12.01.2013

<中間速報>勇太、終盤2つのダボで失速…初日1アンダー



Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/


2011年08月18日13時00分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -6
S・コンラン -6
3 白 佳和 -5
武藤 俊憲 -5
5 M・ママット -4
吉永 智一 -4
小平智 -4
C・プラポール -4
9 谷口 徹 -3
N・ベーシック -3


順位の続きを見る


<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 国内男子ツアー「関西オープン」が、兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部で開幕した。「全米プロゴルフ選手権」から強行スケジュールで今大会に出場している池田勇太は、1アンダーでホールアウトした。池田は前半5番からの3連続バーディなどでスコアを伸ばしたものの、後半15番、18番と2つのダブルボギーを叩き、初日は“70”で終えた。

 現時点で白佳和、チョ・ミンギュ(韓国)が5アンダーで首位、1打差の3位タイに小平智らがつけている。

<速報>勇太、1アンダー20位タイ発進!S・コンランらが首位



Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blo



2011年08月18日18時01分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -6
S・コンラン -6
3 白 佳和 -5
武藤 俊憲 -5
5 M・ママット -4
吉永 智一 -4
小平智 -4
C・プラポール -4
9 谷口 徹 -3
N・ベーシック -3


順位の続きを見る


<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 国内男子ツアー「関西オープン」が、兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部で開幕。初日を終えてチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)、スティーブン・コンラン(オーストラリア)が6アンダーで首位、1打差の3位タイに武藤俊憲白佳和がつけた。

 「全米プロゴルフ選手権」を終えて帰国したばかりの池田勇太は、1アンダーの20位タイで初日を終えている。なお、今大会に石川遼藤田寛之金庚泰(キム・キョンテ)(韓国)は出場していない。

【初日の結果】
1位T:チョ・ミンギュ(-6)
1位T:スティーブン・コンラン(-6)
3位T:白佳和(-5)
3位T:武藤俊憲(-5)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-4)
5位T:吉永智一(-4)
5位T:小平智(-4)
5位T:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)
9位T:谷口徹(-3)
9位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-3)
11位T:塚田好宣(-2)他8名


20位T:池田勇太(-1)他9名gspot.com/

昨年覇者、野中茂はイーブンパー発進、悔いの残るラウンドに



Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/



2011年08月18日18時20分
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リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -6
S・コンラン -6
3 白 佳和 -5
武藤 俊憲 -5
5 M・ママット -4
吉永 智一 -4
小平智 -4
C・プラポール -4
9 谷口 徹 -3
N・ベーシック -3


順位の続きを見る


<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県の小野ゴルフ倶楽部を舞台に開幕した、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」。昨年覇者の野中茂は初日を終え、3バーディ・3ボギーのイーブンパー20位タイにつけた。

 「今日はアゲインストかフォローか、どっちか分かりづらい風が吹いていたのが辛かったです」とこの日は風に苦しめられた野中。「ボギーだったところは全部フェアウェイからだったので悔しいですね。バーディチャンスもけっこうあったので余計悔しいです。明日の課題はパターですね」とティショットが好調ながらスコアを伸ばせなかったことを悔やんだ。

 「予選落ちだけはしたくないので、やるだけやりたいと思います。明日も頑張ります」。明日はディフェンディングチャンピオンの意地をみせて巻き返しなるか。

【初日の結果】
1位T:チョ・ミンギュ(-6)
1位T:スティーブン・コンラン(-6)
3位T:白佳和(-5)
3位T:武藤俊憲(-5)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-4)
5位T:吉永智一(-4)
5位T:小平智(-4)
5位T:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)
9位T:谷口徹(-3)
9位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-3)
11位T:塚田好宣(-2)他8名
20位T:池田勇太(-1)他9名

河井博大、18ホール回りきれず熱中症で無念の棄権


2011年08月18日18時26分
リーダーズボード
順位選手名スコア
1チョ・ ミンギュ-6
 S・コンラン-6
3白 佳和-5
 武藤 俊憲-5
5M・ママット-4
 吉永 智一-4
 小平智-4
 C・プラポール-4
9谷口 徹-3
 N・ベーシック-3
<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の初日。今季の「日本プロゴルフ選手権大会 日清カップヌードル杯」の覇者で現在賞金ランキング4位の河井博大が第1ラウンド14番ホール終了後に熱中症のため棄権した。

 「途中からおかしいな」という感覚があったという河井。「12番、13番ぐらいでかなりしんどかった。けど、やり切らないと思って」と我慢してプレーを続けるも、14番でこれ以上のプレーは困難と判断し棄権。その後は救護室で処置を受け、大事にはいたらなかった。

 河井は開催コースの小野ゴルフ倶楽部で1997年から3年間所属プロをしていた。昨日は「このコースは一番僕が知っている。プレッシャーもありますけど」と語るなど気合いが入っていただけに、残念な結果となってしまった。

10.11.2013

Golf notebook: Spieth pleased with decision to turn pro


Golf notebook: Spieth pleased with decision to turn pro










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange March 25, 2013 7:40 PMThe SportsXchange


--Jordan Spieth's gamble to turn pro without status on any tour after failing to advance past the second stage of PGA Tour Qualifying School late last year is about to pay off.


The 19-year-old, who left Texas after helping the Longhorns capture the NCAA Championship as a freshman last year, has earned $521,892 in four PGA Tour events this season, finishing in the top 25 of the last three.

"A lot of people told me I made the wrong decision," Spieth said after tying for seventh in the Tampa Bay Championship following a tie for second in the Puerto Rico Open.

Spieth can earn his PGA Tour card for next season by finishing in the top 125 on the 2013 money list. Last year, Kevin Chappell finished 12th on the money list with $647,510.

However, the events that made up the Fall Series will make up the start of the 2013-14 season, so it probably will take less cash to sew up playing privileges for next season.

That means Spieth is probably one more good finish away, and that could come this week for the Texan in the Shell Houston Open.

Already, he has earned enough money to be eligible for and accept Special Temporary Member status in the PGA Tour, meaning he can receive unlimited sponsor's exemptions for rest of the season.

"Right now it's excitement," Spieth said after a holing a chip shot for birdie on the 17th hole and holing a seven-foot birdie putt on the closing hole at the Copperhead Course to get his tie for seventh. "I'm just extremely happy. You know, obviously didn't think this would happen.

"When you go, at the beginning of the year, when you know that you only get seven unrestricted exemptions, first of all it's hard to get seven tournaments in, let alone make enough money to get your card. To be able to do it and really in three events ... .

"I missed the cut at Torrey, played well at Pebble, (Puerto Rico) and here, so I never would have guessed that I would get it this quickly."

