Quantcast November 2009 - Posts - Golf International Magazine Online
Tees2Greens Home Page
in

Navigate This Blog

Have You Seen This?

Have You Seen This?

Subscribe To This Blog

Golf International Magazine Online

Follow The World... with Golf International Magazine Subscribe Online

November 2009 - Posts

  • Molinari Brothers Give Italy First World Cup Title

    Brothers Francesco and Edoardo Molinari won a dramatic three-way final round tussle with Sweden and Ireland to claim a first World Cup of Golf for Italy by one stroke on Sunday.


    THE MOLINARI BROTHERS Picture © Getty Images

    The duo found their putting touch on the back nine as their rivals faltered to finish with a four-under-par 68 for a total of 29-under for the $5.5 million tournament at Mission Hills.

    Ireland’s Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell, who had led all week after an opening 58, carded an error-strewn 70 to share second with defending champion Swedes Henrik Stenson and Robert Karlsson, who shot a 69.

    Edoardo leapt around the 18th green after securing victory with a two-foot par putt before embracing his younger brother — the first siblings to lift the John Jay Hopkins trophy in the 55 versions of the event.

    “It’s amazing, we don’t really have any words,” 27-year-old Francesco, who will share a cheque for $1.7 million with his brother, said in a greenside TV interview.

    “It’s been really tough all day, we were playing against some of the best golfers in the world. It was really tough until the last green. But it’s even better when it’s like this.”

    Ireland had started the final day foursomes with a one-shot cushion but were drawn into the chasing pack when world number 10 McIlroy went into the trees with his drive at the third.

    The Ulstermen looked to have recovered their nerves, however, with a string of four birdies from the fourth to surge three shots clear.

    Sweden, who shot a final-round 63 to win last year, had picked up two shots before dropping their first and only shot of the tournament at the eighth.

    Calamity struck for the Irish around the turn, however, when they chalked up two more bogeys at the eighth and 10th holes, the latter when McIlroy missed a two-foot par putt.

    The Molinaris, meanwhile, had gone through 10 holes at a steady one-under before three successive birdie putts from Francesco, the second a curling beauty from 30 feet, broke the three-way tie then put the Italians ahead by two.

    The Swedes and Irish cut the lead to one shot with birdies at the 15th and there was more drama at the 18th.

    First Stenson’s birdie putt tracked around the lip of the hole and out and then Edoardo’s second shot went into a greenside bunker, while the Irish carved out a birdie chance.

    World number 37 Francesco, however, came up with a beautiful sand wedge to two feet and, when McDowell’s putt came up short, Edoardo had a simple shot for championship.

    Francesco had seven top 10s finishes on the European Tour this year, while his brother Edoardo, the 2005 U.S. Amateur champion, was the Challenge Tour champion.

    After his victory in a playoff over Karlsson at the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan last week, 28-year-old Edoardo has now won four of his last six tournaments.

    England’s Ian Poulter and Ross Fisher finally lived up to their billing as one of the pre-tournament favourites with a 64 for fourth place on 26-under.

    World number eight Sergio Garcia missed a two-foot putt as Spain finished a miserable week with a double bogey that left them 22 shots behind the winners with only the hapless Scottish duo (78) behind in 28th and last place.




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Tiger Woods Cancels Police Meeting Again

    Tiger Woods canceled yet another meeting with state troopers but, for the first time, talked about his car crash on his Web site, saying it was his fault, that his wife acted courageously and that remaining details were private.


    TIGER WOODS  Picture © Getty Images

    The statement was posted about an hour before troopers were to meet with the world’s No. 1 golfer at his home inside the gates of Isleworth. A meeting was not rescheduled.

    In a tape of a 911 call released Sunday, two days after the accident, a neighbor told dispatchers that a black Cadillac Escalade hit a tree and “I have someone down in front of my house.”

    Woods’ neighbor never mentions the golfer by name, and the call is inaudible at several points because of the bad connection.

    “I came out here just to see what was going on,” the neighbor, who was not identified, told dispatchers. “I see him, and he’s laying down.”

    One woman is heard in the background yelling, “What happened?”

    In his statement, Woods took responsibility for the accident.

    “This situation is my fault, and it’s obviously embarrassing to my family and me,” Woods said. “I’m human and I’m not perfect. I will certainly make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

    Woods said it was a private matter, and he wanted to keep it that way. What he failed to address was where he was going at that hour.

    “Although I understand there is curiosity, the many false, unfounded and malicious rumors that are currently circulating about my family and me are irresponsible,” he said.

    Windermere police chief Daniel Saylor has said Woods’ wife, Elin, used a golf club to smash out a rear window to help him get out of the SUV when she heard the crash from inside their home at 2:25 a.m. Friday.

