3.06.2014

Mathew Goggin wins Panama Championship more than 11 years after last victory

0
By 
PGA.com news services 

Series:
Mathew Goggin flew under the radar all week at the Panama Claro Championship, and when the dust settled on the Nationwide Tour’s season opener, the 36-year-old Australian emerged the winner. Goggin, who started the final round four off the pace, needed only a 2-under-par 68 for a two-stroke victory and his first title in more than 11 ½ years.
Goggin, one of only two players to better par each day at the Panama Golf Club, finished at 11-under 269, two shots in front of Darron Stiles (66) and fellow Aussie Alistair Presnell (73).
South Carolina’s Tommy Biershenk birdied the final hole for a 68 to wind up three back along with third-round leader Erik Compton, who failed to make a birdie in the final round and posted a 5-over 75.
Googin spent the past five years, and nine of the last 11 on the PGA Tour and earned his first victory since he won twice during the 1999 Nationwide Tour season -- the third-longest span between wins in Nationwide Tour history at 11 years, 6 months and 19 days.
“It’s been a long time,” he quipped. “I’ve had some opportunities over the years but it’s tough to win. It’s tough to win anywhere.”
Goggin’s win was a testament to steady play and patience as opposed to great ball-striking and a bundle of birdies.
“You don’t have to shoot the best score every day, you just have to have the best one at the end,” he said after picking up a check for $99,000. “I accumulated the best score this week. Today was a day where it was more a question of momentum to lose. Par was a good score, it wasn’t one to go on a birdie spree.”
The Nationwide Tour’s eighth time in Central America proved to be the toughest as temperatures reached into the 90s each day, complicated by afternoon storms that produced proximity lighting which forced officials to delay play several times. None of the first three rounds were completed on schedule.
The majority of the field (40 of 64) needed to finish the third round Sunday morning. Compton, who shared the lead after both the first and second rounds, rolled in a short birdie putt at the closing hole to reach 13-under and take a one-stroke lead over Presnell heading into the final 18.
With the greens firming up quickly and pins tucked tight, none of the leaders were able to muster much momentum. The direction of the day was reverse, not forward.
Goggin joined the leaders in the final threesome, the first time he’s been in that spot since playing with Tom Watson in the final pairing at the 2009 British Open. 
Goggin three-putted the ninth hole to fall three back of Compton at the turn, but dug in and waited. Goggin was error-free on the final nine with seven pars and birdies at Nos. 14 and 16. The latter gave him sole possession of the lead for the first time.
“I was fortunate to birdies late and they made a couple of mistakes,” said Goggin. “I was just trying to play solid because there are plenty of opportunities to make bogey on this course.”
Compton and Presnell traded the lead at 12 under at No. 14, when Compton bogeyed and Presnell birdied.
Presnell’s lead disappeared with three consecutive bogeys on his next three holes. Compton added another bogey and was one back when they reached the 465-yard 18th.
“I was trying to win the golf tournament on 18. I tried to hit a hard wedge and get it close,” said Compton, who saw his shot spin back off the front, which appeared to eliminate him from contention. 
Goggin, who smashed his drive dead-center, obliged the favor by dumping his second into a greenside bunker.
“I hit a horrendous shot there,” he admitted. “I was in between clubs and I went with a sand iron. I mis-hit it.”
Compton’s pitch came up short again and he would eventually settle for a double bogey to fall into a tie for fourth. Goggin blasted to four feet and canned his par putt, giving him an early boost in his efforts to return to the PGA Tour next year.
“You have to try to convince yourself that wherever you are, this is where you want to be,” he said. “This is where you’re playing so you better make the most of it.”
Fourth-Round Notes:
--With his victory, Mathew Goggin earned his third title in 79 career starts on the Nationwide Tour (1999 Lehigh Valley Classic, 1999 Omaha Classic and 2011 Panama Claro Championship. His win came 11 years, 6 months and 19 days since his last win on the Nationwide Tour, the third-longest time span between victories on this tour. Omar Uresti went 12 years, 11 months, 8 days betwens wins, while Skip Kendall went 12 years, 8 months, 27 days.
--Jimmy Walker is the only player in Nationwide Tour history to win the first tournament of the year and also wind up No. 1 on the final money list. Walker won the inaugural BellSouth Panama Championship to open the 2004 season. Walker had two wins, two seconds and seven top-10 finishes to wind up No. 1 with $371,346.
--Tommy Biershenk’s tie for fourth is his first top-10 since a pair of ties for fifth in 2007. It’s also his best week since a third-place at the 2002 Samsung Canadian PGA Championship.
--Sam Saunders, playing on sponsor’s exemption, tied for 10th, his career-best finish. Saunders fired a 7-under in the third round to move into contention, then shot a 1-over 71 to wind up at 6-under 274. His previous best was a tie for 15th at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am on the PGA Tour a few weeks ago.
--North Carolina’s Elliot Gealy also carded a 71 to tie for 10th, his career-best effort on the Nationwide Tour. This was Gealy’s 49th career start and his previous best was a tie for 11th at the 2004 Chattanooga Classic.
Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