Spieth planned to play mostly on the Web.com Tour, the PGA Tour's triple-A circuit, this season and earned $50,150 in his first two starts, leaving less than $5,000 from earning full status on that tour.

His tie for seventh in the Panama Claro Championship earned him a spot in the Colombia Championship, where he tied for seventh, with that top-10 finish earning him a spot in the Chile Classic in Santiago.

The only problem was that he had accepted a sponsor's exemption to play in Tampa Bay the same week and the smart money was in Chile.

But, again, Spieth proved he knew best.

--Stacy Lewis ascended to the No. 1 spot in the Rolex Women's World Golf Rankings with class and grace.

After coming from behind to win the RR Donnelley Founders Cup to become the seventh player, and second American, to top the rankings since they were instituted in 2006, Lewis thought of everybody but herself.

First, she said the victory was for her caddie, Travis Wilson, whose gaffe the day before handed Lewis a two-stroke penalty and left her four shots behind Ai Miyazato of Japan heading to the final round.

"Weird things happen when you play enough golf rounds, and I told (Wilson) that over and over and over again," the 28-year-old Lewis said. "He would have felt horrible if we lost by two, so that's why I just put the dagger in and made some more putts there coming in."

After hugging her father, Dale, once she putted out on the 18th hole to wrap up her seventh LPGA Tour victory and second this season, Lewis met with youngsters from the LPGA-USGA Girls Golf Program for a group hug, and later donated $50,000 to the organization.

While accepting her trophy, Lewis paid tribute to three LPGA Tour founders -- Louise Suggs, Marilynn Smith and Shirley Spork -- who were on hand along with two other women pioneers, Carol Mann and JoAnne Carner.

"What you did was way harder than anything I do right now," Lewis said directly to them. "Thank you, thank you 100 times. ...

"If those ladies taught me anything, it's to give back to the game and leave it better than I found it."

Finally, Lewis had something to say about herself.

She didn't have to say much, because her story by itself speaks volumes about the type of determination she has after growing up wearing a back brace much of the time, and needing a metal rod and five screws surgically attached to her spine because of severe scoliosis.

"Almost 10 years ago I was going into surgery to put a rod and five screws in my back," Lewis said. "I'm really not supposed to be here. People with metal in their back, how do you play golf?

"I don't know how, I don't know why I'm here. I know that there's a reason, and I know that everything happens for a reason. Every setback you have along the way, everything good that happens, it all happens for a reason."

Showing what her contemporaries think of Lewis, Yani Tseng, who Lewis replaced at the top of the rankings in the world after Tseng held the No. 1 spot for 109 weeks, sent her friend and the new No. 1 a congratulatory note on Twitter.

--After a long delay because of a legal dispute, construction has started on the course that will be played when golf returns to the Olympic Games in Rio de Janeiro in 2016.

The organizing committee for the Games in Rio said that clearing work had begun to remove "non-native vegetation" after a permit was issued by the city.

"We are delighted that work has begun on the golf venue and we remain on track to deliver the golf course for a test event in 2015 as scheduled," Carlos Nuzman, head of the Rio organizing committee, said in a statement.

The International Olympic Committee has repeatedly downplayed the ongoing legal dispute, but was officially notified about it by court officials during a recent inspection visit to Rio.

Two companies have claimed ownership of the land, with one having announced plans to build a housing complex there instead.

Gil Hanse, whose company was selected to design the course, has been frustrated by the problems because he has been on site for several months waiting to start work.

"We are very excited and pleased to have begun the initial clearing of the site," Hanse said. "It is the start of a long process to transform this property into a beautiful golf course, and we are happy to get started."

Official construction of the course, which will host the first Olympic golf tournament since 1904 in St. Louis, is scheduled to begin April 1.

The course will be built on a 240-acre piece of sandy, partly marshy terrain inland from the Atlantic Ocean in an area of Rio called Barra, about three miles from the Olympic Village.

--J.B. Holmes, who has been battling to reclaim his spot among the best golfers in the world since undergoing brain surgery in 2011, will be miss the next 8-to-12 weeks because of a broken left ankle he sustained in a roller-blading accident near his home in Windermere, Fla.

Holmes, whose ankle is in a cast, has missed the cut in four of the five tournaments he has played this season, in addition to tying for 50th in AT&T National Pro-Am.

"Just a freak little thing," said Terry Reilly, Holmes' agent with Wasserman Media Group.

The 31-year-old Holmes, whose two PGA Tour victories came in the 2006 and 2008 FBR Opens (now the Waste Management Phoenix Open), finished in the top 20 in only two of his 25 events last year after his return from brain surgery.

Holmes, one of the longest hitters on the circuit, missed the last part of the 2011 season after having brain surgery to repair Chiari malformations.

Reilly said his client was rollerblading, part of his training regimen, with his fiancee, Erica Kahldin, when he hit a rut in the road that caused his ankle to collapse sideways.

Holmes and Kahldin are scheduled to be married on April 20.

--Yani Tseng of Taiwan, knocked off her perch atop the Rolex Women's World Golf Rankings by Stacy Lewis, was looking forward to trying to regain the No. 1 spot last week in the Kia Classic.

Tseng never got to the first tee on Thursday, being forced to withdraw the day before per LPGA Tour rules because she missed her tee time for the pro-am at Aviara Golf Club in Carlsbad, Calif.

"I'm embarrassed to admit that I wasn't feeling well last night and accidentally overslept and missed my tee time for the pro-am this morning," Tseng said in a statement. "I was extremely excited to compete this week to defend my title at the Kia Classic and to try to regain the No. 1 spot.

"This was an unfortunate mistake and I want to apologize to Kia, my sponsors and all of the fans. The Kia Classic is one of my favorite tournaments and I have so many great memories in San Diego. I can't wait to come back here next year."

Tseng, who won the Kia Classic last year at La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, will get her next chance to regain the No. 1 spot in a week at the Kraft Nabisco Championship, the first LPGA Tour major of the season, which he won in 2010.

--Ye Wocheng, a 12-year-old from Dongguan in the Chinese province of Guangdong, will become the youngest player to compete in a European Tour event when he plays in the Volvo China Open.

Ye shot 68-74 -- 142 in a qualifier at Wolong Valley Country Club in Chengdu, China, earning his spot despite stumbling a little down the stretch with a triple bogey on his 16th hole of the second round after three-putting the last two holes in round one.

Guan Tianlang, who went on to capture the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship last November and earn a spot in the Masters, set the record when he played in the China Open last year at the age of 13.

"A year ago I set out to break Guan's European Tour record," said Ye, who captured titles in the Callaway Junior World Golf Championships in San Diego in 2010 and 2011, before finishing second last year.

