Friday, March 7, 2014

Steve Stricker gets an ace, takes three-shot lead after 36 holes at the Memorial

steve stricker
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Steve Stricker's ace on Friday was the second of his career, with his first coming in the 1997 Phoenix Open.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
On a course with such a fine line between birdies and bogeys, Steve Stricker settled for perfection Friday in the Memorial with a hole-in-one that put him in control at Muirfield Village.
Stricker used a 6-iron on the 188-yard eighth hole -- his 17th hole of the second round -- then birdied his final hole for a 5-under 67. Instead of being part of a five-way tie for the lead, he wound up three shots clear going into the weekend.
"It's a shock when you see that go in, obviously, but in a good way," Stricker said. "A great way to finish the round."
Stricker said the eighth hole has given him fits over the year, which is just as well. So has this tournament. In 11 previous appearances at the tournament Jack Nicklaus created, Stricker never has finished in the top 10.
He is hoping to change that, and shots like his ace certainly help.
Stricker was at 9-under 135, three shots clear of Rory McIlroy (72), Ricky Barnes (70), Jonathan Byrd (67) and the resurgent Rod Pampling of Australia, who lost his PGA Tour card last year and had a bogey-free 66.
McIlroy already has made 13 birdies over two rounds, proof enough that he's swinging well and making his share of putts. He also has five bogeys and a sloppy double bogey Friday on the 14th hole, when he pulled his tee shot into the tiny stream left of the fairway and nearly went into the water on his next shot.
"I felt as if I played good enough to shoot something in the 60s, but I just made too many mistakes out there," McIlroy said.
McIlroy wasn't alone in the good and bad of Muirfield Village.
Rickie Fowler, the runner-up at the Memorial last year, has only 12 pars in 36 holes. He was at 3-under 141, six shots behind but still very much in the hunt at the halfway points.
"The conditions are scoreable, but bogeys can creep up on you quickly," Fowler said. "You can make some birdies, but if there's a tough pin and you don't hit the right shot, you'll make bogeys. It's a fine line."
Ryder Cup Captain Davis Love III was a great illustration of that. He had six birdies and an eagle and shot 73. Love also hit two into the water on the par-5 11th to make a triple bogey, then took a double bogey on the 17th along with four other bogeys.
Luke Donald, in his debut as the No. 1 player in the world, had another strong rally by finishing with back-to-back birdies for a 69 that left him at 5-under 139, still very much in the hunt. Donald has not finished out of the top 10 in nine straight tournaments.
"Some careless mistakes out there," Donald said.
Stricker made his share, too, such as back-to-back bogeys from the bunker as he was finishing his front nine. But he played the final five holes in 5 under, highlighted by his second career hole-in-one.
He thrust his arms in the air when he realized it had dropped into the cup, but that's about as excited as he gets about an ace. Some players keep the golf balls from the ace. Stricker teed it up on the ninth, made birdie, that gave the ball to the official keeping score without informing him where that ball had been lately.
His other ace came in the 1997 Phoenix Open on the 16th hole, the biggest party scene on tour. That was the hole -- during the same year, no less -- when Tiger Woods made an ace and was showered with beer cans and plastic cups in one of the most raucous celebrations ever seen in this royal and ancient game. The replay has been shown countless times.
"You didn't see mine that year? No?" Stricker said with a grin.
His came in the final round, and there's a reason hardly anyone remembered. For one reason, not many saw it.
"That day, I had teed off the back nine first," he said. "So there wasn't a lot of people there."
The good news for Stricker is the Phoenix Open awarded a car for a hole-in-one on the 16th, but only in the final round. So that's one thing he got that Woods didn't -- just not for long.
"I used it for a little while, and then traded it in for a minivan," said Stricker, whose first daughter was born a year later.
With so many wild scorecards, leave it to Phil Mickelson to have a conservative one. That's not necessarily a good thing this week. Mickelson has made only five birdies against three bogeys through 36 holes, leaving seven shots behind.
"I need something good tomorrow," Mickelson said. "I had a chance to shoot something in the 60s and move up the leaderboard and didn't capitalize on a lot of opportunities."
McIlroy pulled his opening tee shot and made bogey, but two other bogeys on the front came from the middle of the fairway, with a wedge in his hand for one shot and a 9-iron for another.
But he also looked like he'll be a factor on the weekend with consecutive birdies, including a shot that he thought was headed to the back of the 13th green, only for it to settle 6 feet below the hole.
"I'm happy enough," McIlroy said. "I'm thereabouts going into the weekend. There's still a lot of golf left to play. I know that and everyone else knows that. I just need to limit those mistakes. If I can keep the silly bogeys off the card, I think I'll be all right."

