Saturday, December 31, 2011

Close but no cigar

By Steve Pearce

Updated December 31, 2011 13:16:06

2011 was another 'nearly year' for Australia's male golfers at major championships.

During his heyday Greg Norman had golden chances three times to win a green jacket and every time Australians went to school or work bleary eyed and disappointed on Monday morning.

This year threatened for long periods to send everyone on their way happy that they'd set their alarm clocks early. But sadly once again although the characters were different, the result was the same.

Jason Day, Adam Scott and Geoff Ogilvy all nearly became that first Australian to win the US Masters at Augusta.

For so long, Australians have craved success at the year's first major championship, to the point where it's almost wanted too much.

Maybe the players even feel that way coming down the back nine that everyone knows so well. It was there for the winning, but it was a South African who wrote the winning script, although Scott and Day came just about as close as you can without being invited into the cabin.

Day was second best again to a resurgent Rory McIlroy at the US Open in June. Richard Green came closest for the Australian challenge at the Open Championship in July, but in truth was never in touch with an evergreen Darren Clarke.

A resurgent Scott fell just short again at the Atlanta Athletic Club in coming seventh behind eventual USPGA winner Keegan Bradley.

Ogilvy and Robert Allenby nearly came to blows at Coolum, and there was Greg Chalmers' feat of nearly emulating Allenby's triple crown of 2005.

And the Australians, along with the Internationals, nearly came close to beating the US in the Presidents Cup, although that is a bit of a stretch!

It all started at Augusta, when at one point on that thrilling Sunday afternoon it seemed a near certainty that one of the three contending Australians would jump from the pack and take that first green jacket.

It was supposed to be the 'coming of age' of young Northern Irishman McIlroy, but by the time he'd found a rarely visited cabin far from the beaten track on the tenth and taken a triple bogey, his chance was gone.

In the end, he'd sign for an 80 and an implosion many thought he may never recover from. How wrong they were.

After Tiger Woods had lit up the course and posted a competitive 10-under score, it was Ogilvy's turn to shine. A back nine of 31 vaulted him into a share of the lead with Woods, although there were always a few too many good players still on the course for either to be likely to steal the win.

At one stage during the afternoon, Day, Ogilvy and Scott all had a share of the lead at 10-under.

Then Scott seemed poised to take the title when he nailed a stunning tee shot at the 16th and rolled in a short putt to lead by one stroke with two holes to play.

Day was also refusing to go away as he picked up four birdies on the back nine. But none had reckoned on the finish of a young South African.

Charl Schwartzel was the man who found the winning form under the most intense pressure as he almost unbelievably birdied the closing four holes to finish two shots clear of Day and Scott, with Ogilvy and Woods sharing fourth place with Luke Donald.

The US Open became Rory's redemption. After his public meltdown on the final day at Augusta, his dominant eight-shot victory at Congressional was greeted with glee on both sides of the Atlantic and all over the world. Here was a ready-made Woods replacement, and with far less baggage.

McIlroy is part of a group of young players including Day and American Rickie Fowler who are set to dominate the sport over the next decade or two.

Day was second best to McIlroy in Maryland but there was no disgrace in that, as really everyone was. More importantly, it was Day's second consecutive second placing at a major. And that is no easy feat.

So Australia's hopes for a major victory rested on the Open Championship at Sandwich and the PGA Championship in Atlanta.

Sadly, the challenges were far less vigorous as Clarke grabbed his major win in wonderful scenes at Royal St Georges; it was instead shaping as Northern Ireland's year.

Scott performed well in the final major of the year but there was a sense that he'd given his best at Augusta four months earlier.

Still, it was a creditable performance by the Queenslander as he came in seventh behind the rookie winner Bradley.

Scott went on to finish the year as the world's fifth-ranked player, just ahead of Day who continued his improvement to finish eighth.

Both are shaping as major contenders in 2012 and possibly major winners, with Scott maybe just ahead on temperament.

But Day is a prodigious talent and the pair has a great chance to take Australian golf back to the world's summit.

Ogilvy had an up and down year with some good finishes, most notably in the Masters, punctuated by injury and illness. Still, he's ranked 36 and finished the year well in Australia.

John Senden and Aaron Baddeley are inside the top 50 players, while Allenby continues to fade and is down to 59.

Richard Green, Marcus Fraser, Brendan Jones and Chalmers are the other Australians inside the top 100 - which brings us to Chalmers and the Australian spring.

The 38-year-old is an unassuming type of chap and was long odds to win one of the big three, let alone two and challenge for the third. But that's what happened.

He stared down the strongest Open field seen for many years at the Lakes in early November, before holding his nerve in a play-off for the PGA at Coolum, while Allenby and Marcus Fraser lost theirs.

The list of names that finished just behind him at the Lakes illustrates the achievement. Senden was a shot behind, then came Woods, Ogilvy, Nick O'Hern, Scott, Day, Nick Watney and Baddeley. You may have heard of a few of them.

It proved to be a bridge too far at the Victoria Golf Club in mid December though, as Chalmers faded to finish in 12th place in the Masters, well behind the flamboyant and talented Briton Ian Poulter.

The Presidents Cup provided the main local golfing feast in Australia's golfing spring, although it's fair to say the tournament was never as close as organisers and fans would have wanted.

The International side wasn't able to live with its higher ranked and more talented opponent.

Much was made of the local knowledge of the Australian players as the tournament returned to Royal Melbourne for the first time in 13 years, but the Americans were equal to every challenge the course and the weather threw at them.

Their improved preparations in arriving in Australia early handed them sweet revenge for their only loss in the competition in 1998.

Almost in storybook fashion, it was the captain's pick Woods who delivered the winning point for the US on the Sunday, after a couple of years he'd rather forget. On every level.

As if to emphasise the point, he duly won his own tournament a few weeks later to end a barren run without a victory stretching back to his Australian Masters win at Kingston Heath in 2009.

Luke Donald celebrated a stunning achievement in winning the money list on both sides of the Atlantic, but still remains without a major win. It's that statistic that will define his career in years to come and the Briton knows it.

It wasn't a great year for Ogilvy and it was certainly a poor year for Allenby, and the pair became involved in a heated public argument after the PGA at Coolum.

Allenby chose to blame his appalling record at the Presidents Cup on his partners' performances in the foursomes and fourball, among them fellow Victorian Ogilvy.

The US Open champ of 2006 decided to fire back with a sarcastic tweet during the PGA stating that it "warmed the heart to see Robert playing so well".

It threatened to turn a little bit ugly, but a few weeks break between the PGA and the Masters settled both men to the point where they exchanged words and agreed to move on.

On a sad note, we lost the great Seve Ballesteros to cancer in May. Seve was part of a generation of golfers including Nick Faldo and Norman who dragged fans onto the course to watch the game.

Whatever your particular memory of him, the man who won three Open Championships and two US Masters titles in such swashbuckling style will be sorely missed.

And so the golfing world will move on into 2012.

Will Tiger return to anywhere near his best and claim a 15th major title?

Will McIlroy add to his US Open win?

And will an Australian finally win at Augusta?

It nearly happened in 2011 - can one of Day, Scott or Ogilvy find a way or will the ghost of Norman live on for another year?

Watch the golfing year unfold on www.abc.net.au/grandstand

Tags: sport, golf, australia

First posted December 31, 2011 13:03:21


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Westwood moves to world number two

Updated December 19, 2011 08:24:43

Lee Westwood brushed aside a challenge from Masters champion Charl Schwartzel to win the $1 million Thailand Golf Championship by seven strokes.

The emphatic victory at the Amata Spring Country Club, Westwood's fourth of the season, means he moves above Rory McIlroy to number two in the world rankings.

The Englishman played fine golf all week including a stunning 12-under-par 60 in the first round.

He shot 69 in his final round to finish the tournament on 266, an impressive 22 under par, for his third win in Asia this season.

