Monday, December 23, 2013

さくら、難コンディションも耐えて2位タイ浮上!




2010年11月26日17時42分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 宮里 美香 -3
2 森田 理香子 -1
横峯 さくら -1
4 アン・ソンジュ 0
インビー・パーク 0
6 キム・ナリ +1
佐伯 三貴 +1
不動 裕理 +1
9 有村 智恵 +2
上原 彩子 +2


順位の続きを見る





前組との間隔が空いて走らされることもあったがリズムはキープした(撮影:米山聡明)











LPGAツアーチャンピオンシップリコーカップ 2日目>◇26日◇宮崎カントリークラブ(6,520ヤード・パー72)

 2日目を迎えた今季の女子ツアー最終戦「LPGAツアーチャンピオンシップリコーカップ」。この日の宮崎カントリークラブには強い風が吹きスコアを落とす選手が続出した。そんな中でこの日ベストスコアとなる“71”で回ってきた横峯さくらが、トータル1アンダーで首位の宮里美香と2打差の2位タイに浮上した。

【関連リンク】地元で連覇狙うさくら、ショット、パット噛み合わず9位タイ発進

 横峯は4番でボギーが先行すると序盤は我慢の展開。ノーバーディで前半を終えるとハーフターン後の11番でもボギーを叩きスコアを落としてしまう。それでも直後の12番で5メートルのバーディパットをねじ込むと、14番、15番と連続バーディを奪い好位置で2日目を終えた。序盤は不安定なショットに悩まされスコアを落としたが「ヘッドアップしていたので、それに気付いてからは安定しました」とラウンド中にきっちり修正。初日読みが合わなかった高麗グリーンもこの日は上手く攻略し、アンダーパーをマークしてみせた。

 初日の9位タイから地元連覇へ向けて好位置に浮上した横峯にかかる期待は大きくなるばかり。アン・ソンジュインビー・パークら今シーズンツアーを席巻した韓国勢が上位にいればなおさらだ。「期待には応えたいんですけど、マグレじゃ勝てない」とまだまだ道のりは厳しい事を認めたが、誰よりも勝って終わりたい気持ちは強い。「自分を信じてプレーすることが出来れば、結果はついてきてくれる」今シーズンの集大成を残り2日間で出してみせる。

【2日目の順位】
1位:宮里美香(-3)
2位T:森田理香子(-1)
2位T:横峯さくら(-1)
4位T:アン・ソンジュ(E)
4位T:インビー・パーク(E)
6位T:佐伯三貴(+1)
6位T:金ナリ(+1)
6位T:不動裕理(+1)
9位T:有村智恵(+2)他2名

Friday, November 29, 2013

松山英樹、大学対抗戦で優勝!「カシオワールド」に弾み




2011年11月23日17時56分






文部科学大臣杯で優勝を果たした松山英樹







<カシオワールドオープン 事前情報◇23日◇Kochi黒潮カントリークラブ(7,280ヤード・パー72)>


 滋賀県にある日野ゴルフ倶楽部にて開催された「文部科学大臣杯争奪 第4回 全日本大学・高等学校ゴルフ対抗戦」男子個人の部で東北福祉大学の松山英樹がトータル5アンダーで優勝した。

【関連リンク】松山英樹のスイングをスーパースローで分析!

  松山は初日首位発進すると、この日も5つスコアを伸ばし栄冠を手にした。ツアー3週連続出場の中、その合間に出場した学生の大会で貫禄を見せた。ドライバーに関しては「だいぶ真っ直ぐいってフェアウェイキープできた」と手ごたえあり。パッティングに関しては「内容が良くなかったので長めに練習して挑みたい」と語った。

 「明日から期待できるような内容でよかった」この優勝を弾みにして、明日開幕する「カシオワールドオープン」でも活躍できるか。松山はこの日の夕方に会場入り。「疲れはないです」と志賀から高知への移動も苦にせず、「できるだけ上位で戦えるように予選を通過して、残り2日間も戦いたい」と抱負を語った。

 松山は明日、石川遼、先週の「ダンロップフェニックス」を制した武藤俊憲と同組みで9時50分にスタート予定。

遼「一打一打、最善を尽くしていくのみ」




2011年11月23日18時31分
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プロアマに出場した石川遼(撮影:岩本芳弘)






カシオワールドオープン 事前情報◇23日◇Kochi黒潮カントリークラブ(7,280ヤード・パー72)>

 24日(木)より高知県にあるKochi黒潮カントリークラブにて開催される国内男子ツアー「カシオワールドオープン」。開幕を翌日に控えたこの日は恒例のプロアマ大会が行われ、多くの選手が最後の調整を行った。

松山英樹、大学対抗戦で優勝!「カシオワールド」に弾み

 前日、豪州で開催された「プレジデンツカップ」から帰国した石川遼もプロアマに参加。パーティに出席後、あたりが暗くなるまで練習に時間を費やした。この大会は昨年8位タイ、一昨年は2位になるなど相性がいい。ショットは先週から好調で、この試合のカギとなるのは「グリーンの読みが重要になってくる」と語った。この試合に勝たないと、逆転賞金王の可能性は消えるが、まずは「一打一打、最善を尽くしていくのみです」と一旦賞金王のことは忘れ、目の前のプレーに集中する心構えで試合に臨むとのこと。

 予選ラウンドは今季「三井住友VISA太平洋マスターズ」を制した同い年のアマチュア、松山英樹と同組に。改めて報道陣に気持ちを聞かれると「ワクワクしています。飛び跳ねていいだったら、飛び跳ねたいぐらい」と同年代対決を心待ちしている様子だった。

<中間速報>遼、前半終わって2アンダー!首位は宮里優作




2011年11月24日12時32分
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リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 宮里 優作 -7
2 上井 邦浩 -6
3 高山 忠洋 -5
4 小平智 -4
諸藤 将次 -4
6 P・マークセン -3
小田 孔明 -3
8 吉永 智一 -2
宮瀬 博文 -2
倉本 昌弘 -2


順位の続きを見る


カシオワールドオープン 初日◇24日◇Kochi黒潮カントリークラブ(7,280ヤード・パー72)>

 高知県にあるKochi黒潮カントリークラブを舞台に開幕した、国内男子ツアー「カシオワールドオープン」の初日。2試合ぶりに国内ツアーに復帰した石川遼は、INスタートの10番、12番でバーディ奪取に成功する。しかし、早々にスコアを伸ばしたものの、その後は伸び悩み、首位とは5打差の2アンダー8位タイで前半を終了した。

 首位に立っているのは7アンダーの宮里優作、4アンダー2位タイには近藤共弘諸藤将次、3アンダー4位タイには高山忠洋らがつけている。

松山英樹、大乱調で最下位「苦しいゴルフでした」



2011年11月24日20時36分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 宮里 優作 -7
2 上井 邦浩 -6
3 高山 忠洋 -5
4 小平智 -4
諸藤 将次 -4
6 P・マークセン -3
小田 孔明 -3
8 吉永 智一 -2
宮瀬 博文 -2
倉本 昌弘 -2


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傾斜地からグリーンを狙う松山英樹(撮影:岩本芳弘)








もっと写真を見る(10)




カシオワールドオープン 初日◇24日◇Kochi黒潮カントリークラブ(7,280ヤード・パー72)>

 今季アマチュアながら「三井住友VISA太平洋マスターズ」を制した東北福祉大の松山英樹と、石川遼の同学年同組対決はクッキリと明暗が分かれた。国内男子ツアー「カシオワールドオープン」初日、石川は耐えるゴルフで2アンダー8位タイ発進。松山はツアーでの自己ワースト81ストローク、9オーバーで最下位発進となった。