"My dad was my first coach, so I owe him a lot for starting me off and helping me to develop my swing. He's a pretty good player himself, an eight handicap."

The Volvo China Open will be played May 2-5 at Binhai Lake Golf Club in Tianjin, near Beijing.

--Tom Watson wants more of his players on the 2014 Ryder Cup team to make it the old-fashioned way: he wants them to earn it.

Watson announced that he has cut the number of Captain's Picks he can make from four to three for the matches next year on the PGA Centenary Course, designed by Jack Nicklaus, at Gleneagles Resort in Scotland.

"Giving our players one more opportunity to earn a spot on merit, I believe, is the right thing to do," said Watson, who will make his three picks after nine players qualifying through the point standings.

Americans can begin earning point toward the Ryder Cup next month in the Masters. Only points earned from the majors count this year, but all PGA Tour events, with an emphasis on the majors, will count in 2014.

Captain Paul Azinger overhauled the U.S. points system before the 2008 matches at Valhalla in Louisville, Ky. He based the point standings on PGA Tour earnings instead of points assigned to top-10 finishes, put more emphasis on the season in which the Ryder Cup is held and increased the Captain's picks from two to four.

The changes led to a United States victory, but the European has won the biennial event the last two years, including last year, when the Euros rallied from a 10-6 deficit on Sunday by dominating the singles matches.

Watson, who will be 65 when the matches are played in Scotland, is the oldest captain in Ryder Cup history and plays only on the Champions Tour, so he might not know his players that well, yet.

"I've watched a lot of golf on Golf Channel and the networks," Watson said. "I know who Russell Henley (who won the Sony Open in Hawaii) is. I know Kevin ... Streelman (who won the Tampa Bay Championship). You're starting to see players really surge right now.

"Then you have the old stalwarts like Phil (Mickelson) and Tiger (Woods). They have got to step up to the plate as well and lead the team. That's my job as captain, to get the right frame of mind for the team as they approach the Ryder Cup and during the Ryder Cup."

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

A Lesson Learned: Tiger's Putter the Great Equalizer


A Lesson Learned: Tiger's Putter the Great Equalizer











David Damesworth March 25, 2013 9:29 PM


I hope you had the opportunity to watch Tiger Woods win at Bay Hill. But more than that, I hope you appreciate what you saw.


I had the good fortune of playing in the Arnold Palmer Invitational a year ago. Mr. Palmer has always been kind enough extend an invitation to the North Florida PGA Section champion, and as the winner of that event, I was able to test my playing skills against the best in the world. While I didn't make the cut, I learned a lot about the conditions those guys see week in and week out, and I gained a greater appreciation for how good those guys really are.

For starters, I couldn't play from the rough. Bermuda rough is thick and gnarly under the best of circumstances. Throw in a little rain and tour mowing heights, and it becomes darn near impossible. I found myself playing defensively to keep the ball in the fairway.

But for Tiger, the fairways didn't matter. He missed more than he hit and still won by a comfortable margin, because he had the greatest equalizer in the game - a hot putter.

Tiger finished in the bottom 10 percent of the field in driving accuracy and the bottom 50 percent in greens hit in regulation. That would normally mean missing the cut, not running away with a win. But Tiger led the field in putting. Once again, he did not miss from inside 10 feet, and he was in the top 10 percent in up-and-downs.

He didn't hit a bad putt until the 13th hole of the final round, when he left his first effort eight feet short and low. But he proceeded to roll the second putt in the center of the hole as if it was a tap-in. His confidence with the putter is reminiscent of the days when he made every important putt.

And that is the lesson that you can take away from Tiger's win. He could have spent hours on the range at Bay Hill fighting his swing and figuring out a way to hit every fairway. But instead, he spent a great deal of time on the putting green, working on his one-handed drill that helps him keep his hands high and promotes the release of the putter face through impact.

And he putted between two tees he placed in the ground just far enough apart for a ball to fit through them. That drill helped with his posture and grip by forcing him to focus on his alignment and starting the putt on line.

Both drills improved his feel, his rhythm and, ultimately, his confidence.

Never was that more evident than on the ninth hole of the third round when he snap-hooked a drive that hit a tree and almost went out of bounds. Over half the field would have made bogey from where Tiger left that drive. But because of his supreme confidence in his short game, he hit a 7-iron short of the green in an area where he knew he could hit a wedge close. From there, he hit his third shot to three feet and made the putt for an easy 4.

That's why he won this week, and why he's a heavy favorite to win the Masters. You can miss fairways at Augusta National as long as you can putt. And Tiger can certainly putt.

Confidence on the greens takes pressure off the rest of your game. So, rather than spend hours fighting a swing that might help you hit one or two more fairways, take that practice time over to the putting green and work on a few of Tiger's drills.

I promise you, if you make every putt inside of 10 feet, you will shave a lot of shots off your scorecard, and probably have a career round.

David Damesworth is the PGA Head Golf Professional and TPI Fitness Instructor at Orange Tree Golf Club in Orlando, Fla.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Rickie Fowler Failing to Live Up to Potential


Rickie Fowler Failing to Live Up to Potential
Young Phenom is a Trendsetter Idolized by a Generation of Young Golfers but He’s Underacheived so Far on the Golf Course











Mark McLaughlin March 26, 2013 3:40 AM




COMMENTARY | And now, we turn to the rest of the golf universe being drowned out by the floodlights following Tiger Woods and his reclaimed No. 1 ranking to Augusta National … and his latest date with Lindsey Vonn.




Rickie Fowler did his best to take down Tiger in Monday's finish to the Arnold Palmer Invitational but a bogey-triple bogey stumble down the stretch once again doomed his chances. It's becoming an all too common trend for the talented 24-year-old but one that needs to be corrected if he hopes to become a regular winner on the PGA Tour.



Maybe too much was expected of Fowler when he blazed onto the scene with a clinic on clutch putting at the 2010 Ryder Cup. That display backed up Corey Pavin's gutsy pick of Fowler as a captain's choice and the young gun out of Oklahoma State seemed destined to become a perennial Ryder Cup presence.



Fowler took a big step last May in capturing his first tour victory against a deep field on a stellar track at theWells Fargo Championship. Fowler followed up his maiden win with a runner-up showing the next week at the Players Championship and added a T5 at the Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial for good measure.





Then the roof fell in. Fowler played his way off the 2012 Ryder Cup team by failing to post a top 20 finish the rest of the season. Davis Love III made the wrong call picking a flawed Jim Furyk for the team over Fowler as the darling of Puma-wearing young golfers everywhere would have added some needed pizzazz to the U.S. lineup.



