Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Na hits Vegas jackpot with first PGA title

Updated October 03, 2011 11:16:41

Kevin Na kept his cool with a red-hot putter to hold off fellow American Nick Watney and claim his first PGA Tour title with an emotional two-shot victory at the Las Vegas Open.

South Korea-born Na rolled in a 43-footer to birdie the par-3 17th before parring the last for a 6-under-par 65 and a 23-under total of 261 at the TPC Summerlin.

The 28-year-old, who had been winless in his previous 210 PGA Tour starts, threw both arms skywards in celebration before removing his cap and embracing his caddie.

"Oh wow," a tearful Na said greenside after being told he had finally triumphed in his 211th career start.

"I went through a lot. I'd have nightmares finishing second.

"I used to tell my mother 'as hard as I work, when I am going to get my first win?'

"People said they believed in me more than I think I believe in myself, especially Kenny my caddie.

"Every time he was there for me and he believed in me."

Nick O'Hern and Steven Bowditch were the best of the Australians, nine shots behind Na, with a stroke further back to Rod Pampling and Nathan Green.

Tied for the lead overnight with Watney, Na was briefly caught at the top by his playing partner with four holes to play before he tightened his grip on the title with birdies at 15, 16, and 17.

World number 11 Watney, bidding to become the PGA Tour's first three-times champion this year, had to settle for second place after closing with a four-birdie 67.

Americans Tommy Gainey and Paul Goydos both signed off with 68s to share third place at 18-under.

For most of the final round, however, the tournament came down to an effective head-to-head between Na and Watney, the two overnight leaders.

Na made a red-hot start, birdies at the first and second holes putting him two strokes clear at 19-under.

Though Las Vegas resident Watney cut that deficit to one with a long-range birdie putt at the third, Na restored his two-shot cushion by sinking a 20-footer from just off the green at the par-4 fourth.

Na made his first mistake of the day with a bogey at the sixth, after missing the fairway to the left off the tee, and dropped back into a tie for the lead with American Tim Herron at 19-under.

Herron, a four-times winner on the PGA Tour whose most recent victory came at the 2006 Colonial Invitational, had birdied four of the first seven holes before losing momentum over the closing stretch on his way to a 69 and joint-fifth.

Na, however, immediately bounced back with a birdie at the seventh before picking up another shot at the par-5 ninth after reaching the green in two and two-putting.

Two ahead at the turn, Na was briefly caught by Watney when he bogeyed the par-3 14th after failing to get up and down from a buried lie in a greenside bunker.

The long-hitting Watney had rolled in a 15-foot birdie putt at the par-5 13th to get to 20-under overall.

Once again though, Na regained control, sinking a three-footer to birdie the driveable par-4 15th before following up with a two-putt birdie at the par-5 16th to lead Watney by one.

He never relinquished his grip as he finished birdie-par to triumph by two strokes.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted October 03, 2011 11:16:41


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Jordan pulls out of Presidents Cup

Updated November 09, 2011 11:56:23

The US Presidents Cup golf team has lost star power but gained experience with basketball great Michael Jordan replaced by veteran tour pro John Cook as second captain's assistant for the contest in Melbourne in two weeks.

American team captain Fred Couples announced on Wednesday that Jordan, an avid golfer, had withdrawn from his duties at the biennial clash with the Internationals due to commitments as majority owner of NBA club Charlotte Bobcats.

He is replaced by Cook, an 11-time PGA Tour winner who now plays on the Champions Tour and joins fellow tour veteran Jay Haas as an assistant.

Cook will compete alongside eight members of the American team in the Australian Open at The Lakes in Sydney next week before heading to the Cup at Royal Melbourne from November 15-20.

"John has been a friend of mine since we broke in together on the PGA Tour in the early 1980s," Couples said in a statement.

"Having achieved success at the highest levels in the golf world, I value his opinion greatly."

Jordan previously served as an honorary captain's assistant to Couples at The Presidents Cup 2009 at TPC Harding Park.

He said with the NBA labour situation unsettled, he felt he need to remain in the USA.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, melbourne-3000, vic, australia

First posted November 02, 2011 13:22:35


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Day grouped with Woods

Updated November 08, 2011 18:17:13

Jason Day finally gets his wish to go head to head with Tiger Woods for the first time at this week's Australian Open and there appears little chance he will be intimidated.

Australia's top-ranked golfer, Day on Tuesday welcomed his marquee grouping with 14-time major winner Woods and Robert Allenby for the opening two rounds at The Lakes on Thursday and Friday.

World number seven Day credits Woods as a major influence on his booming career.

Unlike older Australian colleagues on the US PGA Tour like Allenby, Adam Scott and Stuart Appleby, Day, who turns 24 on Saturday, was too young to have Greg Norman as his childhood inspiration.

"I read a book about Tiger Woods and that is why I woke up every morning at 5:30 and practised," said Day on Tuesday.

"He has influenced my life a lot. I have always wanted to play against him and it's going to be fun."

But Day also he indicated he no longer sees Woods as the man to beat in world golf, even if he is still the top drawcard.

"Looking back the last couple of years, I think he's lost it a little bit," Masters and US Open runner-up Day said.

"But when he's on a roll like he was at the Masters on the front nine, people knew where the roars were coming from."

"He has plateaued a bit (but) Tiger has proved many people wrong in the past. I think he is going to come back from this and, who knows, he may beat Jack's record (of 18 major titles).

With the niceties out of the way, Day admitted he considered others his chief roadblock to world number one status.

"This is the start of a new generation coming up," he said, naming Rory McIlroy and Martin Kaymer as two of his main rivals.

"Rory McIlroy is leading the way (and) we had a bunch of rookies on the PGA Tour this year who won. It is only getting tougher."

Day is back in Australia for the first time in five years.

A former world junior champion, he was just a talented and perhaps cocky teenager when he left these shores, but a couple of lean years on the US Tour provided a reality check.

"I stopped practising and thought it was going to come easy," he admitted.

"Obviously it didn't. I finally realised that when you get to a level like this, it's not about making huge changes to your swing.

"It's about having the little things right and being mentally prepared for each week and being happy. It's amazing how much stress and unhappiness can influence your game."

Day certainly has not stressed out since his arrival in Sydney.

He had Monday off to take his American wife Ellie on the tourist trail to Sydney Harbour Bridge and the Opera House.

Woods, too, does not seem too bothered about a meticulous preparation before confronting a stellar field, after arriving late on Monday.

In his first look at the course on Tuesday, he lasted only four holes of a practice round before the slow pace of play prompted him to quit hours before a thunderstorm lashed the course.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, sydney-2000, nsw, australia

First posted November 08, 2011 13:39:21


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Million dollar fight over golf course

The owners of the Broken Hill Golf Course are being sued for more than $1 million.

The board of the Broken Hill Golf and Country Club says the owners of the golf course have not been maintaining the grounds, forcing local members to complete work.

In a notice to members, the club says it is claiming $1.1 million from Dialena Nominees, the Mildura-based company that bought the course in 2008.

The club has lodged a statement of claim with the Supreme Court and is yet to get a response from Dialena Nominees.

The board discussed the claim at a meeting last night but president Steve Tucker will not publicly comment on the case, as it is before the court.

Dialena Nominees also declined to comment.

History

Around a decade ago the then owners of the golf course, the Barrier Social Democratic Club, sold the course to the Broken Hill Golf and Country Club.

In the 2004/05 financial year a Queensland based developer, John Cowley, bought the golf club with a view to renovating and expanding the business.

After several years of inaction Mr Cowley sold the course to the Mildura based company Dialena Nominees in July of 2008, which also hoped to develop the site to include accommodation and other businesses.

The ABC understands that, as part of the agreement undertaken when purchasing the golf course, Dialena Nominees was to assume the financial responsibility for maintenaning the course.

A subcommittee of Directors from the Broken Hill Golf and Country Club say that this has not taken place and the Statement of Claim lodged in the NSW Supreme Court for $1.1 million is to recoup losses their club incurred by maintaining the course over several years.

Dialena Nominees has two weeks to respond to the legal action.


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Scott, Senden still have hope at PGA

Updated August 14, 2011 10:49:17

Australian golfers Adam Scott and John Senden will have work to do but still remain in contention after the third round of the US PGA Championship.

The Aussie duo finished at 2-under-par 208, five back from American's Jason Dufner and Brendan Steele who lead at 7-under 203.

Keegan Bradley is third a shot back at 6-under 204, Scott Verplank fourth at 5-under 205 and first round leader Steve Stricker is fifth at 4-under 206.

Senden started on fire by sinking a six-foot birdie putt on the first hole, moving him to a share of the lead.

But some miscued shots on the third hole resulted in a bogey and when he pulled the ball into the water on the eighth hole he once again dropped a shot.

The Queenslander kept his positive outlook and had eagle putts on back-to-back holes, the par five 12th and drivable par four 13th.

Unfortunately both burned the edge of the cup but the resulting birdies sent the 40-year-old back up into the top echelon of the leaderboard.

It was short-lived however, as he bogeyed three of the final five holes to fall back to 2-under.

"I'm not out of it but I'll need to get on a run early tomorrow," Senden said.

"I felt good down the front nine but I had some little mistakes that slowed me down a little bit."