    “The only person responsible for the accident is me,” Woods said. “My wife, Elin, acted courageously when she saw I was hurt and in trouble. She was the first person to help me. Any other assertion is absolutely false.”

    Sgt. Kim Montes of the Florida Highway Patrol said Woods’ attorney, Mark Nejame, informed the patrol that Woods would not be meeting with troopers Sunday afternoon.

    “It has not been rescheduled,” Montes said. “He’s not required by law to give us a statement, and we’ll move forward with our investigation without it.”

    Police first tried to interview Woods on Friday, only for his wife to ask if they could return the next day because he was sleeping.

    As they headed to Woods’ $2.4 million house inside the gates of Isleworth on Saturday afternoon, FHP dispatch put through a phone call to troopers from Woods’ agent, informing them that Woods and his wife would be unavailable to talk until Sunday.

    The accident came two days after the National Enquirer published a story alleging that Woods had been seeing a New York night club hostess, and that they recently were together in Melbourne, where Woods competed in the Australian Masters.

    The woman, Rachel Uchitel, denied having an affair with Woods when contacted by The Associated Press.

    Los Angeles attorney Gloria Allred confirmed she was representing Uchitel when she was reached by the AP on Sunday.

    “She is with me in L.A.,” Allred said later in an e-mail to the AP. “We plan to meet and then we’ll decide on the next step, which we do not plan to announce to the press.”

    Uchitel arrived at Los Angeles International Airport late Sunday morning, where she was met by Allred and escorted out of the baggage claim area and into a black car. Uchitel did not speak to reporters except to ask that she be left alone.

    Woods is to host his Chevron World Challenge this week in Thousand Oaks, Calif., which benefits his foundation. Woods’ news conference had been scheduled for Tuesday afternoon, although it was not clear if he would still play, or even attend.

    “We do not know if Tiger is playing; we are anticipating a great week of competition,” said Greg McLaughlin, the tournament director and president of his foundation.

    Aside from occasional criticism of his temper inside the ropes, Woods has kept himself out of the news beyond his sport. In an October posting on his Facebook account, Woods wrote, “I’m asked why people don’t often see me and Elin in gossip magazines or tabloids. I think we’ve avoided a lot of media attention because we’re kind of boring. …”

    “He’s an iconic brand, the platinum standard,” said John Rowady, president of rEvolution, a Chicago-based sports marketing agency. “I find it interesting how he’s being attacked by so many sides after how gracious he’s been. But even the best of celebrities who try to do their best can be riddled with controversy.”

     




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lee Westwood Claims European Tour Double

    Lee Westwood achieved a European Tour double on Sunday by winning the season-ending Dubai World Championship and the overall money-list title.


    LEE WESTWOOD  Picture © Getty Images

    An imperious eight-under-par 64 earned a final 23-under total of 265 and a runaway six-stroke win over fellow Briton Ross McGowan (68).

    Westwood’s rival for the Race to Dubai money-list, Rory McIlroy of Britain, was third on 273 after a 67.

    Englishman Westwood picked up 1.77 million euros ($2.37 million) for his double triumph.

    “The way I played today under this much pressure and the circumstances of it all was about as good as I’ve ever played,” Westwood told reporters after a flawless eight-birdie round.

    “It’s easily the biggest moment in my golfing career so far. I knew what I had to do and to go out and shoot 66-64 at the weekend, making no bogeys, gives me a lot of confidence for the future.

    “My commiserations go out to Rory.”

    McIlroy arrived here leading the money-list but the 20-year-old Northern Irishman was eclipsed by Westwood, who started the week in second position.

    A dejected McIlroy said: “Every time I looked up at the leaderboard Lee was making birdies.

    “He played unbelievable golf and fair play to him. Lee’s different class and he deserves to be number one.”

    It was Westwood’s second money-list crown after he also finished European number one in 2000.

    He threw down the gauntlet to McIlroy with five birdies in six holes from the second.

    The pick of those was a 35-footer down the hill on the third as Westwood turned on an impeccable display, particularly with the putter.

    By contrast McIlroy could only par the first eight holes, his frustration showing when he smashed a hole in an advertising hoarding at the seventh after his ball had bounced into wood chippings.

    The incident seemed to galvanise the youngster as he rattled off six birdies in nine holes to the 17th.

    Westwood proved unassailable though, even to the dogged McGowan who collected five successive birdies on the back nine before wilting with two closing bogeys.

    The Ryder Cup stalwart became the first player to win the tour’s end-of-season finale and money-list title since Colin Montgomerie in 1993.

    Having slumped to 246th in the world in 2002, Westwood will now climb to fourth in the rankings.

    Westwood put his resurgence down to better fitness, an improved short-game and taking on Europe’s best caddie in fellow Englishman Billy Foster.

    A near-miss at this year’s British Open, when he missed out on a playoff by one stroke, also helped.

