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February 2009 - Posts

  • Hot Putter Sees Ernie Els Through to Third Round

    Ernie ElsPutting superbly with one of his old putters, Ernie Els reached the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship third round for the first time in six years by beating American Steve Stricker 3&2 on Thursday.

    The smooth-swinging South African piled up six birdies in a flawless display at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club, sealing victory with a matching par on the 16th green.

    “I just thought I needed to start making some putts,” Els, 39, told reporters after booking his place in the third round against Britain’s Luke Donald.

    “I went back to my old-style putter and I’ve been trying to get comfortable with that. I’ve also been looking at some old tapes because I’ve been changing my technique—where my hands are and stuff.

    “I’ve gone back to a 35-inch putter and it’s got a little bit of give in the shaft,” said the player popularly known as the ‘Big Easy’. “So I’m back to the old things that I used to do.”

    The three-times major champion, who beat Dane Soren Hansen 4&2 in Wednesday’s opening round, said an improved work ethic was finally paying dividends.

    “I’ve been working my ass off a lot and I’m starting to feel a little bit better,” added Els, who had lost in the opening round of this event for the last four years.

    “I’m really swinging nicely. I’ve just got to stay within myself, not get ahead of myself. Just stay in the moment.

    “Last week I made 20 birdies and finished three under for the week,” he said, referring to his tie for 51st at the Northern Trust Open in Los Angeles.

    “So I had a lot of mistakes in between.

    “But when you’re making birdies you’re doing something good, and I’m striking the ball quite nicely. I’ve been working with (swing coach) Butch (Harmon) and so forth, so I feel I’m really comfortable with my swing.”

    Asked why his record had been so poor at the Accenture Match Play Championship for a seven-times winner of the World Match Play Championship at Wentworth in England, Els replied: “First of all, at Wentworth I sleep at home.

    “And it is 36 holes of match play rather then 18 holes here, so it’s more of a sprint here as we know. If you get off to a bad start, it is hard to get back into it.

    “Also the golf course, Wentworth is one of my favourite courses and I know it very well.”



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  • Tim Clark Knocks Out Tiger Woods

    Tiger WoodsJust about everything went according to plan for Tiger Woods in his celebrated return to golf.

    Except he didn’t plan on leaving this early.

    Woods had no complaints with his game or his knee, but he had no answer Thursday for Tim Clark of South Africa, who played 16 holes without a bogey and knocked the world’s No. 1 player out of the Accenture Match Play Championship.

    So where does Woods go from here?

    “I go to the airport,” he said

    His swing looked as good as it did eight months ago when he won the U.S. Open. His knee felt so strong that when Woods discovered his tee shot into the desert on the 15th hole hit a cart path and went out of bounds—a shot that ended any hope of a rally—he chose to walk 350 yards back to the tee instead of accepting a ride in the cart.

    “I knew I had to play out of my mind to beat him,” Clark said.

    And he did, pouring in six birdies and constantly putting the pressure on Woods throughout a sunny day in the high desert. Clark won, 4 and 2, when he hit his tee shot to 4 feet that Woods conceded for birdie after failing to chip in from off the green.

    “I hit it really good today,” Woods said. “I just didn’t make enough birdies. Tim made some birdies there, and I didn’t answer him in the middle part of the round, and consequently I got behind.”

    Only about 100 fans remained late in the afternoon at Dove Mountain, which surely will lack the energy it had the first two days to welcome back golf’s biggest star. Phil Mickelson, the No. 5 seed who survived another scare, is the highest-rated player left in a tournament that is now down to 16 players.

    The good news for golf is that it probably won’t have to wait eight months to see him again.

    Woods likely will play in two weeks at Doral in the CA Championship, although he said he would wait to see how his left knee felt. This was his first tournament since reconstructive surgery on the knee one week after he won the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines in June.

    Clark, a pesky opponent with a sharp short game, didn’t give him much of a chance.

    “I was really working hard to keep myself calm and try to play my own game,” Clark said. “I put a lot of iron shots pretty close, and I think perhaps he wasn’t expecting that or not. But I don’t think I’m ever going to intimidate Tiger Woods, let’s put it that way.”

    Clark, who has four victories around the world but is 0-for-176 on the PGA Tour, next plays a teenager who might be the best hope of bringing some attention back to this World Golf Championship.

    Rory McIlroy, the 19-year-old whiz kid from Northern Ireland, birdied his last two holes for a 1-up victory over Hunter Mahan. He would have been Woods’ next opponent.

    “It would have been great to play him,” McIlroy said. “You have to play well to beat Tiger, and obviously Tim did that today.”

    Woods, the defending champion, had gone 82 consecutive holes without trailing until he caught a plugged lie in a bunker on the sixth hole and failed to save par. He squared the match with a 10-foot birdie on the next hole, and it was tied at the turn.

    Then, Clark took over.

    Starting with the par-5 11th, he won three straight holes with birdies, and was poised to go 4 up when Woods went bunker-to-bunker on the 14th hole. Woods, however, revived the gallery by blasting out of the sand and into the cup for a birdie to win the hole.

    The rally was on. And then it ended.