【関連リンク】遼、豪州での成長をみせた!アプローチが冴え8位タイ発進

 松山は1番でバーディスタートを切るも、そこからまさかの大崩れ。「出だしは気持ちよくスタートを切れたが、ショット、アプローチ、パターも悪く苦しいゴルフになってしまった」と本人がラウンド後話したとおり、その後はバーディが1つもなく8ボギー・1ダブルボギーと大乱調。昨日、学生の大会で優勝を飾ったが「コースが変わればグリーンの状態も変わる。それに合わせられなかった自分の技術が足りなかった」と苦しげに語った。

 「明日は挽回できるように一生懸命頑張ります」と最後は前を向いた松山。先週の「ダンロップフェニックス」でも初日出遅れ、2日目に猛チャージをみせた。今回もその再現で予選通過はなるか。第2の故郷・高知の回りなれたコースで大器が勝負に出る。

【初日の結果】
1位:宮里優作(-7)
2位:上井邦浩(-6)
3位:高山忠洋(-5)
4位T:小平智(-4)
4位T:諸藤将次(-4)
6位T:プラヤド・マークセン(-3)
6位T:小田孔明(-3)
8位T:石川遼(-2)
8位T:薗田峻輔(-2)他3名

105位:松山英樹(+9)

Friday, October 11, 2013

Park leads Kraft Nabisco by three shots


Park leads Kraft Nabisco by three shots










John Reger, The Sports Xchange April 6, 2013 8:50 PMThe SportsXchange



RANCHO MIRAGE, CALIF. -- Inbee Park shot a 5-under 67 to increase her lead to three shots over Lizette Salas on Saturday going into the final round of the Kraft Nabisco Championship.

Park, who is from South Korea, is at 12-under par, while Salas, who shot a third round 3-under 69 is at 9-under par. Six players, including two-time Kraft Nabisco Champion,Karrie Webb are tied for third at 6 under.

Salas was one stroke behind at the beginning of the third round and immediately put pressure on Park. Salas matched Park's birdie on the first hole and then added another to tie Park on the second.

Park, who had no bogeys in the third round, regained the lead on the fifth hole when she drained a 30-foot birdie.

Salas, who had one bogey in her first two rounds, made her second of the tournament on No. 8 to slip two shots behind Park.

The lead went back to one when Salas made a 3-foot birdie on the following hole. Both golfers shot 34 on the front nine.

Park took advantage of her accuracy off the tee and her approach shots. Park hit 11 of 14 fairways, her best in three rounds and also was 15-18 in greens in regulation.

Putting was also another advantage Park had over Salas. Park made a 40-footer on the 10th hole for birdie and got the lead to three when she birdied No. 12.

Salas cut the lead to two on the following hole with a birdie, but Park increased it again to three when she made a 3-footer on the par-3 17th.

Salas had a chance to cut the lead to two on the final hole when Park made par and Salas had a 4-foot birdie putt. The downhill putt just slid past the right side of the cup.

NOTES: Karrie Webb, who won this event in 2000 and 2006, moved into the top 10 in the third round. Webb, who is from Australia, shot a 67 to get to 6-under par and a tie for third. It was her first round in the 60s. ... Jessica Korda has made 10 birdies in her last 26 holes. She has also made three double bogeys. ... Angela Stanford shot the best round of the day, a 6-under 66, and moved from 28th to a tie for third.

Park leads Nabisco, on verge of 2nd LPGA major title


Park leads Nabisco, on verge of 2nd LPGA major title










John Reger, The Sports Xchange April 6, 2013 9:40 PMThe SportsXchange


RANCHO MIRAGE, CALIF. -- Inbee Park shot a 5-under 67 to increase her lead to three shots over Lizette Salas on Saturday going into the final round of the Kraft Nabisco Championship.


Park, who is from South Korea, is at 12-under par 204, while Salas, who shot a third round 3-under 69 is at 9-under par. Six players, including two-time Kraft Nabisco Champion, Karrie Webb are tied for third at 6 under.

If Park wins it would be the second major championship. She was 19 when she won the U.S. Women's Open and there are a lot of expectations that Park would like to fulfill on Sunday.

"I only won one major in my 7-year career," Park said. "After the U.S. Open I hadn't won for a while. I need to show a little bit more good pIay and maybe a couple more majors would be very nice."

Park is in great position to win, but only has won once in five times when holding the final-round lead on the LPGA Tour.

"I definitely feel the pressure like everybody else," Park said. "I feel pressure, but my emotions just don't show that much in my face."

It seemed like Park was in a zone during the third round, especially with her putter. She made three putts that were longer than 20 feet and had two approach shots that were 2-feet or less.

One of them was by accident. After Salas put her approach shot in the bunker on the par-3 17th, Park hit a shot that barely cleared the front bunker and came to rest 3 feet from the hole.

"I wasn't going for the pin on that shot," Park said. "I was going right of the flag and pulled it a little bit. That wasn't planned, it just ended up perfect."

Salas was one stroke behind at the beginning of the third round and immediately put pressure on Park. Salas matched Park's birdie on the first hole and then added another to tie Park on the second.

"That was my goal," Salas said. "I wanted to start out strong and I was able to do that."

Park, who had no bogeys in the third round, regained the lead on the fifth hole when she drained a 30-foot birdie.

"My putting was really good," Park said. "I don't think I'm the best putter in the world, though."

Salas, who had one bogey in her first two rounds, made her second of the tournament on No. 8 to slip two shots behind Park, though she said Park's play wasn't affecting her.

"I expect that from her," Salas said. "I just try not to pay attention and worry about what I'm doing."

The lead went back to one when Salas made a 3-foot birdie on the following hole. Both golfers shot 34 on the front nine.

Park took advantage of her accuracy off the tee and her approach shots. Park hit 11-of-14 fairways, her best in three rounds and also was 15 of 18 in greens in regulation.

Putting was also another advantage Park had over Salas. Park made a 40-footer on the 10th hole for birdie and got the lead to three shots when she birdied No. 12.

Salas cut the lead to two on the following hole with a birdie, but Park increased it again to three when she made a 3-footer on the par-3 17th.

Salas had a chance to cut the lead to two on the final hole when Park made par and Salas had a 4-foot birdie putt. The downhill putt just slid past the right side of the cup.

"It's going to be in the back of my mind," Salas said about missing the putt. "I put a good stroke on it, it just didn't fall in."

NOTES: Karrie Webb, who won this event in 2000 and 2006, moved into the top 10 in the third round. Webb, who is from Australia, shot a 67 to get to 6-under par and a tie for third. It was her first round in the 60s. ... Jessica Korda has made 10 birdies in her last 26 holes. She has also made three double bogeys. ... Angela Stanford shot the best round of the day, a 6-under 66, and moved from 28th to a tie for third.

Mickelson plays Masters practice round with Condoleezza Rice


Mickelson plays Masters practice round with Condoleezza Rice










The Sports Xchange April 7, 2013 5:50 PMThe SportsXchange



Sunday was only a practice round at the Masters, but three-time champion Phil Mickelson got plenty of attention as he played his round at the Augusta National Golf Club with former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Rice made history when she and South Carolina financier Darla Moore were the first women invited to join Augusta last August.

Rice was one of the members who teed it up with this year's Masters participants on Sunday. She slipped away afterward without talking to reporters, saying only that she had a good time, according to ESPN.com. Members typically do not give interviews, according to the Miami Herald.

But Mickelson had plenty to say.

"She's one of my favorite people. She's got the greatest personality and attitude, and she's so much fun to be around," Mickelson told reporters after the round. "She's so knowledgeable about world affairs. It's just incredible. It's a great experience.

" ... As soon as I saw she was a member, I called her to work up a game, just like I did Arnold (Palmer) back in the day as an amateur. She's just one of my favorite people to be around."

Rice and Mickelson warmed up next to each other on the range, according to multiple reports, and walked to the first tee together.