Scott's round was scattered with missed opportunities. The Queenslander was looking solid after a birdie on the third hole and when his approach on the eighth stopped hole high and six feet away, a move up the pack looked likely.

But he missed the birdie putt by playing too much break and then had a mini disaster on the ninth.

Despite hitting the fairway from the tee and an approach to three feet, Scott then three-putted from the short distance to drop a shot.

He managed to birdie the 13th hole after driving the green and two-putting but bogeyed the tough par-three 15th.

"I had my chances there on the front nine," Scott admitted.

"If I would have converted eight and nine and headed to 10 at 3-under for the day, I could have been setting myself up for a great round and put myself right there."

The Australian's will be paired together for the final round in an all Queensland group, allowing for a team-like atmosphere as they attack the course.

Robert Allenby, the only other Australian left in the field, carded a 1-over 71 to be 3-over and tied 43rd.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, australia, united-states

First posted August 14, 2011 07:05:54


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Singh shades local trio at Irish Open

Updated July 29, 2011 08:07:25

India's Jeev Milkha Singh carded the lowest round of his career overnight when an 8-under-par 63 gave him the Irish Open lead and put marquee names Darren Clarke, Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell in the shade.

The 39-year-old son of a former Olympic sprinter hit an eagle and six birdies which was six strokes better than British Open winner Clarke, seven ahead of US Open champion McIlroy and nine up on last year's US Open winner McDowell.

"I don't know whether it was a good thing or a bad thing, but 59 did cross my mind," said Singh, a three-time European Tour winner and whose eagle came with a 10-metre putt on the seventh.

Australia's Richard Green shot a 67 to be four shots off the lead.

Clarke admitted he had been disappointed with his round, his first outing since his British Open triumph two weeks ago at Sandwich.

"I didn't come here to make up the numbers," said the 42-year-old.

"I hit a lot of good shots and had lots of chances, but didn't quite have the speed of the greens."

McIlroy, out of sorts at the British Open, enjoyed mixed fortunes as he signed for a one-under 70.

The Northern Irishman had bounced straight back from his disappointing performance at Sandwich to set the early pace with four birdies in the first 10 holes, before marring his day with a bogey at the 11th and a closing double bogey.

Playing in his first tournament on home soil since the US Open, the 22-year-old pulled off what he described as "one of the best shots I've ever hit" to save par at the 14th after a spectacular hook around the trees from deep rough onto the green.

But he met trouble again on the 18th when, lying at 3-under-par and one off the lead, he went from a fairway bunker into water for his double bogey.

"At four under through 10, things were going along quite nicely, but I didn't drive it great all day and I played some scrappy golf coming in," he reflected.

"My driving caught up with me at the end. I just need to be more decisive on the tees - I was stuck in two minds."

Later, McIlroy became embroiled in a row on social networking site Twitter with commentator and former European Tour player Jay Townsend.

McIlroy's ire was spiked when Townsend described his course management as "shocking" and "some of the worst I have ever seen beyond under-10 boys' golf competition".

McIlroy responded: "Shut up ... you're a commentator and a failed golfer, your opinion means nothing!"

Townsend stated that he stood by his comments and McIlroy then said: "Well, I stand by my caddie."

McIlroy set the golfing world alight with his eight-stroke win at the US Open, but his hopes of doubling up in the British Open were dashed in the poor weather in Kent when he trailed in only 25th.

It was then announced that McIlroy's relationship with long-time girlfriend Holly Sweeney was over and he was linked with tennis world number one Caroline Wozniacki, but he laughed on Wednesday when asked if the tape on his fingers was caused by playing too much tennis.

"Very funny," he said before commenting about his personal life: "I try to keep it as private as possible.

"Sometimes it's not possible, but it is what it is and you just have to handle that as best you can."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, ireland

First posted July 29, 2011 07:57:25


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Close but no cigar for Baddeley

Updated September 26, 2011 10:00:52

Australian Aaron Baddeley has fallen one shot short of a play-off at the US PGA Tour Championship in Atlanta, won by American Bill Haas over countryman Hunter Mahan.

Haas captured $US11.44 million ($A11.75 million) as winner of the tournament at East Lake Golf Club and also the season-long FedEx Cup on the third sudden-death play-off hole with a clutch par.

Both men finished regulation at 8-under-par.

The pair parred the difficult par-three 18th hole and the par-four 17th, before returning to the 18th in the play-off.

Haas was able to two-putt while Mahan failed to get up and down from the greenside bunker.

The shot of the tournament came on the second play-off hole when Haas managed to play a shot from in the water hazard on the left of the green to just a few feet to stay alive.

Baddeley was left to rue two short missed putts on the back nine, each just over a metre.

It left the 30-year-old with a 2-over 72 final round and an 7-under total, tied third with Englishman Luke Donald and South Korean KJ Choi.

Fellow Australians Jason Day and Adam Scott finished in a tie for sixth at 6-under-par.

"Two short misses on the back nine cost me," Baddeley said.

"That was the golf tournament. Make those two short ones, I win."

The Victorian still had a chance on the last hole but his putt from just outside 10 metres agonisingly burned the edge of the hole.

"I felt like I played good enough to win," he said.

"I hit it pretty good all day except for a couple of loose tee shots."

Baddeley, who started tied for the lead, began nervously when his opening drive went well left of the fairway and into tree trouble but he scrambled well for par and then added four more despite a few loose shots.

But his luck ran out on the par-three sixth when missing the green meant hitting the lake.

Thankfully, he limited the damage to a bogey and remained in a tie for the lead as Mahan also dropped a shot. Fast-forward two holes and Baddeley took charge, grabbing birdie from two metres to take the outright lead.

But it was short-lived when he nuked his second shot on the par-five ninth past the green and failed to reach the putting surface with a flop shot third.

He eventually took bogey when a four-metre putt would not drop and settled back into a battle with Mahan and Haas.

More trouble befell Baddeley two holes later when he turned a five-metre birdie chance into a three-putt bogey, dropping him out of the lead for the first time.

Another close miss on the 16th hole proved crucial and the bogey seemingly ended his run, although a great birdie on the second last hole gave him one last chance.

But it was not to be.

When Haas bogeyed the final hole in regulation, Day was actually in the $10 million hot seat but his three-wood betrayed him on the 17th tee and sailed right into the rough.

He carried the ball up to the greenside bunker but failed to get up and down and the bogey dropped him one back.

The Queenslander gave himself an eight-metre look at birdie and a play-off spot on the last and gave the putt a good run only to see it run by the edge and just over a metre long.

Emotionally exhausted, he missed the short putt to drop to sixth.

Geoff Ogilvy (tied 11th) and John Senden (25th) rounded out the Australian charge.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted September 26, 2011 09:54:12


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Appleby three back in North Carolina

Updated August 20, 2011 12:34:27

Tommy Gainey was not too happy with his game but still managed to seize a three-shot lead over Australian Stuart Appleby after two rounds of the US PGA Tour's Wyndham Championship in North Carolina.

American Gainey fired a 5-under-par 65 for a 12-under total of 128.

That gave him a the second-best 36-hole score in the history of the tournament and a three-shot advantage over Appleby, South African Ernie Els and Americans Daniel Summerhays and Webb Simpson.

Els carded a 66, Appleby a 67 and both Simpson and Summerhays posted 65s.

Another four players were tied on 132 - Jim Furyk (67), Brazil's Alexandre Rocha (66), England's Paul Casey (67) and South African Retief Goosen (65).

Gainey, who started the day tied for the lead with Jeff Quinney, had six birdies and just one bogey but said he did not hit the ball as well as he did in his sparkling first-round 63.

"I hit it worse today than I did yesterday off the tee. I hit my irons worse than I did yesterday," said Gainey, who is still feeling the effects of a sprained left wrist suffered hitting out of the rough at the Canadian Open.

"It's just hard to make birdies when you keep putting yourself ... in the rough.

"The harder you swing at it to get it out, just the more shock that goes into the wrist."

The 125 of Sweden's Carl Pettersson in 2008 is the only two-round total on the par-70 Sedgefield course better than Gainey's.

But Gainey said he had a long way to go in search of a first US PGA Tour title.

"I haven't really accomplished anything in two days," Gainey said.

"The only thing I've accomplished is, I've set myself up in good shape going into the weekend."

Numerous players are trying to play their way into the play-offs, which start with The Barclays in New Jersey next week.

That included number 130 in the standings, Ireland's Padraig Harrington. He birdied two of his last four holes en route to a 68, making the cut at 3-under 137.

"Look at the order of names, everybody around me seems to be in the same position with me," Harrington said.

"Obviously, I'm going to (need to) have a good weekend in order to get through."

Colombian Camilo Villegas, 125th on the list, carded a 64 for 134.

Els, 126th in the play-off standings, had three birdies in five holes late in his round to move up the leaderboard.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted August 20, 2011 12:34:27


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Scott, Day three shots off lead in US

Updated September 23, 2011 08:54:06

Adam Scott and Jason Day are just three shots off the lead and tied fifth during a weather-interrupted first round of the US PGA Tour Championship.