    Woods’ tee shot on the 331-yard 15th hit a cart path right of the fairway and headed into the desert. Only when Woods reached the ball did he learn it had gone over a fence and out of bounds.

    Even then, he kept it interesting. Woods hit driver for his third shot to 20 feet, and Clark expected him to make it to halve the hole. Instead, the putt missed on the high side, and the match ended one hole later.

    Vijay Singh, the No. 4 seed, lost his last three holes and was beaten by Luke Donald of England in 19 holes.

    Besides Mickelson, who is coming off a victory last week at Riviera, the only other top-10 players remaining were No. 8 seed Geoff Ogilvy, who won in 19 holes for the second straight day, this time against Shingo Katayama; and No. 9 seed Camilo Villegas, who beat Miguel Angel Jimenez, 5 and 4. Villegas has played only 26 holes in two rounds.

    It was a big day for England, which had five players advance to the third round, same as the Americans. Leading the way was Oliver Wilson, who made eight birdies and needed them all in a 2-and-1 victory over Anthony Kim.

    Woods wound up playing 32 holes, and said everything felt great—except for losing.

    “I was really pleased, walking down these cart paths, and obviously playing and getting into the rhythm of playing,” Woods said. “I have no soreness, have no pain. Now it’s just a matter of getting back and playing, and playing more rounds.”

    One shot that gets overlooked is one Clark never expected to make.

    He was on the back end of the fifth green, two tiers above the hole, when he jokingly asked Woods to move his marker one spot over. Moments later, however, Clark asked him to tamp down his coin. Then, his putt rolled right over Woods’ mark, down the ridge and broke left toward the cup. Clark raised his arm and pointed his index finger as the birdie putt made its final turn.

    Woods beat Clark, 5 and 4, in the second round two years ago. That wound up helping the South African.

    “I knew what to expect,” Clark said. “I knew how I reacted to it then, and I kind of knew a few things that I had to do differently. I just tried to calm myself down.”

    That wasn’t easy on the 14th, when Clark was poised to put him away.

    Woods was in the bunker when he holed it out for birdie, and Clark remembered what happened last year when Woods rallied from three holes down with a birdie-birdie-birdie-eagle blitz against J.B. Holmes.

    “I figured, ‘Well, here we go. It’s about to start now,”’ Clark said. “I figured the match was probably going to go to 18, even when I was 3-up with three to play. You fully expect him to do something.”

    Except leave this early.



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  • Geoff Ogilvy Conjures Magical Escape

    Geoff OgilvyFormer winner Geoff Ogilvy breathed a sigh of relief after battling his way into the third round of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship with a Houdini-like escape on Thursday.

    The Australian world number eight came from two down after 15 holes to scrape past Japan’s Shingo Katayama on the 19th green at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

    It was the second match in a row where Ogilvy was taken to extra holes, having beaten 2002 champion Kevin Sutherland of the U.S. after 19 in the opening round.

    “In the end, I got lucky but I played kind of well in that little stretch in there before we got to 18,” Ogilvy told reporters. “So I did what I had to do and I got let off the hook a little bit.

    “It was a bit of a sub-standard ball striking day for me. I hit a lot of drivers in the desert but I got lucky most times. I had one unplayable (lie) but I had some sort of shot most times.

    “I didn’t hit it well enough but I hit some good shots on the last few holes when I needed to. That’s all you can do when you’re a couple down with a few to play, just hit good shots.”

    Trailing by two after 15, Ogilvy struck a superb tee shot to nine feet at the par-three 16th where Katayama conceded after overshooting the green, chipping to 13 feet and missing the putt.

    At the par-four 17th, Ogilvy’s luck appeared to run out when his approach bounced back off the green with his opponent on the putting surface in two just 13 feet from the flag.

    However Katayama’s birdie attempt to close out the match slipped past the left edge and the Australian managed to get up and down from behind the green to square the hole.

    “It was just a right-to-left type of putt,” Ogilvy said of the 12-footer for par which he rolled into the cup. “I hit a good putt. It wasn’t a hard putt, it was just a gentle slope.”

    Katayama unravelled over the next two holes, bogeying the par-four 18th and pushing his tee shot into the desert scrub at the par-four first, the 19th.

    “Hopefully you might get a little help from the other guy as well,” said Ogilvy, who beat veteran American Davis Love III 3&2 to win the 2006 Match Play Championship at La Costa.

    “You do good stuff and you put the ball close and it puts pressure on him. Today I got kind of lucky with him bogeying the 18th and then hitting it in the junk on the 19th.”



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  • Phil Mickelson Survives a Scare Again

    Phil the Thrill was at it again.

    Phil Mickelson survived another scare at the Accenture Match Play Championship on Thursday, beating Zach Johnson 1-up in a second-round matchup of Masters winners.

    The fifth-seeded Mickelson is the highest remaining seed after Tiger Woods, Sergio Garcia, Padraig Harrington and Vijay Singh have gone home.

    For the second day in a row, Mickelson staggered to victory.

    Mickelson was 4-up with five holes to play, but his lead quickly shrunk to 1-up after Mickelson bogeyed the 14th hole, then watched Johnson birdie the 15th and 17th.