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Lee Westwood finishes a year driven by change

Lee Westwood finishes a year driven by change

AP - Sports
Lee Westwood finishes a year driven by change
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England's Lee Westwood plays a ball during the final round of DP World Golf Championship, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, Sunday, Nov. 17, 2013. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)
This has been a season of big change for Lee Westwood, and his debut last week in the Shark Shootout was an example.
He typically is on the other side of the world this time of the year, having won the Nedbank Challenge in South Africa in 2011 and 2012, and the Thailand Golf Championship two years ago. But this marks one year since Westwood moved his family from England to Florida to take it easy on the jet lag and allow for more practice in warm weather.
He ended the year without a win anywhere in the world.
Westwood, a two-time Order of Merit winner on the European Tour, attributed his results to change, though that entails more than location. He also began working with Sean Foley. He had a new caddie for most of the year until reuniting this month with Billy Foster.
Asked what held him back this year, Westwood chalked it up to the ''lack of continuity.''
''So many changes, really,'' he said as he headed into the final month of his season. ''It's impossible to quantify the effect that has. Starting with a new coach, changing tours, changing caddies the end of last year, all of it has an effect.''
He also said there were struggles with consistency in his swing. Westwood had a close call at Quail Hollow, and he had the lead going into the final round of the British Open, which was won by Phil Mickelson more than anyone lost it.
''I haven't been settled in a swing all year,'' Westwood said. ''When you're a professional, you can have good results without hitting it well. I haven't had a week where I hit it properly. I didn't even hit it well in the Open. I just know how to get around and I putted well.''
Westwood turned 40 this year, and while he dropped to No. 25 in the world after starting at No. 7, he believes that will turn. More changes are planned for 2014, but only as it relates to his travel schedule. Instead of starting in Middle East, he doesn't expect to play regular European Tour events until May.
He is thinking of playing Torrey Pines, the Phoenix Open and Riviera on the West Coast swing.
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FATHER & SON: Except for having the 54-hole lead and contending at the British Open, one of the best moments for Lee Westwood this year was playing with his father in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
Graeme McDowell will experience that in February.
McDowell and his father, Kenny, will be partners at Pebble Beach. It's the first time they have been there since 2010, when McDowell won the U.S. Open and his father said to him on the 18th green that Sunday, ''You're something, kid.''
Asked for his favorite memory of his father, McDowell went back to his roots in Northern Ireland when he was too young to play the Dunluce course at Royal Portrush.
''Until you're 15 years old or have a 15-handicap, you play the Valley Course,'' he said. ''I remember sneaking out with my dad on a summer's evening on the Dunluce course when I was not eligible to be out there, sneaking out there for a few holes one summer evening and feeling like I was literally at Augusta National. Those are special times.''
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THE GULBIS PRANK: In the January issue of ''Golf Digest,'' Michelle Wie writes a series of tales that includes her first Kraft Nabisco Championship at age 13. And it shows why there's always more to Natalie Gulbis than might appear.
Wie said that on the fifth hole she put a new golf ball into play. She mentioned this to Gulbis on the sixth fairway.
''She stops me and gives me a look of shock,'' Wie wrote. '''You can't do that out here,' she says. 'That's a two-stroke penalty. You need to go back to the tee.' I was speechless, on the verge of tears. Just as I turned to start walking back to the tee, Natalie said, 'Just kidding.'''
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OH, BROTHER: Dustin Johnson took his younger brother, Austin, to Scotland twice as his partner in the Dunhill Links Championship. He brought him to China last month for the HSBC Champions as his caddie, and Johnson won his first World Golf Championship.
Now they'll be spending a lot more time together.
Johnson has decided to keep his little brother on the bag for next year, replacing Bobby BrownAustin Johnson played basketball at Charleston Southern before transferring to the College of Charleston to finish his degree.
''I was getting my resume together,'' Austin said.
Big brother jokingly said he never bothered to look at the resume and ''probably wouldn't have believed it, anyway.''
''Having my brother on the bag has been cool. I love it,'' Johnson said. ''He's my brother. I like having him out here. And we do good.''
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SNEAD AUCTION: The second part of the Sam Snead Collection at Heritage Auctions brought in more than $750,000 this month in Dallas, with the biggest item his 1949 Masters Trophy that went for $143,400.
Snead's captain's trophy from the 1969 Ryder Cup sold for $131,450, while his Wanamaker Trophy from winning the 1949 PGA Championship and his championship medal from winning the 1946 British Open at St. Andrews went for $101,575 each.
Among the more intriguing items was a collection of 3,545 signed personal checks. That drew $34,058. The first auction in July was held in Chicago by Heritage Auctions and brought in $1.1 million. Those lots included his 1954 Masters trophy and the claret jug from St. Andrews.
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DIVOTS: More than a year after Europe's stunning comeback to win the Ryder Cup at Medinah, Graeme McDowell still has not watched video of the final day. ''That might be on my to-do list,'' he said. ''I need to sit down and watch that in real time.'' ... This year wasn't the first time a qualifying tournament was held exclusively for the Web.com Tour. According to the PGA Tour, four weeks before the launch of the Ben Hogan Tour, 132 players competed in Florida over 72 holes with the low 35 players and ties getting cards. The medalist that week? John Daly. ... Kevin Tway received a sponsor's exemption to play in the Phoenix Open. ... Vijay Singh is shopping for a new equipment deal after nearly 15 years with Cleveland Golf. ... Ernie Els has signed an endorsement deal with Ecco. He was wearing the shoes for most of the year without a deal. ... Anthony Kim, who last played in the 2012 the Wells Fargo Championship, ended last year at No. 300 in the world. He ends this year at No. 1,488.
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STAT OF THE WEEK: Tiger Woods, Adam Scott, Justin Rose and Rory McIlroy were the only players who stayed in the top 10 in the world ranking the entire year.
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FINAL WORD: ''The beauty about golf is it takes all shapes and sizes. But it's a hell of a lot more of an athletic game than it used to be 10 years ago.'' - Graeme McDowell.