I thought Fowler would enter this year with a chip on his shoulder, kind of like getting back on his dirtbike after a bad fall and charging the motocross course even harder. His 2013 campaign has shown flashes - he's got three top six finishes - but it's been done in by final-round blowups. Fowler ranks 126th in final round scoring average and you're not going to win too many times with those numbers.



Loose iron shots have been the main culprit. The 7-iron second shot he rinsed into the water fronting Bay Hill's par 5 16th hole is the latest and most memorable example. That errant swing led to a triple bogey, extending a streak that PGATour.com's Fred Albers notes has seen him make a double bogey or worse in 15 straight tournaments. Fowler has been hitting such shots all year as he ranks 133rd in greens in regulation.



Despite the poor finish, Bay Hill marked Fowler's best showing since his run of good play nearly a year ago. And he was encouraged about standing toe-to-toe with Woods, the best closer ever, for most of the final round.





"That's the best I've felt in the final group," Fowler said in his post-round press conference. "It was fun to go after him a little bit, I just wish it could have been a little bit more coming down the last couple holes."



Add to that growing confidence a dose of maturity. Since coming on tour, Fowler has putted aggressively, almost fearlessly. Such boldness creates more opportunities to convert long birdie putts like he did at Bay Hill but also introduces more three putts. Now he sounds ready to ease off the throttle.



"It's not fun having three or four footers coming back all the time," Fowler said. "I'm working on dropping the speed back a little bit."





Fowler is also trying to learn as much as he can from his late mistakes.



"Putting myself in position to win a golf tournament and kind of taking myself out of it…it was kind of kick in the butt to go out there and finish off tournaments."



Sounds like that chip is back on Fowler's shoulder. Only another win can knock it off.

Much Ado About Anchoring Putters

For all the fuss about the belly putter this season, the long stick has yet to be wielded by a tournament winner. Maybe the threat of having to switch back to a normal length putter is playing with their heads but whatever the reason, the PGA Tour's most well known long putters have been mostly missing in action on 2013 leaderboards.



Webb Simpson: The first U.S. Open winner to anchor his putter, Simpson has sandwiched six top 25 finishes around two missed cuts but has yet to be in contention down the stretch on Sunday.

Adam Scott: A sample size of four tournaments is not much to judge but Scott sits in the middle of the pack in strokes gained putting and has made a single cameo appearance in prime time thanks to a final-round 64 to finish third at Doral.

Ernie Els: The long putter worked wonders for Els at the Open Championship at Royal Lytham and St. Anne's but hasn't helped much since. He has just one top 25 finish in five U.S. starts and has been seen on practice greens stroking a standard length putter.



The lone exception to the long-putter-as-an-anchor theme is Keegan Bradley, who is trending in the right direction with the Masters on the horizon.





After a lackluster West Coast Swing, Bradley has heated up in his adopted home state of Florida. The Jupiter resident has finished T4, seventh and T3 in his three starts on the Bermuda greens of the Sunshine state. And those performances could have been better as each was capped by a final-round 71.



Bradley would seem to lack the seasoning to win at Augusta - he'll be making just his second Masters start - but he's been doing course recon with none other than Phil Mickelson, a mentor who's not afraid to pass on his vast knowledge to his Ryder Cup and weekly money match buddy.



Mark McLaughlin has reported on the PGA Tour for FoxSports.com, the Greensboro News & Record, Burlington (N.C.) Times-News and New York Post. He is a past member of the Metropolitan Golf Writers Association. Follow him on Twitter @markmacduke.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

10.07.2013

Fourteen-year-old Tianlang Guan's mom has everything covered as he begins Masters journey


Fourteen-year-old Tianlang Guan's mom has everything covered as he begins Masters journey











Dan Wetzel April 11, 2013 3:33 PMYahoo Sports





AUGUSTA, Ga. – Hongyu Liu had purchased a Masters tote bag, and early Thursday morning she dutifully filled it with supplies.

There was a small, blue insulated lunch box, which she decided would be good for keeping some juice boxes cold. There were a couple of energy bars, two bananas and a fresh towel, in case it rained. She also was carrying three umbrellas.

This was a mother's care package, a portable support system for Tianlang Guan, who was about to become the youngest Masters participant ever. For Hongyu, the idea her son might duff his first tee shot was not a concern. Everything else was.



"He forgets to eat," Hongyu said as she watched him take some final putts on the practice green of Augusta National. "He gets so focused he forgets. So I’m carrying this stuff."





View gallery.



Tianlang hails from Guangzhou, China. He qualified for the Masters last fall by winning the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship. He's a 5-foot-8, 140-pound prodigy who should be in an eighth-grade classroom and has the messy bedroom back home to prove it. "He doesn’t really clean it," mom said. "He’s like a normal [teenager.]"

Normal? Well, this week he had a practice round with Tiger Woods – "He's 14," Tiger said. "Good stuff." – a sit-down with Jack Nicklaus, and this scene Thursday: a huge gallery of fans craning their necks to see his first shot, a simultaneous glimpse at both history and the future.

He smacked it dead center down the first fairway – his playing group included 61-year-old Ben Crenshaw – en route to a solid 1-over-par 73, which he capped off by dropping a 20-foot birdie putt on 18.

[Also: Tiger running out of time to catch Jack? Maybe not ]

Hongyu was not surprised by her kid's poise. "He’s been in over 200 tournaments." She, along with her husband and a small group of family friends, wasn't nervous at all about his ability to play the game. This was a day of celebration.

She is a mom though, so she was worried about Tianlang's habit of forgetting to snack and running out of energy. Prior to the round she called over her son's caddie, Brian Tam, and spoke to him via a translator.

"He’s not in the habit of asking for food, so you have to give it to him to remind him," she said.

Tam nodded and said that he noticed that during a practice round. Hongyu said she'd be right alongside in the gallery with the snacks. So just come over. And she wanted to plan a forced food break after the ninth hole.

[Watch: Thursday recap]

Tam just laughed a little. This was clearly a thorough plan (and one that would be later followed: a banana was consumed on the walk to the 10th tee). Hongyu also had those three umbrellas with her. The woman thought of everything. She didn't want them in the golf bag however, because it might make it too heavy and burdensome for the caddie.



"It's good," Tam said with a laugh. "I’ve carried much heavier."

Mom wouldn't switch up though. This is how it would work, she said. The caddie deferred. Soon her son was heading to the tee box and she was off, happy and relaxed to stroll the course.

Tianlang is slight, looks young, but swings hard. There were worries his lack of distance would get him, but he bombed some shots off the tee by playing bigger clubs. He can putt as well as nearly anyone.

Other than Tiger Woods, Tianlang was the most anticipated start of Thursday's opening round, old and young trying to imagine being him.