"She kept asking about the course, and I kept asking her about countries," Mickelson said. "It was really fun. And she really can putt. She's a phenomenal putter."

Rice's final putt of the day was a 40-footer on the 18th hole for a par. With her 17 handicap, it was a net birdie.

Afterward, Rice donned a green jacket and mingled with players. She hugged Tiger Woods.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Snedeker falls short, sheds no tears this time


Snedeker falls short, sheds no tears this time











PGA.COM April 14, 2013 9:31 PM

.

View gallery
Brandt Snedeker said his Masters finish Sunday hurt, but he handled this one better than in 2008.(Getty …


By Nancy Armour, Associated Press


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- The last time Brandt Snedeker came this close to winning the Masters, he wept uncontrollably, distraught that the tournament he's dreamed of winning since he was a child slipped through his fingers.

On Sunday, the only tears after the final round were from his 2-year-old daughter.

"I'm not as crushed as I was in 2008 because I know I'm going to be there again," Snedeker said. "I know this golf course so well and I putted about as poorly as I could today, and I still had a chance on the back nine. I'm very disappointed that I didn't win, but I realize that I'm not that far off from winning this thing.

"I'm going to do it soon."

The co-leader after the third round, Snedeker couldn't make a putt Sunday on his way to a 3-over 75. After scratching his way through the front, he opened the back nine with two straight bogeys, including a miss from 3 feet on 10, to fall three strokes off the lead. With the two par-5s still to play, however, he wasn't out of it.

Then he put his approach shot on 13 in Rae's Creek.

As the ball splashed into the water, Snedeker grimaced and bent both ends of his hybrid club, looking as if he wanted to snap it.

"I didn't, I needed that club on 15," he said. "I was in-between clubs and I took the longer club and tried to cut a ball off that fairway, which is really difficult to do. But it was the only way I had a chance of getting it close. My 4-iron wouldn't have made it and the hybrid, if I hit it normal is too much. So I tried to cut it and came out of it and hit it where you can't hit it."

Snedeker managed to save par, only to make bogey on the 14th. The closest he would come to the green jacket this year was watching playing partner Angel Cabrera force a playoff with eventual winner Adam Scott.

"Any time you have a chance to win the Masters and you don't come through -- my lifelong dream -- you're going to be upset, you're going to cry, you know, but I'll get through it," Snedeker said. "I'm playing great, I look forward to what the next weeks are going to hold. And I'm going to come back here next year and I'm going to do my best to get in that last group again."

Five years ago, Snedeker was thrilled to find himself in the final group on Sunday in his first Masters as a professional. He was 27, just two years removed from the Nationwide Tour.

The moment proved to be too much, and he managed only six pars in the entire round as he blew up with a 77. Afterward, his voice shook as he tried to control his emotions. He finally gave up, burying his face in his towel as he sobbed.

But Snedeker, despite his youthful looks, is no longer that wide-eyed kid.

He won the Tour Championship last year, beating Rory McIlroy. There was a three-week stretch earlier this season when he was the hottest player in golf, finishing second to Tiger Woods at the Farmers, second to Phil Mickelson in Phoenix and capping the run with a win at Pebble Beach.

Snedeker was unflappable as he climbed into a share of the lead Saturday, opening with 12 pars and making three birdies over his final six holes to take a one-stroke lead with Cabrera. Being in the final group was no longer enough, he said Saturday night, he wanted to win it and was ready to do so.

"I'm not here to get a good finish," he said. "I'm not here to finish top five. I'm here to win, and that's all I'm going to be focused on tomorrow. I realize what I have to do to do that, and I'm going to do everything I can to make sure that happens."

Nerves weren't an issue, Snedeker said. His putter was.

"I did not putt the way you're supposed to putt around Augusta, I just never had the speed," Snedeker said. "If I putt the way I normally putt and don't make those two loose swings, I'm right there with a chance to win the golf tournament.

"But I'm pretty excited with the way I played," he said. "I know that if I do that again, play the exact same way again and I putt the way I normally do, I got a chance."

That's why there were no tears.

Make no mistake, though, this finish was every bit as gutting as that one in 2008, even if it didn't look it.

"It's going to be more difficult tonight because I had a really good chance at the end of the day if I do what I normally do," he said. "It will be tough to sit there and watch the playoff and actually hear what happens. It's going to be a tough night. A tough couple days."

Adam Scott, Angel Cabrera save the Masters


Adam Scott, Angel Cabrera save the Masters











Dan Wetzel April 14, 2013 9:57 PMYahoo Sports






View gallery.

Adam Scott (L) hugs Angel Cabrera after winning 77th Masters. (Getty Images)AUGUSTA, Ga. – Drenched by rain, drained of emotion, Adam Scott and Angel Cabrera found themselves in a prolonged bear hug on the 10th green of Augusta National, the two golfers patting each other on the back, shouting into each other's ear over the roaring crowd.



Scott had just bested Cabrera on the second playoff hole of these Masters, draining a clutch 12-footer in fast approaching darkness just moments after Cabrera's 15-footer somehow stayed out.

This was more than who won or who lost, however, because someone was going to win and someone was always going to lose. This was the culmination of an epic finale to an otherwise ho-hum (by its high standards) and controversy-filled Masters; two great golfers draining long putts, making daring chips and restoring not just the roar to the Georgia Pines here, but reminding everyone of the camaraderie of competition.[Related video: Controversial putter a game-changer for Adam Scott]

When their mesmerizing duel ended Sunday, there was no storming off in over-competitive anger, no woe-is-me heartbreak and no exaggerated celebration. The winner was gracious, the loser classy and for that they just kept patting each other on the back, side by side walking off the green.

"[I told him] I was happy for him," Cabrera said of their conversation. "That I know he deserved it."

Adam Scott and Angel Cabrera saved the 77th Masters.





View gallery.Scott became the first Australian to win a green jacket by overcoming what seemed like a national plague of nerves that have doomed generations of his countrymen, most notably Greg Norman.



Rather than wilt with the steady-driving Cabrera coming on strong, Scott stood up and fought back. He drilled a 30-foot putt on 18 to move to 9-under, a shot that will be replayed for years. Scott stood and screamed, "Come on Aussie," as the gallery burst into pandemonium.

It was the kind of putt, Scott said, that he'd seen so many champions hit here that when it happened to him, he just assumed it was over.

"For a split second there, I thought I'd won," he admitted.

[Related: Tiger Woods may not have deserved penalty]

The wave of noise washed down the hill to the middle of the fairway, where Cabrera understood the stakes, and Scott wanted him to feel the magnitude of the moment.

"The chance to put all the pressure on the guy back down the fairway," Scott said.

El Pato cares little for pressure, though. He knew he needed to get up and down from 163 yards out. So he did just that, hitting a brilliant 7-iron to within about 6 feet.

By that point Scott was in the scorer's room, his joy of believing he was on the verge of winning the Masters replaced by the realization he had more work to do.

They replayed 18 and up by the green, same place that moments before Scott thought his dream victory was sealed with a historic shot, he watched Cabrera nearly chip in from the fringe, a shot that would have been even more historic. It buzzed the cup, only to stay out.

"My heart was about to stop there standing on the side of the green thinking, 'Is this is it, really?' " Scott said.

[Related video: Cabrera, Scott talk about dramatic Masters playoff]

Then it was onto a second playoff hole on 10, where Cabrera's potential tournament winning putt again just stayed out. "I think it almost hit the edge of the hole," Cabrera said. Then Scott, squinting through the darkness brought on by dusk and clouds, had to trust the read of his caddie and promise himself to be bold, to try to win this.

His putt hit the bottom of the cup.

"Amazing feeling," Scott said.







View gallery.

Adam Scott poses with his green jacket after winning the Masters. (AP)



The final hour of this tournament, with the stakes at their highest, was amazing golf. Not just the stunning shots, but the feel-good moments, such as Cabrera giving Scott a thumbs up after a strong approach on the second playoff hole.