    “Turnberry felt like a championship I should have won,” said Westwood. “But you’ve got to turn a third place in a major into a positive.

    “Today I felt similar pressure. It means a lot to say I’m European number one again and I gain an incredible amount of confidence from it.

    “When April and the U.S. Masters comes around next year I won’t have forgotten this, it will be crystal clear.”




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Rain cuts tournament to 54 holes

    More rain on already saturated grounds at The Houstonian Country Club washed out play at the LPGA Tour Championship on Saturday, forcing tour officials to cut the season-ending event to 54 holes.


    WATER LOGGED.. Picture © Getty Images

    More than 1.4 inches (three centimeters) of rain fell on the course from Friday morning until the decision was made to call off play on Saturday at 1:30 p.m. local time.

    Play is expected to resume at 9 a.m. on Sunday to complete the second round. A cut will be made to the low 70 scores and ties, and a third round and final round will be played starting at 7 a.m. on Monday.

    “We had a plan to try and play 72 holes by Monday, but that would have required players to possibly stay over for Tuesday and we didn’t want to do that,” said Doug Brecht, the tour’s vice president for rules and competition.

    Tournament leader Lorena Ochoa, who can win her fourth straight U.S. LPGA Player of the Year award with a win this week, has not hit a shot in competition since early Thursday afternoon when she finished a first-round 66.

    Ochoa and most of the players were not in the clubhouse when the decision was made to cancel and return on Sunday, when the forecast is for sunny and dry conditions.

    The rain had been forecast to clear up late Friday and give way to cool and dry conditions on Saturday. But the rain continued overnight and was still heavy at 7 a.m. Saturday when play was scheduled to resume.

    Because of miscommunication between local tournament officials and the U.S. LPGA, players were sent out to their assigned holes early Saturday, only to be told the course was unplayable and sent back to the clubhouse.

    “I asked when I arrived this morning if the course would be ready for play at 7 a.m., and I was told absolutely it would be,” Brecht said. “When it became light around 6:45 a.m., it was clear that was not the case, so we just turned the players around and sent them back.”

    The tournament was nearly canceled or moved this summer when original title sponsor Texas financier R. Allen Stanford was accused of running a giant Ponzi scheme. Then the tournament’s top attraction, Michelle Wie, dropped out after the first round with an ankle injury and popular tour presence Natalie Gulbis withdrew with an undisclosed illness without even hitting a shot.

    Sophie Gustafson, who technically is the second-round leader, having gotten to 4-under-par after playing 11 holes, said there was little the players could do with the wet weather.

    “All we can do is stay dry and get ready,” she said after signing autographs for fans at the clubhouse.

    Holes No. 3 and 5 were among those at the course that were under water and unplayable.

     




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Rickie Fowler & Mark Brooks Share Pebble Beach Invitational Lead

    Rickie Fowler shot a 5-under 67 at Del Monte, and former PGA champion Mark Brooks had a 69 at Spyglass Hill on Saturday to share the third-round lead in the Callaway Golf Pebble Beach Invitational.

    The 48-year-old Brooks, the tournament winner in 1992 and 2002, and Fowler, the 20-year-old former Oklahoma State star who had two top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour last month, had 7-under 209 totals.

    “I just played pretty solid,” said Brooks, who had four birdies and one bogey. “I wasn’t really in a lot of trouble.”

    In addition to his two Pebble Beach Invitational victories, Brooks was second behind LPGA Tour star Juli Inkster in 1990.

    “If it’s a nice day, guys can go low,” Brooks said about the final round at Pebble Beach. “I’ve played so many rounds here, it’s mind-boggling.”

    Fowler, who earlier this week was invited by Greg Norman to play in the Shark Shootout, had five birdies in his bogey-free round.

    “I had never played the course before,” Fowler said. “My caddie had walked the course, so I relied on him a lot. It made it a lot easier and I made a couple of good putts, too.”

    Second-round co-leader Matt Bettencourt shot a 69 at Spyglass Hill, and was tied with Bryce Molder at 6 under. Molder had a 70 at Pebble Beach.

    Former U.S. Open winner Scott Simpson, who carded a 68 at Spyglass, and Craig Bowden, who had a 73, also at Spyglass, followed at 4 under. Simpson was the leader among the 11 Champions Tour entrants. A Champions Tour player has never won the event.

    Two-time defending champion Tommy Armour III had a 70 at Pebble Beach en route to a 5-over total. He made the cut by two strokes.

    Mina Harigae, who will make her debut on the LPGA Tour next season, shot a 70 at Spyglass. At 2 under, she was the lone woman to make the cut.

    The top 40 pro scores and ties and the top-10 amateur teams advanced to the final round. The pro winner will earn $60,000 from the $300,000 purse.