On the second hole, he wound up just in front of the green and walked past three kids from the local First Tee program – Tyler Troxel, 9; D.J. Kellar, 12; and Naitian Zhou, 13.

All three wanted to see a peer play with the pros, although they admit they didn’t have much in common with challenging Augusta National … other than the video game version.

"We have the Masters game," Troxel said.

So how would they play this shot, virtually?

"I’d go for the hole," Troxel said.

"Sand wedge," Kellar added. "Definitely sand wedge."

[Also: Caroline Wozniacki has not learned the art of golf from Rory McIlroy ]

They all laughed and sort of marveled at the site of a junior high kid playing in the Masters. One hole later, Tianlang drained a 12-footer for birdie, causing an eruption of cheers and then holding the ball aloft to acknowledge the crowd. He has some personality to him.

His father, Hanwen, and friend John Ho, who owns the course in China where Tianlang plays, came bouncing by, patting each other on the shoulder, excited at the big shot. The dream is to somehow make the cut. At that moment the kid was even par.







View gallery.

Tianlang Guan tees off on the second hole Thursday. (Getty Images)



Hongyu Liu walked behind them, more reserved. This is exactly what she expected out of her boy. This is how he plays. Why would Augusta National be any different?

Mom was just having fun watching her son. The tote bag of snacks and juice boxes was still slung over her shoulder.

Across this warm, humid afternoon, Guan stunned the golf world with two things – his outrageously soft hands around the green and his poise, even in the wake of mistakes.

When he was seemingly lost behind the sixth green, he executed a perfect up and down for par. When he made a poor chip on nine and wound up with a bogey, he immediately responded with a birdie on 10. When he went into the pond on 11, a recovery shot saved bogey, and he then settled into par, birdie through Amen Corner.

“It must help to have 14-year-old nerves,” Crenshaw joked. “I’m telling you, he played like a veteran. He played a beautiful round of golf. His thought process, he never got rushed … at 14 to have the presence like that?”

Combine that with a world-class short game – which Gaun said is self-taught, has never been coached and something he only works on during weekends – and the rest of the golfing world – weekend hackers, anyway – might just consider quitting the game.

When he sunk a putt from just off the green at 18, seemingly oblivious to the stakes and theater, he pumped his fist and waved his hat to the cheering gallery. He finished with a 73, tied for 46th and every bit in the hunt to make the cut on Friday [the top 50 move on].

His mother, standing behind the green, jumped up and down and clapped before recording his score on a handmade scorecard.

“Wonderful,” she said. “I’m very happy.”

Others in the gallery realized who she was and began trying to hand her business cards.

“Today’s pretty special for me,” Tianlang Guan noted later. “It’s amazing to play in the Masters.”

And forget just wondering if he can make the cut – an absolutely ridiculous assertion prior to this. Guan was asked about winning the whole tournament.

“I think probably not this year, but I think in the future.”

That isn’t even the big dream.

“Hopefully I can win the four majors in one year.”

Coming from just about any other golfer that would be the definition of gumption. Not here, not today. No one in Augusta laughed. No one doubts it’s not possible.

Pressure and fatigue and youth may wind up dooming the kid on Friday, who knows? But here on a remarkable opening day in the life of a 14 year old, everything turned out perfect, everything went according to plan.

Everything.

“I am happy he ate the snack,” his mom said before heading off to congratulate her kid.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Masters: Welshman Jamie Donaldson aces par-3 6th at Masters


Masters: Welshman Jamie Donaldson aces par-3 6th at Masters











PGA.COM April 11, 2013 5:39 PM

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Jamie Donaldson, 37, had six top-10 finishes in 2012, including a T7 showing at the PGA Championship, …



AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- Jamie Donaldson has made a hole-in-one at the Masters.

The Welsh golfer aced the sixth hole during Thursday's opening round. He becomes the fifth golfer to make a 1 at the 180-yard hole known as Juniper. And it's the first sinceChris DiMarco in 2004.

Overall, it was the 24th ace in Masters history. Last year, Bo Van Pelt and Adam Scott made holes-in-one at No. 16.

Donaldson's brilliant shot left him at 1 under for the tournament, three strokes behind the leader, David Lynn of England.

©2013 by STATS LLC and Associated Press.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Eubanks: Woods clearly still Masters favorite


Eubanks: Woods clearly still Masters favorite











PGA.COM April 11, 2013 7:17 PM

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Tiger Woods only missed two putts inside 12 feet, a herculean feat at Augusta National.(Getty Image …


By Steve Eubanks, PGA.com


He's got them right where he wants them.

Tiger Woods shot 70 in the opening round of the Masters, which wasn't good enough to lead. In fact, it left him off the first page of the leaderboard, tied with the likes of John Huhand Tim Clark, who were not on anyone's short list of potential winners.

He finished four back of Australian Marc Leishman, four behind Sergio Garcia, three behind Dustin Johnson, two back of Rickie Fowler - who had two double bogeys - and a couple back of David Lynn, an affable Englishman that most casual fans wouldn't know if he sat down next to them at the Krispy Kreme on Washington Road. He also trailed Trevor Immelman, who hasn't won a tournament since he won this one five years ago. And he was behind a 53-year-old in the form of Fred Couples when he signed his scorecard.

Still, those who picked Tiger felt very confident in their choice. Leading after Day One is like leading the first 50 laps of a 500-mile race: It's nice while it lasts, but has no bearing on the outcome.

Tiger wasn't leading when the sun set on Thursday night in 1997, or in 2001, or 2002, and he certainly wasn't leading at the end of the first round in 2005. The old adage that you can't win the tournament on the first day has never been truer than Tiger's opening-day record at the Masters.

In 1997, he shot 70 in the first round and trailed John Huston, Paul Stankowski and Paul Azinger. On Sunday afternoon he rolled in a final putt to win by 12 shots, a Masters record.

In 2001, Tiger opened with another 70 and was tied for 14th. He actually trailed one player, Scott Verplank, who ended up missing the cut. By Sunday, he was able to cruise home with a two-shot win to capture the Tiger Slam.

Then in 2002, he shot yet another 70 on Thursday and was tied for sixth, three behind Davis Love III. He won by three.

The last time Tiger won the Masters in 2005, he opened with a 74 and could have been in danger of missing the cut. Instead, he came roaring back to take a three-shot lead into the final round. Chris DiMarco caught him, but Tiger prevailed on the first playoff hole.

This time he shot one of the easiest 70s of the day, a round where he never looked out of control, never struggled with his swing and looked like he could have shaved off two or three more strokes off at any moment.