Schwartzel fought hard and briefly threatened the leader, but the South African had to settle for the runner-up spot after shooting an even-par 72.

Little-known American Michael Thompson performed well with a 70 to finish in third place, one shot back, while in joint fourth place two strokes further behind were Thailand's Chawalit Plaphol and Simon Dyson of England.

"The first two days were probably the best I've ever played," Westwood said.

"I've never had an 11-shot lead after two rounds before."

Although Westwood's fourth-round score did not match the 60 and 64 of his first two days, he was still very satisfied with it.

"I thought 69 was a good score. I putted great on the back nine," he said.

Westwood felt the turning point on Sunday was at the 12th when he sunk a birdie after Schwartzel had also birdied and looked like he might close to within two shots.

"Fortunately I holed it," he said.

"That was an important putt."

He was understandably upbeat about the next season.

"I'm a better player than one year ago and I'm managing my game better too," he said.

Schwartzel admitted it had been "a tough day".

He conceded that Westwood's birdies on the 12th and 13th proved decisive.

"I had pulled him back to three shots and it was getting close up to that stage," Schwartzel said.

Schwartzel began the day knowing he had to overhaul a four-shot lead and got off to a good start when he birdied the first hole, while Westwood could only manage a par.

But Westwood responded quickly with two successive birdies and at the turn the Englishman held a five-shot lead.

There was drama at the par-five 11th when Schwartzel sunk an eagle while Westwood missed a birdie putt, resulting in a two-shot swing to the South African and cutting the lead to three.

Both players birdied the 12th but Westwood also picked up a stroke at the 13th to restore his four-shot lead.

Schwartzel's challenge effectively ended at the next hole when a poor chip saw him make a bogey, leaving Westwood five shots clear with just four to play.

He went on to stretch the lead by a further two strokes.

John Daly finished joint 16th after shooting 75 in the final round while Sergio Garcia recorded a 71 for joint 24th place.

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, thailand

First posted December 19, 2011 08:24:43


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Golf world mourns Kim Jong-il

Updated December 20, 2011 16:39:52

North Korean leader Kim Jong-il's death was noted on Twitter as an epic loss to golf, with hundreds recalling the Stalinist state media's reports of Kim's 11 holes-in-one in a single round in 1994.

Reports hailed Kim's 38-under par 34 over 18 holes at the 7,700-yard (7,041m) Pyongyang Golf Course in his first try at golf, a feat watched purportedly by 17 security guards protecting the man hailed as 'Dear Leader'.

Kim, who died on Saturday of a heart attack at age 69, was 52 at the time he purportedly fired a round where birdie was his worst score on any hole.

Twitter sceptics wondered whether or not Kim might have tried to surpass such stars as Tiger Woods or reigning English world number one Luke Donald had he truly gone 21 strokes below the best score from a US PGA golfer.

"Look at it this way: with Kim Jong Il dying, everybody will be moving up one spot in the world golf rankings," noted Dan Daly in a Twitter posting.

Others pondered the golf showdowns that never happened.

"Kim Jong-il's passing means Luke Donald is now indisputably golf's world no.1," tweeted John Mackay.

"Congrats Luke. Just a shame it wasn't settled on the course."

"Golf world mourns the passing of the prodigious world leader never to win a major," tweeted Shaun Hinds.

Even Paddy Power tweeted: "The world has lost a golfing legend, we're 1,000,000/1 for any PGA player to beat Kim Jong Il's record round of 38 under."

Some saw hope for Kim from beyond the grave.

Rick Reilly posted: "Just in from North Korean state news agency: Kim Jong Il's corpse shoots 54, incl 6 aces."

Nick Howell pondered what might have been, saying his record round "Could've been even better if his ball hadn't stuck under the windmill on the eleventh."

Alistair Barrie was shocked there was not more mention on golf websites, noting: "No one seems remotely concerned that the world's greatest golfer has died."

"With passing of Kim Jong Il, sports world may have lost greatest golfer of all time," tweeted HuffPost Sports.

"The golf world mourns the loss of Kim Jong-Il. Routinely scored 3 or 4 aces every round according to state run media, so it must be true," wrote Len Berman.

Ray Ratto had his suspicions, tweeting: "Don't fully buy this Kim Jong-Il golf story. Surely the Callaway people would have sent him a hat, a shoulder patch or something".

In a timely post with Christmas approaching, Chris Scoular said: "The North Korean equivalent of finding out Santa isnt real must be finding out Kim Jong Il didnt invent the hamburger or shoot a 38 in golf."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, korea-democratic-people-s-republic-of

First posted December 20, 2011 07:30:27


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In-form Chalmers misses Masters cut

Updated December 20, 2011 11:31:16

Greg Chalmers, Australian golf's man of the moment, has narrowly missed direct entry to next year's US Masters.

Chalmers has ended 2011 at number 60 in the world rankings after a spectacular summer highlighted by victories at the Australian Open and Australian PGA championships.

But only the top 50 secure automatic inclusion to the season's first major, meaning Chalmers will need to win on the US PGA Tour before April to book his ticket to Augusta.

If he fails to break his decade-long drought on the premier US Tour, the 38-year-old West Australian left-hander must be in the world's top 50 after the Arnold Palmer Invitational held two weeks before the Masters.

Chalmers, who was languishing outside the top 200 before his Australian Open triumph last month, has only played at Augusta once, missing the halfway cut in 2001.

Fellow Australian Robert Allenby is also in doubt for the Masters after falling to a year-end ranking of 59th.

Allenby, 40, has contested the past 11 Masters events, for four missed cuts and a best placing of tied 29th in 2002, but his streak may be coming to an end.

World number five Adam Scott and the eighth-ranked Jason Day, who finished joint runners-up this year South African Charl Schwartzel, will head Australia's 2012 Masters challenge.

Geoff Ogilvy, ranked 36th, John Senden (43rd) and Aaron Baddeley (46th) will also be striving to become the first Australian to don the famous green jacket after clinching automatic entry.

American Jim Furyk, the 2003 US Open champion, was among 11 golfers to clinch a Masters invitation by finishing in the year-end top 50.

Furyk squeezed in as the world num ber 50, but young Japanese sensation Ryo Ishikawa just missed making the Masters field after ending 2011 ranked 51st.

Other high-profile casualties include South African multiple major winners Ernie Els and Retief Goosen.

Els, who has suffered plenty of heartache at Augusta National, slipped to number 56 after being eligible for the Masters every year since his debut in 1994.

Goosen is ranked 56th.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states, australia

First posted December 20, 2011 11:31:16


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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Donald lands historic double

Updated December 12, 2011 11:05:05

Luke Donald was on top of the world in more ways than one after becoming the first player to win the money-list crowns in Europe and the United States.

Rival Rory McIlroy needed to win the Dubai World Championship to deny Englishman Donald the chance of topping the order of merit in Europe but the young Northern Irishman ended up in joint 11th place on 9-under 279 after closing with a 71.

The 34-year-old Donald, who has been at the summit of the world rankings for 27 weeks, had already clinched the US Tour's money-list crown in October.

"I couldn't see Rory's name on the leaderboard but I kind of knew the double was mine by the 13th hole," Donald told reporters after shooting a 66 for 272 to take third place behind Dubai winner Alvaro Quiros of Spain (269).

"I knew I had made history and the last six holes were kind of surreal," added the winner of this year's WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in Arizona, PGA Championship at Wentworth, Scottish Open in Inverness and Disney Classic in Florida.

"The pressure went away and I was able to enjoy myself, have a few smiles and enjoy the walk. I guess that's what it is all about," added Donald.

McIlroy has been feeling tired and drained after suffering with a viral infection for a couple of weeks and he said this had simply been a tournament too far at the end of a hectic playing schedule.

"I couldn't get anything going when I needed to. I played a nine-hole stretch, the last two on Friday and the first seven on Saturday, in five over par. That's where the tournament got away from me," said McIlroy.

