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October 2009 - Posts

  • Paul Casey Eager for Return to Action

    Britain’s world number four Paul Casey will make his first appearance since July at the World Match Play Championship in Spain on Thursday.


    PAUL CASEY Picture © Getty Images

    Casey returns after a rib injury which has ruled him out since the British Open and caused him to slip from first to fourth in the Race to Dubai money list.

    “This is the longest I’ve been out of action and I am really eager to get back out on the course,” Casey, the 2006 World Match Play champion, told the European Tour website.

    “I’ve listened to, and followed, all the medical advice and my first goal is to try to win The Race to Dubai, starting with the Volvo World Match Play.”

    Following a break in 2008, the tournament debuts at the Costa del Sol’s Finca Cortesin Golf Club having previously been held at Wentworth, England since its inception in 1964.

    The Race to Dubai list’s top four—leader Lee Westwood of Britain, Germany’s Martin Kaymer, Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy and Casey—have been kept apart in the 16-man line-up.

    Masters champion Angela Cabrera of Argentina, Sweden’s world number seven Henrik Stenson and Colombian Camilo Villegas are also in the field.

    The new format sees four groups of four players compete in a round robin over the first two days with the leading player from each group qualifying for the semi-final knock out stage.

    Draw (prefix denotes seeding, British unless stated):

    Group A: 1-Paul Casey, 8-Retief Goosen (South Africa), 9-Anthony Kim (U.S.), 16-Scott Strange (Australia).

    Group B: 4-Sergio Garcia (Spain), 5-Martin Kaymer (Germany), 12-Robert Allenby (Australia), 13-Oliver Wilson.

    Group C: 3-Henrik Stenson (Sweden), 6-Rory McIlroy, 11-Angel Cabrera (Argentina), 14-Simon Dyson.

    Group D: 2-Lee Westwood, 7-Camilo Villegas (Colombia), 10-Ross Fisher, 15-Jeev Milkha Singh (India).




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  • Strongest Ever Field Lines Up for Singapore Open

    The Race to Dubai heats up in Southeast Asia this week when the newly co-sanctioned Singapore Open tees off on Thursday at the city-state’s demanding Sentosa Golf Club.


    DARREN CLARKE & PADRAIG HARRINGTON Picture © Getty Images

    Still regarded as the flagship event on the Asian Tour, the $5 million tournament joined up with the European Tour this year and will boast its strongest ever field as the pursuit for a big payday in the Middle East next month nears its conclusion.

    Marquee players such as Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els, Geoff Ogilvy, Padraig Harrington and K.J. Choi will also line up at island’s Serapong Course but Thailand’s Thongchai Jaidee is confident he can upset the odds and emerge as champion.

    “This year, my body is stronger than last year,” the former paratrooper said.

    “The key this year has been my health. If I feel strong, I can play well. I played well in a couple of majors and it’s given me a lot of confidence.”

    The 39-year-old Thongchai has been a big name in the region for a decade, winning two Asian Tour order of merit titles, but has made a global breakthrough this year with victories in co-sanctioned events in South Korea and Indonesia.

    The Lop Buri native has seven other top-20 finishes on the European Tour this year and sits just three places outside the top 15 in the Race to Dubai rankings.

    Thongchai feels the Singapore layout is perfect for his game and arrived in good shape after a finishing in a tie for 19th at the Portugal Masters two weeks ago.

    “The course is very tricky but my swing is better than last time,” said Thongchai, who recovered from a disappointing opening 76 last year to finish 13th. “I’m confident of playing well, because my driver and irons are working well.

    “I’ve not won three tournaments in a year before but this year I have a very good chance of achieving that goal.

    “However, you need to drive the ball well around (Serapong), and hit the fairways. It’s not an easy course to score on. The greens are firm and the rough is very thick. On some holes, you have to hit away from trouble.”

    Thongchai admits the players from outside the region may have better skills but feels the sweltering conditions can help level the playing field.

    “The tournament is in Asia so there is good chance for an Asian to win,” he added. “We have very strong players who regularly play well in the tournament.

    “It’s a good field but the weather favours Asian players. Europeans always struggle in the heat, so it’s an advantage for our players.

    The last two European Tour order of merit winners, Britain’s Justin Rose and Sweden’s Robert Karlsson, as well as twice Singapore Open champion Adam Scott of Australia are also in the field.




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  • Phil Mickelson Looking to End Season on a High Note

    Phil Mickelson has produced a strong finish to a turbulent year off the course and the world number two credits an improved performance on the greens for helping him end his season on a high note.


    PHIL MICKELSON Picture © Getty Images

    Mickelson stormed to a pair of early victories on the PGA Tour and fifth place at the U.S. Masters before his wife Amy was diagnosed with breast cancer and the popular Californian opted to put his season on hold to spend more time with his family.