    Mickelson finally closed out the match with a par 4 on 18.

    “I had a couple chances with a couple of short putts on 14 and 15 that could have ended the match earlier, but he fought hard to extend the match,” said Mickelson, who has reached the third round for the first time since 2006, when he lost to David Howell.

    The match played out much the same as Mickelson’s 19-hole victory over Angel Cabrera in the opening round. Mickelson was 4-up with five to play against Cabrera, who squared the match on the 17th hole.

    Mickelson said he has been working on his swing with coach Butch Harmon this week. Mickelson will face Stewart Cink on Friday.

    Cink said he’s looking forward to the match.

    “He has the ability to play really bad for a little while and then just play as well as anybody in the world,” Cink said. “So who knows what’s going to happen. I just hope I have a decent game of my own tomorrow.”



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  • Late Birdies Lift Bo Van Pelt in to Lead

    Midway through his first round at the Mayakoba Golf Classic, Bo Van Pelt was right where he started—even par. And he was OK with that considering the wind had turned completely around from his lone practice round, making the course feel entirely new.

    He sure figured things out quickly.

    Van Pelt birdied seven of his last nine holes Thursday for a 7-under 63 and the first-round lead. He started the run with four straight birdies, then birdied three of the final four holes, including about a 2-foot putt to close the round in style.

    “I played pretty aggressive,” Van Pelt said. “No matter what I was hitting, it was going straight.”

    Chris Riley and Jarrod Lyle opened with 65s. Rookie Scott Piercy, who has three top-25 finishes in four starts this year, was in a group at 66.

    Defending champion Brian Gay was tied for 20th at 68. David Toms—the world’s 65th-ranked player, leaving him one spot from making the Match Play field—shot a 70.

    From the start, Van Pelt was accurate off the tee, which is a must to handle the tight fairways on the Greg Norman-designed course.

    His putter was another story.

    Although Van Pelt came out early to try getting the speed down on the practice green, he didn’t find it until a par-saving putt on No. 18, his ninth hole.

    “That was pretty much the key,” he said. After that, “I just started making some.”

    Van Pelt birdied the par-5 first hole and the par-3 second, then faced a big test—a 462-yard, par-4 that was the 22nd-toughest hole on the entire PGA Tour last year. He birdied that hole and the next, too.

    After a par on No. 5, he bounced back with two more birdies. He parred No. 8, but there’s no shame in that; it was 32nd-toughest on tour last year and yielded the fewest birdies over the brief history of this tournament.

    On his final hole, Van Pelt smacked a drive right down the middle, only to find that it stopped in a divot.

    “I was just trying to hit a solid wedge shot—and it came out just how I wanted,” he said. Then came the bonus of watching someone else in his group putt along his same line, making a short putt even easier.

    Van Pelt matched the lowest score of his career, although the other was an 8-under round, and grabbed a first-round lead the fourth time in his career. He’s hoping to parlay it into his first PGA Tour victory.

    His best finish was a tie for second in Puerto Rico last year. He’s done pretty well this season, having tied for fifth at the Bob Hope Classic and tied for 30th last week at the Northern Trust Open, closing that tournament with a 65.

    “I feel like I’ve been playing a little better than my scores,” he said. “Last week, I was frustrated because I wasn’t making any putts, then finally on Sunday I did. I shot 6-under and didn’t have any bogeys.”

    Van Pelt’s closing nine of 28 on Thursday was a tournament record for either nine. His 63 was two off the tournament record at the 6,923-yard, par-70 El Camaleon.

    Van Pelt was part of the first group with an afternoon tee time, so there was a notion that the stiff wind morning starters complained about might’ve calmed down. Apparently not because Lyle was the only other standout from the later groups.

    Riley is among the players who’ve been here every all three years and he said the gusts Thursday were the strongest yet. That apparently suits him because it was his best score yet, too. He got a boost by holing a 130-yard wedge shot for an eagle.

    “I love to play in the wind because I hit the ball low,” said Riley, who has tied for 18th and 22nd at this tournament. “A low ball flight is pretty good here. … You see the guys who’ve won here in the past—Brian Gay and Fred Funk—they’re pretty straight down the middle, there’s no length or anything like that.”

    J.P. Hayes was among those at 66. He missed the cut at his only other event this year and admits the main reason he’s here is because he could get into the field. He certainly looked as if he belonged with four birdies and no bogeys.

    Also fitting in nicely in that pack at 66 was Pablo Larrazabal of Spain, last year’s European tour rookie of the year. He birdied his first two holes and four of the first seven, but was slowed by a pair of bogeys on the back nine. His success would certainly make proud tournament sponsor OHL, which is based in Spain.



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  • Angelo Que Opens Four Shot Lead

    Angelo Que of the Philippines shot an 8-under 64 to take a four-stroke lead after Thursday’s first round of the $1.25 million Indonesia Open.

    Que, who won the 2008 Philippine Open, had eight birdies to open a comfortable lead over a group of six players: compatriot Antonio Lascuna, Australian pair Tony Carolan and Andrew Dodt, Richie Ramsay of Scotland, England’s Simon Khan and Welshman Jamie Donaldson.