That is why Tiger's 2 under should have the field worried. He looked like a Ferrari on cruise control, humming along with ease but looking as though he could shift to another gear at any moment.

He had 30 putts, more than his rounds at Doral and Bay Hill, but fewer than the majority of the field at Augusta National. "I didn't leave myself the easiest of putts, so I'm pleased with how I putted," he said afterward.

He only missed two putts inside 12 feet, a herculean feat at Augusta National, and the fairways he missed were marginal at best. There were no wide rights or hard lefts, no club-throwing hooks or two-fairway-over recoveries. He looked as close to the Tiger of 2000 as he has in years. And that is why he is still the favorite, no matter how far down the leaderboard he finishes on Thursday night.

"More so than most courses, you have to be very patient," Tiger said underneath the oak tree after signing his card. "Especially with the greens being as soft as they were and as slow as they were, it will bait you into firing at some flags. You have to be very disciplined."

That is another variable in his favor. No one in the last 15 years has been more disciplined on the golf course than Tiger Woods. The next three days should be no different.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

9.29.2013

Watson reduces captain's picks so players can earn more spots


Watson reduces captain's picks so players can earn more spots









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Tom Watson is seeking his own balance between his picks and players who play their way onto the team.(Getty Images)

PGA.COM April 22, 2013 8:23 AM
It's a philosophical difference, and rational arguments can be made on both sides. On Wednesday morning, 2014 Ryder Cup Captain Tom Watson announced that he was revising the team selection process by reducing his captain's picks from four to three. That means that nine players will qualify and Watson will pick three in September of 2014, a few weeks prior to the event. Under the system that was in place since 2008, eight players qualified and four were selected by the captain. "Giving our players one more opportunity to earn a spot on merit, I believe, is the right thing to do," said Watson. "I will use all possible resources in choosing these three captain's choices to complete the best possible team in order to win the Cup back for the United States." This seems quite rational and logical. But so did the system that Paul Azinger instituted in 2008. Zinger lobbied for the captaincy at Valhalla, because he wanted to institute his now-famous pod system, breaking the 12-man team into three four-man pods and having those pods bond over the course of the week, a concept he learned by studying Navy SEAL training. Davis Love III used a modified version of that same strategy in 2012, when he kept the same twosomes together from the moment the team landed in Chicago until the singles matches on Sunday. But equally important to Zinger's strategy was changing the qualification process, taking the captain's picks from two to four - which Watson has now changed to three - and revamping the way players earned points, which Watson has left unchanged. Players will continue to earn Ryder Cup points only during the major championships in non-Ryder Cup years. Points increase and encompass all tournaments during Ryder Cup years, with additional weight given to the majors. That change from a system where players earned points for top-10 finishes and wins was a compromise hashed out at the PGA of America offices in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. Zinger originally wanted to eliminate off-year qualification altogether, but he received pushback from PGA officials on that point. "I was challenging orthodoxy," Zinger said. "The only way to change outcomes is to change events. The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result. We had been doing things one way for years and we'd been losing. If we were using a two-year qualification system 'because that's how it's always been done,' then we needed to try something different, because what we'd done hadn't worked too well." The compromise worked in 2008 and no one thinks that U.S. fielded a weak team in 2010 or 2012, either. Now, the only difference is that nine players will earn their way onto the roster instead of eight, with Watson filling out the rest. On the whole it's a minor tweak, one that will give the players more control over their own destiny without inhibiting the captain's ability to fill out his team with the hottest players prior to the matches. And if Watson chooses to break the team into four-man groups as Azinger did, he still has the opportunity to put one of his picks in each pod. "Tom is committed to do everything in his power to win the Ryder Cup," PGA of America President Ted Bishop said. "His evaluation and research of the U.S. qualifying system is just another example of his dedication to identify the best players for the 2014 United States Ryder Cup Team."
By: Steve Eubanks, PGA.com
Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

A Lesson Learned: When laying up is your best option


A Lesson Learned: When laying up is your best option











Josh Nichols April 22, 2013 9:08 AM


What a great honor it was to welcome the golf world to TPC Sugarloaf -- where I've been privileged to serve as PGA Head Professional since 2011. It was the inaugural year for the Greater Gwinnett Championship and we couldn't be happier with how the week unfolded. So many people deserve recognition and credit for the magical week, I'll try to include them all with a collective "Thank You!" -- and they all know who they are.

There were two lessons to be learned this week. One wasn't instructional, but it was very educational. As golf professionals, we are all charged with growing the game. Have you taken your young golfer out to watch a Champions Tour event?

As I watched the faces of the youngsters as they followed, talked to, received autographs from or simply received a smile or wave from the legends of the game, I could see the proverbial light flip on. Tom Watson, Jay Haas, Bernhard Langer -- the kids out here this week watched more than golf, they watched golf history. And they left here with a better understanding and spirit of the game. It was a great sight to see and quite a lesson for me to learn.

But back to golf instruction.

This course is not new to hosting championships at the highest level. As the host of the PGA Tour's AT&T Classic from 1997-2008, TPC Sugarloaf was specifically designed to host events with up to 30,000 fans. Those fans come for many reasons -- most of all a dramatic finish. TPC Sugarloaf's 548-yard par-5 18th hole provides just that. It's one of the best finishing holes in golf. And that provides the perfect setting for this week's, "A Lesson Learned."

Our new champion, Bernhard Langer, aptly provided the tutorial. As Langer stood on 18th tee box with a 3-shot lead on Sunday, Tom Pernice Jr. was ahead of him on the green with a 20-foot eagle putt that would pull him within one shot.

Langer's drive sailed right of the fairway finishing in the rough. However, he saw up ahead that Pernice had missed his bid for eagle. Even with Pernice's tap-in birdie, Langer knew that a bogey would still win him the championship.

The second shot on this classic par 5 plays dramatically downhill, with many players able to give the green a go in two. Langer now faced a decision. With only 215 yards to cover the lake fronting the green, it was time to evaluate not only the shot, but also the circumstances that surrounded it.


Situations like this face every golfer, of every skill level at one point or another. At 215 yards, depending on wind, it was no more than a 3-hybrid and no less than a 5 iron. A lay up would require a shot no more than 120 yards... 120 yards! Nobody -- even the best players in the world, like to lay up with a wedge.

But here's the lesson, this is what the separates great players from really good players -- the ability to think rationally under even the most intense circumstances. Langer kept the BIG picture in mind, laid up with a wedge, and then wedged it to three feet. Yes, he still made birdie to win by three.