Australia's best world-ranked golfers each opened with an impressive 3-under-par 67 to trail American and recent PGA Championship winner Keegan Bradley by three strokes in the prestigious event at East Lake Golf Club.

Rain and lightning stopped play early with four of the 30-man field yet to complete their round.

Americans Jason Dufner (66) and Chez Reavie (66) carded 4-under rounds to be tied second with Englishman and world number one Luke Donald who was 4-under through 17 holes.

Scott is looking for his second victory of the year after claiming the World Golf Championships Bridgestone Invitational back in August, while Day is on track for an impressive 10th top 10.

Both men remain mathematical chances to take out the $US10 million bonus for winner of the FedEx Cup, but must find a way to win the tournament and hope others falter.

It was a precision ball-striking day for Scott who could have shot much lower if his long putter had cooperated. He found 16 of 18 greens in regulation but missed six putts from inside 10 feet making a super low score impossible.

The 31-year-old Queenslander was behind the eight ball early when he bogeyed the fifth hole, thanks to a three-putt, but he bounced back just two holes later by making a 4.5-metre birdie.

While chance after chance then passed him by, he remained calm and kickstarted a late run with a 10-metre bomb putt on the 14th hole.

Scott then finished birdie, birdie on the final two holes to get within striking distance of the lead.

"It was a good round out there today. I played really solid," Scott said.

"I hit a lot of greens but left a lot of chances out there. To finish birdie, birdie was a nice way to end the day and make something out of what could have been a really good round.

"I had so many chances from 10 feet today so that's a little disappointing but it's good that I'm playing really great and giving myself some chances.

"If I can do that for three more days, I'm pretty sure I'm going to have a hot one out there."

Day also started with an early bogey but birdied the ninth hole to get back square on the front nine. He then gained shots on three of the last five holes to join Scott at 3-under.

Geoff Ogilvy fired a 1-under 69 to be 18th while Presidents Cup hopefuls Aaron Baddeley and John Senden had differing days.

Baddeley shared the lead at one point before finishing with a 2-under 68 to be tied 10th, while Senden struggled to be 3-over par and in a tie for 28th.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted September 23, 2011 08:10:45


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Senden eyes PGA lead


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Stricker seizes PGA lead, Tiger woeful

Updated August 12, 2011 17:15:09

Steve Stricker matched the lowest round in major golf history, firing a 7-under-par 63 for a two-shot lead while Tiger Woods slumped to a 77 at the 93rd PGA Championship in Atlanta.

Reigning US Open champion Rory McIlroy added to the drama, his status for round two unknown after straining a tendon in his right wrist while hitting a shot on the third hole but playing through the pain and firing a 70.

John Senden was the best of the Australians, carding a 2-under 68, one better than last weekend's WGC Bridgestone Invitational winner Adam Scott.

World number seven Jason Day shot a 1-over 71, Robert Allenby a 72 and Steve Elkington a 73. Aaron Baddeley (77), Brendan Jones (78) and Richard Green (79) all struggled.

Stricker, a 44-year-old American seeking his first major title, led a US charge atop the leaderboard in hopes of ending the record six-major drought since an American captured one of golf's most coveted crowns.

The perennial major contender had a chance to become the first man to fire a 62 in a major but missed a three-metre birdie putt on the ninth hole, his last of the day.

"I realised it was for 62. I didn't realise it was for history," Stricker said.

"It never really registered. I was just trying to make a birdie and never thought about the history of it.

"I hit a good putt. It just didn't go in."

American Jerry Kelly, a pal of fellow Wisconsinite Stricker, was second on 65 with compatriot Shaun Micheel another shot adrift and US veteran Scott Verplank fourth on 63.

No American has won a major title since Phil Mickelson at the 2010 Masters and if no US player hoists the Wanamaker Trophy on Monday (AEST), 2011 will be the first year since 1994 with no US major winner.

Tiger slumps

Former world number one and 14-time major winner Woods, in his second week back after a three-month injury lay-off, fired his worst opening round in a major, matching his sixth-worst career round to put him at risk of missing the cut.

It was the worst 18-holes for Woods at a US-based major and matched the second-worst of his career at any major event, the only poorer total being his 10-over 81 at the 2002 British Open.

"I can't just go out there and play by feel," Woods said.

"I'm not at that point yet."

Woods, who could miss the cut for only the third time in a major event, briefly grabbed a share of the lead after birdies on three of his first five holes following a 10th-tee start.

"I said 'you know what, I'm feeling good, let's just let it go.' And it cost me the whole round," Woods said.

"My shots don't shape like they used to."

Northern Ireland's McIlroy, who won his breakthrough major title two months ago at Congressional Country Club, suffered his injury after blasting a 7-iron shot near a tree root on the third hole.

Doctors made a preliminary diagnosis of the tendon strain after an MRI exam but McIlroy will not decide whether or not he plays until he tests himself in the warm-up for his second round.

"If I can strap it up and play again tomorrow I will," McIlroy said.

McIlroy felt pain and swelling in his wrist but fought on, admitting later "to be honest, I finished with one hand".

"I jarred my right wrist and right arm," he said.

"The impact went through the club. Just then, on that shot, there was a sharp pain up my arm."

McIlroy iced his forearm and had a medical trainer examine it amid fears he might have to withdraw, but he fired four birdies and four bogeys on the day.

"They said if you feel comfortable, play on, but there's no point in risking it," he said.

"I thought, 'There are seven or eight months until the Masters so I might as well play through the pain.' I'm glad I did it."

Atlanta Athletic Club, renovated and lengthened after surrendering the lowest 72-hole major score of 265 to winner David Toms at the 2001 PGA Championship, showed its vulnerable side again thanks to Stricker.

Stricker opened with three birdies in a row and added others at the par-3 15th and par-4 18th, dominating over the four-hole stretch most players declared the course's toughest.

"I really had no expectations coming into the round," Stricker said.

"I didn't make many birdies in practice. I really didn't know what to expect but I got it going."

He added birdies at the first and par-5 fifth and nearly added another to make history, instead firing the 25th 63 in majors history, the first at a PGA since Woods in 2007 in the second round of his victory at Southern Hills.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states, australia

First posted August 12, 2011 05:56:07


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O'Hair wins Canadian Open in play-off

Updated July 25, 2011 11:57:28

Sean O'Hair tapped in for bogey to edge Kris Blanks in a play-off to win the Canadian Open, posting his first win on the USPGA Tour in three years.

O'Hair, who turned 29 earlier this month, shot a final round 2-under-par 68 to get into his first career play-off with fellow American Blanks as they both finished at 4-under 276.

Australian Geoff Ogilvy (70) finished in a tie for fourth with Vancouver native Adam Hadwin, with Argentina's Andres Romero (70) alone in third one shot adrift of O'Hair and Blanks.

O'Hair won despite making bogey on the final hole as he two-putted after his tee shot landed in the rough on the unforgiving Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club course.

Blanks also missed the fairway off the tee. He then landed in the bunker and then hammered his chip shot well past the flag off the green.

Blanks finished with a double bogey to hand the victory to O'Hair.

It was the fourth PGA Tour victory for O'Hair, who started the fourth round three shots off the lead.

Blanks, whose wife is from Vancouver, was seeking his first win the tour.

Romero had a chance to get into the playoff but he made bogey on number 18 after hitting his approach shot into the bunker.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, canada, united-states

First posted July 25, 2011 10:50:15


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In-form Garcia makes it two in a row

Updated October 31, 2011 08:21:21

Sergio Garcia, fresh from his victory at home in last week's Castello Masters, followed up by winning the Andalucia Masters in Valderrama on Monday morning.

The Spaniard edged out his compatriot Miguel Angel Jimenez by one stroke after shooting a fourth round level par of 71 for a 6-under-par total of 278.

Scotland's Richie Ramsey, who led after rounds one and two, was a shot further away in third with Ireland's Shane Lowry fourth on 3-under.

Garcia led by three shots with three holes to play but was made to fight after Jimenez birdied the 16th and 17th for a victory that was a good deal harder than Garcia's 11-stroke stroll in the Castello Masters.

The 31-year-old became the first Spaniard to win a stroke-play event at Valderrama and was going one better after finishing runner-up at this course three times.

This fifth EPGA Tour success on home soil lifted him back into the world top 20.

"It's very, very special," he said.

"Valderrama - I have so much history here and unfortunately it wasn't as good as this until now."

Jimenez had joined Garcia on 6-under with a brace of early birdies and took the outright lead when Garcia three-putted the sixth.

But the 47-year-old dropped shots at the 13th and 15th with Garcia gaining shots at the 11th and 14th, with a superb up-and-down from a greens-side bunker at the 16th keeping him at 6-under.

And he held his nerve when Jimenez had reduced the gap to one going to the final hole to cap a productive two weeks.

"I'm out of words," added Garcia, who now leads the European Ryder Cup points race.

"It's been two amazing weeks. Miguel fought so hard and had some good chances coming in, 17 for eagle and 18 for birdie.

"I wasn't as good as probably the last 13 days, but we hung on and managed to pull through.

"On 18, we decided to play a little more conservative and make sure we hit the fairway, then the chip was just amazing. I thought it was going in.