    Play was delayed two hours due to inclement weather, and several players failed to complete their rounds in the jointly sanctioned Asian Tour and European Tour event.

    Former champion Simon Dyson of England was the most prominent of those yet to finish, with his 4-under total after 16 holes giving him a share of second on the leaderboard.

    Que needed just 20 putts over 18 holes of the Kuta Golf Resort course overlooking the world-famous surf of Balangan Bay.

    “I’ve never done that before, probably only in a computer game… this is a very nice performance,” Que said.

    Thailand’s Thongchai Jaidee—the highest-ranked player in the field at No. 88—carded a 71 to leave him tied for 35th, along with Rafael Cabrera Bello of Spain, who had the tournament’s first hole-in-one on the 140-yard par 3 15th.

    Defending champion Felipe Aguilar of Chile was 3 over after 16 holes.

    The tournament has been relocated this year from the capital of Jakarta to the popular tourist destination of Bali.



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  • Victorious Return for Tiger Woods

    Tiger WoodsTiger Woods felt like he had never been away.

    He played that way, too.

    Woods took five practice swings, slow and measured, settled over the ball and then backed away to make sure he was aiming in the right direction. Then he launched his 3-wood down the fairway and went back to work.

    “Walking down the fairway, it felt like business as usual,” he said. “I thought I would be more nervous on the first tee. It just came back down to playing the game again, and that felt good.”

    His game looked as good as ever.

    Woods made a triumphant return to golf Wednesday in the Accenture Match Play Championship with a birdie-eagle start and a convincing victory that showed golf what it had been missing in the 253 days since he limped his way to an epic U.S. Open title.

    The gentle fist pump returned when he hit 3-iron from 237 yards to within 4 feet for eagle. He struck another familiar pose by slowly raising his putter over his head as a 20-foot eagle dropped on the 13th hole.

    The only attention paid to his left knee came after a lengthy wait on the 315-yard 15th hole. Woods stretched his legs, then grabbed a 3-wood and drove onto the green.

    He never trailed Brendan Jones of Australia, closing him out with a par save from bunker to win, 3 and 2.

    “He’s Tiger,” Jones said. “He does freakish stuff.”

    Woods said he had looked forward to the rush of competing. It was as if all that time away from golf had been bottled up inside him. And then it came gushing out on a scorching day on Dove Mountain, where temperatures approached 90 degrees.

    Fans packed into the bleachers around the first tee, with more lined up behind the ropes all the way to the green. Their cheers when Woods walked onto the tee could be heard all the way down the fairway.

    “You are back!” one spectator shouted.

    Was he ever.

    First came an 8-iron to 5 feet for birdie. Then it was the 3-iron to 4 feet for eagle.

    He won the first two holes before some rust settled in. Woods made three bogeys over his next five holes and was leading, 1 up, until he birdied the par-5 eighth with a 6-foot putt.

    Jones never got any closer.

    Woods had not competed since reconstructive surgery on his left knee a week after winning the U.S. Open. It was the third time in five years Woods had surgery on his left knee, adding to the mystery of whether he would be as good as the player who has won 65 times on the PGA Tour, including 14 majors.

    “It held up,” he said. “It felt good.”

    His return dwarfed everything else that took place in the first round at The Ritz-Carlton Club.

    Stewart Cink was the second match out, and there were only a few dozen fans in the bleachers. His game with Richard Sterne was tied after 18 holes, so they headed back to the first tee—making Woods and Jones wait a few extra minutes.

    This time, there wasn’t an inch of wood available in the bleachers. Fans stood four deep around the tee box, and they lined the ropes all the way to the green, some 460 yards away. It was a bigger crowd than when Cink played Woods in the championship match last year.

    “I just told everybody on the first tee that he’s waited eight months to play,” Cink said. “He can wait two more minutes.”

    Cink wound up winning his match, one of five that required overtime.

    Phil Mickelson, who blew a four-shot lead at Riviera and rallied to win three days ago, did it again. He was 4 up on Angel Cabrera with five holes to play until the Argentine caught him, but Lefty birdied the 19th hole.

    Other top players were not so fortunate.

    Sergio Garcia, the No. 2 seed, lost to Charl Schwartzel on the 18th hole when the Spaniard hit into the bunker and made bogey.

    Third-seeded Padraig Harrington, who won the British Open and PGA Championship while Woods was away, arrived at Dove Mountain having missed his last two cuts. This was a short week, too, for he lost to Pat Perez on the 18th hole.

    Anthony Kim and Camilo Villegas, the faces of the next generation hopeful of challenging Woods, had the shortest days. Kim never lost a hole in beating Lin Wen-Tang of Taiwan, 7 and 5, while Villegas beat Rod Pampling, 7 and 6.

    They were on the same course, but it sure wasn’t center court.

    Cink was surprised to see even a few dozen people in the bleachers when he began his match.

    “They got there early and claimed their seats for Tiger,” he said. “Because really, Tiger’s match was the only one that mattered today.”

    Woods, as he has done so often in his career, gave the crowd what they came to see.

    And even Jones, who appeared to be overwhelmed, got caught up in the commotion.