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lee Westwood Moves Two Clear at Halfway

    Lee Westwood took advantage of a couple of putting errors by money-list rival Rory McIlroy to grab a two-shot lead after the second round of the season-ending Dubai World Championship on Friday.


    LEE WESTWOOD  Picture © Getty Images

    Westwood birdied the 18th, a tough par-five, to shoot a three-under 69 for a nine-under tally of 135.

    Fellow Briton McIlroy (69) shared second spot on 137 with overnight leader Robert Allenby of Australia (72), Colombian Camilo Villegas (71), South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen (66), Briton Ross McGowan (66) and Ireland’s Padraig Harrington (69).

    Triple major winner Harrington twice found water as he carded a double-bogey seven at the last hole.

    “I didn’t even know there was a water hazard left of the green,” the Irishman told reporters. “I’m glad it’s not Sunday when I did it but Friday.”

    Westwood, second behind Race to Dubai money-list leader McIlroy, was two shots adrift of his young rival after the Northern Irishman powered to the turn in 31 with three birdies and an eagle three courtesy of a superb approach to three feet at the seventh.

    However, missed putts of three and two feet for bogeys on 14 and 15 meant the 20-year-old McIlroy handed the initiative back to the Englishman.

    Like McIlroy, Westwood opened with two birdies in a row but then saw several chances go begging until he closed with two birdies in the last three holes.

    “It was a case of patience being a virtue and all good things coming to those who wait,” said Westwood, 36, after rounding off his day by sinking a 20-foot putt.

    The 2000 European number one was unaware he had been overtaken by McIlroy midway through the round because he has decided not to look at course leaderboards this week.

    “I’m trying to win the Dubai World Championship so there’s no room for thinking about what anyone else is doing, there’s not enough room in my head for that,” said Westwood.

    McIlroy tried his best to blot out his two putting mistakes.

    “I had a perfect front nine and then missed a couple of short putts but I still think I’m playing well enough to give myself a shot at the title,” he said.

    “I shouldn’t dwell on missed opportunities.”

    The two other players who can take the order of merit crown on Sunday, Martin Kaymer and Ross Fisher, were well off the pace.

    A 71 helped German Kaymer finish on two-under 142 while Briton Fisher was on 144 after another 71.

     




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • DA Points & Matt Bettencourt Take Over Pebble Beach Invitational Lead

    D.A. Points shot a 2-under 70 at Del Monte, and Matt Bettencourt had a 71 in wind and rain at Spyglass Hill to share the second-round lead in the Callaway Golf Pebble Beach Invitational on Friday.

    Points, 66th on the U.S. PGA Tour money list this season, had a scrambling round with two eagles, three birdies, two bogeys and a triple bogey.

    “I’ve had the most fortunate tee time of the tournament at 8:30 and we got through before it got too bad,” Points said. “I had some tough shots, but I played well overall. I had a recent top-10 finish and I was in the top 70 on the money list. I’m playing the best golf of my career and I just hope to keep it going.”

    Bettencourt, who won the 2008 Nationwide Tour Championship and just completed his rookie season on the U.S. PGA Tour, had four birdies and three bogeys to match Points at 6-under 138.

    “It was very windy and nasty,” Bettencourt said. “It was the toughest I’ve ever seen Spyglass. It was brutal.”

    Wind gusted to 40 mph (65 kph) and steady afternoon rain fell at all three tournament courses. Only six players in the field of 75 pros from the four major U.S. pro tours broke par. Seventeen pros shot 80 or higher and only eight players improved their scores from the first round.

    Champions Tour veteran Jim Thorpe, who had 72 at Spyglass Hill, and U.S. PGA Tour newcomer Craig Bowden, who shot a 68 at Del Monte, were tied for third at 5 under.

    Two-time tournament winner Mark Brooks, who had a 70 at Del Monte, and Bryce Molder, who shot a 71 at Spyglass, were 4 under.

    Olin Browne, who shared the first-round lead with John Cook, shot a 76 at Spyglass Hill to finish at 2 under. Cook, the winner of the Champions Tour’s Charles Schwab Cup Championship this month, carded a 77, also at Spyglass Hill.

    Cook was among three players at 1 under.

    Two-time defending champion Tommy Armour III shot an 80 at Spyglass Hill to finish at 7 over.

    Mina Harigae, who will make her debut on the U.S. LPGA Tour next season, shot a 74 at Del Monte and leads the four women pro entrants at even par 144.

    The 72-hole event continues on Saturday at all three courses. The final round on Sunday, which will include the top 40 pros and ties and top 10 teams, will be held at Pebble Beach. The pro winner will earn $60,000 from the $300,000 purse.

     




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lorena Ochoa Leads, Michelle Wie Withdraws

    Michelle Wie is gone, putting all the attention on Lorena Ochoa’s player of the year fight with Jiyai Shin at the LPGA Tour Championship.