"I've been in that situation three or four times on this course. It wasn't easy, but I believed in my ability. To be able to hit the chip I hit there and roll the putt in with the pressure, it was nice."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, spain

First posted October 31, 2011 08:00:25


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Simpson gains on Donald in money duel

Updated October 22, 2011 10:46:51

World number one Luke Donald lost ground in his battle with Webb Simpson for the PGA Tour money list title as the Briton carded a 1-under-par 71 in the second round of the Disney Classic at Lake Buena Vista in Florida.

Donald needs to finish no worse than in a two-way tie for second at this week's season-ending event to eclipse American Simpson at the top but he will go into Saturday's third round five shots off the pace in a tie for 14th.

Australian left-hander Nick O'Hern was fourth at 10-under after shooting a 66.

While money list leader Simpson returned a 69 to end the day level with Donald at 7-under 137, American Justin Leonard, South Korean Bio Kim and Swede Henrik Stenson took joint control.

Leonard fired a best-of-the-day 63 on the Palm course, one of two layouts hosting the event, 21-year-old PGA Tour rookie Kim carded a 65 and Stenson a 64 as the trio set the pace at 12-under 132.

For former British Open champion Leonard, this week has been a rare moment of good form in an otherwise forgettable season.

"It hasn't been a good year," said the 39-year-old who has not won since the 2008 St Jude Championship and languishes 144th in the money list.

"I'm looking forward to the year being over but it's nice to have a chance this week to finish it off on a good note. I had a fun, easy day today."

Kim, the youngest player on this year's PGA Tour, was delighted after a round highlighted by only 22 putts on the more difficult Magnolia layout.

"I putted great and 20, 30-footers went in the last two holes too," he said with a broad grin.

"I hit the ball better than (I've done in the) last couple of months so that's always good."

Kim celebrated his 21st birthday in South Korea in August when he also had surgery to correct an irregular heartbeat.

"I was a little bit scared but this is the second time getting the surgery," he said after recording eight birdies and a lone bogey. "I (also) had it when I was 11.

"I practised before I took the surgery and then had about a week when I didn't touch a club. After that it was totally fine. The doctor said I could play golf."

The cut fell at 3-under 141 with British world number 17 Justin Rose and former major winners Davis Love III, David Duval and Shaun Micheel among those missing out.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted October 22, 2011 10:46:51


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McIlroy considers rejoining PGA Tour

Updated August 04, 2011 08:42:52

US Open champion Rory McIlroy says he is considering rejoining the PGA Tour, just nine months after opting not to take up his card for the 2011 season on the US circuit.

Homesickness had been the main reason for his decision to focus on the European Tour at the end of last year but he has since changed his mind, mainly due to the poor weather at last month's British Open.

"I spoke to a couple of the guys from the PGA Tour today about it, and I'm leaning towards taking my card up again definitely," world number five McIlroy told reporters on the eve of this week's WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.

"I feel as if I play my best golf over here. I'm very comfortable in this country. I'm going to look at a few houses down in Florida after the PGA (Championship)."

Asked what had prompted him to reverse his PGA Tour decision, the 22-year-old Northern Irishman replied with a smile: "Probably the (British) Open ... the weather".

"I just thought about it. I feel as if my game really suits playing courses over here.

"I love Quail Hollow, Memorial, Akron. You play the Match Play, Honda, Doral, Masters. You have your favourite events, and most of my favourite events seem to be on this side of the pond.

"And my game suits it over here. I'd like to give it a go again and obviously last more than one year and really see how it goes."

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states, northern-ireland, united-kingdom

First posted August 04, 2011 08:42:52


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Johnson celebrates Barclays victory

Dustin Johnson celebrates after winning The Barclays tournament at Plainfield Country Club in Edison, New Jersey on August 27, 2011 (Getty Images: Hunter Martin).

Tags: golf, sport, united-states


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Super Tseng defends Open in style

Updated August 01, 2011 14:53:27

Taiwan's Yani Tseng confirmed she is the best player in the world by staging a successful defence of the Women's British Open at Carnoustie with a four-shot triumph.

The 22-year-old collected her fifth major - the youngest player to achieve the feat - with a final round 69 and a 16-under-par 272 total.

She won by a comfortable four shots from American Brittany Lang, who closed with a 67.

Sweden's Sophie Gstafson, the 2000 champion, claimed third place on 11-under after a 68 and South Korea's Amy Yang was fourth on 11 under with a closing 67.

Karrie Webb was the best-placed Australian, a distant 13 shots behind Tseng after a final-round 72.

It was Tseng's second major of the season - she won the LPGA Championship by 10 shots last month - and extended her lead at the head of the world rankings.

"I feel so good," a smiling Tseng said.

"This is a great place to win my second British Open because there is so much history attached to the course.

"I started out feeling a little nervous, but it was much easier than last year. I knew I could trust myself.

"I think the key was the 10-foot putt I made to save par at the 15th. I had been struggling a bit with my putter but that made me feel comfortable."

Tseng started the final round two shots behind Caroline Masson, but with the young German succumbing to the pressure, she took the lead by the time she had made her second birdie of the day at the long sixth.

She was four ahead at the turn and only made a slight stumble with bogeys at the 12th, where she hit her approach through the green, and at the short 13th, when she was unlucky to hit the pin with her tee shot and ricocheted into a horrible lie on the egde of a bunker.

But with no one else mounting a serious threat, the powerful Tseng regained control with birdies at the long 14th and 17th and a five-foot putt for birdie at the 18th was the icing on the cake that earned the 239,000 pounds first prize.

Tseng is three years younger than when Patty Berg won her fifth major in 1943 and she is now halfway to matching former world number one Annika Sorenstam's total of 10.

The Swede captured her tenth when she was 35.

Sherri Steinhauer was the last player to retain the British Open title, which became a major in 2001.

The only other player to win the title two years in a row was American Debbie Massey in 1980 and 1981.

Masson had a horror day, especially with the putter. The 22-year-old, who had led by one at halfway and two after 54-holes, was out in 39 and dropped more shots at the tenth and 11th and then double-bogeyed the 12th.

But the second-year professional did manage a brave finish.

She birdied the final two holes to rescue a 78 and finished in a tie for fifth place with the 2009 champion, Scotland's Catriona Matthew (72).

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, scotland, united-kingdom

First posted August 01, 2011 14:43:33


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Day cautious on Tiger's selection

Updated October 27, 2011 16:35:42

Australia's top golfer Jason Day admits the selection of Tiger Woods in the US Presidents Cup team is a "touchy subject".

Woods' early selection by US captain Fred Couples, who overlooked new USPGA champion Keegan Bradley, has raised eyebrows.

Couples has been questioned about his decision due to Woods' lack of form, injuries and recent fall from the world's top 50.

But world number seven Day said Couples was faced with a dilemma.

"Tiger has dominated the game for a good 10 years," he said on Thursday.

"It's hard not to pick him.

"They have a two-year period (between Presidents Cups) to pick the teams.

"Keegan has won a tournament and a major and it's his rookie year. If they picked him, it would be a great addition to the team.

"It's very hard not to pick Tiger Woods because of what he's done in the past, obviously winning 73 PGA Tour events, 14 majors. It's kind of hard to go, 'okay Tiger, you're not on the team'.

"It's kind of a touchy subject. Whether it's Keegan or Tiger, we still have to beat that person. I think as a team, we've got to keep playing one shot at the same time and try to beat the person in front of us."

No pressure

Day was the automatic first selection for the international team for the Cup to be played at Royal Melbourne next month, but said he did not feel extra pressure to perform.

"You know what, it's great that I achieved the number one spot but, no, it doesn't (create extra pressure)," he said.

"The team that we're playing for, it's not an individual kind of event. It's more about the teamwork, getting the job done with team-mates.

"I'm just out there trying to do the best job I can. If I can play golf the way I know I can play, kind of help my team out any way that I can possibly, that's all I'm asking for."

Day said he told international team captain Greg Norman that he and his team-mates were desperate to win at Royal Melbourne.

"I talked to him after I made the team," he said.

"We were kind of getting along the lines of we really want to win one, take it home, hold onto it for a couple years.

"It's been a while. I think our whole team is very hungry to go down there and perform.

"We have a unique team, a lot of young guys, a lot of old guys. I think hopefully we can kind of all mix in together and play as one and try and win this thing."

Day and Korean Kyung-tae Kim will be making their debut in the Presidents Cup while South African Ernie Els will be playing his seventh and Victorian Robert Allenby his sixth.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, melbourne-3000, vic, australia

First posted October 27, 2011 16:35:42


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Norman questions Tiger selection

Updated October 17, 2011 11:46:03

Greg Norman says he would not have chosen Tiger Woods as a wildcard selection for next month's Presidents Cup in Australia because of the former world number one's poor form since the end of 2009.

Instead, Norman felt PGA Championship winner Keegan Bradley was a worthier captain's pick for the 12-man United States team to take on the Internationals in the November 17-20 competition.

"I wouldn't have (picked Woods)," Norman told the Fort Myers News-Press newspaper in Florida on Sunday. "I think Keegan Bradley was much more deserving.

"I can understand the name of a Tiger Woods and his history of what he's done on the golf course. But I pick the guys who I think are ready to get in there and play and have performed to the highest levels leading up to it."