    A brief return to action was halted again after an emotional second-place finish at the U.S. Open to Lucas Glover in June when his mother was also diagnosed with breast cancer and Mickelson took a second sabbatical before returning to action in August.

    His results improved steadily and he capped a strong end to the PGA season with last month’s win at the Tour Championship in Atlanta and by helping the U.S. team retain the Presidents Cup.

    “It’s been an interesting year,” Mickelson told reporters after completing a practice round for this week’s co-sanctioned Singapore Open on Tuesday.

    “The last few weeks I started to play very well but I have had some interesting things go on throughout the year that has made this year unique,” he added.

    “Fortunately, I have been able to return to the course and started playing well again.

    “Looking back, having won three times in the U.S., it’s been an okay year. I would have liked to have won a major and had opportunities at the U.S. Open and Masters but just couldn’t pull through.”

    Mickelson is winding down his schedule with an Asian swing that takes in the Singapore Open and next week’s HSBC Champions in Shanghai and the 39-year-old has been buoyed by the positive recent results following extensive work on his short game.

    “My putting has really improved. Since I began working with (swing coach) Butch Harmon I have been striking the ball better than ever, hitting it more confidently and driving the ball straighter and longer than I ever,” he said.

    “However, I have not had the scores or the results because my performance on the greens has been bad over the past two years… I have not been consistently at a high level.

    “Working with (putting coach) Dave Stockton has got me back the way I have always putted. I had slowly gravitated away from some of the techniques and feel I have grown up playing.

    “He has reaffirmed all I believe in my short game. Hearing it from a guy has won two PGAs had validated what I knew.”

    Mickelson also feels the development of golf internationally will benefit by the abridged PGA Tour season and the sport’s successful bid to be included as an Olympic event from the 2016 Games in Rio de Janeiro.

    “Our season in the U.S. has been shortened and that allows many of the top players to play internationally and allows me to come here and compete,” Mickelson said.

    “I am hoping this will help grow the game in addition to the Olympics.

    “The Olympic Foundations will direct a lot of money towards the educating and teaching of juniors. I think the game of golf will finally get the recognition it deserves.”

     




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  • Michael Jonzon Wins Again After 12 Years

    Michael Jonzon ended a 12-year wait for his second European Tour victory when the Swede won the Castello Masters on Sunday.


    SERGIO GARCIA & MICHAEL JONZON  Picture © Getty Images

    The 37-year-old stayed calm to birdie the final hole at the Mediterraneo club and post a four-under-par 67 for a 20-under total of 264, one stroke better than Germany’s Martin Kaymer and Swede Christian Nilsson.

    Since he won the 1997 Portuguese Open, Jonzon’s career has failed to take off. But Sunday’s victory moved him from 158th on the money-list to 65th and in with a chance of playing next month’s lucrative Dubai World Championship.

    “I was so proud of myself holing that putt on the last,” he told Reuters. “I was determined not to let the win get away from me.

    “Life has been desperate at times and I came here looking at playing at the qualifying school.”

    It looked as though Jonzon would run away with it going into the back nine after chalking up an eagle and three birdies in six holes to the turn.

    Three dropped shots in three holes coming home, though, provided a nervous ending for the Swede.

    Jonzon went to the 18th tied with Nilsson, who was already in the clubhouse, and Kaymer, one of his playing partners.

    An 18-foot putt, while Kaymer missed from half that length, then earned Jonzon the $495,000 first prize.

    Kaymer slumped six strokes behind the Swede after double-bogeying the 13th. But the 24-year-old German, back after a nine-week injury absence, came roaring back.

    While he made ground on Race to Dubai money list leader Lee Westwood, joint second place here was not quite enough for Kaymer to regain top spot.

    “I came here not knowing what to expect after such a long time off so this is very encouraging,” he said.

    Holder and tournament host Sergio Garcia (69) was the title favourite going into the final round but he was hampered by sickness and needed medical attention on the course.

    The world number 10 had to settle for fourth place on 267 after a double-bogey at the 12th ruined his chances.

    “I tried to pump myself up but I just didn’t have any energy because of not eating,” said Garcia.

    British rookie Sam Hutsby (71) briefly shared the lead when he holed out with his second shot for an eagle on the first.

    The 20-year-old, playing in only his third European Tour event as a professional, finished on 270 to earn a place in next week’s Singapore Open.




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  • Troy Matteson Wins in a Playoff

    Recovering from a late collapse, Troy Matteson birdied the second playoff hole to beat Jamie Lovemark and Rickie Fowler in the Frys.com Open on Sunday at Grayhawk Golf Club.


    TROY MATTESON Picture © Getty Images

    Matteson bogeyed the final two holes of regulation to fall into the playoff with Lovemark and Fowler, who are both seeking PGA Tour cards.