2.23.2014

Golf-Day to face Dubuisson in Match Play final

Golf-Day to face Dubuisson in Match Play final

Reuters 
Feb 23 (Reuters) - Australian Jason Day held off a late fightback by American Rickie Fowler to book his place in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship final with a 3&2 victory in a battle of the young guns at Dove Mountain on Sunday
On a crisp and clear morning in Arizona's high desert, Day sealed the win when fellow 25-year-old Fowler surprisingly three-putted from just five feet at the par-three 16th.
Day, who recorded six birdies in 16 holes to reach the final for the first time, will face Frenchman Victor Dubuisson in the title match later on Sunday at Dove Mountain's Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.
Dubuisson, who had never previously played matchplay golf until his debut this week in a World Golf Championships (WGC) event, came from three down after seven holes to beat veteran South African Ernie Els one up.
"It was a tough day," Day, who was beaten by eventual champion Matt Kuchar of the United States in last year's semi-finals, told Golf Channel.
"Rickie is playing great golf right now and I just thought if I gave that little bit of an inch for him to move in, he was going to knock the door down.
"So I was just trying to hang tough and my game was solid today. Hopefully I can take it into the final."
Day birdied four of the first eight holes to go three up before Fowler twice trimmed the lead to two, first with a concession at the ninth and again at the short 12th, where Day missed a seven-foot par putt.
The Australian also bogeyed the 13th for his advantage to be cut to one before getting back to two-up with a birdie at the driveable par-four 15th, where he chipped to three feet.
Fowler responded with a brilliant tee shot to five feet at the 16th but squandered the chance to level when he pushed his birdie attempt to the right of the cup, then missed the par putt coming back to lose the match.
EARLY ELS LEAD
In the second semi-final, four-times major winner Els raced into a three-up lead after just four holes against a slow-starting Dubuisson before the Frenchman got into his stride with birdies at the eighth and ninth to trail by one.
Dubuisson levelled the match with another birdie at the par-five 11th, where he chipped to within three feet, and went one ahead when his 44-year-old opponent bogeyed the 12th.
It looked likely that Els would get back to all square after he hit a stunning approach to a foot for a conceded birdie at the par-five 13th, but Dubuisson coolly matched him by sinking a clutch putt there from 18 feet.
However, the Frenchman stumbled at the par-four 14th where he failed to reach the green in two, executed a poor chip and ran his par putt well past the cup before conceding the hole.
Dubuisson got back to one up with a birdie at the 15th where his tee shot ended up just short of the green but Els immediately levelled when he stunningly drained a curling downhill birdie putt from 32 feet at the 16th.
Both players parred the 17th but the South African lost the match on the 18th green when he missed his par putt from 13 feet after the Frenchman had lagged his birdie putt to within two feet of the cup.
Dubuisson, who burst into the limelight by winning his maiden European Tour title at the Turkish Airlines Open in November, admitted he had been very nervous competing against one of his golfing idols.
"I didn't sleep very well last night, I slept like one hour, and this morning I woke up and I realised that I was playing against Ernie Els, one of my favourite players," the 23-year-old said.
"On the first tee. I shake the hand of Ernie and I wasn't feeling comfortable. I was watching him and I was very impressed to be next to him. I was thinking of all the matches he won and the (two British) Opens." (Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by Larry Fine)
Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Golf-WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship quarterfinals scores

Golf-WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship quarterfinals scores

 
Feb 22 (Infostrada Sports) - Scores from the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship Quarterfinals on Saturday in Marana, Arizona
Jason Day (Australia) beat Louis Oosthuizen (South Africa) 2 and 1
Rickie Fowler (U.S.) beat Jim Furyk (U.S.) by 1 hole
Ernie Els (South Africa) beat Jordan Spieth (U.S.) 4 and 2
Victor Dubuisson (France) beat Graeme McDowell (Britain) 
Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Oosthuizen tries to cope with a back injury