The world number two said he would skip next week's inaugural Thailand Golf Championship, the last event of the season on the Asian Tour.

"I can't wait to have a few weeks off," added McIlroy.

"People telling you what to do and where to go, another flight, more sleeping patterns messed up. Next week would have been a big struggle too.

"The doctor told me last night that no matter how bad I'm feeling now I'd be even worse if I played next week."

As for Donald, he was basking in the glow of a campaign he did not even dare to dream of at the turn of the year.

"It's something you always hope for and believe is possible," he said.

"But doing it and believing it is totally different.

"There were a lot of lean years there for a while when I wasn't winning. You've just got to keep believing that at some point it's going to be your time."

Donald still has next week's Australian Masters to play in before his competitive year is done.

Donald was asked how his father, who died a month ago, would have reacted to his success.

"He popped into my head a few times today especially after the 13th hole," the Englishman replied.

"I just remembered him and I think he would have been very proud of me. I'm sure he would have given me a big hug."

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-arab-emirates, england, united-kingdom

First posted December 12, 2011 06:49:36


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Appleby pulls out of Masters

Updated December 16, 2011 13:22:46

Defending champion Stuart Appleby has been forced to withdraw from the Australian Masters due to a back injury.

Appleby played the first round at Victoria Golf Club on Thursday and fired a 1-under-par 70.

But he said on Friday before he was due to hit off that his back injury had become too painful for him to continue.

Appleby made the decision after consulting his coach Steve Bann and physiotherapist Tina Maio.

The Victorian said earlier in the week he was confident that with rest and continued treatment he would be fit to resume playing when the US PGA Tour gets underway next year.

Meanwhile, US-based Australian Matthew Giles upstaged the field early when he sprung to the top of the leaderboard midway through the second round.

The 22-year-old New South Welshman added a 3-under-par 68 to his opening 67 to set the pace at 7-under the card along with Victorian Ashley Hall.

Overnight leader Ian Poulter started his second round at six-under and was in second spot.

Giles' form comes at the end of a disappointing year in which he lost his Nationwide Tour card in America.

The Arizona-based US college graduate led the recent Australian PGA Championship at Coolum with just seven holes remaining.

AAP

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

First posted December 16, 2011 13:16:26


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Quiros retains lead, Donald on Money List brink

Updated December 11, 2011 07:00:59

Barring a spectacular collapse on the final day, England's Luke Donald is all set to create history by becoming the first ever player to win the Money List on both the US PGA and the European Tours in the same season.

While Donald produced a a solid, bogey-free third round of 6-under-par 66 on Saturday, it was Rory McIlroy's failure to make any impact following a listless performance that should help the Englishman's accession to the throne.

McIlroy, who needs to win the Dubai World Championship to have an outside chance of winning the European Tour's Race to Dubai, struggled throughout the day and finished with a 1-under round of 71 for an 8-under total of 208.

But with Spain's Alvaro Quiros leading the tournament at 14-under 202 following a round of 70, it would take a superhuman effort from the 22-year-old on Sunday.

McIlroy's challenge was well and truly over on the par-5 seventh, when his second shot veered left into the bushes.

He had to take an unplayable and ended up with a double-bogey seven. And although he played the back nine in 32 shots, he conceded the Race to Donald.

"The Race is over," said McIlroy, who made one bogey and four birdies apart from the double.

"Luke is in a great position and he has played great the last couple of days. I expect him to go out and shoot another very solid round tomorrow and wrap this thing up.

"He deserves it. He plays great all year. He deserves to be the number one in the world and he deserves to win both Money Lists. He's had an incredible year."

However, Donald said he is still not taking things for granted.

"You can't take anything for granted in this game. I would be foolish to expect that it's over," he said.

"Tomorrow it will be just like any other day in terms of my focus will be on trying to catch whoever is the leader and trying to win the tournament.

"I'm certainly in a good position. But I'm not going to try and think like that. I'm going to try and treat tomorrow's round like the fourth round of any other tournament.

"I am looking to win the tournament and I said from the start; I could get in trouble if I concentrate on that ninth place position.

"At times, it's been tough not to. In a certain way, it's almost felt a little bit like Q-School. I haven't been there for 10 years, but doing all the great work that I've done this year, if I wasn't able to quite complete it, I feel like I'd walk away missing out something."

In the midst of the Donald-McIlroy battle, the man wearing the biggest smile was Quiros.

Despite starting the day with a bogey and ending with another, he did enough good work in the middle for a 2-under 70.

That gave him a two-shot lead going into the final day over Scotland's Paul Lawrie, who eagled the final hole in his 66, while South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen also returned a similar score to be one ahead of Donald in sole third place at 205.

Despite the bogey on the final hole, Quiros said: "I am happy and positive because it's the only way to see it. I'm still leading the tournament, and even when the day wasn't the best one, I'm still hitting good shots and good putts. So this is the only thing that matters.

"I have another day to go, and I am looking forward to tomorrow."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-arab-emirates

First posted December 11, 2011 06:59:08


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Allenby moves to bury Ogilvy spat

Updated December 12, 2011 23:34:53

Geoff Ogilvy says he is yet to talk to fellow Australian golfer Robert Allenby after their ugly spat that followed the Internationals' Presidents Cup loss.

In Melbourne for the Australian Masters at Victoria Golf Club, Ogilvy says it could be interesting if they are paired together when the tournament gets underway on Thursday.

The 2006 US Open champion and Allenby exchanged heated words in public after the Australian PGA's final round at Coolum last month.

It came after Allenby's comments that his Presidents Cup playing partners, including Ogilvy, were partly responsible for him finishing pointless at Royal Melbourne earlier in the month.

"I haven't spoken to Robert," Ogilvy said.

"He left a message on my phone when it was off last night saying he wants to bury the hatchet."

Ogilvy says he never had an issue with Allenby, just with what he said, and that they are still good friends.

He feels the gallery at Victoria could get involved if they played together.

"It could be quite interesting [if we're playing together]," Ogilvy said.

"If think we'd be professionals and work it out pretty quickly but we might get a few in the gallery that will try to entice us a little bit. It might be quite fun."

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, melbourne-3000

First posted December 12, 2011 13:59:25


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Appleby cleared for Masters defence

Updated December 15, 2011 08:34:11

Defending champion Stuart Appleby has decided to contest the opening round of the Australian Masters at the Victoria Golf Club in Melbourne.

Appleby had been in doubt for the tournament with a chronic, lower back injury.

He confirmed his participation after warming up on the driving range this morning.

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

First posted December 15, 2011 08:34:11


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Appleby may pull out of Masters

Updated December 13, 2011 23:44:37

Defending champion Stuart Appleby may be forced to pull out of this week's Australian Masters at Victoria Golf Club.

Appleby revealed that a nagging back injury had become so painful it had ruined his swing and made practising difficult.

The Victorian said that he hoped rest and treatment over the next two days would enable him to line up in the high-class field, but refused to rule out withdrawing.

"I haven't done many withdrawals prior to first rounds," Appleby said.

"But there is a point, yeah. I don't know where it is.

"I don't know my body well enough to know whether I can manufacture something from an ad hoc swing or whether it's a futile fight that I need to try another day.

"I'll make that decision closer to the time."

The multiple winner on the US Tour said that he was fighting injury issues when he won last year but did not have to contend with constant pain.

"I could actually still play and still turn my body around but this year it's been touchy," he said.

"I think that's been boiling all year. I hope I can get on top of that in the next 24 hours to get me to the first tee."

Appleby said it was impossible to predict with any certainty what the odds were of him playing.

"I dunno," he said.

"I want to practise, I want to work on my game but I guess I can only work with what I've got.

"Treatment has been of high importance and it will be right up until when I'm playing.

"I don't mind a compromised swing but I can't play with something that is just pointless."