    After all three players parred the first playoff hole, Matteson hit his approach within 3 feet on the 464-yard, par-4 17th hole. With shadows stretching onto the green, he rolled in the putt for his second PGA Tour win.

    On the first playoff hole—the 515-yard, par-4 18th—Matteson and Fowler each reached the green in two and made easy par putts.

    Lovemark got a gift when his approach splashed into a man-made lagoon, then bounced onto the slope of the green. Lovemark chipped to 3 feet and made the putt to stay alive.

    The 29-year-old Matteson’s first tour victory came as a rookie in 2006, when he won the Frys.com Open in Las Vegas, now called the Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open.

    Fowler and Lovemark had finished their rounds when Matteson faltered on a sun-splashed afternoon in the desert.

    After bogeying the 17th, Matteson (68) knocked his approach shot into a bunker on the 18th. He chipped to about 10 feet, then missed the putt to force a playoff with Fowler and Lovemark.

    Fowler and Lovemark watched the drama unfold from a practice green across the lagoon from the 18th green.

    Fowler (64) led briefly midway through the round, but his bogey on 18 cost him a chance to win in regulation.

    Lovemark played his way into contention with a 64. He had seven birdies in regulation, five on the back nine.

    Bill Lunde (66) and Tim Clark (67) tied for fourth at 16 under, and 2007 winner Mike Weir (61) and Bryce Molder (63) followed at 15 under. Weir had a chance for the fourth 59 in PGA Tour history, but parred the final three holes.

    Matteson rolled into Sunday with a three-stroke lead, thanks to back-to-back 61s on Friday and Saturday—a PGA Tour record for lowest score in consecutive rounds.

    For most of the day, the tourney was a duel between Fowler and Matteson, who traded salvos on Grayhawk’s Raptor Course.

    Fowler entered in a five-way tie at 12 under, four strokes back of Matteson. But the 20-year-old Fowler, who turned pro after the Walker Cup last month, quickly charged into the lead.

    Fowler aced the par-3, 203-yard fifth hole to go to 17 under and leapfrog Matteson. It was the fourth hole-in-one in two days.

    Matteson, playing two groups behind Fowler, responded with an eagle on the par-5 fourth hole to jump back in front.

    Matteson’s edge grew to two strokes with a birdie on the par-4 No. 6, and he led by two at the turn. But Fowler birdied the 10th, 11th and 12th to reclaim the lead.

    Matteson tied it with a birdie on the par-5 11th.

    Fowler dropped a stroke with a bogey on the par-3 13th. But he regained his composure and pulled back into a tie with a 30-foot birdie putt on the 14th.

    Moments later, a roar went up behind Fowler: Matteson had answered with his own birdie on the 12th and led again.

    Matteson clung to the lead as the duel moved to the final holes. With a chance to tie on 16, Fowler missed a 45-foot birdie putt by inches.

    Fowler was still in the hunt until the par-4 18th, when his tee shot landed on the side of a fairway bunker. Fowler put his next shot into a bunker to the left of the green, then chipped to the fringe and narrowly missed a par-saving putt.

    The victory capped a strong final two months for Matteson, who played inconsistently for much of the year.

    Matteson missed the cut in 11 of his first 22 starts this season. But he found his form as the year wound down, making the cut in his final eight events and finishing in the top 20 three times.

     




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  • Lucas Glover Coasts to Five Shot Grand Slam Win

    U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover brought a new set of irons to the PGA Grand Slam of Golf to start getting ready for next year, and it worked out beautifully in Bermuda at the PGA Grand Slam of Golf.


    LUCAS GLOVER  Picture © Getty Images

    Glover briefly gave up the lead to British Open champion Stewart Cink until running off three straight birdies around the turn at Port Royal Golf Course and closing with a 5-under 66 for a five-shot victory.

    Masters champion Angel Cabrera also had a 66 and finished second after Cink bogeyed the last hole for a 70. PGA champion Y.E. Yang, still struggling with jet lag after a flight full of delays from South Korea, shot 70 to finish last among the four major champions.

    “I brought out new irons this week with the new grooves just to try and see how they work, because I wanted a couple of rounds under my belt with this new model,” Glover said. “So Nike made a good set, and I think I like them.”

    A new rule changing the dimensions of grooves in irons starts next year, although it is expected to affect wedges the most, and Glover kept his old wedges in the bag this week because he didn’t want to give up too much of an advantage.

    Ultimately, he won with his putter, especially the birdie putts on the ninth, 10th and 11th holes to pull away. Cink made bogey on the 12th and 13th, eliminating any drama in Bermuda.

    Glover finished at 11-under 131 and earned $600,000, pushing his total for the year over $4 million.

    Cabrera, who won the Grand Slam two years ago when it first moved to Bermuda, finished at 136 and made $300,000. Cink earned $250,000 and Yang took home $200,000.

    For at least a couple of hours, it looked as though the 36-hole event might be headed for a playoff for the third straight year.