    “As I walked off the first hole, there was just mayhem—media, and everyone was just running,” Jones said.

    After Woods birdied the first hole, Jones overhead a reporter say, “Another nine holes to go for 10 and 8.” Jones did his best to make the match last as long as it did. After a lengthy wait on the 315-yard 15th, Woods hit 3-wood onto the green, and the Australian followed with a shot even closer, making eagle. Still, Jones knew his stay at Dove Mountain was not going to be a long one.

    “I really wouldn’t be betting against him,” Jones said. “He hit some shots other people can’t hit.”

    Next up for Woods is Tim Clark, who beat Retief Goosen. Clark lost to Woods in the second round two years ago, only it wasn’t quite the circus it is now.



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  • Late Bogies Cost Sergio Garcia

    Sergio GarciaWorld number two Sergio Garcia was the highest seed to make an early exit at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship on Wednesday, losing one down to South African Charl Schwartzel.

    Although the Spaniard survived a barrage of three consecutive birdies from the first by putting wizard Schwartzel to go two up after 15 holes, he tumbled out of the tournament with a bogey-bogey-bogey finish.

    “Charl played well and didn’t give me much,” second-seeded Garcia told reporters after a fluctuating encounter at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

    “I worked really hard for 15 holes and played really, really well but unfortunately just hit two bad shots on 16 and 17.

    “He took his (chances). He did make a lot of putts but I still had my chances. I was two up and I was in control of the game. Unfortunately I just let it slip away.”

    Schwartzel, a double winner on the European Tour, booked his place in the second round with a superb putting display on Dove Mountain’s difficult, heavily contoured greens.

    “I really rolled the ball well,” the 24-year-old said after totalling just 26 putts. “I made those clutch putts, the ones I needed to make.

    “In match play, once you start making those putts, it’s hard for your opponent. Just knock in those ones and it grinds them down.”

    Schwartzel, who will next meet Britain’s flamboyantly dressed Ian Poulter, was delighted with his form over the final holes.

    “At the end there he sort of gave it to me a little bit, but still, it was one hell of a match,” he said.

    “I didn’t feel the pressure coming up 17 and 18. I thought I hit a really good bunker shot on 17, and knocking in that six-footer just sort of got it going.

    “I put the ball on the green on 18 first, and that was it.”



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  • Oliver Wilson secures upset against KJ Choi

    Oliver Wilson celebrated his first appearance in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship with an upset 3&1 victory over South Korea’s KJ Choi in Wednesday’s opening round.

    World number 45 Wilson, who is yet to win on the European Tour, bogeyed the par-four first to trail by one but birdied the next two holes to take control and never relinquished his grip.

    The Englishman, who piled up five birdies on a blazing hot day in the Arizona desert, sealed victory with a par at the 17th where Choi bogeyed after finding a bunker with his approach.

    “I feel pretty good,” Wilson, 28, told reporters after defeating the world number 20 at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

    “It is not a good draw getting KJ. It was always going to be tough. He is a solid player tee to green and you are certainly not going to get him riled or anything and beat him mentally.

    “I played well on the front, not so well on the back but made some good up-and-downs,” added Wilson, who last year became the first player to represent Europe at the Ryder Cup without having won a professional tournament.

    “A big putt on 14 kept me two up and I managed to hang on from there.”

    Wilson will next meet American world number 11 Anthony Kim, who thumped Taiwan’s Lin Wen-tang 7&5 in the first round.

    “He has been on a long trip back from Australia so maybe a bit of jet lag will kick in,” Wilson said of the globe-trotting Kim with a broad grin. “Again it will be a tough match.

    “You don’t have any easy matches out here. I am going to work on a few things this afternoon and I look forward to it tomorrow.”



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  • Phil Mickelson Survives Angel Cabrera Fightback

    Phil MickelsonPhil Mickelson survived a stirring late fight back by Argentina’s Angel Cabrera to conjure a last-gasp win in Wednesday’s opening round of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

    The American left-hander, fresh from victory at last week’s Northern Trust Open, squandered a four-up advantage after 13 holes before scraping past Cabrera with a birdie on the 19th green.

    Long-hitting Cabrera wrested back the initiative with three consecutive birdies from the 15th to level the match but Mickelson sealed victory after hitting his approach to six feet at the first extra hole.

    “I played against a very tough competitor in Angel,” world number three Mickelson told reporters on a blazing hot day at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

    “On the back nine, he sure hit a lot of good golf shots and won four holes in a row. I was fortunate to win in sudden death, but I’ll gladly take it. It’s nice to win the first match.”

    Mickelson, who has reached the last eight only once in nine editions of this event, was delighted to maintain form after a rusty start to the 2009 PGA Tour.

    Although he won his 35th Tour title at Riviera Country Club on Sunday, he had missed the cut in his first start of the season and finished no better than joint 42nd in his next two appearances.

    “Given that the first three weeks I didn’t play very well to be able to play well on the last three holes and make some birdies when I needed them feels great,” the three-times major champion said.

    Mickelson, who will meet fellow American Zach Johnson in Thursday’s second round, applauded Cabrera’s form in the latter stage of the match.