However, he was optimistic that with rest and better training he should be fully fit for the next season.

Appleby's problems intensified during last month's Australian PGA Championship at Coolum.

Meanwhile, world number one and the first man to win both the US and European PGA money lists this year, Luke Donald, fellow Englishman Ian Poulter and young Italian star Matteo Manassero will be joined by a local line-up including Greg Chalmers who will be aiming to win the domestic Triple Crown at Victoria GC.

The Western Australian collected the Australian Open and PGA titles and will be out to emulate Robert Allenby's 2005 feat of winning all three major events in the one year.

Chalmers said if he could manage it, it would trigger some key opportunities for him.

"It's incredibly important," Chalmers said.

"I was ranked around 64 so if I have a strong finish this week, a first or a second, I have a chance to get in the top 50 in the world.

"And that gets me in the (US) Masters, in all the majors, all the World Golf Championship events."

AAP

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

First posted December 13, 2011 17:59:11


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Ogilvy levels record to take Masters lead

Updated December 17, 2011 23:29:56

A rampaging Geoff Ogilvy set his home course alight by shooting a record-equalling 63 to take a two-stroke lead over Britain's Ian Poulter heading into the final round of the Australian Masters.

Former US Open champion Ogilvy, a long-time member of the tournament's Victoria Golf Club venue, put on a clinic of iron play and putting on a windy afternoon as he charged past overnight leader Poulter to move to a 13-under total of 200.

"Obviously, I'm very comfortable out here on this golf course. I've probably played here more than I've played any other course in the world," Ogilvy told reporters.

"It's fun to come back to Melbourne always ... especially to play here."

Britain's hopes of a win Down Under lie firmly on Poulter's shoulders, with world number one Luke Donald eight strokes behind after a third successive day of toil on the greens.

Donald, the joint US PGA and European Tour money list winner, carded a 2-under 69 and birdied his last hole to give himself the faintest hope of an unlikely victory on Sunday.

But the day belonged firmly to the moustachioed Ogilvy, nicknaed Mogilvy on Twitter, as he tore through the front nine in 29 and tapped in his ninth birdie on the par-five 18th to equal the sandbelt course's record.

Bursting out of the blocks with an eagle and two birdies in his first three holes, Ogilvy threatened to obliterate the mark after reaching 8-under with a 30-metre chip-in for birdie at the par-four 12th, but marred his round with bogeys at 13 and 16.

"All in all, I left a couple out there but I stole a couple, especially on 12, so I'm pretty happy with that," the 34-year-old added.

The Australian stands on the brink of a drought-breaking victory after a frustrating, winless year on the US Tour that was marred by a succession of injuries.

Poulter, who battled food poisoning on Friday, is outright second after carding a 2-under 69, with Australians Nathan Green and Ashley Hall in joint third place, two strokes further adrift.

While Poulter managed to shrug off the nausea during his fighting third round, the Briton was unable to master the gusty winds that buffeted Victoria in the afternoon.

"It was awkward. Got off to a great start, two birdies on the first two holes and then the next four holes had four completely different wind directions," said Poulter, dressed in uncharacteristically sober matching whites.

"Hats off to Geoff for going in actually 8-under par in that wind today, that's a great score. When someone posts a course record on Saturday they generally move forward.

"Geoff's done that and I'll be chasing him down tomorrow."

Reuters

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

First posted December 17, 2011 17:55:04


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Scott named top Aussie golfer

Updated December 13, 2011 00:12:53

Adam Scott has edged out Jason Day to win the Australian Golf Digest player of the year award.

The Queenslander's season was highlighted by a stunning win at the WGC's Bridgestone International, leading the Ohio tournament from start to finish.

This was in addition to a dramatic final round of 67 at the Masters which allowed him to tie for second, alongside Day, two shots behind South African winner Charl Schwartzel.

"Wholesale changes to his putter, caddie, swing and, most importantly, mindset have sparked a career-defining season for Adam," said Australian Golf Digest editor Steve Keipert.

"If nothing else, 2011 will go down as the year Scott made his biggest steps yet en route to reaching his undeniable potential."

A resurgent Karrie Webb is rewarded for a fine season by scooping the female award for the 13th time.

The 37-year-old had a stellar year, winning the HSBC Women's Champions event in Singapore and the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup in Arizona.

AAP

Tags: sport, golf, australia

First posted December 13, 2011 00:12:53


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Poulter in Masters lead

Updated December 18, 2011 16:37:32

England's Ian Poulter has eased ahead of rival Geoff Ogilvy as the pair battle for the Australian Masters title.

Poulter began the day two shots behind Ogilvy but started with a bang when he made an eagle two at the first at Victoria Golf Club to draw level.

The pair were locked at 13-under the card and well clear of the field before the English star birdied the par-three seventh to take the outright lead.

He then birdied the par-five ninth to move to 15-under, two shots clear of local hero Ogilvy who had pars at each of his first nine holes.

Another Victorian, Marcus Fraser, has produced the most prominent challenge, collecting five birdies to swoop to 10-under and outright third spot.

World number one Luke Donald, out of the spotlight all week after a draining year which saw him win the money lists of both the US PGA and European PGA tours, came alive early.

The Englishman bagged three shots through the front nine to take outright fifth before dropping shots at the 13th and 14th to sink back to 6-under.

AAP/ABC

Tags: sport, golf, melbourne-3000, vic, australia, england, united-kingdom

First posted December 18, 2011 15:15:41


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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Quiros gunning for Dubai double as McIlroy slips

Updated December 10, 2011 08:56:56

Alvaro Quiros set himself up for a unique Dubai double when the reigning Desert Classic Champion opened up a four-shot lead on top of the leaderboard at the halfway stage of the Dubai World Championship.

A course-record 8-under-par 64, capped by a brilliant eagle on the final hole of the day, gave the popular Spaniard a two-day total of 12-under 132.

Overnight leader Peter Hanson could only follow his opening-round 64 with a sedate 72 and was four shots off the pace.

Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy, involved in a thrilling battle for the European Tour's Race to Dubai honour, made successive bogeys on his final two holes to drop down to tied-third-place at 7-under par 137 along with England's Robert Rock.

Needing to win the tournament to have any chance of becoming Europe's new number one, McIlroy, who later revealed he was suffering from a mild case of dengue fever which caused him recent exhaustion and a skewed blood count, is now five behind the leader.

The news was much better for Luke Donald, who could become the only player to win the Money List both on the US PGA Tour and the European Tour on Sunday, as he closed with three consecutive birdies in a round of 4-under-par 68, which elevated him to tied-12th-place on the leaderboard.

The world number one Englishman needs to finish in the top nine to win the Race to Dubai and cap what has been a brilliant season for him.

But the spotlight was on Quiros, and he was intent on spoiling the party for McIlroy and Donald by denying them the pleasure of winning the tournament as well.

"Luke and Rory are not the only two players in this tournament," he said.

"Obviously, they are fighting for the Race to Dubai final top position, but the rest of us are playing here to try to ruin the party and this is good - I think otherwise the competition wouldn't be as stiff."

After holing a 20-footer eagle putt on the monstrous 620-yard, par-5 18th, Quiros said: "Hopefully there is even better golf to come.

"I always seem to do well in the Middle East - the weather is great for one thing and the set up of the courses really suits my game.

"But this is only the half way stage and while it is a good thing for me, there is still a lot of golf to be played."

McIlroy was understandably disappointed with his finish, but he was not giving up on his chances.

"I thought I played solid and standing on the 17th tee, I wanted to pick up another shot and get to 10-under for the two rounds," he said.

"That would have been perfect but it wasn't to be."

McIlroy will be visiting the doctor again Saturday to get an opinion on whether he needs to rest and pull out of the Asian Tour season-ending championship next week.

"I have given myself a bit of an uphill battle but I can make up the shots - I just have to bide my time and play as well as I can," he said.