"Angel is a great man," Scott said.

The entire thing stood in contrast to nearly four full days of fitful play, scoring controversies, sportsmanship debates, penalty strokes, brutal Saturday conditions that rendered moving day moot and even a rain-soaked, mistake-prone final day, at least until the bitter end came along.

There is never such a thing as a bad Masters – this remains golf's best weekend each year. There are varying degrees of great, however, and this tradition like no other was headed toward the more forgettable part of the scale.

Then the golf took off, the sportsmanship shined through and two very different players – a tall, muscular, 32-year-old Aussie and a rumpled, 43-year-old Argentine – reminded everyone what makes this such a great stage for drama.

"It's an incredible camaraderie," Scott said. "He's a great guy."

Not long after their repeated hugs on the 10th green, Scott retired to Butler Cabin for a television interview, then a quick jacket ceremony on a wet, dark practice green. Australian fans were shouting and screaming and making a proud racket for their guy, turning this proper country club into a rowdy mess.

About the same time Cabrera was walked out of the Augusta National clubhouse and toward his car. He had a drink in one hand, a cigarette in the other. His quest for a second green jacket fell short, his role in saving the week did not.

"Golf gives and takes," Cabrera said.

Especially here, especially at the Masters.

Woods unable to recover from ricochet shot


Woods unable to recover from ricochet shot











PGA.COM April 14, 2013 10:08 PM

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View gallery
Tiger Woods, at the Masters, said "Well, we could do a what-if on every tournament we lose," about whether …


By Jim Litke, Associated Press


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- A Masters that began with such promise for Tiger Woods effectively ended late in the second round, when his near-perfect wedge struck the flagstick at No. 15 and ricocheted into the water.

He left the grounds late Sunday afternoon in a steady drizzle, empty-handed once again.

His 2-under 70 left him at 283, four strokes behind the number that sent Adam Scott and Miguel Cabrera to a playoff. Scott, whose caddie, Stevie Williams, formerly worked for Woods, won it on the second extra hole.

After slipping into a share of fourth place, Woods put much of the blame on a familiar nemesis -- his putting.

"It's one of those things where this golf course was playing a little bit tricky," he said. "We had four different green speeds out there and I couldn't believe how slow they were the first two days. Yesterday, I couldn't believe how fast they were. And then today, it was another different speed again."

But his driving wasn't all that strong, either.

While Woods ranked comfortably among the top one-third in both greens in regulation and putting, he finished near the bottom in hitting fairways. What might have been the biggest obstacle, however, was the odd turn of events at No. 15 on Friday.

Woods was tied for the lead at 5-under and had a wedge in his hands with 87 yards left to the pin at the 530-year, par-5 hole. His first attempt hit the stick and caromed about 45 degrees left, rolling into the pond. He took a penalty drop and recovered with another beautiful wedge for a tap-in bogey 6.

But a viewer called into the club and advised Masters officials that he believed Woods had taken an illegal drop. Officials reviewed a videotape of the shot and initially decided no penalty was warranted. But after Woods said in a post-match interview that he'd dropped the ball 2 yards from the original spot, club officials conducted another review, met with him Saturday morning, and added the two-stroke penalty. That made his score at the hole an 8 and bumped his round to 73.

But it was considerably better than the second option -- disqualification.

Asked Sunday whether that blunted his momentum, Woods replied, "Well, we could do a what-if on every tournament we lose.

"We lose more tournaments than we win. But I certainly had my opportunities to post some good rounds this week," he added. "I thought I really played well. ... So overall it was a pretty good week."

Yet it began even better than that.

Woods arrived at Augusta National early last week off consecutive PGA Tour wins and with a new girlfriend, Olympic ski champion Lindsey Vonn. Soon after, he picked up another endorsement from Jack Nicklaus, who repeated that he still expected Woods would one day eclipse his record 18 career majors.

And when Woods opened Thursday with a 70 -- the same score he posted in the opening round of three of his four Masters wins -- the stars appeared to be aligning for yet another green jacket.

"I thought 65 would win it outright" Sunday, Woods said. "I thought that was going to be the number ... maybe 8- or 9-under.

"If I would have shot my number," he added, "it might have been a different story."

Just before he left the clubhouse, Woods was asked whether hitting the flag was as bad a break as he's had in his career. He reflected for a moment.

"I've had a few," he said finally, "but that's certainly up there."

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Golf notebook: Singh escapes PED controversy without sanction


Golf notebook: Singh escapes PED controversy without sanction










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange May 6, 2013 2:20 AMThe SportsXchange


--We might never know exactly what went down behind the scenes in the Deer Antler Spray Incident, in which Vijay Singh admitted using the product, which included the banned substance IGF-1, a growth hormone.

Singh escaped punishment because the PGA Tour said the World Anti-Doping Agency has ruled that the substance no longer is banned, although it was at the time.

The Big Fijian hasn't said a word publicly since a Sports Illustrated article in January disclosed that he was taking the stuff, and the PGA Tour always is secretive about such matters.

Singh did release a statement: "While I have used deer antler spray, at no time was I aware that it may contain a substance that is banned under the PGA Tour Anti-Doping Policy. In fact, when I first received the product, I reviewed the list of ingredients and did not see any prohibited substances. I am absolutely shocked that deer antler spray may contain a banned substance and am angry that I have put myself in this position. I have been in contact with the PGA Tour and am cooperating fully with their review of this matter. I will not be commenting further at this time."

After being cleared, Singh withdrew last week from the Wells Fargo Championship, citing a back injury, and he did the same thing when he pulled out of the Waste Management Phoenix Open after the Sports Illustrated article came out.

About all that is known is that Singh was not sanctioned by the tour in any way.

"We're going to say that it's not on the list for purposes of consumption," said commissioner Tim Finchem of the PGA Tour, a former lawyer. "But just know that we're not liable here if for some reason or another you managed to trigger a positive test even though there is no test out there.

"So it is kind of silly, but it is what it is."

This is not the first time deer antler spray has been an issue in golf, the first time coming when Mark Calcavecchia of the Champions Tour, which is overseen by the PGA Tour, was told in 2011 to stop using and promoting the substance.

Calcavecchia was not punished, only warned, and all players under the PGA Tour umbrella were told that deer antler spray was on the listed of banned substances.

Even though Singh apparently missed the memo, it's possible his lawyers threatened legal action if he were suspended, because a precedent was set when no action was taken against Calcavecchia for taking the same substance.

Again, we might never know, because nobody involved is saying much.

--Move over Guan Tianlang, here comes Ye Wocheng.

Ye, a 12-year-old from China, became the youngest player to compete in a European Tour event last week when he played in the Volvo China Open at Binhai Lake Golf Club in Tianjin, China.

At 12 years and 242 days, Ye was about 10 months younger than Guan was when Guan played in the same event last year.

Ye said he made it a goal of his to break the record when he watched Guan play in the tournament a year ago. Guan shot 77-79--156 and failed to make the cut in 2012.

Even though his appearance was historic, Ye had a predictable outcome, shooting 79-79--158 and missing the cut by 14 strokes.

"I was a bit less nervous (in round two), which is why I played well at the start," Ye said. "But then on the back nine I struggled a little bit, which was a bit disappointing. Overall I'm still pretty happy with how I played.

"Golf is a hard game to play at this level of competition and on these courses, but I feel I will soon be ready for it. I'm looking forward to the next time I can play out here."

Guan went on to win the Asia Pacific Amateur Championship last year to earn a spot in the Masters, where last month he became the youngest player to make the cut at 14 years, 169 days. He also made the cut in the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Jason Hak of Hong Kong, who is a freshman at Georgia Tech, became the youngest player to make the cut in a regular European Tour event at 14 years, 304 days in the Hong Kong Open in November 2008.