Norman will lead the Internationals at Royal Melbourne Golf Club where his opposite number, Fred Couples, will have Woods and Bill Haas on his team as his two captain's picks.

Couples had inked Woods in as one of his selections a month early, despite the 14-times major champion's struggles on and off the course in recent years.

Woods has played in every Presidents Cup since 1998 but has not triumphed anywhere since the 2009 Australian Masters while battling leg injuries and trying to rebuild his golf swing and private life following the breakup of his marriage.

"I just don't think he's swinging the golf club the way he used to when he won all those major championships," Norman said of Woods, whose world ranking has slipped to 52nd.

"He's a different player out there nowadays. He looks more confined. I know what it takes to have freedom in a golf swing ... and I just don't think he's technically in the right position to do what he used to do."

Norman expressed sympathy over the omission of 25-year-old Bradley from the US team.

"If I was in his shoes, I would feel like I got gut-checked a little bit," the Australian said.

"He's a young guy. He likes the Presidents Cup. He loves the idea of playing for his country and he's not, so I feel for him."

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, australia, united-states

First posted October 17, 2011 10:21:00


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Tseng retains LPGA title in Arkansas

Updated September 16, 2011 15:54:11

World number one Yani Tseng has made the most of her second chances, rolling in a four-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a playoff to retain the LPGA Tour's Arkansas Championship title.

Taiwan's Tseng holed the winning putt on the par-five 18th hole to edge South Korea's Amy Yang who failed to convert a six-foot birdie attempt just moments earlier.

Tseng had her own putting woes on the final hole in regulation after failing to make a five-foot putt that would have given her the victory at the Pinnacle Country Club course.

Instead the pair headed to a playoff after they both closed with 3-under 68s to finish at 12-under 201.

Tseng leads the LPGA Tour with five wins this season, including major titles at the LPGA Championship and Women's British Open.

Yang parred the final 11 holes of regulation. She forced the play-off by making a four-foot putt on 18 after Tseng missed her short one.

Japan's Ai Miyazato shot a 66 to finish third at 11-under.

Cristie Kerr was the lone American to crack the top seven as she fired a final round 68 to end up two strokes back of Tseng.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted September 12, 2011 17:13:37


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Preview: Australian Open 2011

Updated November 09, 2011 14:54:05

With Melbourne to host the Presidents Cup next weekend, the Australian Open is the perfect lead-up event for a field laden with world-class talent.

Where: The Lakes GC, Eastlakes, Sydney, NSW

When: November 10-13

Co-sanctioning tours: PGA Tour Australasia & OneAsia Tour

Prize money: $1.5 million

Field size: 156 players

Format: 72-hole stroke play

Course length: 6,290 metres (out 3,014m/in 3,366m)

Cut: Top 60 plus ties

Trophy: Stonehaven Cup

Defending champion: Geoff Ogilvy (Aus)

Former champions in field: Geoff Ogilvy (2010), Adam Scott (2009), Craig Parry (2007), John Senden (2006), Robert Allenby (1994, 2005), Stephen Allan (2002), Stuart Appleby (2001), Aaron Baddeley (1999-2000), Greg Chalmers (1998), Greg Norman (1980, 1985, 1987, 1995-96), Peter Senior (1989)

4-Dustin Johnson (USA), 7-Jason Day (Aus), 8-Adam Scott (Aus), 10-Matt Kuchar (USA), 12-Nick Watney (USA), 16-Bubba Watson (USA), 19-David Toms (USA), 20-Hunter Mahan (USA), 21-Bill Haas (USA), 39-Geoff Ogilvy (Aus), 50-Aaron Baddeley (Aus), 56-Tiger Woods (USA), 58-John Senden (Aus), 64-Robert Allenby (Aus), 149-Stuart Appleby (Aus), Greg Norman (Aus), Fred Couples (USA), John Daly (USA)

No.12 - 409m, par 4

One of the hardest holes on the course. The tee shot is protected by trees on the left and waste area on the right. The green is elevated and protected by greenside traps. Birdies will be at a premium.

No.14 - 502m, par 5

Water protects the left side of the fairway for the tee shots but most players finding the fairway will go for the green with their second shot to a large green protected by water at the front and bunkers at the back.

No.16 - 396m, par 4

A tough left-to-right dogleg that often plays into the wind. The fairway is generous but a lake about 250 metres from the back tee protects the middle and right side of the fairway. The green is on the other side of the lake and protected by bunkers. Expect a few birdies, but more bogeys - and worse.

No.17 - 454m par 5

A pivotal hole, almost a par four-and-a-half. The landing area for the tee shot is almost like an island, with water at the front, back and to the left. The second shot is played over water to a green protected by water on the left and a large bunker on the front right. Expect a few eagles and plenty of birdies, but also some big numbers.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, eastlakes-2018, nsw, australia

First posted November 09, 2011 11:46:36


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Tiger may 'pack it in' if slump goes on

Updated September 23, 2011 09:07:26

Former European Ryder Cup captain Bernard Gallacher has questioned Tiger Woods's golfing desire and believes the 14-times major winner could quit unless he quickly reverses his alarming slide down the rankings.

Woods is without a victory for almost two years and has slumped from first to 49th in the world in just 10 months while trying to rebuild his golf swing and private life following the break-up of his marriage.

The 35-year-old American failed to qualify for the PGA Tour's money-spinning FedExCup playoffs and is not due to compete again until next month's Frys.com Open in California, a US Fall Series tournament.

"I can see a possibility of Tiger packing it in. I can see him getting to the point where he is fed up," Gallacher said.

"If he doesn't feel like he can win majors any more then he might just pack it in and concentrate on his foundation and try to redeem himself to the public by doing good work for his foundation.

"If he is outside the top 50 and doesn't qualify for World Golf Championship (WGC) events and the FedExCup he might say, 'I'm hitting my head up against the wall and might not bother.'"

The 62-year-old Scot, who was Ryder Cup captain in 1991, 1993 and 1995, said Woods was "not competing properly" any more.

"He is going into majors and WGC events without having played for two or three weeks leading up to them, thereby not getting into the competitive swing, and before he knows it he has missed the cut," said Gallacher.

"Now he's playing in tournaments he doesn't really want to play in. He's going to play in the Fall Series in order to try and find his game.

"Whether he's got the desire any more, I don't know."

Nicklaus record

Gallacher, a tough Ryder Cup competitor in his playing days who also won 10 European Tour titles, doubts that Woods can break Jack Nicklaus's record of 18 major victories.

"I've got huge respect for Jack and he thinks Tiger will come back (to form) and has a good chance of beating his record," said the Scot.

"Frankly I think it's 30-70 against him getting back to the level he was at.

"With all the distractions and problems he's had from his personal life, and also from not competing as much, the landscape has changed. There are a lot of young players around now so I would say it's doubtful he can reach those levels again."

Gallacher said the slide in Woods's game was particularly evident on and around the greens.

"He is more wild off the tee but crucially he's not holing the putts he used to," he explained. "That's the important thing.

"You reach an age in golf where you don't hole everything all the time. The other reason Tiger used to be different from everyone else, apart from the fact he was good up to the greens, was that he was fantastic around the greens.

"If he missed the greens he would definitely get up and down or he could hole a crucial putt at the right time. He is not as good around the greens now."

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted September 23, 2011 06:27:49


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Norman reckons Open's wide open

Updated November 08, 2011 08:03:36

With the strongest field in more than a century, Greg Norman believes up to 30 players could win this week's Australian Open at The Lakes Golf Club in Sydney.

Four of the world's top 10 players - including Norman's predicted number-one-in-waiting Jason Day and fellow Australian Adam Scott - plus another four from the top 20, a host of US PGA stars, six major winners and no less than a dozen former Open champs will tee off on Thursday.

It is little wonder five-times champion Norman can not pick a victor from the 156-man field in which bookmakers list Scott alongside struggling 14-times major winner Tiger Woods as joint favourites.

"There are probably 30 guys this week who can win the golf tournament," Norman said on Monday.

"Normally there's probably 10 to 12 or 15 and you can double that number this week."

American Dustin Johnson is the top-ranked player at number four in the world and believes he has every chance of following in the footsteps of Norman and other legends like Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Peter Thomson and Norman Von Nida in lifting the Stonehaven Cup.

"I go to every tournament to win," the big-hitting Johnson said after having his first look at the course on Monday.

"I had a decent year. I played good. I played a little better at the end of the year. If I get the putter going, we'll be alright."

Johnson is in Australia for the first time but does not believe he will be at a disadvantage to the local hopes, including Scott and fellow former champions Aaron Baddeley, Robert Allenby, Stuart Appleby, Peter Lonard, John Senden, Stephen Allen, Greg Chalmers, Peter Senior and titleholder Geoff Ogilvy.

"We're going to have a great field this week, especially with the Presidents Cup being here (in Australia next week)," Johnson said.

"We've got a lot of good players playing this year and I think they've done a great job with the golf course.

"The grass is good, the fairways are in good shape, the greens are good; they're rolling pretty good.

"It's been a while since I played an event. I've come out and been working hard so we'll see how things go."

Declaring global golf in the healthiest state he could remember, Norman nominated 23-year-old Day as the best chance of bursting from the hungry pack of international hopefuls to become Australia's second-ever world number one after himself.