    Cink opened with two birdies, and another birdie at No. 5 gave the British Open champion the lead. Glover’s birdie on the ninth put him in a tie for the lead as they headed to the back nine, and it was over four holes later. Glover birdied the next two holes, Cink followed with two bogeys and no one else had a serious chance of catching the U.S. Open champion.

    “I had it going really well, and then I just … I don’t know, the wheels kind of fell off out there,” Cink said. “And then the bogey I made on 12, really, I just felt like the momentum just sort of dissipated completely.”

    Cabrera also was in the hunt until he missed a birdie putt at No. 12 that had the makings of a two-shot swing.

    “I made what I made and I missed what I missed, and I think that the 12th hole was a key there,” Cabrera said. “I went on to lose it, on the 12th hole, when Lucas had made a very important long putt for par, and I missed a short one for birdie there.”




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  • Mike Weir Happy for Frys Open to Stay in the Desert

    The Frys.com Open has camped at Grayhawk Golf Course until its home course in California is ready.

    Mike Weir has heard good things about the event’s future home at the Institute Golf Course in Morgan Hill, Calif. But after winning the inaugural Frys.com Open in 2007 and finishing in a fourth-place tie last year, Weir is happy the tournament has at least one more year in the desert.


    MIKE WEIR  Picture © Getty Images

    “You still hate to see it leave here,” Weir said on Wednesday. “I love coming here.”

    Two years ago, Weir joined dozens of Canadian fans for an impromptu toast outside the media center after his one-stroke victory over Mark Hensby. Weir celebrated his first tour victory in three years—and he hasn’t won since.

    “It’s been a little bit of a drought again,” said Weir, whose best finishes this season were third in the Bob Hope Classic in January and second at Pebble Beach the following month.

    This is the third year the Frys.com Open has been played on the par-70, 7,125-yard Raptor Course as part of the PGA Tour’s Fall Series. Victories and earnings in the five fall events count on tour records and in the world golf rankings.

    There’s a $5 million purse, with the winner taking home $900,000.

    Scottsdale is one of only two cities, along with Orlando, that hosts two PGA tour events. In February, TPC Scottsdale is home to the FBR Open, the tour’s most heavily attended tournament.

    But the struggling economy has put a squeeze on Scottsdale’s two events.

    The FBR Open, formerly called the Phoenix Open, is seeking a new sponsor after FBR announced it would not renew its deal after 2010.

    Meanwhile, the Frys.com Open is “year-to-year” at Grayhawk, tournament director Scott Reid said. The Institute won’t be ready to host the event in 2010, he said, and organizers will consider other cities as potential hosts.

    “I think that Grayhawk would continue to host this event if we wanted to stay,” Reid said. “But I think we’re just kind of going to evaluate the opportunities that might be in another market that doesn’t have a PGA Tour event already.”

    The Frys.com Open drew 35,450 last year, up about 8,000 from its first year as word spread about the event. The Frys.com Open doesn’t draw the same partying throngs as the FBR Open, but that can be a bonus for golf fans.

    “We feel like we’re more of a true golf-fans event,” Reid said. “It’s more about the golf tournament, seeing the players and seeing the golf than it is about being seen.”

    This year’s tournament has attracted some big names in the field of 132, including Fred Couples, David Duval and Justin Leonard.

    Some golfers, like Couples, Tom Lehman and Tim Clark, are playing because the course is in their neighborhood.

    “They can sleep in their own bed and still play for a $5 million pursue,” Reid said.

    For others, the tourney represents a chance to move up on the money list.

    “You’ve still got stuff to play for,” Clark said. “A win is big. It does a lot for you.”

    Just ask defending champion Cameron Beckman.

    Beckman entered last year’s Frys.com Open ranked 176th on the money list and 447th in the world. He had skipped eight weeks because of back problems and was in danger of losing his tour card.

    But Beckman defeated Kevin Sutherland on the second playoff hole to earn his second career victory.

    Beckman’s only other tour win had come in 2001, in the Southern Farm Bureau Classic. In between victories, Beckman had to go back to Q school twice. Thanks to his victory here last year, Beckman has an exemption through 2010.

    “I went through some tour schools in between (victories) and had some rough years,” the 39-year-old Beckman said. “For some of us, if you’re not playing well, you’re trying to keep a job.”




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  • Lucas Glover Leads Grand Slam with Record Round

    Lucas Glover shot a course record Tuesday to dominate the first round of the PGA Grand Slam.

    Glover hit six birdies and an eagle to finish at 6-under 65 at the newly renovated Port Royal Golf Course, but bogeys at Nos. 13 and 16 stopped him from taking total control of the tournament.


    SPLASHING!  Picture © Getty Images

    The U.S. Open champion owed his record-setting round to a hot putting, including monster putts of 60-plus feet on Nos. 4 and 17, which earned him the eagle and a two-shot lead over Stewart Cink.