Ye qualified for the Volvo event through an open qualifier in March, when he shot 2-under-par 142 to earn one of the three available spots.

"I've been dreaming about this since I was a boy," Ye said.

The youngest golfer to play a PGA Tour event was Don Dunkelberger, who was 11 at the 1937 Chicago Open.

--Darren Clarke of Northern Ireland, who captured the 2011 Open Championship at Royal St. George's, returned to the European Tour last week in the CIMB Niaga Indonesian Masters after missing five weeks because of a hamstring injury.

Clarke, who was forced to miss the Masters last month because of the injury, opened with a 2-under-par 70, but he showed his rust by shooting 75-72-74 the rest of the way to tie for 56th.

The 44-year-old was injured while playing tennis on a family vacation in the Bahamas.

"It has been a frustrating period," said Clarke, who also missed the Valero Texas Open because of the injury. "I'm not good at sitting and not doing anything. I've had intensive treatment on my hamstring, and it is fine now.

"I was playing tennis with my kids, and I thought I was 24 and not 44. Unfortunately I had to pull out from Augusta and (the Ballantine's Championship in South Korea two weeks ago). I couldn't do anything. I could hardly walk, hit golf balls or putt.


"I had to sit at home and watch the Masters. I only watched the last round on television because if I watched every day, then I would have been frustrated."

Clarke had not played in the Indonesian Open before, so he sought advice from his friend Lee Westwood, a two-time winner of the Indonesian Masters.

--The legendary course at Muirfield in Edinburgh, Scotland, has been lengthened by 158 yards and more rough will be grown for the Open Championship in July, it was announced by Peter Dawson, chief executive of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews.

Dawson said that new tees have been added on seven holes, taking the distance of the par-71 course from 7,034 yards when Ernie Els won the Open in 2002 to 7,192 yards.

Els will be making something of a double title defense, since he also won the Open last year at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.

"The R&A and the (host) club strategize about the course's strengths and weaknesses, based on history and viewing previous championships," Dawson said. "We used (golf course architect) Martin Hawtree to come up with plans, discussed them with the R&A and the club, and then presented to the members at a meeting in Edinburgh I attended with Martin and club officials.

"Members sanctioned the changes, and we've gone along on that method at all the other courses where we've made alterations. The changes we have made here have sharpened up the strategy of the golf course. This course has produced some fantastic quality of champions in the past, and we envisage that continuing."

In recent years, the R&A has made alterations to all nine courses in the Open Championship rotation, trying to keep them up to date with all the changes in the modern game.

The biggest change at Muirfield is on the par-5 ninth hole, where the championship tee has been moved back almost 50 yards, making it play to 554 yards.

Also, a new bunker was added on the right side of the fairway, and other bunkers were moved closer to the green.

To make the changes on that hole possible, Muirfield swapped some land with its neighbor, The Renaissance Club.

"The players love it," Dawson said of Muirfield. "It's immensely popular, and it's always in fantastic condition. I always say we could hold an Open here any year at three weeks' notice.

"We will be setting the course up to challenge the golfers. The rough has been cut down over the winter, but it will regenerate depending on the weather we get. You will see the rough up, and you're unlikely to win an Open at Muirfield from the rough."

Other new tees have been added at the second, fourth, 14th, 15th, 17th and 18th holes. There also has been some reworking of bunkers, and the 10th fairway has been moved to accommodate a bigger practice range.

Muirfield is hosting the Open for the 16th time since 1892, and the East Lothian area is gearing up for the event, which is expected to bring an economic impact of 70 million pounds (approximately $109 million) to the region.

--PGA Tour Canada announced that Freedom 55 Financial has been confirmed as the presenting sponsor of the Tour Championship of Canada, the tour's marquee event, which will be conducted by Golf Canada.

The tournament, which will be played Sept. 12-15 at Sunningdale Golf and Country Club in London, Ontario, will culminate the season-long Order of Merit race, with the top finishers earning Web.com Tour cards.

"We're delighted to solidify the Tour Championship of Canada presented by Freedom 55 Financial as the season finale for 2013," PGA Tour Canada president Jeff Monday said.

"With a quality organization like Freedom 55 Financial, an experienced host in Golf Canada and a tremendous golf course at Sunningdale, we have all the right pieces in place for an outstanding finish to our inaugural season."

Headquartered in London, Ontario, Freedom 55 Financial, a division of London Life Insurance Company, entered into a multi-year agreement that ensures the Tour Championship of Canada will remain in the London area for years to come.

The event will feature a unique partnership between PGA Tour Canada and Golf Canada.

"Golf Canada is very proud to be evolving our longstanding partnership with the PGA Tour and becoming the host organization for the Tour Championship of Canada presented by Freedom 55 Financial," Golf Canada CEO Scott Simmons said.

"Some of Canada's best and brightest PGA Tour prospects will be competing at this event, and we are honored to be a part of the excitement surrounding the PGA Tour's continued support of the game in Canada. We are also pleased to bring professional golf to Sunningdale and the tremendous golf community in the London area."

Golf Canada has more than a century of expertise running national golf championships that include the RBC Canadian Open on the PGA Tour, the CN Canadian Women's Open on the LPGA Tour and Canada's national amateur championships.

--Padraig Harrington is known for tinkering with his game more than perhaps any player on the major tours.

In fact, there are those who believe that Harrington has tinkered himself into the massive slump he has been mired in since 2008. He won the 2007 Open Championship at Royal Birkdale, repeated the following year at Carnoustie and claimed the PGA Championship a month later at Oakland Hills.

Last week, he took his penchant for change to a new level when he showed up at Quail Hollow for the Wells Fargo Championship with a belly putter, even though he agrees with the R&A and the USGA that anchored putters should be banned.

"I took it out last week," said Harrington, who came into the tournament with three missed cuts in seven outings on the PGA Tour this season. "Mechanically, everything I do with my putting stroke is better with the belly putter than without it. ...

"I had picked up the belly putter in the past and have always hated it, but when I put it on the analysis, everything came out better. So that encouraged me to get over the, 'I don't like the feel of this,' because I accelerate better, and I do so many things better with it."

Not last week.

It didn't help that the greens at Quail Hollow were not up to PGA Tour standards, but Harrington took 32 putts on Thursday and 35 on Friday, including a total of seven missed putts from 10 feet and in.

Harrington, who has not won anywhere since the 2010 Iskandar Johor Open on the Asian Tour, shot 80-75--155 and missed the cut by nine strokes, tying for last in the field of 156 players through 36 holes.