    LORENA OCHOA  Picture © Getty Images

    Wie withdrew from the season-ending event Thursday because of a sprained left ankle, hours after Ochoa shot a 6-under 66 to take a one-shot lead over Reilley Rankin.

    The 20-year-old Wie, fresh off her first LPGA Tour victory last week at Ochoa’s tournament in Mexico, shot a 72 in the afternoon. She limped through her round on the gimpy ankle that she sprained during the Solheim Cup in August, went for treatment afterward and withdrew about an hour later.

    “I wanted to do everything I could do to fight through the injury,” Wie said in a statement. “It bothered me last week in Mexico, but I was able to play through the pain. I realized today that I wouldn’t be able to continue to play through it.”

    Ochoa teed off in the morning, before the wind picked up across the Houstonian Golf and Country Club.

    She was four shots ahead of Shin (70) on the leaderboard, but the 21-year-old South Korean leads Ochoa by eight points (156-148) in the race to become the tour’s player of the year. To earn the distinction this year, Ochoa must win this week or finish no worse than third and hope Shin places out of the top 10.

    But Ochoa says she’s actually feeling more relaxed this week after dealing with the demands of hosting a tournament a week ago.

    “Last week was a little bit tough in many different ways with all the things to do and all the pressure,” she said. “Everything is a little bit easier, if you compare it to last week.”

    Shin and Ochoa started on the back nine and both were 2 under after three holes. Shin added birdies at Nos. 13 and 15 to move to 4 under.

    Both players bogeyed the difficult 17th, then picked up birdies early on their second nines. Ochoa added birdies on Nos. 6, 8 and 9, capping her round with a 15-foot putt and a modest fist pump.

    “Tomorrow is a new start,” Ochoa said. “I’m going to play like I’m a few shots behind and continue being aggressive and give myself chances to win on Sunday.”

    Shin bogeyed two of her last four holes as the wind strengthened. She is trying to sweep the rookie and player awards. Nancy Lopez is the only player to win both in the same season, accomplishing the feat in 1978.

    Shin and Ochoa also are in a virtual dead heat for the Vare Trophy, given to the player with the season’s lowest scoring average.

    “I played 2 under, which was not bad in the wind,” Shin said. “Lorena, she played really good, a 66. But we still have three more rounds. I will just focus on my game and try my best for three more days.”

    Rankin also teed off early and finished her 67 before the wind became a factor. The 30-year-old Rankin has missed seven cuts in 17 starts this season before matching her best round of the year on Thursday.

    “It was nothing spectacular,” she said. “I just tried to stay patient and not worry about how I hit it. I’m just giving myself chances and not getting too frustrated.”

    Wie drew the largest galleries and she was 3 under through 12 holes. Her ankle gave way on the 13th tee, and she stumbled backward, sliced her tee shot into the rough and took her first bogey.

    She bent over in apparent pain on No. 14 and slipped again hitting her tee shot to the par-3 17th. Wie smacked her right leg and yelled an obscenity as the ball sailed right and rolled into the water. She made a double bogey to slip back to even par.

    After pulling out of the tournament, Wie said she wanted to take a careful approach to her injury.

    “I want to make sure that I’m being smart with it,” she said. “I will return home to have it looked at by my doctors and follow their advice for treatment.”

    The first round was suspended because of darkness at 5:25 p.m., with four groups still on the course.




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lee Westwood Well Placed After First Round

    Lee Westwood’s six-under-par 66 at the season-ending Dubai World Championship gave him a first-round advantage over money-list rival Rory McIlroy on Thursday.


    LEE WESTWOOD  Picture © Getty Images

    Former European number one Westwood shared second place with Colombian Camilo Villegas and Briton Chris Wood, one stroke behind tournament leader Robert Allenby of Australia. McIlroy was three off the pace on 68.

    There was plenty of cut and thrust as Westwood, second in the Race to Dubai, opened an early three-shot advantage over money-list leader McIlroy.

    The 20-year-old from Northern Ireland caught up with his playing partner with three birdies in a row from the 13th before Englishman Westwood replied with a birdie hat-trick from the 15th.

    After holing a 40-foot birdie putt on 17 and conjuring a par at the last by pitching under trees from wood chippings in a nearby garden, Westwood refused to get carried away with his early advantage.

    “It’s all about jockeying for position over these first three rounds and then going for the kill on Sunday,” the 36-year-old told reporters.

    “There’s a lot of water still to go under the bridge until Sunday and the idea is to win this tournament so that everything else falls into place.”

    McIlroy, however, said he became caught up in the race to be European number one.

    “I found my thoughts wandering and it will be a good thing us not playing together tomorrow,” said the youngster.

    “Two shots is not much. If I was two behind on Saturday night it would be different.”