Donald was elated with his finish and said: "I was frustrated out there. I tried to stay as patient as I can. I tried to just go out there and enjoy it and know that it's just a game, but it's tough. There's a lot at stake, and I want to do my best and obviously try to finish off what I came here to do.

"But yeah, to make three birdies in a row will make the lunch taste great, and hopefully make the next two days a little easier."

"I'm going to need to be even more patient on the weekend. And I need to try and get rid of those silly mistakes. If I can go back to the kind of golf that got me here in the first place, then I should be fine."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-arab-emirates

First posted December 10, 2011 08:56:56


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Golf Gifts - 8 Golf Gift Ideas

Golf Gift Ideas

McIlroy leads Donald after birdie blitz

Updated December 09, 2011 10:26:39

A swashbuckling finish yielding five birdies in six holes catapulted Rory McIlroy up the Dubai World Championship leaderboard as he seized the early initiative in his European money-list battle with Luke Donald.

The US Open champion returned a 6-under-par 66 while US PGA Tour money-winner Donald, bidding to become the first player to land the orders of merit on both sides of the Atlantic, struggled to a 72.

Swede Peter Hansen led the field after a record-equalling 64.

McIlroy, who needs to win this week to have a chance of catching Donald, made a bad start, losing his ball at the second hole after slicing his long approach shot into bushes and racking up a double-bogey seven.

The 22-year-old Northern Irishman dropped another shot at the eighth but roared home in 30 strokes with birdies at the 10th, 13th, 14th, 16th, 17th and 18th.

"I just stayed patient," McIlroy told reporters.

"I knew there was going to be some point where I would be able to make a bit of a charge.

"When you get on a roll like that it's nice. You don't have to think about it too much, you just try to hit the fairway, hole the putt and go on to the next hole."

McIlroy, who kept alive the money-list battle by winning the Hong Kong Open on Sunday, has finished in the top five in his last five events on the European Tour.

"This is the longest period in my career I've played this level of golf," said the world number two.

"It's been a good run."

Donald said before the tournament he rated McIlroy as a more talented golfer than Tiger Woods, but the Northern Irishman was keen to play down the Englishman's assessment.

"It's one thing to have talent but it's another to actually have the capability of turning that talent into something productive," he said.

"I think what Luke was trying to say was maybe golf comes as easy to me as it does to Tiger. I'll never know but look, Tiger's won 90-odd tournaments worldwide and 14 majors and that's definitely more of a talent than my five wins.

"There are different types of talent. You could say some of Luke's short-game shots out there today were unbelievable," said McIlroy.

"Luke's definitely got more talent than me around the greens. I don't feel invincible."

Donald toiled in the face of McIlroy's assault, bogeying three holes in a row from the 14th.

The 34-year-old Englishman has a lead of $1.06 million over second-placed McIlroy at the top of the money-list and needs to finish in the top eight here to end the season as number one even if his rivals wins the tournament.

"I played solidly with four birdies on the front nine and then hit a few shots that cost me, poor drives on 14 and 15, and it was a bit of a loose back nine unfortunately," said world number one Donald.

"This course can do that to you. There are a lot of hazards in the middle of the fairways, bunkers that you have to aim to one side or the other.

"Rory had a great back nine," added Donald.

"He was holing putts from everywhere (but) I cannot really concentrate on what he is doing, I've got to take care of my own business."

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-arab-emirates

First posted December 09, 2011 07:12:42


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Golf On Tour - PGA Golf Practice Secrets Exposed

How to Correctly Practice Swing Drills Golf Experts Use to Improve Their Confidence on the Course

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Golf Fitness Training in the Off-Season

McIlroy 'more talented' than Woods

Updated December 08, 2011 07:45:57

Rory McIlroy is a more talented golfer than 14-times major winner Tiger Woods, world number one Luke Donald said on the eve of his Dubai World Championship showdown with the young Northern Irishman.

Donald, whose amazing consistency in 2011 has made him the world number one for a little over six months now, leads McIlroy in the European Tour's Race to Dubai going into the season-ending Dubai World Championship by 789,788 euros ($1.04 million).

All he needs to do is ensure he finishes inside the top 10 this week to become the new European number one.

The Englishman has finished outside the top 10 only three times in 12 starts on the European Tour this year and has been in the top-10 in 20 of his 26 worldwide starts in 2011.

But Donald is under no illusions that it will be a cakewalk for him, especially considering he is up against reigning US Open champion and the world number two McIlroy.

"I think we all expected Rory to come out and play great. He showed the world how great he can be and will be going forward at the US Open," he said.

"That was an unbelievable way to play in that event and finish it off like he did.

"I've always said, I think of the guys I've played out here on Tour, Rory has the most talent that I've ever played with."

When questioned if that list includes 14-time Major champion Tiger Woods, Donald said: "I believe so, yeah. I know Tiger is very, very close and obviously I think Tiger's work ethic has always been tremendous, and his mindset, as well.

"I think his mindset is what has separated himself from the field when he was really at the top of the game. But in terms of talent, I think Rory has more talent.

"He's young and he's got a great future ahead of him and I see him winning lots of tournaments and lots of Majors.

"I'm not surprised the year he's had. He probably has not won as much as he thought, but he's got time for that. I'm sure he'll put up a good challenge this week. I think the sky's the limit for him."

AFP

Tags: golf, sport, united-arab-emirates

First posted December 07, 2011 23:25:26


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Build a Consistent and Reliable Golfing Swing With These Three Principles

Imperious Slater tees up golfing future

Updated December 08, 2011 17:28:47

"Well then," says Kelly Slater. "Now we're talking."

The world's top surfer is on the North Shore of Oahu, signing posters for the Pipeline Masters.

Described breathlessly - but rather accurately - as the Superbowl of Surfing, Pipe is scheduled to begin in life-threatening, jaw-dropping waves peaking at six metres.

Heaving swells will dump their loads on a shallow reef, turning Pipe into a gladiator's pit.

With thousands of howling spectators on the sand, man-on-man heats carry the sub-plot of everyone just wanting to get out alive.

Ambulances will be on standby. Medical staff shall be in abundance.

Slater admits the prospect of rocking and rolling at Pipe fills him with a curious mix of anxiety, excitement and outright fear and so seems relieved when conversation turns to a more genteel pursuit, the good walk spoiled.

Slater is so dedicated to the noble yet confounding game of golf, and so proficient, that he has an itch to play professionally when he quits his current day job as the greatest surfer of all.

"I like golf, I love it, I work hard on it and actually I'd like to become..."

A professional? Go on, say it. You want to become a professional. The 39-year-old raises an eyebrow: can we be trusted with such privileged information?

Just say it. It is written all over his beaming face. Slater dreams about tackling the biggest names on the USPGA Tour and here is why: he's a born competitor. A self-described perfectionist. A performer.

As fit as 10 fiddlers, Slater has a golf handicap of two.

Reuters watched him play 18 holes at the Arnold Palmer-designed Turtle Bay course and make no mistake, he can play.

Natural gifts are at his disposal: the agility, physical strength and fitness that Craig Stadler might have benefited from. The discipline and dedication that one of his more colourful playing partners, John Daly, never quite gripped and ripped.

The last two occasions he played the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am he beat his partner, USPGA Tour regular Pat Perez.

When he partnered Simon Dyson to win The Alfred Dunhill Links Championship on The Old Course at St Andrews in 2009, it barely rated a mention. Everyone assumed the Englishman carried him. Everyone assumed wrong. The most calm figure walking down the 18th fairway was Slater.

He's played with Daly, Darren Clarke, Steve Stricker and Dustin Johnson. He's sidled up to Ernie Els on a driving range and hit balls without feeling misplaced.

Go on, admit it. You want to play at least one professional event before your time is done.

"I do think about it," he said.

"Funnily enough, I just did an interview with the Golf Channel - they're doing a special for Christmas and the three golfers they followed were me, Tiger Woods and Steve Stricker.