    “He made three birdies and I give him a lot of credit for really gutting it out,” the 38-year-old said. “He made a great 10-footer on the last hole for par to extend it into sudden death and he played some great golf.

    “Again, I was fortunate to come out on top with somebody that was really getting hot there at the end.”



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  • Phil Mickelson Surprised by Tiger's Media Throng

    Phil MickelsonPhil Mickelson is a veteran of 17 years on the PGA Tour but was taken aback by the media frenzy that greeted Tiger Woods in the Arizona desert early on Tuesday morning.

    Back in action after an eight-month absence, Woods defends his title at this week’s WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship and was watched by around 100 reporters and photographers when he teed off at 0700 local (1400 GMT) for a practice round.

    “I’ve never seen so many cameras and photographers especially that early in the morning,” Mickelson told reporters at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.

    “It’s pretty evident to see what he (Woods) has done for the game of golf. For us to have the most recognisable athlete in the world playing our sport is so fortunate for all of us.

    “We’ve all been able to benefit from it and to have him back is awesome,” Mickelson said of the 14-times major champion.

    “We are going to have more of a challenge winning golf tournaments certainly but also it will be more rewarding if we’re able to win.”

    Woods has not played competitive golf since his remarkable U.S. Open victory at Torrey Pines in June, having been sidelined by reconstructive knee surgery.

    The world number one had not previously seen the monster Ritz-Carlton layout, which measures 7,833 yards off the back tees, and set off for 18 holes after warming up on the practice range.

    Mickelson, who arrived at the range shortly before fellow American Woods, takes on Argentine Angel Cabrera in Wednesday’s opening round.

    “He (Cabrera) is an incredible player,” said the world number three. “He won the (2007) U.S. Open, he hits the ball a long way and has great feel around the greens.”

    Left-hander Mickelson will tee off in the opening World Golf Championships (WGC) event of the year fresh from victory at the Northern Trust Open on Sunday.

    “It feels great to win and it always feels great to be back in contention,” the 38-year-old said. “It feels great to be able to pull through when I wasn’t hitting some of my best shots.”

    Mickelson squandered a five-stroke lead before coming from two behind with three holes remaining to clinch his 35th PGA Tour title at Riviera Country Club.

    “It’s also a platform for me to hopefully get better,” he added. “I had a good session with (swing coach) Butch (Harmon) this morning trying to improve on it and build my game up.”



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  • Tiger Woods Looking Forward to Competitive Play

    Tiger WoodsTiger Woods pulled into the parking lot as sunlight began to filter across the desert floor. He ducked into the clubhouse to change into golf shoes and headed out for a practice round, a routine he has followed for a dozen years.

    For a moment, it didn’t seem as though he had been gone from golf for the last eight months recovering from knee surgery.

    “It feels the same. Nothing feels any different,” Woods said, recalling a conversation with his wife Tuesday morning. “Just because it feels like I’m coming back to what I used to do.”

    But there was one change that brought so much satisfaction.

    Standing on the first tee at Dove Mountain, he drew back his 3-wood and sent the ball soaring against the Arizona sky, his swing looking just as good as it did that Monday in June at Torrey Pines when he won the U.S. Open in a playoff.

    Only this time he didn’t wince. He didn’t stoop over and clutch his left leg. He didn’t have to use his club for a cane.

    Nothing hurt.

    “I feel great,” Woods said. “I didn’t think it would feel this good before the surgery, or even just after the surgery, because I hadn’t known what it’s like to feel this way. It’s been so long. So to have it feel this healthy and this solid and secure, man, it’s a great feeling.”

    He was about an hour late for his press conference, but he had a good excuse.

    It was his first time walking 18 holes since the U.S. Open, and “I forgot how long it takes,” said Woods, who has been riding a cart at home.

    Woods does not know what to expect from his game when the Accenture Match Play Championship begins Wednesday, mainly because there is sure to be rust. He has not competed since surgery to rebuild ligaments in his left knee the week after Torrey Pines.

    “I’ve played one tournament in 10 months,” Woods said. “I’ve simulated tournaments the best I possibly can, but it’s hard to get the adrenaline up to where it’s going to be tomorrow when I play. I’m trying to get into the rhythm of the round as fast as I possibly can.

    “And hopefully, it will happen quickly for me.”

    His first-round opponent is Brendan Jones, an Australian Woods has never met.

    Woods is the defending champion, which means nothing in this fickle format. It doesn’t matter what score he shoots, as long as he wins more holes than his opponent.

    “You have to be on your game right away,” he said. “You have to make sure you bring the intensity and bring your game from the very first hole. Because if you don’t, then I’ll be going home.”

    The intensity might come from the circus around him.

    Even if Woods felt like his drive to The Ritz-Carlton Golf Club was just like going to the office, it soon was clear this week will be different. About 50 photographers were waiting at the entrance of the practice range, and a dozen of them camped on the slope behind where Woods set up to hit balls.

    The only other player on the range was Phil Mickelson, who won two days ago at Riviera and virtually was ignored.

    “As I’m walking to the range, I’ve never seen so many cameras, especially that early in the morning,” Mickelson said.