    Leader Allenby is hoping to make his return to the European Tour a telling one.

    In 1996 the Australian hit a famous shot in the tour’s then-season finale, the Volvo Masters.

    Having broken his sternum in a car accident a month before the Spanish tournament he was obliged to hit a drive, one that was little more than 50 yards in length, to ensure he kept his third place on the order of merit.

    Allenby said the accident ended his chances of being 1996 European number one and blighted his career.

    “The injury did hold me back, physically for two years and then there were the mental scars,” said the 38-year-old. “I had to somehow try and find the game I had prior to the accident.

    “I’d won three times that year and I was looking good to beat Monty (Colin Montgomerie) for the order of merit but I couldn’t play the last five tournaments.

    “But things are coming good again, I feel like I’ve spiced up my game by coming back over to Europe,” added Allenby.

    The other two players who can win the Race to Dubai, third-placed Martin Kaymer of Germany and fourth-placed Briton Ross Fisher, were well down the field.

    Kaymer returned a 71 while Fisher began with a 73.




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • John Cook & Olin Browne Lead Pebble Beach Invitational

    Champions Tour players John Cook and Olin Browne shot 6-under 66s at Del Monte Golf Course to share the first-round lead in the Callaway Golf Pebble Beach Invitational on Thursday.


    JOHN COOK  Picture © Getty Images

    Cook, coming off a victory on Nov. 1 in the Champions Tour’s season-ending Charles Schwab Cup Championship, had six birdies in his bogey-free round.

    “I’m pretty satisfied, considering I haven’t played at all since the Charles Schwab Cup,” said Cook, who won his first U.S. PGA Tour event at the Bing Crosby Pro-Am on the Monterey Peninsula in 1981. “I mean I’ve hit a few balls. But I didn’t have any expectations, so I’m pleasantly surprised.”

    Browne, who won the Pebble Beach Invitational in 2001, opened with an eagle, shot 31 on the front nine and had four birdies while playing one group ahead of Cook.

    “I got off to a nice start and made some nice putts,” said Browne, who joined the Champions Tour in May after a three-win U.S. PGA Tour career. “Del Monte is the kind of course where if you hit quality shots, you’ll get lots of birdie chances.”

    Jim Thorpe, one of 11 Champions Tour players in the field of 75 pros, shot a 67, also at Del Monte. Matt Bettencourt, 10th this year in the U.S. Open, and Champions Tour veteran Tom Purtzer also shot 67s at Del Monte.

    Daniel Chopra, whose last U.S. PGA Tour win was the 2008 Mercedes-Benz Championship, and Rickie Fowler, who finished second this year in the Frys.com Open, both carded 68s at Spyglass Hill. D.A. Points had a 68 at Pebble Beach. Four players are grouped at 69.

    The event includes players from the four major U.S. professional tours as well as mini-tour, club pros and amateur teams.

    Two-time defending champion Tommy Armour III opened with a 71 at Del Monte.

    Mina Harigae, who will join the U.S. LPGA Tour in 2010, shot a 70 at Pebble Beach, the lowest round among four women pro entrants.

    The 72-hole event continues on Friday and Saturday at all three courses. The final round on Sunday, which will include the top 40 pros and ties and top 10 teams, will be held at Pebble Beach. The pro winner will receive $60,000 from the $300,000 purse.




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • European Tour Abandons Changes to Membership

    European Tour membership for 2010 will remain the same after it was decided to shelve a points system for next year aimed at six key events, the European Tour’s director of operations said on Wednesday.

    “We’ve spoken to our sponsors to say we felt it was the wrong time to introduce something like this. You could say it has been shelved for the moment,” David Garland told reporters at the Dubai World Championship.

    Qualification therefore remains a mandatory 12 events, two of which have to be played in Europe.

    A new system, devised last month but not ratified, entailed a points table for each European event played.

    To encourage participation in top events, players would have got extra points at the Irish Open, Europe’s PGA Championship, French Open, Scottish Open, Dunhill Links Championship and Portugal Masters to make membership qualification easier.

    The move was designed to halt the exodus of players to America and appease European sponsors dismayed at a shortage of top class fields in their events.

    But the tour, which had promised a decision on any new system before the start of the 2010 season next month, has decided now is not the time for change.

    Although the decision has been accepted by the tournament committee, its chairman Thomas Bjorn, who will resign formally in 2010, will discuss it further with tour officials.

    The 38-year-old Dane had said he would not even serve on the committee if the radical membership plans he had guided did not take place and may stick to his word.

    “Thomas says he will accept and abide by any decision made by the tour,” Bjorn’s manager Guy Kinnings told Reuters. “Over his place on the committee, he will talk further about that to the tour.”