"It's coming out Christmas Day. Point is, I'm pretty entrenched in the golf community now, even if it isn't at the competitive level yet.

"It's about the personal challenge for the moment but I would like to maybe compete in the future. There are these vague dreams in my head about it. The trouble would be the amount of time it would take to be good and confident enough.

"There's a ridiculous amount of work that goes into it. I'd have to practice as much as I surfed when I was growing up. All the time I spend at the beach now, I'd have to spend on the golf course.

"To play those tour guys, even just one or two times, I'd have to be able to completely trust myself: trust my swing, not let any doubts get in my head. I'm not there yet.

"The Champions Tour might be my best bet but I'd have to wait till I'm 55 for that. Only the established guys get to play as soon as they turn 50.

"They don't want some unknown guy who's practised for 30 years getting on and everyone is like, 'shoot, the guy we've never heard of from Oklahoma is better than anyone'.

"It would take a lot of dedication but I'm putting a lot of time into my golf. I think anyone, when they do something once, they want to become masterful at it."

Slater glides around Turtle Bay. His swing is smooth and uncomplicated. He has a baseball grip, a rarity among elite players who prefer overlapping or interlocking, but Bob Estes has forged a long career with the same 10-finger technique so it can be done.

A double-jointed back is a god-send for Slater in both surfing and golf: he has looseness and coil to spare. Text book stance. Effortless backswing. A follow-through worth photographing.

A short iron sucks back a couple of metres. The broom stick putter works well enough. He is attracted to the internal warfare that rages inside a man during a round of golf, the odd similarities of courage needed to take off on a 20-foot wave or sink a two-foot putt.

"I've played with almost all the US PGA guys except for Tiger," Slater said.

"I've played with Stricker, played in a group with Darren Clarke at St Andrews, Dustin Johnson, had a couple of rounds with John Daly.

"First time I ever played with a pro, I was in Vegas. I went and played with a buddy called Sandy Armour. His brother is Tommy Armour III, their grandfather is one of the absolute legends of golf. Tommy was on tour.

"First hole, I was so nervous I sliced it so far right that it was crazy. Second shot, I hit it way left into deep rough. It was a par four.

"Third shot, I hacked it up to about 50 feet from the pin. I holed the 50-footer for par, which was pretty funny, but really it was pretty ugly and it was just the nerves of being in a different environment.

"That's what can happen when you don't completely trust yourself. But I do feel like I can hold my own.

"I actually beat my pro straight-up two years in a row at the Pebble Beach event so when I get it going, I can go, but that was me having a couple of great days and him having a couple of bad days. If we both had great days, he'd beat me by three or four strokes."

Slater's most immediate assignment is inside the liquid Colosseum of Pipeline. To say nothing over 18 holes could be as nerve-racking would be to overlook the essence of golf.

A short putt can be as excruciating as a vertical take-off in its own way. As Lee Trevino said, the pressure of a $10 putt when there's only $5 in your pocket.

There are precedents for swapping sports. Grand slam tennis champion Ivan Lendl tried to make it to the 2008 US Open at Torrey Pines but came up short in qualifying.

Australian Scott Draper, though, pulled it off, playing Davis Cup tennis and earning a start in his national golf championship.

A master of mind games, patience and self-control, Slater might be better placed than most.

Michael Jordan made a lunge at professional baseball in his post-basketball years but only because his real passion, the good walk spoiled, wasn't up to scratch.

Ever played with Jordan? "No," Slater grins. "I'll wait till he gets a little better."

Reuters

Tags: sport, golf, surfing, united-states

First posted December 08, 2011 17:21:23


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Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Golf Conditioning- Being in Shape For a Better Score

Perth to host Australia's richest golf event

Updated December 07, 2011 18:14:41

Perth will host the most lucrative golf tournament in Australia when it stages the inaugural $2 million Perth International Championship next year.

Backed by the Western Australian government under a three-year agreement, the tournament is to be co-sanctioned by the European and Australasian tours and played at Lake Karrinyup Country Club.

The event puts Perth back on the international golf map, following on from the Heineken Classic, Johnnie Walker Classic and Lexus Cup staged in recent years.

Owned and promoted by international sports management company IMG, the Perth International should draw a strong field of overseas stars to battle the Australians through its connection with the European tour.

PGA Tour of Australasia chief executive Brian Thorburn welcomed the event as another boost for Australian golf after a big season highlighted by the Presidents Cup.

"The PGA Tour of Australasia is delighted to add the Perth International Golf Championship to its 2012 schedule and look forward to welcoming the European Tour and its players back to Australia," Thorburn said.

"Perth has a proud history of staging world-class golf tournaments and following on from one of Australia's most successful golf seasons ever, we look forward to working with all parties to grow this prestigious tournament."

European tour chief operating officer Keith Waters welcomed his tour's return to Western Australia and the Asia-Pacific region.

"Returning to Australia, and the city of Perth in particular, will further enhance the global nature of the European Tour," Waters said.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, perth-6000, wa, australia

First posted December 07, 2011 18:14:41


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The Power of Core Breathing For Golf - An Approach to Golf As You Get Older

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Lyle and Green grab Tour cards

Updated December 06, 2011 13:07:23

Australian golfers Jarrod Lyle and Nathan Green will return to the US PGA Tour in 2012 after earning their cards at qualifying school.

Lyle shot a combined 14-under par 418 over the pressure-packed six-round tournament at PGA West to finish in a tie for fifth, while Green came from the clouds on the final day to steal one of the last spots.

American Brendon Todd won the tournament at 17-under-par to head up the 27 players who qualified at 8-under-par or better.

After a poor first two days seemingly cruelled his chances, Green fired a blistering bogey-free 6-under 66 on the final day to rocket up the leaderboard, moving from a tie for 63rd to a tie for 27th.

While the rules state the top 25 players and ties gain cards, Green was the beneficiary of the fact two players above him were already exempt through Nationwide Tour status.

As such they did not count against the quota, moving the ecstatic Australian into the final spot.

"I am proud of how I really ground it out. I haven't had that feeling for a long while and it's good to know there is still the competitive drive inside me," Green said.

"I was resigned to the fact last night that I would be on the Nationwide Tour next year and I had made my peace with it but to finish the year like this after playing poorly is great."

Lyle, who gets married in Shepparton this Saturday, kick-started his run to reclaiming his place on the toughest tour in golf with a magnificent hole-out from the bunker for par on the third hole.

"I buried the ball in the face of the bunker and left my third shot in the sand but then holed out for par and from there I knew I was destined to make it," he said.

Riding the momentum from the unlikely par, the Victorian posted back-to-back birdies on the fourth and fifth holes and was never headed.

While victory was not to be, Lyle cruised home to ensure the upcoming nuptials would be a double celebration.

"My fiancee and my family have really helped me this week. Obviously I wish I could be home helping with the wedding plans but to be able to come home with a card makes it all worthwhile," he said.

"[My wife] Briony sent me a text last night that simply said 'you're bloody awesome' and strangely enough it got rid of all my nerves and gave me tons of confidence and now here I am."

Steven Bowditch was left to rue a handful of four-putts, eventually finishing two shots off the mark in a tie for 38th at 6-under.

Matt Jones posted the same overall score after dropping from 13th with a 3-over 75.

Both Bowditch and Jones will still play on Tour next season via conditional status although starts will be limited.

Lyle and Green join Adam Scott, Jason Day, Aaron Baddeley, Geoff Ogilvy, John Senden, Marc Leishman, Rod Pampling, Nick O'Hern, Robert Allenby, Stuart Appleby, Greg Chalmers, Gavin Coles and Matthew Goggin as full cardholders for 2012.

Bronson La'Cassie (-1, tied 82nd) Steve Allan (-1, tied 82nd), Craig Hocknull (+2, tied 103rd) and James Nitties (+5, tied 115th) all finished well outside the mark leaving them with varying Nationwide Tour status in 2012.

