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."





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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.







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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/