Oosthuizen tries to cope with a back injury

AP - Sports
Oosthuizen tries to cope with a back injury
.
View gallery
  • .
  • .
  • .
  • .
MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- The most fickle part of the Match Play Championship for Louis Oosthuizen was his nagging back injury.
His luck ran out Saturday when he felt pain in his back while warming up on the range. When he first tried to hit a draw on the par-5 second hole, it got even worse. And one point, he was on his back on the 13th tee as his trainer tried to stretch him out.
''It's a bit painful that it always happens when I'm playing well,'' Oosthuizen said after losing on the 17th hole to Jason Day.
He was playing well enough that Oosthuizen required only 47 holes to reach the quarterfinals, the fewest of anyone. But it was a battle from the start, especially against a player like Day who has reached the semifinals the last two years.
Oosthuizen pulled off an unlikely birdie on the second hole to square the match, and he went ahead on the third with a 25-foot birdie putt. Day was able to at least try to drive the par-4 fourth green to set up a birdie, while Oosthuizen chose to lay back. Day won the hole and never trailed again.
''If I can commit myself to hit the shot, it's not that bad,'' Oosthuizen said. ''But I can't commit. My body is restricting me to go through the shot.''
Oosthuizen needs to get his back sorted out. He's been dealing with it since last summer. Some weeks it feels good, other weeks not so much. He said it most affects him when he plays a long stretch of golf.
And this has been a long week.
''I'm glad to not be playing tomorrow,'' he said with a smile. ''I don't want to be the first guy to withdraw from the finals or semifinals.''
Oosthuizen is scheduled to play the Honda Classic next week ahead of the next World Golf Championship at Doral. He said he would see how he feels in a couple of days, and might end up dropping Honda and adding the week after Doral at Innisbrook.
---
MENTAL EXAM: Jordan Spieth lost his match to Ernie Els. He also lost his cool.
It's the one area of Spieth's game that he's still trying to master as he enters his second full year on tour. When the golf isn't going well, Spieth shows it.
Els noticed.
''I could almost sense the frustration in Jordan today that he wasn't quite playing the way he did yesterday,'' Els said. ''And I was kind of playing on that a little bit, just making sure if I was missing a shot, that I made sure that I got it up-and-down to keep kind of him at bay, or keep him frustrated.''
Spieth described himself as a ''little mental midget out there,'' as he constantly turned toward caddie Michael Greller.
''Actually kind of embarrassing looking back,'' he said. ''I was dropping clubs and just whining to Michael, and you just can't do that. In match play, you've got to keep your cool. Any time you show that, it's a weakness, and Ernie can take advantage of it.''
And he did.
---
A LONG WALK: Rickie Fowler might have logged more miles than anyone this week, and not just because he has played 71 holes to reach the semifinals.
Fowler has been taking hikes up the mountain behind The Ritz-Carlton at Dove Mountain with his mother and sister, a peaceful way to end a day and a great place to watch the sunset over the high desert north of Tucson.
''The first night I went on my own, which was kind of fun,'' Fowler said after his 1-up win over Jim Furyk. ''My mom and sister came in on Tuesday, so made them go with me. And I guess we're going to continue that. It's been working. I'll be going on a hike a little later this afternoon and go hang out up there and just relax and watch the sunset and go down and have some dinner at the hotel.''
Fowler said it's about a 25-minute hike. Once they get to the top, they send pictures and used FaceTime with friends.
''It's just a fun way to relax and enjoy the afternoon,'' he said.
---
MIC CHECK: Jordan Spieth had to aim away from the hole from a bunker on the par-5 second. The idea was to splash out with some side spin, catch the fringe and have the ball trickle toward the hole.
It worked except for one tiny detail - he forgot to have the TV microphone removed.
The ball struck the base of the microphone and stayed there. Spieth could only get up-and-down for par, and Els two-putted for birdie to win the hole.
---
A WORLD AFFAIR: For only the third time in 16 years of the Match Play Championship, the semifinalists are from four continents - Australia (Jason Day), Africa (Ernie Els), Europe (Victor Dubuisson) and North America (Rickie Fowler).
Those four continents also were involved in 2007 (Geoff Ogilvy, Trevor Immelman, Henrik Stenson and Chad Campbell).
The first time it happened was in 2001 in Melbourne, when the semifinalists were from North America (American Steve Stricker), Africa (Els), Europe (Pierre Fulke) and Asia (Japan's Toru Taniguchi).
---
DIVOTS: At 44, Ernie Els is the oldest player to reach the semifinals in the Match Play Championship. The oldest winner was Kevin Sutherland, who was 37 when he won in 2002. ... Victor Dubuisson is the 11th player to reach the semifinals in his Match Play debut. That includes the four semifinalists from the inaugural year in 1999. Geoff Ogilvy and Jeff Maggert are the only players to win in their first year. ... Dubuisson has played 67 holes this week, the fewest of the four players remaining.
Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/