AAP

Tags: sport, golf, united-states, australia

First posted December 06, 2011 12:57:08


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Plan for the Coming Golf Season - Spring for Professional Golf Lessons

Florida For Golfers - Golf In The Sunshine State 12 Months A Year

Tiger's title drought over

Updated December 05, 2011 15:04:52

Tiger Woods ended a frustrating victory drought of just over two years when he clinched the Chevron World Challenge which he hosts by one shot, holing a six-foot birdie putt at the last.

A stroke behind fellow American Zach Johnson overnight, Woods fired a 3-under-par 69 at Sherwood Country Club in California to claim the 95th tournament win of his career - but his first since the 2009 Australian Masters.

Woods, whose world ranking plummeted from number one to 52nd while he struggled for fitness and form over the last two years with his private life in tatters, came from one down with two holes to play to post a 10-under total of 278.

He drained a 15-footer at the par-three 17th before coolly knocking in a six-footer on the 18th green and then celebrating with a roundhouse sweep through the air with his right arm.

Tiger Woods birdied the last two holes to win the Chevron World Challenge, the one-shot triumph his first victory since a 2009 sex scandal shattered his iconic image.

Woods had gone 26 starts worldwide in more than two years without a victory as personal turmoil was followed by struggles on the course with swing changes and, this year, injuries that curtailed his playing time and stalled his pursuit of Jack Nicklaus' record of 18 major titles at 14.

This morning (AEDT) the former world number one delivered under pressure, making birdies at 17 and 18 to erase a one-shot deficit and beat former Masters champion Zach Johnson by one stroke in the unofficial 18-man event.

"It feels great," said Woods, who let out a roar as his six-foot birdie putt at the final hole dropped, then shook hands with Johnson as fans at Sherwood Country Club bellowed their approval.

"I wasn't really thinking, I think I was yelling.

"I think I was screaming something, but it was just that I won the golf tournament.

"I pulled it off with one down, two to go. To go birdie-birdie is as good as it gets."

Woods' last victory had come at the Australian Masters on November 15, 2009.

Later that month, he crashed his car outside his Florida home in the hours after the US Thanksgiving holiday, an incident that led to the unveiling of his secret sex life.

Asked if he could characterize his feelings at finally ending his victory drought, Woods just beamed.

"It feels awesome, whatever it is," said Woods, who is projected to rise from his current 52nd in the world rankings to 21st.

Woods' final-round 69 gave him a 10-under total of 278, and he donated the $1.2 million winner's prize to his charitable foundation, for which he hosts this event.

While the Challenge is not an official PGA Tour tournament, it counts toward the world rankings.

Johnson, who led Woods by one after three rounds, carded a 1-under 71 for 279.

England's Paul Casey, dead last in the 18-man field after a first-round 79, was the unlikely third-placed finisher with a 69 for 283 while Australia's sole entrant Jason Day shot an even-par 72 and finished 15th, 13 shots behind Woods.

But the final round was all about Woods and whether he could out-duel Johnson and finally get himself back into the winner's circle after promising performances at the Australian Open and in America's Presidents Cup triumph in November.

Despite a few "loose shots", Woods said his new swing held up admirably.

"When the pressure was on the most the last two holes, I hit three of the best shots I hit all week. That's very exciting for me," he said.

Back-to-back birdies at 10 and 11 gave Woods a two-shot lead over Johnson, but Woods gave a stroke back with a bogey from a bunker at the 12th.

Johnson rattled in a birdie putt at the par-five 13th to pull level, then went up a stroke with a birdie at the par-five 16th, where Woods was unable to hole his birdie effort from the fringe

At 17, Woods watched as Johnson's birdie putt lipped out, then rolled in a 15-footer for a birdie and a share of the lead.

"I hit exactly where I wanted to," Johnson said of his putt at 17.

"It just didn't dive enough, or I hit it too hard, one of the two."

Woods said seeing Johnson's putt fail to drop gave him a better read on his own.

"I brought my read in a little bit after seeing his, and my ball held its line all the way up there," Woods said.

"I would easily have missed that by a ball, ball and a half high if I didn't see Zach's putt."

Johnson said he had few regrets on the day but was unhappy with his 18-foot birdie attempt at the last, which curled away from the hole and set the stage for Woods.

"That's the one that was frustrating," Johnson said.

"I did not hit a good putt there ... probably didn't have it read right, either."

Overall, however, Johnson relished the tension of the round against an all-time great keen to prove himself back to his best.

Johnson said he had no doubt that a Woods untroubled by the kind of injuries that forced him to miss two major championships this season remains formidable.

"If the man is healthy, that's paramount," Johnson said.

"He's the most experienced and the best layer I've ever played with.

"In every situation, he knows how to execute and win."

AFP

Tags: sport, golf, united-states

First posted December 05, 2011 10:20:50


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Golf Swing Instructions to Help Golfers Improve Their Swing

Day plays down thumb injury

Updated December 02, 2011 13:48:41

Australian golf star Jason Day expects to keep playing despite a thumb injury suffered in the first round of Tiger Woods' Chevron World Challenge.

World number eight Day jarred his right thumb between his club and a tree after a wayward nine iron on the 17th hole at Sherwood Country Club in California.

The 24-year-old played the final three holes in 5-over-par to finish at 2-over 74, eight shots adrift of leader KJ Choi who shot a 66.

Tournament host Woods shot a 69 to share second place with fellow American Steve Stricker in extremely blustery conditions where winds reached 55 kph.

There were immediate fears Day had suffered soft tissue or ligament damage and might be sidelined but the Queenslander was quick to allay fears.

"I jammed it into the tree and it hurts and I probably need to get it looked at but I will be okay," said Day, who was tied 12th in the 18-player field.

"It's cut and I feel like its bruised a little but I think I can keep playing.

"There is pain through impact so I need to watch it and if I need to pull the pin and rest it I will.

"It certainly hurts on top but I feel like I'm tough and don't want to make excuses."

Day would still be guaranteed $US140,000 for last place even if he withdrew from the lucrative tournament.

Woods sung Choi's praises for managing his score.

"KJ's playing an amazing round because he's got most of it in the wind," said Woods, who played three groups in front of Choi and took advantage of the calm early conditions to birdie four of his first five holes.

"For him to play that well that early and then keep it going is one hell of a round."

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted December 02, 2011 13:48:41


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Monday, December 5, 2011

Jones soars at US PGA Tour Q-school

Updated December 02, 2011 17:05:11

Australian Matt Jones rocketed into a share of second place as he thrived in extremely windy conditions at the US PGA Tour qualifying tournament.

Jones negotiated the trickier Stadium course at PGA West in the Californian desert, shooting a bogey-free 4-under-par 68 second round on Friday morning as others had their hopes blown away by winds gusting up to 60 kph.

The New South Welshman moved to 9-under, one shot behind American leader Will Claxton.

"I enjoy it when it's difficult because it means I lose the high expectations I often put on myself," Jones said.

"I don't think about having to make a birdie here to catch up or other score-related thoughts.

"I know I can just grind it out and if I pick up a shot here or there it's a bonus."

Jones made only 10 of 25 cuts on the PGA Tour this year, finishing 133rd on the money list to retain only conditional membership for next season.

The 31-year-old says the knowledge he is still guaranteed some starts in 2012 also helped release pressure on home.

"It's definitely an edge for me when conditions are like this, especially when you add the fact I know I have conditional status next year," he said.

"I can go for a few shots others might not."

With four rounds remaining two other Australians were also inside the top 25 and ties, the magic mark to gain Tour cards.

Steven Bowditch (73) was tied 15th after finishing at 5-under and Jarrod Lyle (72) is a shot further back in a tie for 21st.