    “I played well,” Glover said. “I’m really pleased with my round. I didn’t know what to expect. I think, truthfully, not seeing the course might have helped, because we might not have known where some of the trouble was.”

    Despite missing several putts on the back nine, British Open champion Cink remained confident that he could chase down Glover.

    “I think the greens are, they are tricky to read,” Cink said. “I’ll maybe slightly adjust for tomorrow.”

    While Glover and Cink had good rounds, Angel Cabrera and Y.E. Yang struggled. Cabrera finished five shots behind Glover, with four bogeys on the back nine. At the par-5 17th hole, Cabrera duffed two chip shots and then two-putted from 14 feet.

    Yang, still recovering from the long flight from South Korea, finished with an even par 71.

    “I tried my best,” Yang said. “Unfortunately, I didn’t hit under par. Fortunately, I didn’t embarrass myself by hitting over par. Hopefully, tomorrow I’ll end in on a stronger note.”




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  • Martin Kaymer Returns After Foot Injury

    Talented young German Martin Kaymer will make his comeback from injury at this week’s Castello Masters in Spain.

    The 24-year-old, who won back-to-back tournaments in July when he lifted the French Open and Scottish Open trophies, has been sidelined by a foot problem for seven weeks.

    MARTIN KAYMER   Picture © Getty Images

    “I am really looking forward to getting back out on the golf course,” said Kaymer on the tour’s official website on Monday.

    “My foot has healed well and the doctor has told me I am fit, to put pressure on the foot and play normally.”

    Kaymer was injured in a go-karting accident and his long absence has allowed British pair Lee Westwood and Rory McIlroy to overtake him in the Race to Dubai money list.

    “Hopefully, I can get back to the form I was in before the accident because I was playing great and was top in the Race to Dubai,” he said.

    “If I can get back to that kind of form I have a chance to win tournaments and the Race to Dubai itself. But I have to be patient and make sure I am confident my foot is 100 percent this week.”

    World number 10 Sergio Garcia returns to the scene of his tear-jerking victory in Castellon last year when he defends his title at the Club de Campo del Mediterraneo where his father is the club professional.

    “Winning the Castello Masters was one of the most emotional moments of my career,” said the Spaniard. “It was a dream come true and a very special victory in front of all my family, friends and members of the club where I have grown up.

    “Many people came to watch that day and they made me feel they wanted me to win which is something I will never forget. I started crying during the prize giving as it was so emotional.”

    The tournament starts on Thursday.




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  • European Tour Gains Two Tournaments, Loses Three

    The European PGA Tour added a pair of tournaments to its 2010 schedule on Monday and left three others off the list.

    The Africa Open in South Africa and the Hassan 11 Golf Trophy in Morocco were put on the schedule, while the Johnnie Walker Classic in Australia, the Malaysian Open and the Indonesian Open were missing.

    The three missing events had a combined prize fund of more than $4 million in 2009.

    The Africa Open, which will be co-sanctioned with the Sunshine Golf Tour, will be held at the East London Golf Club in the first week of January. In March, the Hassan 11 Golf Trophy, which dates back to 1971 and is being upgraded to Tour status, will be played at the Royal Dar-Es-salam Club in Rabat. The tournament features a new celebrity pro-am format over the first two rounds.

    The Tour also said that the Race to Dubai, the European tour’s money list bonus scheme, will be in place again next season. The Race to Dubai’s future was put in doubt when Leisurecorp, the initial backers of the scheme, was hit by the recession and taken over by Nakheel Leisure, which negotiated a $5 million reduction in the prize fund.

    “We are committed and proud to take our partnership with The European Tour forward into the new season,” Nakheel Leisure managing director Hamza Mustafa said. “The inaugural Race to Dubai has been a phenomenal success and I believe we are currently seeing the benefits of the new format with some impressive fields in the latter part of the season as players race to qualify for the Dubai World Championship.”

    The 2010 season starts in December 2009 with two tournaments in South Africa. It then moves on to the three-event desert swing in Abu Dhabi, Qatar and Dubai in late January.

     




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  • Annika Sorenstam Enjoying Life Away from Golf

    At 6 weeks old, Ava Madelyn McGee is already showing a stubborn streak—just like her mum.

    Annika Sorenstam isn’t too surprised at the personality her daughter is developing. Her own tenacity drove the golfer to 72 LPGA Tour wins, including 10 majors.

    But right now Sorenstam is loving leaving that world behind.

    “The best thing is to not live out of a suitcase,” she told The Associated Press on Monday. “I never used to unpack because I was going two days later. Now things are actually hanging in the closet. Things are in the drawers. It’s kind of nice.”

    The 39-year-old Swedish great left the tour at the end of last year, then married Mike McGee in January. Their daughter was born Sept. 1.