Course Source: St. Johns Golf & Country Club, Fairmont Chateau Whistler


Course Source: St. Johns Golf & Country Club, Fairmont Chateau Whistler










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange May 6, 2013 2:20 AMThe SportsXchangeIN THE PUBLIC EYE: St. Johns Golf & Country Club in St. Augustine, Fla.
THE LAYOUT: There are dozens of options on Florida's "Golf Coast," but for the price and experience, St. Johns is one of the best.
Architect Clyde Johnston carved a magnificent 7,236-yard track out of a pine forest that winds through natural wetlands, playing to a par of 72 with a USGA rating of 74.7 and a slope of 132.
However, only low-handicappers can play from the gold tees and must get permission in the pro shop. There are five other sets of tees, down to a 2,500-yard family layout, that make the course enjoyable for players of all abilities.
St. Johns, considered by locals to be the equal of its higher-priced neighbors near Interstate 95, has been host to the PGA Tour qualifying school in the first round five times, the 2006 PGA Level II Qualifying School and U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship local qualifying the last several years.
Before heading out onto the course, warm up on the state-of-the-art practice facility, which includes a 10,000-square-foot putting green, a double-sided driving range and several practice bunkers.
GENERAL MANAGER: Dan Zimmer.
LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: Even though there are 63 bunkers on the course, plus several waste areas, and water comes into play to one degree or another on 14 holes, St. Johns offers wide driving areas and spacious yet challenging green complexes.
After a relatively straightforward opening hole, a 400-yard par 4 where the primary obstacles are a large oak tree and fairway bunkers on the left, Johnston challenges the golfer with a meaty 552-yard par 5. Get past the fairway bunker on the right side of this slight dogleg left and there is water along that side of the fairway all the way to a green guarded by sand and grass bunkers.
After a beautiful 210-yard par 3 with water and sand to the right, the fourth hole is a tantalizing par 4 at 382 yards from the tips, but the lake on the right comes into play off the tee and on the approach.
The front nine wraps up with two magnificent holes. The 565-yard eighth, rated as No. 1 on the card, plays through a corridor of trees, and even though the water is almost out of play on the left near the green, seven bunkers pockmark the trip home. Don't be fooled by the traps short of the green because the putting surface is actually 40 yards beyond.
If you are ever going to hit a straight drive, No. 9 is the place, with water on the left and sand on the right. Hit the fairway and more bunkers plus mounding provide a challenge on the approach to the green, but take a peek at the magnificent view of the stately clubhouse across the water behind the hole.
There is only a trace of water on the first three holes of the back nine, but the par-3 13th, which plays 194 yards from the tips, is almost completely surrounded by it. Even a breath of wind makes club selection dicey, with a single bunker protecting the front of the green.
As good as the rest of the course is, St. Johns is one of those layouts that saves the best for last, starting with the 557-yard, par-5 16th, where water is reachable on both sides of the fairway from the tee. The fairway narrows so an accurate layup shot is required, and the wraparound bunker behind the green on the left is not a bad spot compared to the water beyond.
The 212-yard par-3 17th is a dangerous beauty, with water and sand to the left, a steep slope and grass bunkers on the right. Make par and run to the final tee.
No. 18 is considered the best finishing hole in the area, other than the famous one on Pete Dye's Stadium Course at nearby TPC Sawgrass. Right is the sensible path off the tee because the lake from No. 17 runs all the way down the left side of this hole and three bunkers sit in the middle of the fairway. That's also the best angle from which to approach the green without having to carry the water, which protects the left side. Into the wind, this hole can play two or three clubs longer.
Add up your score and enjoy post-round refreshments in the Grille Room or on the back patio overlooking the ninth and 18th greens.
OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: St. Johns is located in what might be called the golf capital of the United States, because the headquarters of the four major golf tours in the country are nearby.
Not only that, the World Golf Village and the World Golf Hall of Fame are only a few miles away, also in St. Augustine. Located there are two championship courses, the Slammer and the Squire (designed by Robert Weed and named for Sam Snead and Gene Sarazen), and the King and the Bear (named for Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus, who collaborated on the design).
Right down the road in Ponte Vedra Beach is TPC Sawgrass, home of the PGA, Champions and Nationwide tours. On the property are Pete Dye's Valley Course and the Stadium Course, with its infamous island 17th green, site of the Players Championship this week.
About an hour's drive down Interstate 95 in Daytona Beach is LPGA International, home of the LPGA Tour, with the Legends Course, designed by Arthur Hills, and the Champions Course, designed by Rees Jones.
Also in the area are Royal St. Augustine Golf and Country Club, St. Augustine Shores Golf Club, the Golf Club at South Hampton in St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra Golf and Country Club at Sawgrass, the Ocean Course designed by Jack Nicklaus at Hammock Beach Resort in Palm Coast, Queens Harbour Yacht and Country Club in Jacksonville, Magnolia Point Golf and Country Club in Green Cove Springs, and Eagle Harbor Golf Club in Orange Park.
WHERE TO STAY: Stay and play on the grounds of the World Golf Village at the Renaissance Resort, the Comfort Suites, Laterra Resort and Spa or the Grande Villas, which all offer golf packages for the Slammer and the Squire, and the King and the Bear.
Historic St. Augustine is the oldest European settlement in the United States, first visited by Ponce de Leon in 1513, and there are numerous hotels and B&Bs in and around the city. Among the best are the Bayfront Marin House, the Casablanca Inn on the Bay, Casa Monica Hotel, the Bayfront Westcott House, St. George Inn, Our House Bed and Breakfast, Alexander Homestead Bed and Breakfast, the Pirate Haus Inn and the Carriage Way B&B.
In Ponte Vedra Beach are the Sawgrass Marriott Resort and Beach Club, Ponte Vedra Beach Inn and Club, the Lodge and Club at Ponte Vedra Beach, the Hilton Garden Inn and the Fig Tree Inn.
Golf resorts in the area include the Hammock Beach Resort in Palm Coast and Amelia Island Plantation.
ON THE WEB: www.stjohnsgolf.com
THE LAST RESORT: Fairmont Chateau Whistler Golf Club in Whistler, British Columbia, Canada.
THE LAYOUT: Don't be fooled by the 6,635 yards shown on the scorecard; look instead at the 145 slope from the back tees, because this scenic beauty can play like a beast.
The course, which plays to a par of 72, climbs 400 feet from the clubhouse up the slopes of Blackcomb Peak and features tight fairways, doglegs, severe drops and rises from tee to green, plus uphill, downhill and side-hill lies.
This is a resort course, so playing from the one of five tee boxes that most suits your game can bring an enjoyable and even exhilarating golf experience -- but selecting the right club is a must.
The valley views are spectacular on this course that winds through granite rock outcroppings and tall Douglas fir trees, some that are 1,300 years old, with a river and fast-running streams dissecting many holes.
Carts are required because of the steepness of the course, and don't be surprised to see a bear looking for a handout.
The course opened for the season last Saturday and will remain open through Oct. 14, weather permitting.
DIRECTOR OF GOLF: Gregg Lown.
LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: It does not take as long to reach Whistler these days because of a construction project that widened the scenic Sea-to-Sky Highway to handle the traffic for the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in the Vancouver area.
Workers blasted enough granite out of the mountains to fill 60,000-seat B.C. Place Stadium in Vancouver, where the Opening and Closing Ceremonies were held, and all of the rock was recycled into fortifying the old two-lane Highway 99.
Whistler was the site of the Alpine skiing events, and Canadians were disappointed their country did not claim a single medal at the venue, but they still celebrate the gold that Nancy Greene of British Columbia claimed in the giant slalom at Grenoble, France, in 1968.
Greene was instrumental in the development of Whistler, and the locals did not forget, naming a street located on the way from Chateau Whistler Golf Club to Nicklaus North Golf Club as Nancy Greene Drive.
The first ski run opened at Whistler in 1965, and golf did not arrive until Whistler Golf Club was created in 1982. However, the most distinctive of the four local courses opened in 1993, Chateau Whistler Golf Club, designed by Robert Trent Jones II.
After a fairly straightforward start on the 505-yard first hole, the toughest stretch of the Chateau Whistler course tests the golfer on the second through sixth holes -- the first three dramatically uphill.
No. 2 is a deceiving 326-yard par-4, with a delicate second shot from a severe uphill lie to a dramatically sloping green guarded by a rushing stream and a large bunker. The third hole plays much longer than its 399 yards from the back and requires a long tee shot in order to clear the stream and a natural hazard with the approach.
The third consecutive par 4, No. 4, is even longer at 411 yards and might be the most difficult driving hole on the course. Make sure to hit enough club on the approach because of the false front to the green.
Use at least half a club less on the 190-yard fifth hole because of the drop, but a well-struck shot will leave a chance to make birdie.
The last of this challenging fivesome is a 457-yard par 4, rated No. 1 on the card, that plays downhill from the tee and then back up to the green. Try to land your approach shot on the front of the green, which slopes toward the back.
Signature hole is No. 8, a 212-yard par 3 that plays downhill to a green with a granite wall on the right and a large lake on the left. Playing safe and hitting your tee shot off the wall sometimes will kick the ball onto the green for a birdie opportunity.
The best of the back nine is saved for the finish.
While the sound of all of the rushing water almost makes you feel if you are playing in the shower, the roar on the par-4, 444-yard 17th is the loudest, perhaps because water cuts across the fairway twice. Two precise shots are needed to safety reach the tricky green, where a large swale dominates the right side.
The 543-yard finishing hole plays downhill off the tee toward one last lake 300 yards away, with trees on the right side of the fairway but open area to the left. Try to stay below the hole on the approach because the green is banked from back to front.
Bring your kids when playing at Chateau Whistler because players under 18 golf free when accompanied by a paying adult.
OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: Whistler Golf Club, located barely inside the town limits, was the first course in the area and the initial Arnold Palmer-designed layout in Canada. It opened in 1982 and underwent a $1.8 million renovation in 2000.
Nicklaus North Golf Course, less than a five-minute drive from Fairmont Chateau Whistler, was the first course in the world to have the name of the greatest golfer in history on it. The course brought thousands of golfers to the Whistler area when it hosted the televised Telus Canadian Skins Game in 1997, and the event returned in 2005.
Big Sky Golf and Country Club, located about 25 minutes north of Whistler, is a spectacular course designed by Robert Cupp and John Fought at the foot of Mount Currie in the Pemberton Valley. It opened in 1994 in a valley where potatoes once grew, and it features seven lakes plus several streams that bisect the course.
If you have a chance on the way up from Vancouver, stop and play Mayfair Lakes Golf and Country Club below the towering Coast Mountains in Richmond, or picturesque Furry Creek Golf and Country Club, about 30 minutes south of Whistler on the Sea-to-Ski Highway.
WHERE TO STAY: Fairmont Chateau Whistler, part of the worldwide chain that has its flagship in San Francisco, is one of several spectacular golf properties owned by the corporation in Canada.
Also included are Jasper Park Lodge Golf Club and Fairmont Banff Springs Golf Course in Alberta, Fairmont Le Chateau Montebello Golf Club and Fairmont Le Manoir Richelieu Golf Club in Quebec, and Algonquin Golf Course and Academy in St. Andrews-by-the-Sea, New Brunswick.
Golf can be arranged by the concierge at outstanding local courses for guests of the Fairmont Queen Elizabeth in Montreal, the Fairmont Tremblant in Mont-Tremblant, Quebec, the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac in Quebec City, the Fairmont Palliser in Calgary, the Fairmont Hotel Macdonald in Edmonton and other Fairmont properties that do not have their own courses.
Conde Naste Traveler magazine has selected the Fairmont Chateau Whistler as the No. 1 ski resort and No. 1 golf resort in Canada. Whistler receives 46 feet of snow a year, and the Wizard chairlift right outside the back door of the resort whisks skiers up the slopes of Blackcomb Peak to 8,100 acres of skiing terrain.
After returning from the slopes and/or the links, have yourself pampered in the Vida Spa. Then enjoy exceptional cuisine in the Wildflower Restaurant, the Wine Room or the Portobello Market and Fresh Bakery, and have a drink in the Mallard Lounge. For even more exceptional service, stay on Fairmont's exclusive Gold Level.
Other winter activities include cross-country skiing, horse-drawn sleigh rides, snow-shoeing, dog-sledding, ice skating, four-wheel driving, indoor rock climbing and snowmobile riding.
During the spring and summer, guests also enjoy kayaking, wakeboarding, windsurfing, jet boating, whitewater rafting, swimming, fishing, rollerblading, mountain-biking, hiking, rock climbing and canoeing.
Other top hotels in Whistler include the Four Seasons Whistler Resort, the Westin Resort and Spa Whistler, the Whistler Alpine Chalet, the Delta Whistler Village Suites, the Crystal Lodge & Suites, the Pan Pacific Whistler Mountainside and the Chalet Louise B&B Inn.
ON THE WEB: www.fairmont.com/whistler; www.fairmontgolf.com/whistler