"I really love Jason Day. He's young enough, he's keen enough, he's hungry enough," Norman said.

"He's got seven years on Adam, or whatever it is, and Adam's still got that opportunity to be that, no question.

"His game has turned around, no question about it, but from a young player - I don't call a guy in his 30s young anymore - a guy in his 20s like Jason Day, he's really got it.

"I really like the way he plays and I like his humility. He's just down to earth. He hasn't forgotten where he's come from and he's just a good-hearted, simple, easy-going guy that just loves to play the game of golf."

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, sydney-2000, nsw, australia

First posted November 07, 2011 19:19:18


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Singh loses Irish Open lead, Clarke misses cut

Updated July 30, 2011 11:36:15

Germany's Marcel Siem replaced India's Jeev Milkha Singh at the top of the leaderboard at the Irish Open after a superb finish to his second round on Friday.

Siem eagled the long 16th to join Singh and Denmark's Soren Hansen in first place and then birdied the next hole to move into sole possession of the lead.

He finished with his second successive round of 66, one shot in front of Singh and Hansen and a further shot ahead of Spain's former Ryder Cup player Ignacio Garrido, who finished with three birdies for a 65.

Singh matched the lowest round of his career in the first round on Thursday with an 8-under-par 63.

The 39-year-old son of a former Olympic sprinter hit an eagle and six birdies on Thursday, but found it harder to continue that inspired form 24 hours later and carded a 1-under round of 70.

Singh quickly set the tone for an erratic round as he bogeyed the first hole and the 418 yard fourth, but found enough composure to birdie the second, with a fine putt from eight feet, and also the seventh and the short tenth.

"It was a bit more of a struggle, so I'm happy with 1-under," Singh said.

"I didn't drive it that well and my putting was not as good, but it was still good enough."

Meanwhile, England Simon Wakefield came on strong late in his round and birdied the 16th and 17th to reach 7-under, which was enough to finish the day level in fifth place with Raphael Jacquelin of France.

Defending champion Ross Fisher and fellow Englishmen Simon Dyson and Simon Wakefield are among those on 7-under and promising Irish amateur Paul Cutler stands 6-under after a 67.

Darren Clarke and Padraig Harrington both missed the cut, leaving Rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell to fill the void for the Irish crowds.

McIlroy grabbed three late birdies for a second-round 68, while fellow Northern Irishman McDowell, the 22-year-old's predecessor as US Open champion, went two better than that to put both of them on 4-under par at halfway.

In his first start since his dream British Open victory at Sandwich, 42-year-old Clarke dropped four shots in the last eight holes for a 74 and 1-over aggregate.

"A weekend off is not what I wanted coming here. It will not do me any harm, but I'd much prefer to be playing," Clarke said.

"It's more mental fatigue than physical fatigue. I was trying and couldn't get anything going - I couldn't buy a putt."

Three-major winner Harrington had little hope after double-bogeying the short sixth and with a 72 crashed out on 3-over.

That is now back-to-back missed cuts for the Dubliner before he heads back to America and, already down to 64th in the world, he is likely to fall even further now.

"It's tough when you miss the cut, but it's fine lines out here. It just wasn't my two days. Going double bogey, bogey knocked the stuffing out of me," Harrington said.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, ireland

First posted July 30, 2011 07:58:28


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Williams under fire over Tiger rebuke

Updated August 09, 2011 08:06:55

Steve Williams, the caddie fired last month by Tiger Woods after carrying his clubs in 13 major triumphs, has been roundly criticised for his remarks after caddying for Australian Adam Scott in his victory at the WGC Bridgestone Invitational.

Scott's win on Sunday was one of the biggest triumphs of his career in one of his first events with 47-year-old New Zealander Williams as his caddie.

"That's the best week of my life. I have been caddying for 33 years, 145 wins, and that's the best win I've ever had," said Williams, who also called it his "most satisfying win" and added "I sort of believe in destiny sometimes".

The subtle digs at Woods, the former World number one now ranked 30th who won 13 of his 14 major titles with Williams as caddie, brought swift rebuke on Twitter posts.

Paul Azinger, the 2008 US Ryder Cup captain, was stunned Williams would rebuke Woods as he did, posting, "Wow! Really? In yo face TW?"

"Steve Williams breaks the unwritten caddy rule, by talking to the press. Most don't, a few do at times when appropriate," Azinger posted later.

US tennis star Andy Roddick was stunned as well.

"Am I missing something? Was steve the one actually playing?" Roddick pondered in one posting, later noting, "the guy was just happy for his new employer! So happy for him that he almost mentioned his name".

And Roddick was far from alone in feeling that Williams stole the spotlight from Scott.

"Steve surely doesn't seem bitter at all," tweeted US LPGA player Christina Kim. "Greatest week of my life. Good job congratulating Adam, who hit the shots, you knob."

English golfer Oliver Wilson posted: "Cannot believe they have interviewed Steve Williams. Nice of him to take away from Scotty's win. Says it all..."

Woods had said he fired Williams in person on July 3 at the PGA National event near Philadelphia, but Williams said the dismissal came in a telephone conversation after the caddie asked to work for Scott on a temporary basis while Woods was recovering from left leg injuries suffered at the Masters.

"He called me up when I asked him to go and caddie for Adam and he didn't agree with it and thought it was time to take a break," Williams said.

"In caddie lingo, that means you're fired."

Williams was cheered by spectators as he walked up the 18th green alongside Scott, who cracked, "I had no idea how popular a New Zealander can be, coming from Australia. Surprising."

But Scott also gave serious praise to Williams' effort, saying: "Obviously he's a popular guy around here having won now eight times. They appreciate him a lot and he's a bit of a character.

"It was fun to get support, whether it's for me or him, I don't care. It's the right team."

Scott said he wants no part of bitterness between Woods and Williams, although many golf fans can hardly wait to see how tense the situation is when Woods and Scott are next paired together.

"That's between those guys. I'm not involved in it at all and they know that," Scott said.

"I'm just out here to do my job. They'll figure that out themselves. They're both men."

Williams said he and Scott were friends off the course and that has helped them blend well quickly.

"Just because you're a good caddie doesn't mean that you're the one who can put a good player over the top," Williams said.

"You've got to gel. Adam was a friend of mine off the course, so I was fairly confident we'd get along pretty good. It's obviously like a dream come true."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states, new-zealand, australia

First posted August 09, 2011 08:06:55


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Webb five shots off lead in Scotland


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Scott leads Day by one at Bridgestone

Updated August 07, 2011 09:40:12

Australia's Adam Scott shot a 4-under-par 66 to regain sole possession of the lead heading into the final round at the WGC Bridgestone Invitational.

Scott moved to 12-under 198 for the tournament to take a one-stroke lead over fellow Australian Jason Day and Japanese 19-year-old phenomenon Ryo Ishikawa, who finished 11-under 199.

Day matched Scott's 66 while Ishikawa rocketed into contention with a bogey-free 64.

American Keegan Bradley and Scotsman Martin Laird share fourth a shot further back at 10-under 200.

Scott enters the final day in prime position to grab his eighth win on the US PGA Tour and the US$1.4million payday that goes with it.

He birdied two of the opening four holes before bogeys on the sixth and 10th stalled his run.

But after abandoning his strategy to draw the ball off the tee and instead hit everything with a fade he birdied 12, 14, 15 and 16 to ensure sole possession of the 54-hole lead.

"Today was a good round because I wasn't really feeling it, although I'm swinging well," Scott said.

"Just a couple shots got away from me throughout the round, and I somehow managed to straighten it out early on the back nine and played really nicely coming in, so I was very happy.

"A few holes that I tried to draw the ball off the tee, I left them out to the right.

"I couldn't get the ball working back to the left, and I've been hitting the ball really nice the other way this week, left to right, so I just went back and hit everything left to right coming in."

The 31-year-old Scott was not concerned with golf's new breed, with the four guys behind him in their 20s, or in Ishikawa's case, teens.

The Queenslander believes he has the game to outlast them on Sunday but admitted the tournament was still well and truly up for grabs.

"I'm just going to look at it as a great opportunity," he said.

"It's a pretty bunched up leaderboard and a pretty tough golf course out there.
"I'm just going to have to play well to win tomorrow. You know, my strategy is just to have a chance when I'm coming down the last.

"I feel like my game is in good enough shape. The one thing I'm going to focus on is my rhythm, my rhythm of my golf swing and try and keep it nice and smooth because everything else feels good.

"I don't feel like there's a lot of pressure on me, I just want to play well tomorrow, and I think if I do that, I can win."

Ishikawa, winner of 10 titles on the Japan Golf Tour, is trying to become the youngest winner on the US PGA Tour in a century.

England's Luke Donald moved up the leaderboard with a 64 that put him on 201, tied with American Rickie Fowler (69) and Sweden's Fredrik Jacobson (67).

Donald, winner of the WGC Match Play Championship earlier this year, needed just 26 putts and said that was the key to his improved scoring.

"It's nice to get in position," Donald said. "I putted a lot better today. That was really the only difference between today and the first two days.

"I've been swinging it nicely, hitting a lot of fairways, a lot of greens. Just was able to get the putter rolling and hole a few putts, which was a pleasant surprise."