Sure, you may not be playing for a $278k winners check in your Saturday Nassau with the boys, but you can benefit from this lesson. When faced with a difficult decision during a round, remember to ask yourself three questions:

1. Will this guarantee me the result at the end of the round that I want?

2. Have I pulled this shot off before during competition (not just on the practice tee)?

3. Can I live with the worst case scenario?

If the answer to all three is "yes" then go for it! If even one is a "no" then choose the safe option.

Thinking your way around the golf course, while not as sexy as adding 30 yards to your tee ball, will save you more shots. At the end of the day anyone who has ever touched a golf club will admit: lower scores are more fun than a miracle shot.

Josh Nichols is the PGA Head Professional at TPC Sugarloaf in Duluth, Ga.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

LPGA: Park extends No. 1 ranking over Lewis


LPGA: Park extends No. 1 ranking over Lewis










The Sports Xchange April 22, 2013 4:00 PMThe SportsXchange



Korea's Inbee Park stretched out her cushion a bit in retaining the No. 1 spot in the LPGA Rolex Rankings and now holds a 0.34-point lead over American Stacy Lewis.

Park finished fourth in the Lotte tournament in Hawaii, which concluded Saturday, while Lewis tied for ninth.

Korea's Na Yeon Choi moved into the third spot with a tie for sixth, while former world No. 1 Yani Tseng continued her slide, falling into fourth after finishing in a tie for 38th in Hawaii.

Norway's Suzann Pettersen, who won the event, moved up one spot to No. 5 in the world.

Korea's So Yeon Ryu and Jiyai Shin, China's Shanshan Feng, Japan's Ai Miyazato and Australia's Karrie Webb round out the top 10.

American Paula Creamer remained at No. 11.




Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

9.28.2013

Two marshals come to Tiger's defense


Two marshals come to Tiger's defense










The Sports Xchange May 15, 2013 12:50 PMThe SportsXchange



A day after two marshals disputed Tiger Woods' version of events from a controversy with Sergio Garcia at the Players Championship, two others came to the defense of the world's No. 1-ranked golfer.

The issue stems from the second hole Saturday, with Garcia claiming Woods created a distraction by removing a club from his bag during Garcia's second shot, resulting in a poor shot that ultimately led to a bogey. Woods asserted he had been given the go-ahead that Garcia had already played his shot, but two marshals told Sports Illustrated on Monday that nothing had been said to Woods.

On Tuesday, two other marshals said there had indeed been communication.

"It is not true and definitely unfair to Tiger," marshal Brian Nedrich told the Florida Times-Union. "That's because I was the one Tiger heard say that Sergio had hit."

According to Nedrich, he could barely see Garcia but saw a glimpse of him swinging followed by the ball in the air. Fellow marshal Lance Paczkowski couldn't see Garcia and told fans he had yet to hit. Nedrich said Woods had already taken his club out of his bag, but that the marshals did indeed tell him Garcia had played his shot.

It's yet another version of the sequence of events, with Woods saying he was told Garcia had played his shot and then removed his club.

"There was a lot going on, as usual, when Tiger plays," Nedrich told the paper. "Then, he's trying to have the concentration he needs to win a tournament. It's easy to get small details out of whack when things happen so fast. It was an unfortunate incident, and I don't think either player is to blame."

"Tiger Woods did not lie," Paczkowski told the Times-Union. "Was there a small mistake in what he remembered? Yes. But I don't think it rises to the level of lying."

The drama began when Woods pulled a 5-wood from his bag, iliciting applause from the crowd - and Garcia said the commotion resulted in his poor shot. SI.com reported that Garcia turned and glared in Woods' direction, and he later told NBC, "It's very simple. You have to pay attention to what's going on because the other guy is hitting. You do something when you're in the crowd, and the crowd is going to respond."

On Monday, John North, the chief marshal for the first three holes, told SI.com: "Nothing was said to us, and we certainly said nothing to him. I was disappointed to hear him make those remarks. We're there to help the players and enhance the experience of the fans. He was saying what was good for him. It lacked character."

Countered Nedrich: "It's disingenuous to suggest that Tiger is a liar because he got a minor detail wrong."

"The comments from the marshals in today's (Times-Union) story definitively show that Tiger was telling the truth about being told Sergio had hit," said Mark Steinberg, Woods' agent, in a statement. "I hope this demonstrates to some reporters the importance of accuracy and not jumping to misplace conclusions."

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Kuchar could get major breakthrough at US Open


Kuchar could get major breakthrough at US Open










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange May 15, 2013 1:50 PMThe SportsXchange


In 2011, Keegan Bradley ended an American drought of six majors without a victory by winning the PGA Championship.

Last year, Bubba Watson captured the Masters and Webb Simpson claimed the U.S. Open title, and for each of the three, it was the first majors championship of his career.

It might be Matt Kuchar's turn, perhaps as soon as next month in the U.S. Open at Merion.

"I think the more comfortable you get winning tournaments -- I've now got five wins, and I'd like to continue that going," said the 34-year-old Kuchar, who is playing this week in the HP Byron Nelson Championship after a disappointing tie for 48th in his title defense at the Players Championship. "Majors are certainly on my radar. I think all of us try to peak for major championships. Everybody wants to get their game in the best shape possible for majors. ...

"I would like to kind of be 'on' with regularity and play well week in and week out, and I felt like that was the best preparation and just continue playing well and let that carry into major championships and just keep the good play going."

The upward turn of Kuchar's career since 2009 reads like a roadmap heading toward a major championship.

Kuchar ended a seven-year, non-winning streak by capturing the 2009 Turning Stone Resort Championship during the Fall Series, and things took off from there.

The following year, he captured the Barclays to open the PGA Tour playoffs for the FedEx Cup. He added a victory last year in the Players Championship and earlier this season in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship, where he beat defending champion Hunter Mahan in the final.

Not only has he shown he can win the big tournaments, but he also leads the PGA Tour with 33 top-10 finishes in the past three-plus seasons.


"I've always thought you were supposed to take the appropriate steps to get to the next level," said Kuchar, whose brilliant amateur career included a victory in the 1997 United States Amateur. "I've always thought that like in school, you kind of graduate elementary school, get to middle school, you graduate middle school and get to high school and then college, and those are the steps you take. You don't jump straight into college, and you don't jump straight into advanced-placement courses. You kind of take these little steps to get there.

"I thought the same was applicable with golf. I felt like you kind of start playing well, you start top-10ing, you start having a lot of chances, and then you win a tournament. Then you start doing the same in bigger tournaments. You start having better and better results, and you take those steps and feel more and more comfortable in the big tournaments, majors included, and I feel like I've made the right progressions.

"I've been pleased at kind of the trajectory of my career the last couple years."

That Kuchar, who has been in or near the top 10 in the World Golf Rankings the last few years, has become a major player is no surprise to anyone who saw him play during a brilliant amateur career.