Inside the Ropes: Players aren't all fans of Players Championship


Inside the Ropes: Players aren't all fans of Players Championship










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange May 6, 2013 2:21 AMThe SportsXchange


The debate about whether the Players Championship actually should be the fifth major has raged for years and obviously will be discussed at length this week at TPC Sawgrass, when the event celebrates its 40th edition.

Bubba Watson weighed on the subject last year when he withdrew before the tournament following a whirlwind month after his victory in one of the four bona fide major championships, the Masters.

Had it been as important as a major, he would have been at TPC Sawgrass, the flagship event of the PGA Tour.

Lee Westwood, the No. 1 player in the World Golf Rankings at the time, and Rory McIlroy, on his way to becoming No. 1, passed on the tournament two years ago, with major input from their agent, Chubby Chandler.

When PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem moved the tournament from the run-up to the Masters to May in 2007, the idea was to give the Players a spot of its own and put a big tournament in five consecutive months on the schedule.

He obviously was hoping that having the Masters in April, the Players in May, the U.S. Open in June, the Open Championship in July and the PGA Championship in August might give the Players a boost in status.

Even though it remains a big event, the plan might have backfired.

"It just seems that it comes now in the season where there's a lot of big tournaments, and it sort of just, I think before the Masters, it sort of stood out," McIlroy said of the Players.

"And now in the place where it is, it's just one of a number of big tournaments coming up."

Chandler weighed in with this: "Moving it to the middle of May has made it about the 10th most important tournament in the world."

McIlroy left Chandler's International Sports Management later in 2011, and he and Westwood returned with apologies of sorts to the Players Championship last year.

But the damage had been done.

When Watson decided not to play last year, PGA Tour executive Ty Votaw said, "Some of the top-ranked European Tour players like Lee Westwood and Rory McIlroy also missed the Players Championship last year, which delivered a big blow to the credibility of the event."

Westwood, who rejoined the PGA Tour last year and moved his family from England to the United States before this season, also has talked down the Players.

On his list, the event had fallen behind the World Golf Championships.

"They have to go in now before the Players Championship," Westwood said of the WGC events. "So what is (the Players), eighth on the list now?"

As far back as 2003, Ernie Els said: "The four majors are the most important. Obviously the Players Championship is our championship. The tour runs it ... but it's not a major. Never will be."

In recent years, Els has piled on by saying: "(The BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, flagship event of the European Tour) is definitely taking the place of the Players. I also feel we have a stronger field (at Wentworth) and a classic course."

That last part is an absurd statement because Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and the rest of the Americans do not play in the BMW, while almost all the best players in the world make it to the Players, like it or not, every year.

If nothing else, the Players has a major feel to it.

"We obviously have strong fields at the majors, but player-for-player, this is the best field we have all year, the biggest purse we have and one of the toughest tests of golf we have," said Mickelson, who captured the Players in 2007.


"This tournament has built a real credibility. We use the same course every year like Augusta (National), so you see history being made and shots being played that you can look back on."

Woods has dominated the World Golf Championships, with his victory in the WGC-Cadillac Championship earlier this year giving him 17 of those distinctive trophies.

"I would say I think (the Players) is much bigger," said Woods, whose only title at TPC Sawgrass came in 2001. "This field is so much deeper, and it's played on a much more difficult golf course."

Oh yes, the Stadium Course at TPC Sawgrass.

That could be one reason why you get so many varied comments when talking about the Players Championship, because it is played at Pete Dye's dye-abolical masterpiece.

From the beginning, the players have had a love-hate relationship with the place. Sometimes it's hate-hate.

McIlroy is only one of the latest to say he does not like the course, that it doesn't suit his game, although last year he amended that to saying he hadn't learned how to play it yet.

Then he went out and missed the cut for the third time in as many appearances in the Players.