    Ava took her first plane ride Monday. Sorenstam wasn’t going to miss the Women’s Sports Foundation’s annual banquet in New York, where she will be honored Tuesday. Sorenstam’s foundation is also partnering with the organization to create an award that will recognize a young female athlete who inspires others.

    The trip went smoothly, but Sorenstam isn’t planning to do much traveling with her newly expanded family. She relishes getting to know her neighbors at her home in Orlando, Fla.—and it’s not as though she’s not busy. She’s involved in several business ventures.

    And of course motherhood is a full-time job in itself.

    “I thought leaving the tour would be hard,” Sorenstam said, “but I realized there are other things than golf.”

    She practiced Sunday for the first time since her daughter was born because she’ll be playing with some of her foundation’s sponsors while she’s in New York this week. Sorenstam just did some chipping and putting; afterward, her hands and body were sore.

    “It’s just very, very strange,” she said. “I took the clubs out of the garage and hadn’t really looked in the bag for months. Just making sure everything was there where it should be. Gripping the club, getting a new glove out. It’s just a feeling of holding a club that’s different.”

    Sorenstam didn’t want to use the word retirement when she left the tour. She still doesn’t, but she also doesn’t sound like an athlete pining to return to competition soon.

    “I didn’t want to close the doors,” she said. “You never know what can happen. I’m still young in the sense I can return to competition if I wanted to.”

    And she’s never far from the game of golf. Sorenstam was involved in the sport’s successful bid to be added to the 2016 Olympics.

    “I think it’s wonderful for the game of golf, maybe not in the countries where I played, in the U.S. and Sweden and the European countries,” she said. “But if you look globally it’s huge, to give other girls and boys the opportunity to play the game.”

    She also serves as an adviser to the board of directors of the LPGA Tour. The tour is seeking a new commissioner after Carolyn Bivens resigned in July, bowing to pressure from players who were upset about the organization’s economic woes and her leadership.

    “We’re looking for a new leader, maybe for a little bit new direction, a little bit more focus and a vision—we haven’t had that in a while,” Sorenstam said. “It’s always tough when you change, especially when the environment is like this.

    “Right now we have to be in survival mode. The economy is very, very tough and we’ve lost a few more tournaments. We’ve got to really focus on relationships—build new ones and cherish the old ones.”

    Sorenstam had a day Monday that any new mother could relate to. Up at 2:30 a.m. with her daughter, she later rushed to the airport on no sleep, never even getting a chance to brush her hair. In New York, she found herself changing a diaper in the hotel lobby restroom.

    She looks at Ava and marvels, “Wow, this is ours.”

    “Then you start thinking about (teaching) morals and values,” she said. “It’s not easy. There’s a lot of things to balance and juggle. You just get a smile once in a while that makes it all worth it.”




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  • Tiger Woods Rates Season a Great Success

    Tiger Woods usually measures the success of a season by the number of majors he wins but after clinching a Presidents Cup for the U.S. on Sunday the world number one conceded this year had been special.


    FRED COUPLES & TIGER WOODS    Picture © Getty Images

    While Woods was unable to add to his collection of 14 major titles, it would be hard to find any disappointment in a campaign that produced six PGA Tour wins, a $10 million bonus as Tour Championship winner and the winning putt in a 19 1/2 to 14 1/2 Cup win over the Internationals.

    “It’s a great year, are you kidding me?,” Woods told reporters. “Even though I didn’t win a major championship, to come back from what I came back from, to have the success I had this year, I don’t think anyone would have predicted that and I’m very proud of that.”

    The season began with great uncertainty for Woods, who did not return to the PGA Tour until late February for the WGC-Accenture Match Play World Championship after eight months out recovering from reconstructive knee surgery.

    The 33-year-old American quickly confirmed he was back at his best, his victories producing more than $20 million in prize money to make him sport’s first $1 billion athlete according to Forbes magazine.

    The Presidents Cup victory also came with a tasty measure of revenge for Woods, who secured the trophy with a six-foot putt for a crushing 6&5 win over South Korea’s Yang Yong-eun, who spectacularly overhauled him in the final round of the PGA Championship.

    “He got me there and I figured I would get him here,” said Woods. “It certainly wasn’t the same atmosphere but it was an important but then it was still an important point.

    “He got off to a good start.

    “He birdied the first and I made a mistake there and from then on, I actually played pretty good.

    “I hit a couple loose shots here and there but I really putted well, other than missing that putt over there at 12, that was about it.”

    There were plenty of fist-pumps during a week in which Woods went unbeaten, posting a record of 5-0, but the clinching putt produced only a muted reaction, the world number one taking off his cap then walking over to shake hands with Yang.

    “I did not know at all because last time I saw the board, we were down six matches, so I figured that I could handle my match and just worry about that,” said Woods, who becomes just third player to go 5-0 in a Presidents Cup giving him a record 18 career wins.