After claiming the U.S. Amateur title at Cog Hill Golf and Country Club outside of Chicago, he earned the 1998 Haskins Award as college player of the year as a sophomore at Georgia Tech and finished as low amateur in the Masters and the U.S. Open that year.

Kuchar earned six titles for the Yellow Jackets before his graduation in 2000 in business management, before he briefly took a job in finance to have something to fall back on, just in case.

All it did was help him know what to do with his money once he turned pro.

In 2001, he earned his PGA Tour card without going to qualifying school by making $572,669 in six tournaments, including a tie for second in the Texas Open at La Cantera and a tie for third in the Air Canada Championship.

Kuchar broke through for his first victory on the circuit in the 2002 Honda Classic, and then ... almost nothing, for nearly seven years.

"Golf is a difficult and humbling game," the 6-foot-4 Kuchar said of how it brought even a big man like him to his knees. "I think it's gotten the best of everybody at times. So it was at times very frustrating. I think it's one of those things, even when you're playing great, the game of golf can still bring you right back down and humble you pretty quickly. ...

"Yeah, there were times I felt like I was going to have a hard time fighting my way back, and fortunately with my work with (instructor) Chris O'Connell, it's really been this upward climb where I feel like there's still a lot of improvements we can make. I feel like we've made a great deal of improvements, and I feel like there's still a lot of room to get better."

Kuchar turned to O'Connell in 2006, when he also went back to what was then the Nationwide Tour (now the Web.com Tour) and relearned what it was like to compete and win. He captured the Henrio County Open and finished second in the Preferred Health Systems Wichita Open and the Nationwide Tour Championship.

It restored the upward momentum of his career, and he has reached new heights by finishing in the top 10 in majors five times in the past four seasons, including ties for third and eighth the past two years in the Masters.

"I'm certainly looking forward to contending more in majors and hopefully getting my chance to win a couple," Kuchar said.

Once he breaks through, it might be as simple as one-two-three.




Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/

Tiger Woods’ Greatness Exemplified by Marshal’s Comments


Tiger Woods’ Greatness Exemplified by Marshal’s Comments
Marshal: He Lacked Character, but I was Still Rooting for Him











Chris Chaney May 15, 2013 4:25 PM




COMMENTARY | Did Tiger Woods lie at the Players Championship?

No, not about his drop on the 14th hole during the final round; that's a different argument for a different day.

This is about "The Incident."

Let's set the scene: It's the third round of the Players Championship. Woods and his playing partner, Sergio Garcia, have 37 holes and one shot under their belts so far. Woods, who has been working the ball beautifully all week, misses one left into the gallery amongst the trees. Garcia does not. He's positioned beautifully on the right side of the fairway on the par-5 second hole at TPC Sawgrass, away by a yard, according to the PGA Tour's Shot Tracker, and therefore, the first to play.

As Garcia prepares himself, Woods is languishing in a sea of spectators, clearing room for his next shot. Once a human V is made around Woods and his preferred line, he assesses his options. He sees an opening and believes that he can hit a 5-wood up near the green. He pulls his club, almost out of habit as he continues to plot his upcoming shot in his head, mumbling yardage numbers and wind direction and ball flight when sporadic cheering comes from the spectators surrounding him.

Momentarily knocked out of his supreme focus, Woods realizes the applause is for his club choice -- one that indicates to the crowd he is going for the par-5 green in two. Woods, now aware of his misstep, attempts to quiet the crowd by putting a finger to his lips and pointing toward his playing partner who, unbeknownst to Woods, has just struck his second shot. Woods refocuses himself and goes back to crunching numbers.

Meanwhile, Garcia's second shot is right going righter. He looks in Woods' direction -- still holding his follow-through -- with an expression somewhere between disbelief and disgust.

The two continue playing under ominous skies until play is called due to weather five holes later. During the nearly two-hour rain delay, Garcia makes his gripe with Woods known, insinuating in a Golf Channel interview that Woods pulled his club as an act of gamesmanship to mess with the Spaniard.

Asked about Garcia's comments following the round, Woods said he was aware of what was said and noted that a marshal told him that Garcia had already played his shot.

The duo's past and disdain for one another made news as the incident on the second hole played the role of reignitor of the imbroglio.

The next layer of the story came out Monday, long after Woods had already raised the crystal trophy above his head. SI.com's Michael Bamberger talked to a pair of marshals who were working the second hole Saturday when "The Incident" took place.

The chief of marshals for the first three holes, John North, stood over Woods' ball after it came to rest off the tee to protect it from the stampede of fans hoping to get within an arm's reach of Woods.


Questioned about the truth of Woods' assertion that marshals had told him Garcia had played his shot prior to Woods pulling a club, North said, "Nothing was said to us and we certainly said nothing to him.

"I was disappointed to hear him make those remarks. We're there to help the players and enhance the experience of the fans. He was saying what was good for him. It lacked character."

(North's comments have since been refuted by another marshal who admitted to telling Woods that Garcia had hit, although Woods had already pulled his club.)

Later, on Sunday afternoon, North, a graduate of the Naval Academy and Vietnam War veteran, sat watching the television broadcast from a military appreciation tent. With Woods and Garcia coming down the stretch, North said of Woods, "I hate to say it, but I was rooting for him. It tears me apart. But when he's winning ..."



But when he's winning. When he's winning, we set aside our personal grievances or feelings toward Woods the man and embrace the greatness that is Woods the golfer.

Perhaps it's part of the American psyche to place athletes up on pedestals, hoping and wishing for them to be something better than themselves, more than mortal. We want to be a part of history; it's exhilarating and memorable. We want to say, "I was there when…"

That's how North felt watching the greatest golfer of this generation Sunday afternoon, not yet 24 hours since Woods, in North's opinion, lied for his own personal gain, and in essence, threw North and his marshals under the bus.

But that's what greatness does to people in the moment. It encapsulates us; that as by a matter of proximity, we were a part of something great as well.

And sure, after the trophy's been given out and Woods has flown his private jet back to his mansion on the water in his gated community you might feel a little dirty, a little let down or disappointed in yourself for casting aside your morals to embrace something bigger than yourself.

After all, it's just sports. It's just a man hitting a ball, right?

Yes, that's true, but you know, next week, next month or next year, you're going to be rooting for Tiger Woods to do something great again just so you can say, "I was there when…"

Chris Chaney is a Cincinnati, Ohio-based sportswriter. He has written for multiple outlets including WrongFairway.com, Hoopville.com, The Cincinnati (OH) Enquirer and The Clermont (OH) Sun.



Follow him on Twitter @Wrong_Fairway.

Atricles Course: http://golfatn.blogspot.com/