Former world number one Tiger Woods struggled on the greens on the way to a 2-over 72 that left him 13 shots off the lead.

The event serves as a tune-up for Woods for next week's PGA Championship at Atlanta, where he will resume his quest to break the record of 18 major championships won by Jack Nicklaus.

Woods is playing his first tournament since limping out of the Players Championship in May. His last complete round came at the Masters, where he first suffered the left knee and Achilles injuries that sidelined him.

Despite his difficulties with the putter, Woods was satisfied with his ball-striking.

"I really hit it good coming home, started hitting the ball the right flight, every tee shot was flash, everything was back to where it was at the beginning of the week," Woods said.

"Only difference is I didn't putt well again today, two horseshoes, three-putted 18, and then obviously made a bogey with a sand wedge on 16.

"That's four shots right there."

AAP/AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states, australia

First posted August 07, 2011 06:03:04


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Bradley heads for PGA Championship win

Keegan Bradley celebrates a birdie putt on the 17th green during the final round of the 93rd PGA Championship at the Atlanta Athletic Club on August 14, 2011

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Bowditch trails Immelman at Greenbrier

Updated July 29, 2011 15:15:16

Australia's Steve Bowditch sits just a stroke off leader Trevor Immelman after the first round of the Greenbrier Classic in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia.

Bowditch shot a 5-under-par round of 65 to be in a five-way share of second place behind South Africa's Immelman.

Former Masters champion Immelman has had very little to enjoy on the golf course over the last two years but all that changed in the opening round.

Immelman, who has struggled for fitness and consistency since having surgery on his left wrist in 2009, delivered a superb display of ball-striking on the way to a 6-under 64 at The Greenbrier in White Sulphur Springs.

Repeatedly peppering the flags with pinpoint approach shots, Immelman racked up seven birdies and one bogey to take the lead.

Immelman, who won his first major at the 2008 Masters, was delighted to regain form at The Greenbrier after months of struggle and four missed cuts in his last six PGA Tour starts.

"Obviously I'm excited with the 64 today," Immelman said.

"Any time you shoot a number like that it's exciting. That's why you put all the hard work in.

"It's been a frustrating couple of years not being able to swing the way I want to swing and practise the way I want to practise."

A medium-length hitter renowned for his ball-striking and course management, Immelman had wrist surgery in October of 2009 after suffering from tendonitis for much of that season.

He missed 10 of 19 cuts on the 2010 PGA Tour as he slowly worked his way back but was greatly encouraged by his all-round health coming into this year.

Meanwhile, Canada's David Hearn, Zimbabwe's Brendon de Jonge and Americans Chris Di Marco and Kyle Stanley opened with 66s, but fan favourite and world number six Phil Mickelson was frustrated after carding an erratic even-par 70.

Mickelson, a four-times major winner, offset five birdies with five bogeys in his round.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted July 29, 2011 14:37:14


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Vegas makes early inroads in Vegas

Updated September 30, 2011 13:26:42

Venezuelan rookie Jhonattan Vegas lived up to his glitzy surname by charging into a tie for the lead in the opening round of the Las Vegas Open.

Ever-smiling and pumping his right fist whenever he sank a birdie putt, the powerful 27-year-old from Maturin fired a sparkling 8-under-par 63 on a sweltering day at the TPC Summerlin.

Vegas, who won his first PGA Tour title at the Bob Hope Classic in January, racked up 10 birdies and two bogeys to end the round level with American journeyman William McGirt, a fellow rookie.

Australian Nathan Green and South Korean Charlie Wi opened with 64s while Germany's Alex Cejka, American Nick Watney and Australian Rod Pampling were among a group of 11 knotted on 65.

"It was a great round," a beaming Vegas said after surging to the top of the leaderboard in the first of four Fall Series events on the PGA Tour.

"I feel like I'm hitting the ball absolutely great, which is something fun to do, but the main thing was I made a lot of putts today.

"There are lots of birdie holes out here that you can take advantage of ... and that's kind of what I did today.

"I put myself in great position pretty much all day long."

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted September 30, 2011 13:26:42


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Scott, Day hot on Watson's tail

Updated September 05, 2011 10:01:02

Australians Jason Day and Adam Scott are in a group of five players one stroke behind leader Bubba Watson at the Deutsch Bank Championship in Boston.

Scott, who shared the overnight lead with Watson and South Africa's Charles Schwartzel, birdied the last for a round of 71.

"It was hard to get the ball really close today, the greens were a little bit firmer," Scott said.

"But I'm playing well, hitting the ball well. If I can do that tomorrow I should give myself a chance."

Day, who finished tied with his countryman in second place at Augusta in April, birdied the last two and made an eagle at the second in a round of 67.

Watson regained his composure after dropping three shots on the back nine to grab a narrow lead after the third round.

The American made a birdie at the penultimate hole for a round of 1-under-par 70 after losing his advantage with three bogeys between the 11th and 15th holes.

He finished the day on 11-under-par, one stroke clear of Day and Scott and three Americans, Jerry Kelly, Brendan Steele and Chez Reavie.

"It started out with a bad shot on one and a quick bogey but I held it together," Watson said.

"I fought down the stretch and I'm one up going into the last day so I have a good shot at it."

Britain's Luke Donald, the world's number one ranked player, and Schwartzel, the Masters champion, were among another bunch of five players at 9-under on a congested leaderboard.

Watson, chasing his third win on the PGA Tour this season, threatened to open up a bigger lead when he made his fourth birdie of the day on the 10th hole to reach 13-under par, before he came unstuck.

He salvaged a birdie at the 17th to regain the outright lead but missed another opportunity when he only parred the par-5 18th as the chasers started closing on.

American Phil Mickelson carded the best round of the day, making six birdies and an eagle for a 63, to finish as one of two dozen players within four shots of the lead.

"It was a good ball-striking round, one of the best I've had," Mickelson said.

The Deutsche Bank tournament is the second leg of the season-ending FedEx Cup playoffs.

The leading 70 players after Monday's final round move on to the BMW Championship in Illinois before the top 30 qualify for the Tour Championship finale at Atlanta.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted September 05, 2011 09:10:57


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Lincicome plays a shot in Montreal

Brittany Lincicome plays a tee shot on the third hole during the final round of the Canadian Women's Open at Hillsdale Golf and Country Club near Montreal on August 28, 2011 (Getty Images: Robert Laberge).

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Tiger shrugs off hot dog-flinging 'idiot'

Updated October 10, 2011 13:58:20

Tiger Woods' tough 2011 season took one more odd turn when a fan flung a hot dog in his direction in the final round of the Frys.com Open.

Woods was preparing to putt at the seventh green at CordeValle - his 16th hole of the day - when the man burst out of the crowd and tossed the hot dog in Woods' direction.

Woods backed away from his putt and the man promptly surrendered to tournament security personnel and police.

Authorities did not give the man's name, but said he appeared to be intoxicated and had been arrested.

Bryce Molder won the event in a play-off over Briny Baird, capturing his first win on the PGA Tour by making a six-foot birdie putt on the sixth extra hole.

While Woods has had to endure the occasional heckler since his return to competition in 2010 in the wake of a sex scandal, he had never had a spectator get through the ropes to approach him.

"When I looked up, the hot dog was already in the air," said Woods, who regretted missing his subsequent birdie putt but otherwise did not seem especially concerned.

"He was pretty far away from me."

Woods said the man "laid on the ground and looked like he wanted to be arrested because he ... put his hands behind his back and turned his head."

"I guess he wanted to be in the news," Woods said.

"And I'm sure he will be."

Australian Rod Pampling, playing in the same group with Woods and India's Arjun Atwal, called the incident "bizarre".

Atwal noted that it was lucky the incident did not turn uglier.

"They could have shot him," Atwal said.

"The cops could have thought it was something else."

"He's just an idiot," Dan Diggins, the tournament's director of security, said of the man, although by the time Woods' round was finished
Diggins could see the lighter side.

"It wasn't a chili dog - that could have been bad," he said.

Woods, who was making his first start since missing the cut at the PGA Championship in August, notched his third straight 3-under 68.

Playing in the first group of the 10th tee, he got off to a blazing start with birdies at 10, 12, 14 and 15 before dropping a stroke at the par-three 16th.

He birdied the par-four 17th, but slowed down with bogeys at the second and fifth after making the turn, although he capped his round with a birdie at the par-five ninth.

The good news for Woods was that for the first time since the 2010 Deutsche Bank Championship he notched three straight rounds in the 60s.

"I got better every day, and unfortunately, a couple times I didn't get the momentum going when I had a couple of chances to make putts," Woods said.

"I could have just really got it rolling."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted October 10, 2011 12:23:49


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Dufner contemplates his next move

Jason Dufner waits on the third play-off hole with his caddie Kevin Baile during the final round of the 93rd PGA Championship at the Atlanta Athletic Club on August 14, 2011

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Haas hoists Tour Championship trophy

Bill Haas waves to the gallery on the 18th green after winning both the FedEx Cup and the US PGA Tour Championship at East Lake Golf Club on September 25, 2011

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Scott swoops to Ohio lead

Adam Scott waves to fans on the 18th hole after finishing with an 8-under-par 62 during the first round of the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone Country Club on August 4, 2011 in Akron, Ohio.