    “I saw we were down six matches at one point so I just kept my head down and tried to extend my own lead.

    “I did pretty good coming in.”




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  • Colin Montgomerie Impressed by Tiger's Perfection

    European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie believes Tiger Woods’ perfect performance in the Presidents Cup will make his own team’s task harder at the Ryder Cup.


    Picture © Getty Images

    Woods, who missed the U.S. win at the Ryder Cup last year because of knee surgery, made the clinching putt for a 19 1/2 -14 1/2 win Sunday over an International team in San Francisco.

    “He seems to have his team game down as well as his individual one now,” Montgomerie said at a news conference at Celtic Manor with U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin.

    “Five points out of five. There’s never been a European who has ever achieved that feat in Ryder Cup play. This will be difficult enough to try and regain the Ryder Cup without Tiger Woods (on the American team) never mind if he’s back to his top form and winning five points out of five. It makes our job even tougher.”

    Appointed in February, Montgomerie needs to turn around a European team outplayed 16 1/2 to 11 1/2 at Valhalla last year.

    “So we have to counteract that by playing as well we can against him and also the other 11 players on the team,” Montgomerie said. “But I think it makes it, I hate to say it in front of Corey Pavin and our American friends, but it makes it a better win if we can regain the Ryder Cup with Tiger Woods in it.”

    Woods and Steve Stricker won all four of their matches. But Pavin said he hadn’t yet decided whether they would be paired next year at Celtic Manor.

    “It’s not safe to say,” he said. “I haven’t made any pairings yet and you have to assume that both Tiger and Steve Stricker both made the team as well. They are both in tremendous form right now. If you put two players together who are playing well, they are going to be a tough team to beat.”

    Unbeaten in singles matches, Montgomerie has played in eight Ryder Cups and been on five winning teams. He and Pavin, who played in three, are considered two of the most competitive team players.

    “We were friends before we were made captains of our respective Ryder Cup teams and will remain so. Of course, this is not an exhibition match,” Montgomerie said. “So this is a highly competitive competition and, the more competitive it is and the more passion that is brought to it, it just fuels people watching and viewing the Ryder Cup. But it’s not OK to cheer for a missed putt and never has been and never will be.”

    The rival captains played nine holes of a course that has changed considerably in the last few years.

    Organizers weren’t happy with the original layout, saying it was too strenuous for thousands of fans to climb up and down the course. Nine new holes were constructed, 1-5, 14, 16-18. The 18th tee now has a spectacular panoramic view of the course and the rolling hills in the background.




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  • Cory Pavin Calls for Pause for Missed Putts

    Captain Corey Pavin will have no problem if home fans celebrate missed putts from his U.S. team at next year’s Ryder Cup—as long as they leave a polite gap before applauding.


    COREY PAVIN Picture © Getty Images

    Pavin is promising an understated style of captaincy at next October’s event and the American would ideally like a corresponding performance from the crowd.

    “Obviously the fans (make it difficult),” Pavin told Reuters in an interview on Monday after playing nine holes of the Celtic Manor course that will host next year’s event.

    “Eighty percent are going to be cheering for the home team and that’s tough.”

    He added: “I think it’s OK to applaud after a proper pause, whatever that might be.

    “It’s fine to have some applause to show your team’s just won a hole but you can’t be disrespectful to the U.S. players, and vice-versa.”

    The slightly built American, U.S. Open champion in 1995, cut a quiet, understated figure in Monday’s match and that is a style crowds will get used to next year.

    “I think I’m not going to be running around all over the place and patting players on the butt,” Pavin said after the light-hearted match pitting himself and Welsh opera singer Bryn Terfel against rival skipper Colin Montgomerie and radio presenter Chris Evans had finished all-square in glorious weather.

    “There might be a player who needs a word of encouragement here and there but all these guys are professionals, they know how to play and to compete and I expect them to come in here and be ready to go.

    “They know how to deal with the pressure. I might say something here and there but for the most part I’ll be a quiet captain.”

    Pavin was a playing member of the last U.S. team to win the Ryder Cup on European soil, back in 1993. He knows the quest to repeat that feat could prove to be frustrating on a personal level.

    “As a player … I have control,” he said. “As a captain, I’m at the mercy of my players.”




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  • Straightforward Presidents Cup Win for Powerful US Team

    Fred Couples had his best week in golf without ever swinging a club.

    The U.S. captain sat at the center of the table, lined on both sides by a dozen players who had done just about everything right at the Presidents Cup and walked away with another overwhelming victory Sunday over the International team.


    FRED COUPLES Picture © Getty Images

    Sitting next to each other were Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, who didn’t lose a match all week. Woods became only the third player in the Presidents Cup to go 5-0, while Mickelson was 4-0-1 and every bit as impressive the way he raised the level of three partners.