    Woods played alone, followed by swing coach Hank Haney, agent Mark Steinberg and spokesman Glenn Greenspan.

    “He looked great,” Haney said. “I’m very pleased with how he did today. It’s slowly coming around, and he’s getting more consistent. His knee is not flopping all over the place. It’s nice to see him not in pain, not hurt when he’s playing.”

    Haney said Woods was hurting when the won the Match Play for the third time last year. Woods tried to take care of his wounded knee with surgery to clean out cartilage after the Masters, but the ACL already was gone. And then came a double stress fracture of the tibia while practicing for the U.S. Open.

    Woods figures he had only 20 percent of his ACL some five years ago, none since stepping in a hole while jogging after the British Open in 2007.

    “I feel a lot stronger in my left leg,” Woods said. “Both legs have been stronger than they ever have been. Stability is something I haven’t had in years. So it’s nice to make a swing and not have my bones move. … It’s nice to hit into it for the first time.”

    Woods doesn’t watch a lot of golf on TV, but he knows what has transpired during his absence.

    He remains No. 1 in the world ranking, although the gap has closed from an 11.33-point margin over Mickelson to a 1.74-point lead over Sergio Garcia.

    Padraig Harrington won the British Open and PGA Championship, meaning the Irishman will go to the Masters with a chance to join Woods and Ben Hogan as the only players to win three straight majors. Once considered young, the 33-year-old Woods has noticed the next generation making its move, from Anthony Kim to Camilo Villegas, from Rory McIlroy to Dustin Johnson.

    None of it made him eager to return.

    He spent the last eight months chasing around his 20-month-old daughter, Sam, and waiting on the Feb. 8 birth of his son, Charlie.

    “It was a blessing in disguise to have an opportunity just to see Sam grow that fast and that much,” he said. “As players, you travel so much that I would have missed a lot of that. So I was very lucky there.”

    In the last few weeks, he said he would go to the range at home in Florida while Charlie was asleep. His wife, Elin, would call when the child woke up, and Woods would head back to the house.

    His family is in Florida, and Woods said this week would be a time to catch up on sleep. That’s one incentive to win matches.

    “I’m looking forward to the rush tomorrow. I really am,” Woods said. “Waking up tomorrow, and getting ready for my round, and getting focused, and coming out here, warming up and getting fired up. I’m really looking forward to that more than anything else. Because I haven’t had that in a long time.”



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  • Golf Celebrates the Return of Tiger Woods

    Tiger WoodsWith a mixture of huge relief and joy, the PGA Tour celebrates the return of Tiger Woods to competition this week after an eight-month injury absence.

    The American world number one, sidelined since his extraordinary U.S. Open playoff victory at Torrey Pines in June, is back to defend his title at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

    More importantly for the Tour, though, is the likely impact of the most influential player in the game.

    Ever since he turned professional amid much expectation in late 1996, Woods has been golf’s equivalent of the goose that continues to lay golden eggs.

    In many ways, he has almost single-handedly ushered in an era of multi-million dollar endorsements and lucrative appearance money over the last decade and more.

    His Afro-American-Asian background has spread the sport to an audience far beyond its traditional image of male, white and middle-class and he has become arguably the world’s best known and most marketable athlete.

    The absence of Woods over the last eight months was a little like trying to stage the Oscars without the prized statuettes.

    Most fans have sorely missed him and television ratings have plunged at golf tournaments where he normally plays.

    On top of that, the world has changed since Woods defied stabbing knee pain and a double stress fracture of his left tibia to beat fellow American Rocco Mediate over 19 holes to clinch his 14th major title.

    The global economic landscape has been left in tatters and the PGA Tour faces an uncertain future with turmoil in the auto and financial services sectors leaving the sport vulnerable to the loss of marketing and advertising dollars.

    Eleven of the Tour’s title sponsors come from the financial sector and many of these contracts are up for renewal after the end of the 2010 season.

    Woods himself is not immune. Last November, automaker General Motors’ Buick brand ended its endorsement deal with Woods, worth an estimated $8 million annually, a year early in a move to cut costs.

    Hi return has been viewed as golf’s ideal stimulus package but the world number one prefers not to see it like that.

    “The only thing I can control is my play,” the 33-year-old said in a conference call last week after announcing his comeback following reconstructive knee surgery.

    “We as a collective whole on the PGA Tour have to do a better job of making sure that we appreciate all the fans and sponsors for what they do for us and allowing us to have an opportunity to compete and play for a living.

    “In these times, I think everyone’s well aware of how important that is. Over the years we may have taken that for granted but now is a time when reality has checked in.”

    Virtually to a man, Woods’s peers have celebrated his return.

    “We need him back and we’re all excited to have him back,” American world number three Phil Mickelson said after winning his 35th PGA Tour title at the Northern Trust Open.

    “I hope he stays healthy because it’s evident the game needs him. The economy has been struggling, the sponsors have been struggling and to have him back is so critical for the sport.”

    Although Woods has a few detractors who argue he has become bigger than the game, compatriot Steve Stricker disagrees.