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Garcia dedicates Castello win to Seve

Updated October 24, 2011 09:19:42

Sergio Garcia won the Castello Masters by a huge 11 shots on Monday morning, the joint-third largest victory in European Tour history, and dedicated his triumph to Seve Ballesteros.

The 31-year-old Spaniard shot a closing 63 on the Club de Campo del Mediterraneo course, where he once was boys champion, to finish on 27-under-par as he secured his first title for almost three years.

"That was for Seve," said Garcia, sending a skyward kiss, in honour of Spanish legend Ballesteros who died of brain cancer in May.

The two previous biggest wins were by Tiger Woods, who won the 2000 US Open by 15, and Ernie Els who won the 2005 Asian Open by 13 shots. Els also holds the under-par winning record on tour when he was 29-under at the 2003 Johnnie Walker Classic.

Garcia had started the day at 8-under and eventually finished ahead of compatriot Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, who was second after a 64 while Swede Alex Noren and Scotland's Richie Ramsay were joint third on 15-under.

"I would like to thank not only my family and friends, but also my sponsors, everyone for supporting me through two tough years," said Garcia after his 19th title.

Sunday's victory will move him back into the top 35.

"They have stuck with me and believed in me and I'm happy to be able to pay them back. At the beginning of the week there's always a little extra pressure because you want to do well in front of your home fans and on your home course.

"But I felt really good and it showed. Hopefully I can keep moving forward, but there are still some things I can improve on."

Garcia had believed another victory was close to hand after successive top-12 finishes in the last three Majors while he was edged out in a play-off by Pablo Larrazabal at the BMW International Open in June.

Garcia picked up birdies on Sunday on the fourth, fifth, eighth and ninth holes. He added more gains at the 10th, 11th, 14th and 15th.

His only blemish was a bogey at the 17th.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, spain

First posted October 24, 2011 09:19:42


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Woods feeling good ahead of return

Updated August 03, 2011 13:34:46

Fresh from a practice session and eager to play again, Tiger Woods said he feels better than he has in a long time ahead of his return this week from a three-month injury layoff.

The former world number one, speaking to reporters ahead of this week's WGC-Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio, said the left leg pain that kept him out of tournament golf since May is behind him.

"I don't feel a thing. It feels solid, it feels stable, no pain," Woods said after playing nine holes at Firestone, where he is a seven-times winner, without a noticeable limp.

Woods has not competed since he withdrew from the Players Championship in May after completing just nine holes and the 35-year-old American said he is excited to make his return to the game he once dominated.

The 14-times major champion will try to get back into the swing of things this week at Firestone, then play next week at the PGA Championship in Atlanta.

He also hopes to qualify for the season-ending playoffs for the FedEx Cup and has signed up to play the Australian Open in Sydney in November, making him a likely starter for the following week's Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne.

A practice round on Monday in Atlanta and Tuesday's nine holes pleased him, he said.

"I still haven't been in a competitive environment yet, so that's a totally different atmosphere," he said.

"But the shots felt very crisp, very clean. I was very pleased."

Woods, who missed the June 16-19 US Open at Congressional and the July 14-17 British Open at Royal St George's because of the injury, said he had the urge to resume play last week at the Greenbrier Classic, but held off.

"Docs advised that maybe I'd want to take another week of training and really start pushing it pretty hard, so I did, and I feel good now," he said.

Woods hurt his left knee ligaments and Achilles tendon during the Masters in April but returned to competition about a month later at the Players, which he said was too soon.

"If I had just sat out another week or two, I'd probably have been playing through this stretch. But I wanted to come back and play and made it worse," said Woods.

He has not won a major since the 2008 US Open nor any tournament worldwide since 2009.

Woods has also been trying to rebuild his golf swing and his private life following the breakup of his marriage after he confessed to a string of affairs.

Now he said he is ready for the challenges of a sport where young players are winning more often.

"Try to beat these boys," Woods said when asked what still excites him.

"That's fun. That's fun."

Reuters

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First posted August 03, 2011 06:02:48


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Lyle grabs early lead at The Lakes

Updated November 10, 2011 15:53:58

Victorian Jarrod Lyle fired a sizzling 7-under-par 65 to grab the early clubhouse lead in the Australian Open at The Lakes Golf Club in Sydney.

Lyle collected five birdies and eagled the 502-metre par-five 14th in a flawless opening round to hold a one-shot advantage over American Dustin Johnson.

"That's the lowest score I've shot all year, I've played solid all year, but just haven't achieved anything," Lyle said.

"On the course it's been a really rough year and off the course it's been awesome (engaged and expecting his first child)."

Lyle's low round of the year marked a welcome return to form for the cancer survivor after he finished 167th on this year's US money list to lose his PGA Tour card.

He must attend qualifying school next month to avoid relegation to the secondary Nationwide Tour.

The 30-year-old picked up birdies at the first, fifth, ninth and 10th holes to reach 4-under after 11 holes while Johnson had grabbed five birdies playing the back nine first.

Johnson, the world number five and top-ranked player in the 156-man field, went on a birdie spree in the benign conditions but bogeys on the short par-4 10th and par-3 18th holes cost him the outright lead.

At one point early in his round, Johnson reeled off five consecutive birdies from the 12th hole after hitting off on the 10th alongside five-times champion Greg Norman and dual winner Aaron Baddeley in one of the marquee groupings of the day.

"I made a lot of good putts, some tap-ins and some three-four footers, and I played really solid all day and made some great iron shots," Johnson said.

"I was a little rusty at the start, it was the first time I've been in competition for five-six weeks now, but then got it going pretty well."

Norman finished with a respectable 1-under 71 but Baddeley never got hot in returning a 1-over 73.

Veteran Fred Couples, the US Presidents Cup captain, is a further shot back after returning an impressive 5-under 67, one better than fellow American Bubba Watson.

A stack of players have posted 68s, with most of the morning starters under par, including defending champion Geoff Ogilvy who signed off for a 70.

Tiger Woods teed off just after midday (AEDT) alongside Australian young gun Jason Day and two-time champion Robert Allenby.

Adam Scott, Stuart Appleby, John Senden and Craig Parry also had afternoon tee times for the first round.

AAP/AFP

Tags: golf, sport, sydney-2000, nsw, australia

First posted November 10, 2011 13:03:21


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Blanks off to fast start at Canadian Open

Updated July 22, 2011 13:03:07

American Kris Blanks has fired a 3-under-par 67 to set the pace at the Canadian Open, grabbing a first round lead for the second time in three events.

Blanks also found himself perched atop the leaderboard after the first day at the John Deere Classic two weeks ago and the Puerto Rico Open last year but so far the 38-year-old journeyman has been unable to translate his flashy starts into a strong finish and a first PGA Tour win.

Helped by an eagle at the par-five seventh at the Shaughnessy Golf and Country Club, Blanks battled to a one shot advantage over a chasing pack of 11 players, including South African Ernie Els (68) and Matt McQuillian, who is among the 17 Canadians in the field bidding to become the first home grown winner of the national championship since Pat Fletcher in 1954.

"It was that way the same way at John Deere ... so I will kind of draw on some of the stuff that happened in the following rounds after that," Blanks told reporters. "But it's a little different this week.

"I don't necessarily feel like I've got to shoot six-or-seven under tomorrow like I did at John Deere.

"I'm just going to try to stick to my game plan, get a good night's sleep and get after it tomorrow."

Still, it is unlikely to be a restful night for Blanks with another pack of nine golfers, led by American young guns Anthony Kim and Rickie Fowler, lurking a shot further adrift at 1-under and ready to pounce.

American Sean O'Hair had been poised to snatch the lead from Blanks getting to 4-under with four to play only to bogey his final three holes to join the group on 69.

The spectacular tree-lined Shaughnessy layout bared its teeth as the field struggled to get under par in near ideal conditions.

Tough course

The last time the Canadian Open was staged on the par-70 layout in 2005 it played as the most difficult non-major event on the PGA Tour and may hold that distinction again this year.

"Obviously I am very pleased with that, this is a very tough golf course," Els told reporters. "All and all just a solid round of golf.

"This golf course is very much like a US Open. It's Canada's national open and this is the way national opens should be played. They should be played as tough as possible."

After missing the cut at the British Open, Donald looked as if he had brought his major hangover with him to Canada.

Playing the back nine first, Donald got his round off to a disastrous start with double-bogeys on two of his opening four holes.

But then the Briton suddenly began to live up to his top ranking picking up back-to-back birdies at 14 and 15 before reeling off three consecutive from the fifth to finish at level par 70 alongside crowd favourite John Daly.

Masters champion Charl Schwartzel got his day off to rocky start going 3-over on the front nine but the South African responded with an error free finish picking up a pair of birdies, including one at the last to finish on 1-over 71.

Jose Maria Olazabal's first visit to the Canadian Open will not provide many pleasant memories as the Spaniard laboured to a 4-over 74 alongside defending champion Carl Pettersson of Sweden, twice Canadian champion Jim Furyk and home favourite 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, canada, united-states

First posted July 22, 2011 12:54:33


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