    At the far end of the table was NBA icon Michael Jordan, who inspired awe and preached teamwork.

    No wonder it all felt so easy.

    “Basically, these guys played golf and did it all,” Couples said. “I would like to say that I didn’t have a whole lot to do with it.”

    A strong American team lived up to its reputation at Harding Park with a 19 1/2 -14 1/2 victory, keeping their record perfect on American soil and winning the gold cup for the third straight time.

    “They are just one hell of a team,” Ernie Els said. “We have to pretty much go back to the drawing board, because they are a pretty well-oiled team, and it’s hard to beat that kind of team.”

    Woods and Steve Stricker became the first partnership in the Presidents Cup to win all four of their matches. Woods looked every bit the world’s No. 1 player in the world when he delivered the defining moment of these matches—on the verge of losing in foursomes Saturday, he holed a 25-foot birdie putt on the 17th and hit a 3-iron to 8 feet for an eagle that was conceded in a crucial victory.

    Stricker, the No. 3 player in the world who won three times this year, pulled more than his weight in his pairings with Woods.

    Mickelson was unbeaten for the second time in the last three Presidents Cup, only this was more impressive. He took Anthony Kim and Sean O’Hair along for his ride, and picked up Justin Leonard in another match on the day after Leonard missed a short putt that might have given the International team momentum.

    “Phil Mickelson—if I had to say anything from my perspective—was able to take guys who had not really been successful on certain days and turned them … giving them confidence to help them rebound and get back to their game form,” Jordan said in his only remarks at the winning press conference.

    “That, to me, symbolizes what a team is all about.”

    The top three players in the world—all Americans in every sense—combined to go 13-1-1.

    Perhaps it was only fitting that the clinching putt went to Woods, the first time that has happened in the 11 times he has competed in the Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup.

    Much was made about his match with Y.E. Yang, who ended one of golf’s great streaks by coming from behind in the final round to beat Woods at the PGA Championship and end his otherwise splendid year without a major.

    That was for a major. This was only for a point.

    “I tried to get my point,” Woods said. “And I got my point.”

    He lost the first hole, and that was it. With three birdies in a five-hole stretch at the turn, he piled up the lead and kept his head down, not bothering to look at a board to do the math and realize his match would be the one that gave the Americans the winning point.

    “I was 5 up, trying to make it 6,” Woods said, and it ended at the 13th hole for a 6-and-5 victory.

    Ahead of him, British Open champion Stewart Cink earned his first outright victory of the week by cruising past Adam Scott, while Kim and O’Hair followed with blowout victories, and Hunter Mahan wore down Camilo Villegas.

    Behind him, Mickelson was the last match on the course and made a birdie on the 17th for a 2-and-1 victory over Retief Goosen.

    Couples never wore an ear piece attached to a radio so he could keep tabs on every player and stay abreast of every match. He wondered about Harding Park, cutting up with both teams.

    His only nervous moment came Saturday night with the final pairings, when International captain Greg Norman surprised him by not loading his best players at the top. Couples was uneasy about the matches, but not for long.

    “I’m sure we tried our best all week,” Geoff Ogilvy said after his 2-and-1 victory over Stricker. “Coming in today, we had too much to do and the U.S. team was obviously very motivated.”

    Woods joined Mark O’Meara (1996) and Shigeki Maruyama (1998) as the only Presidents Cup players to go 5-0, and his 18 career wins is the most by anyone in the Presidents Cup.

    Even after his best performance in a team event, he kept the focus on team.

    “It’s one of my better Cup experiences—we won, and that’s the name of the game, whether you go 0-5 or 5-0,” Woods said. “The fact that we won, that’s the No. 1 thing. We came here to win as a team, and we did it.”

    The International team was left searching for answers.

    It didn’t have the strongest players this time, yet that doesn’t always matter in his format. More troublesome is that the International side lost by at least three points for the third consecutive time, and the overall points in this series favors the Americans by 144-119.

    Norman attributed the difference this week to putting, which is true in golf no matter what the occasion. He also conceded that America’s best three players made it tough on his team.

    “Woods won all five matches—that’s huge,” Norman said. “But that’s what you expect out of your No. 1 player in the world. You need him to step up to the plate, and sometimes he hasn’t done that. And this time, he did do it.

    “You need your big gun … and he stepped up the plate big time for his team.”

    Norman got some good performance from his side.

    Ryo Ishikawa, the 18-year-old sensation from Japan, beat 49-year-old Kenny Perry and was 3-2 for the week. Vijay Singh earned the most points for the International team by going 2-0-3, and he won praise for his sportsmanship when he conceded a 7-foot birdie putt to Lucas Glover on the 18th hole to halve the match.

    Norman would willingly be captain again for 2011, especially since the Presidents Cup returns to Australia at Royal Melbourne. It was last played there in 1998, the only time the International team won the trophy.




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