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Rory McIlroy Aiming to be Youngest Money Winner for 30 Years

    Rory McIlroy is trying to become the youngest player to finish at the top of the European Tour money list in 30 years.

    No pressure.

    The 20-year-old Northern Irish golfer leads the standings going into the season-ending Dubai World Championship, which starts Thursday. McIlroy could become the youngest player to win the Order of Merit since Seve Ballesteros did it at the age of 19 in 1979.

    England’s Lee Westwood, Germany’s Martin Kaymer and England’s Ross Fisher are also still in contention for the title. The Dubai tournament, with a winner’s prize of $1.25 million, has 58 of the top 60 players on the European money list in the field.

    The winner of the money title will also collect a $1.5 million bonus as part of The Race to Dubai.

    With five top-5 finishes in his last seven tournaments, McIlroy begins the Dubai World Championship with a lead of $191,000 in the money list.

    “All the money involved this week is going to be more exciting,” McIlroy said before heading off for a final practice session under the burning sun of the Arabian Desert. “And certainly the Race to Dubai has created a lot more excitement at the end of the season.

    “How do I cope with the pressure? I just try to treat it like any other tournament and play the best golf I can. If I play as well as I can then everything else will fall into place. My goal this year was to try to break into the world’s top 10 and hopefully another good week will get me into that.”

    McIlroy was questioned about his recent decision to join the PGA Tour in 2010, when he will chase the money lists on both sides of the Atlantic. Some senior European players who belong to his management agency advised him not to make the move.

    “Lee Westwood and Darren Clarke have tried playing there and it didn’t really work out for them,” McIlroy said. “They were giving me advice based on their past experiences. They would rather stay in Europe but I want to venture out.

    “Most of the events I will be playing in America will have Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and Steve Stricker (the current world top three) and I want to challenge myself against the best. Then I think I will become a better player.”




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • LPGA Announces Reduced 24 Event 2010 Schedule

    The 2010 LPGA Tour will consist of 24 tournaments, four fewer than this year, in 10 countries.

    The season tees off in Thailand from Feb. 18-21 and stays in Asia a week later with an event in Singapore.

    “We have made great strides in our long-term goal of building an intelligent and sustainable schedule for the LPGA Tour,” acting commissioner Marty Evans told a news conference on Wednesday at the season-ending LPGA Tour Championship.

    “We look forward to a wonderful season finale this week and a bright future for the LPGA Tour in 2010 and beyond.”

    Evans is in temporary charge following the resignation of Carolyn Bivens in July. Former marketing executive Michael Whan will take over as full-time commissioner in January.

    The first women’s major of the season, the Kraft Nabisco Championship at Mission Hills, California, will be held from April 1-4.

    The LPGA Championship at Pittsford, New York takes place from June 24-27 with the third major, the U.S. Open at Oakmont, being staged from July 8-11.

    The fourth and final major is the British Open at Royal Birkdale from July 29-Aug. 1




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Lee Westwood Set for Race to Dubai

    Lee Westwood must banish the memory of one of his worst displays of the year when he goes in search of the European order of merit title at this week’s season-ending Dubai World Championship.


    LEE WESTWOOD  Picture © Getty Images

    The 36-year-old Briton was all at sea on the greens in last week’s Hong Kong Open and finished down the field in joint 54th position on his first visit to Fanling.

    Apart from missing the cut in the PGA Championship at Wentworth, the only other time the consistent Westwood has been outside the top 50 this season was when he was tied 61st at the WGC-CA Championship in Florida in March.

    “Last week was a bit of an off week, nothing really went for me and I couldn’t get anything going,” the world number five told reporters on Tuesday.

    “I don’t think it will have an effect on me. I am fairly optimistic and I have been playing this game long enough not to let one (bad) week bother me.”

    Westwood is one of four players with a chance of winning Europe’s inaugural Race to Dubai.

    The Englishman led the money list going into the Hong Kong Open but Rory McIlroy’s second-place finish in Hong Kong took the 20-year-old from Northern Ireland more than 128,000 euros ($190,700) clear at the top.

    German Martin Kaymer, third on the money list, knows the lucrative first prize of 830,675 euros ($1.24 million) at the Dubai World Championship would guarantee him the order of merit crown while fourth-placed Briton Ross Fisher is also in contention.

    The Greg Norman-designed Earth layout at Jumeirah Golf Estates will be making its European Tour debut in Thursday’s opening round of the Dubai World Championship.

    “I don’t know anything about the course but it will be a new experience for everybody so they will be in the same boat as I was in Hong Kong,” said Westwood.

    McIlroy knows he simply has to finish higher than his three rivals this week to top the Race to Dubai but said his chief concern was victory in the tournament.

    “I won’t be trying to protect a lead or finish ahead of this guy or that guy,” he said. “I want to win. If I win it will take care of everything.”