    “It’s nothing but good things for our Tour when he comes back,” the four-times PGA Tour winner said.

    “Tiger has not only brought a lot of attention to our sport and to our game but he’s helped raise the purses here dramatically.

    “We owe him a lot as a player. I’ve thanked him a number of times, I really have.”



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  • Brendan Jones Ready for Tiger Woods Challenge

    Little-known Australian Brendan Jones will face the biggest exposure of his career when he meets world number one Tiger Woods in Wednesday’s first round at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

    Jones booked his place in the opening World Golf Championships (WGC) event of the year as one of the top 64 players in the world and was overjoyed when he heard he would take on Woods.

    The game’s leading player has been sidelined by knee injury for the last eight months and his return to the PGA Tour this week was only confirmed four days ago.

    “Somebody said Tiger’s announced he’s coming back and I got a few chills up the back of my neck,” Jones, 33, told reporters at Dove Mountain’s Ritz-Carlton Golf Club on Monday.

    “But I’m here now and two days away from it, so I’m very, very excited. If I get beat by anybody, I would like to get beat by Tiger. It’s a chance of a lifetime, really.”

    Asked to describe his emotions as he prepared to take on the 14-times major champion in a head-to-head duel, Jones replied: “I’m nervous and I’m really, really happy.

    “I’m very, very excited to have that opportunity for one of the most anticipated comebacks in any sport, really. And to have a front row seat to all of it is a great honour.”

    An eight-times winner on the Japan Golf Tour, Jones has previously competed in only three WGC events and accepts he will tee off on Wednesday as a huge underdog.

    “I would probably put the house on Tiger but I didn’t fly all this way to try to lose,” the New South Wales professional said.

    “I’m here to try to beat him, and there’s been some funny things happen in sport.

    “I’m up against it but I’m hoping that I’ll put in a good effort,” added Jones, who broke into the world’s top 60 by winning the Nippon Series JT Cup in Japan in December.

    Woods has clinched the Accenture Match Play Championship three times—in 2003, 2004 and by a record winning margin in last year’s final—but three of his six losses at the event have come against Australians.

    He was beaten by Peter O’Malley at the first hurdle in 2002 and has twice gone down to Nick O’Hern, in the second round in 2005 and after 20 holes in the third round in 2007.

    “I’m an Australian so I got some sort of chance,” Jones said with a broad grin. “Obviously I know that I’m a long shot. I have got nothing to lose.

    “I can just go out, be a lot more aggressive than what I normally would be. I have some sort of chance.

    “It will be a dream come true to actually play Tiger and win but I’m not going to get too carried away just yet.”



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  • Thai Star Prayad Goes Stateside with Masters Ambition

    Prayad MarksaengThai star Prayad Marksaeng hopes to be on full throttle when he embarks on an American odyssey this week which he hopes will lead him all the way to the US Masters in April.

    The talented Asian Tour star will become the first Thai to compete in the elite 64-man WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship at Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Marana, Arizona starting on Wednesday and he hopes to pull off some surprises, starting with his first round match against England’s Lee Westwood.

    Currently ranked 53rd in the world, Prayad knows he has every opportunity to break into the top-50 which would earn him a second appearance at the Masters, the year’s first major.

    Prayad has two cracks to achieve his goal as he will remain in the US for the WGC-CA Championship next month. Both the WGC events offer a lucrative US$8 million in total prize money.

    “I am the first Thai player to compete in the Match Play and I’m proud of this achievement. It will inspire me to play well,” said the 43-year-old veteran, who won three times in Japan last year.

    Prayad enjoys competing in match play competitions, especially after he won all three matches in Asia’s victory over Europe in the Royal Trophy, a Ryder Cup-style event, in Bangkok last month.

    “I had a great outing at the Royal Trophy which gave me a good boost. I hope to carry that experience into the WGC events. I am enjoying some good form and I hope it will continue,” said Prayad, who finished tied second in the Maybank Malaysian Open two weeks ago.

    “I love match play events. I enjoy taking risks and competing in close matches. I find match play formats very exciting. There are no second chances and that keeps me on the ball,” said the Thai, a six-time winner on the Asian Tour.

    After the Match Play, Prayad will head to Doral Golf Resort and Spa for the CA Championship from March 12-15.

    “I will strive hard at both events. I have two chances to move up the rankings. I hope to produce two good results,” said Prayad.

    In preparation of his trip, he sought the advice from countrymen Prom Meesawat and Chapchai Nirat, who competed at Doral previously and liked what he heard from them. “They told me that the greens are similar to those in Thailand, so I think I will be quite comfortable,” he said.

    Prayad was invited to the Masters last year but was forced to withdraw in the second round with injury. He was hoping to get the nod again after ending 2008 in 51st place in the world rankings, missing out an automatic invitation by one rung, but Augusta National opted to invite talented Japanese teenager Ryo Ishikawa.

    “I was injured last year and I couldn’t prove myself. After that disappointment, I was determined to get my way back to the Masters to show my true potential,” said Prayad.

    “Ryo is a great player and he deserves to be in the Masters. I am not disappointed at all that I wasn’t invited and I am really focused on breaking into the top-50,” said Prayad.



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