Craig Hocknull (74, 1-under, tied 57th), Andre Stolz (69, even, tied 81st), James Nitties (74, even, tied 81st), Steve Allan (74, 1-over, tied 101st), Nathan Green (74, 4-over, tied 133rd) and Bronson La'Cassie (76, 8-over, tied 158th) round out the Australian contingent.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted December 02, 2011 17:05:11


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Woods moves three strokes clear at Sherwood

Updated December 03, 2011 13:00:10

Tiger Woods mixed dazzling brilliance with occasional moments of sloppiness while charging into a three-shot lead in the second round of the Chevron World Challenge on Saturday morning.

Seeking his first victory in more than two years, the former world number one fired a 5-under-par 67 on a relatively calm day of gusting winds at Sherwood Country Club to take control of the tournament which he hosts.

Woods, who has not been in the winner's circle since the 2009 Australian Masters, recorded two eagles, five birdies, two bogeys and one double-bogey - along with three missed putts from three feet, to post an 8-under total of 136.

Overnight leader KJ Choi of South Korea lost ground after the turn to card a 73 and slip back into a tie for second at 5-under with American Matt Kuchar (67).

Two more Americans, Zach Johnson (67) and Hunter Mahan (68), were a further stroke back in a share of fourth.

"That was probably the highest score I probably could have shot today," Woods told reporters after taking the 36-hole lead for a second successive year in the elite 18-man event.

"I hit the ball really well, hit one bad shot today and almost made birdie on that hole if I would have hit a decent putt."

Woods pulled his tee shot under trees in the left rough at the par-5 fifth from where he was forced to chip out sideways back on to the fairway.

Despite hitting a stunning utility wood to three feet, he surprisingly missed the birdie putt.

"I hit a few bad putts today, but overall I really hit the ball well all day," the 14-times major winner said.

"I didn't really miss a shot."

For his second tournament in row, Woods holds the lead going into the last two rounds, having led the Australian Open by a shot after 36 holes.

"I want the lead after the four days," he said with a smile. "Two days is nice, but four days is even better. I know I'm playing better, and it's nice to see my position on the leaderboard kind of equating to it."

Woods made a sizzling start to the second round, eagling the par-5 second after hitting a superb second shot with a five-iron from an awkward side-hill lie in the left rough to five feet.

Immediately after striking the ball, Woods charged down the hill to watch the end result and then pumped his right fist in delight.

He calmly knocked in the eagle putt to trim Choi's overnight lead to just one shot before drawing level with the Korean at the par-3 third where he sank a 10-footer for birdie.

Choi edged a stroke in front at the par-4 fourth, thanks to a monster birdie putt from 40 feet, and then benefited from a surprising two-shot swing at the par-4 sixth.

Woods bogeyed the hole after three-putting, missing a three-footer there for par, while Choi knocked in a six-footer for birdie to get to 8-under overall, three ahead.

Two holes later, though, Choi's lead had again been cut to one.

Woods drained a 15-foot birdie putt at the tricky par-3 eighth and the Korean bogeyed the ninth after missing the green to the left with his approach and duffing his first chip from the rough.

Out in 3-under 33, Woods eagled the par-5 11th after hitting an exquisite four-iron to 15 feet. A birdie at the par-3 12th gave him the outright lead for the first time which he never relinquished.

Despite running up a double-bogey at the par-3 15th, where he hit what he described as "a sweet shot" that got caught in a gust before ending up in the water hazard guarding the front of the green, he birdied 16 and then bogeyed 17 after flying over the green with his tee shot.

"There was a little bit of wind out there on the back nine," Woods said with his trademark flashing smile.

Choi, who had been three shots clear overnight, struggled on the back nine and ran up an ugly quadruple-bogey at the 15th after hitting two balls into water.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted December 03, 2011 12:56:47


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McIlroy wins Hong Kong Open

Updated December 05, 2011 09:40:57

Rory McIlroy boosted his hopes of finishing the year as Europe's top golfer after sensationally holing a bunker shot for birdie at the last to capture the Hong Kong Open.

The US Open champion, runner-up in Hong Kong twice before, came from three strokes behind heading to the final round to win by two strokes, firing a 5-under-par 65 for a 12-under tally.

World number two McIlroy needed to win or finish second in Hong Kong to have any chance of denying Luke Donald a historic first ever European and PGA number one title in the same season.

The 22-year old McIlroy, who won his fourth professional title, will also need to finish in the top two and above Donald in next week's Dubai World Championship to deny him both money list titles.

McIlroy said he had also been fired up by rivalry with British world number three Lee Westwood, who took out the Sun City Challenge in South Africa.

"When I woke up this morning and saw that Lee Westwood shot 62 (in the third round) in Sun City, I thought I really needed to win to stay above him in the world rankings, and that was a little bit of motivation for me," McIlroy said.

"After two place finishes here in Hong Kong, if feels like this win has been a long time coming, to be honest.

"It's just fantastic. I've loved this city, I've loved this golf course.

"I played my first Hong Kong Open in 2007; I felt like it owed me something after losing the play-off in 2008.

"I had to wait a few years for it to finally happen but to get my hands on this trophy and to win this tournament is very special."

McIlroy's first-prize cheque of 341,723 euros allowed him to move from third to second place on the Race to Dubai money list, 789,789 euros behind Donald.

"One of my goals going out today was to win this tournament to keep myself in with a shout next week," McIlroy said.

It's still very dependent on what Luke does because he's got such a big lead but if I can somehow get myself into contention next week, you never know."

Defending Hong Kong Open champion Ian Poulter shared fourth place in recording a 66.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, hong-kong

First posted December 04, 2011 20:30:34


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Woods overhauled by fast-finishing Johnson

Updated December 04, 2011 11:37:00

Tiger Woods endured a challenging day in gusting winds before finally surrendering his overnight lead to fellow American Zach Johnson in Sunday morning's third round of the Chevron World Challenge.

Three strokes clear of the chasing pack at the tournament's halfway point, four-times champion Woods battled to a 1-over-par 73 on a sunny but chilly afternoon at Sherwood Country Club.

In pursuit of his first victory in more than two years, Woods bogeyed two of the last six holes for a 7-under total 209, finishing a stroke behind Johnson who spectacularly eagled the par-4 last for a 68.

Johnson, whose only major title came at the 2007 Masters, covered the back nine in 4-under to take control of the elite 18-man event going into Monday's final round.

Reuters

Tags: golf, sport, united-states

First posted December 04, 2011 11:37:00


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Bowditch among leaders at PGA Tour school

Updated December 01, 2011 19:48:27

Australian Steven Bowditch fired seven birdies in an opening round 66 to be two strokes off the lead at the US PGA Tour qualifying tournament.

Bowditch's 6-under-par round on the Nicklaus Tournament course at PGA West near Palm Springs left him tied seventh behind American joint leaders Will Claxton and Daniel Summerhays.

The top 25 and ties after the six round event are awarded full tour cards for the 2012 season.

The 28-year-old Bowditch failed to retain his card after finishing just outside the top 125 on the 2011 season money list but has a good chance of rectifying the situation thanks to some blistering iron shots.

Fellow New South Welshman Matt Jones also started strongly with a 5-under 67 on the Nicklaus course to be tied 10th.

Like Bowditch, Jones barely missed out on retaining his card via the money list and is looking to turn a conditional card into a full one this week.

"It's a little easier to go in relaxed knowing you still have quite a few starts lined up next year through conditional status," Jones said.

"I can relax and just play and not get caught up in the pressure some other guys might be feeling."

Jarrod Lyle (4-under, tied 26th), Craig Hocknull (3-under, tied 43rd), James Nitties (2-under, tied 61st), Steve Allan (1-under, tied 87th), Nathan Green (2-over, tied 146th) and Andre Stolz (3-over, tied 153rd) round out the Australian contingent.

AAP

Tags: golf, sport, united-states, australia

First posted December 01, 2011 19:48:27


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