    Asked how it would feel to pick up both trophies, McIlroy replied: “It would be fantastic and that’s my aim. I was 11-under for the two rounds at the weekend in Hong Kong so I have good momentum going into the final week.”




    Add to Technorati Favorites
  • Win Brings Fresh Expectations from Michelle Wie

    From a hotel suite in Honolulu overlooking the golf course where Michelle Wie first showed her awesome potential, she looked at newspaper photos from various stages of her youth and realized those days were behind her.


    MICHELLE WIE  Picture © Getty Images

    She was 15 and had just turned pro.

    Within a year, her income approached $20 million, more than any other female golfer.

    “I know I have to win. That’s my priority now,” Wie said that day. “They all expect me to do better and work harder.”

    That was four years ago, spanning 42 starts on the LPGA Tour. Those expectations took a long time to fulfill.

    Her face was flush with celebration and relief Sunday when Wie blasted out of a bunker to tap-in range for a two-shot victory in Mexico. She thrust her arms in the air, covered her mouth and before long, she finally tasted that LPGA tradition for first-time winners by getting showered with beer.

    It was clear an enormous burden had been lifted.

    Wie created those expectations by shooting 68 on the PGA Tour at age 14, by having at least a share of the lead on the back nine of three major championships when she was 16, by coming within nine holes of qualifying for the U.S. Open and by developing shots that few other women were capable of hitting.

    “For sure, it’s definitely off my back,” said Wie, now 20 and in her third year at Stanford. “I think that hopefully, life will be a lot better. But I still have a lot of work to do. I still have a lot to improve. It just feels so great right now.”

    But as one burden is lifted, another is soon to arrive.

    The timing could not have been better for the LPGA Tour, which is starved for attention and struggling to climb out of an economic morass that likely will lead to the fewest tournaments it has had in years.

    The tour finally got rid of its commissioner, Carolyn Bivens, and replaced her with Michael Whan, who is to be introduced in Houston on Wednesday and takes over at the start of 2010.

    The LPGA needs star power, and no other player can move the needle like Wie.

    She was attracting the largest crowds even when Annika Sorenstam was still playing and winning majors.

    Paula Creamer was 18 and had not gone through high school graduation when she captured her first LPGA Tour victory. Morgan Pressel was 18 when she became the youngest major champion in LPGA Tour history. Neither generated as much attention as Wie winning for the first time in Mexico at a tournament that was shown on tape delay.

    Wie won the Lorena Ochoa Invitational, named after the No. 1 player in women’s golf. Yet not even Ochoa could not carry the tour. When she was going for a record-tying fifth straight victory last year in Oklahoma, it received only local coverage. The Golf Channel did not send a crew to document her winning streak.

    Wie has the kind of appeal not seen since Nancy Lopez—but only if she keeps winning.

    Clearly, her impact on women’s golf would have been far greater had Wie won much earlier. She attracted attention because of her power and her youth, and she only has one of those left.

    Even now, Wie has only one victory. Ochoa remains the No. 1 player, while Jiyai Shin has shown to be the best this year, on the verge of becoming the first player since Lopez in 1978 to win player of the year and rookie of the year in the same season. Wie played 18 times this year and is not among the top 10 on the LPGA money list.

    To predict greatness after one victory is tantamount to the predictions she faced when she first turned pro.

    Wie winning can only help, although the LPGA Tour still faces a mighty struggle. Sponsorship dollars remain tough to find and the tour does not have a network TV deal. The Golf Channel televises LPGA events on a tape-delay basis. And while Wie played a full schedule this year, she also remains devoted to her education—and the Cardinal football team—at Stanford.

    She is still only 20, but already has been through more than most players on the LPGA Tour.

    Wie lost goodwill in some golf circles by trying to compete against the men before she had proved herself on the LPGA Tour. She was 0-for-7 trying to make the cut on the PGA Tour, although it has been almost three years since she last tried.

    She endured more criticism from the media than any other female golfer in 2007 while trying to play through an injury. The worst of it came after she withdrew from Sorenstam’s tournament while on the verge of shooting 88—which would have banned for from playing for a year—only to show up two days later at Bulle Rock to prepare for a major.

    Most impressive about Wie was that through it all, she never lashed out at any of her critics. She earned respect by going through LPGA Q-school last year and by leading the United States to victory in the Solheim Cup.

    And now—finally—she’s a winner.

    Among her immediate plans were “definitely bask in the glory.”

    The LPGA Tour surely will try to capitalize on this moment, as it should, although the tour should be mindful of the four years that preceded Wie’s victory, and the four years before that when she was girl among men.

    Keep the expectations reasonable.

     




    Add to Technorati Favorites
More Posts Next page »
Privacy Policy | Legal Statement | Advertise
© 2006-2009 Tees2Greens, Inc.