"They ruined a perfectly good swamp," J.C. Snead said when the Stadium Course became the permanent home of the Players Championship and hosted it for the first time in 1982.

Of course, Jerry Pate didn't feel that way after winning that first tournament played on the Stadium Course, taking a dive into the lake next to the 18th green along with Dye and then-commissioner Deane Beman, the early driving force behind the Players Championship and TPC Sawgrass.

While the Players might never be universally accepted as one of the Grand Slam events, it will undoubtedly continue to be a major topic of conversation.



COMING UP

PGA TOUR: The Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., Thursday through Sunday.

TV: Thursday and Friday, 1-7 p.m. EDT on the Golf Channel; Saturday and Sunday, 2-7 p.m. EDT on NBC.

LAST YEAR: Matt Kuchar claimed the biggest victory of his PGA Tour career when he closed with a 2-under-par 70 to win by two strokes over Rickie Fowler, Zach Johnson, Ben Curtis and Martin Laird of Scotland. Kuchar, who made the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship his fifth title earlier this year, was one stroke behind Kevin Na at the start of the final round in the so-called Fifth Major after posting scores of 68-68-69. He stumbled out of the chute with a bogey on No. 1 on Sunday, but he took the lead by carding three birdies in the next 11 holes, and Na fell back on his way to a 76. Kuchar was lining up a 15-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole when he saw Fowler sink a 20-footer for birdie across the water at No. 17. Kuchar, who became the first American to claim the Players since Phil Mickelson in 2007, answered by sinking his birdie putt and survived a three-putt bogey on the 17th hole.



CHAMPIONS TOUR: 74th Senior PGA Championship at Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis, May 23-26.

TV: Thursday and Friday, noon-3 p.m. EDT on the Golf Channel; Saturday and Sunday, 3-6 p.m. EDT on NBC.

LAST YEAR: Roger Chapman of England built a nine-stroke lead early in the final round and held on to claim his first victory on the Champions Tour by two strokes over John Cook at Harbor Shores Golf Club in Benton Harbor, Mich. The 53-year-old Chapman, who had only three professional victories previously, added the U.S. Senior Open less than a month later. In the Senior PGA, he built a five-stroke lead after 54 holes with rounds of 68-67-64 before closing with a 1-over-par 72, carding bogeys on three of the last five holes. Kenny Perry posted a tournament-record 62 in the final round, but all it got him was a tie for ninth, five strokes behind Chapman.



LPGA TOUR: Mobile Bay LPGA Classic at the Crossings Course at Magnolia Grove in Mobile, Ala., May 16-19.

TV: Thursday and Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m. EDT; Saturday and Sunday, 5-7 p.m. EDT, on the Golf Channel each day.

LAST YEAR: Stacy Lewis held a five-stroke lead early on the final day, only to be caught by teenager Lexi Thompson. However, Lewis regained the lead with a birdie on the 16th green and claimed her third victory of the LPGA Tour with a two-putt par on the final hole to close out a 3-under-par 69. Thompson, who was 17 at the time, pushed Lewis all the way to the finish, closing with rounds of 66-65. Lewis, the only player in the field to record four scores in the 60s, hit her second shot at No. 15 into the water left of the green and carded her first bogey in 24 holes. That dropped her into a tie with Thompson, but Lewis, who has won five times since, bounced back with the birdie on the next hole after a brilliant chip shot, and she closed with two pars.

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Tiger Woods is Right: Ban Anchoring Sooner


Tiger Woods is Right: Ban Anchoring Sooner











Ryan Ballengee May 21, 2013 5:59 PM


COMMENTARY | Why wait? Two-and-a-half years is a long time for anchoring to continue to be legal under the Rules of Golf.



Tiger Woods has a solution: enact as soon as possible the ban that was formally announced Tuesday, rather than waiting until Jan. 1, 2016 for it to take effect.



"Anchoring should not be a part of the game," Woods said Monday at Congressional C.C., site of his AT&T National, played June 27-30. "I've always felt that in golf you should have to control your nerves and swing all 14 c
lubs, not just 13. And as far as the PGA Tour, I hope they do it as soon as possible to be honest with you."





He's not entirely right, but he's close. The ban of the anchored stroke -- which will fall under Rule 14-1b in the next edition of the Rules of Golf -- should begin two years sooner, at the start of 2014.



Like the timetable to implement new grooves specifications that were announced in 2008, pros should have to deal with them first, then high amateurs, then the bulk of the 26 million Americans that play golf.



Pros had to start using clubs with grooves that jived with the new rule at the beginning of 2010. High amateurs will have to convert next year. The rest of us? We have until 2024 to swap out our sticks. That's a 14-year difference between pros and everyone else.



The ban should start Jan. 1, 2014, but only for professionals. It should start earlier for the simple reason that the likes of Keegan Bradley, Webb Simpson and other players that anchor their putter now will be subject to fan heckling for another 30 months. That's far too long for guys who have done nothing wrong under the current Rules of Golf to be looked at as cheaters for something that isn't even illegal yet.



Bradley already had to deal with an unruly fan. Days after the proposed ban was announced, a fan yelled "Cheater!" at the 2011 PGA champion while playing in Tiger Woods' World Challenge event in California. The USGA had to issue a statement condemning the fan -- a messy situation.



Starting the ban next year would be as close as it will get to good timing for the guys on the PGA Tour, as the schedule will go to a wrap-around calendar after this season. In essence, accumulating FedEx Cup points will never end. Every tournament will offer them. The Tour's brief Asia swing will now offer big money that counts toward the money list. A player can fall behind very quickly when the year never ends. Bumping up the ban forces players to make a conversion they may hold off in doing until four months into the 2015-2016 season.



PGA Tour veteran Bob Estes suggested to me last November that the success rate of adopting the anchored stroke is already low because there's little time for his struggling peers to learn over several months without putting their livelihood in jeopardy. The same would likely be true going back to a traditional stroke.



There will be no perfect time for the pros to have to switch, but if everyone is forced to do it at the end of this calendar year, there are no holdovers or stubborn stalwarts that could be accused of clinging to their advantage longer than anyone else on the PGA Tour.



Bumping up the ban impacts a couple-thousand players worldwide. The USGA said Tuesday that just about 2 percent of recreational golfers anchor the putter. Of 26 million American golfers, then, just about 300,000 anchor. They're sparse. Why not let this dinosaur of a stroke, then, die quietly over a long span?



Give amateurs until 2030, or some other outrageous date in the distant future, to ditch the anchored stroke. Players who have leaned on the anchored stroke -- literally -- to keep enjoying the game without back problems will have two more decades to do just that.



Meanwhile, most young kids that may have taken up the anchored stroke early, akin to what 14-year-old Chinese amateur Guan Tianlang did, will have ample time to change how they putt before they get to the collegiate or professional level.



A select group of teens would fall through the cracks. Current college recruits that anchor the putter, though they are rare, might have their futures negatively impacted by the proposed, drawn-out adoption time frame. Coaches will be uncertain if these otherwise brilliant talents will be able to make a successful swap to a traditional stroke. That impacts players that are not only on the doorstep of college, but for three more classes.



Ending the practice of anchoring for players that could someday go on to join the paid ranks of professional golf would help remove any doubt college golf programs might have in making an investment in developing an up-and-coming kid who just so happens to anchor the putter.



Why put off until tomorrow what can be done today? It's a great outlook for life and one that applies to the anchoring ban. Do it now. Rip off anchoring like the Band-Aid that it is for so many and let the game move on to other critical issues, like mediating a truce between Tiger Woods and Sergio Garcia. Or maybe slow play, how far the golf ball travels and developing a more robust drug-testing program.



Ryan Ballengee is a Washington, D.C.-based golf writer. His work has appeared on multiple digital outlets, including NBC Sports and Golf Channel. Follow him on Twitter @RyanBallengee.