Fischer earns full status on Web.com Tour

Fischer earns full status on Web.com Tour

AP - Sports
Fischer earns full status on Web.com Tour
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Zack Fischer tees off on the eighth hole during the first round of the U.S. Open golf tournament at Merion …
LA QUINTA, Calif. (AP) -- Zack Fischer closed with an 8-under 64 on Tuesday in Q-school to earn top status on the Web.com Tour next year.
This was the first year that Q-school only offered status on the PGA Tour's secondary circuit. Fischer finished at 31-under 401 in the six-round tournament at PGA West. As the medalist, he is assured entry into every Web.com Tour event.
Scott Pinckney shot a 68 to finish second. Pinckney and the other players in the top 10 will have full status through 12 tournaments. After that, the priority ranking will be reshuffled depending on the money list. That group includes Max Homa.
Players who finished between 11th and 45th do not face the reshuffle until after the eighth event. Sam Saunders, the grandson of Arnold Palmer, tied for 11th.

Top 10 sporting quotes of 2013

Top 10 sporting quotes of 2013

Reuters 
By Pritha Sarkar
(Reuters) - Following is a list of 10 memorable sporting quotes in 2013:
Lance Armstrong
"Yes" - American cyclist Lance Armstrong finally confessed to taking performing-enhancing drugs to win his seven Tour de France titles in an interview with Oprah Winfrey.
"I am flawed...deeply flawed. I didn't invent the (doping) culture but I didn't try to stop the culture and that's my mistake, and that's what I have to be sorry for."
Armstrong, who received a life ban for engaging in what the United States Anti-Doping Agency described as "the most sophisticated, professionalized and successful doping program that sport has ever seen" further accused authorities of making him a scapegoat for following a doping culture that was rife in cycling.
"When you see the (life ban) punishment ...I got a death penalty meaning I can't compete. I'm not saying that is unfair but it is different."
Oscar Pistorius
"I am absolutely mortified by the events and the devastating loss of my beloved Reeva. With the benefit of hindsight, I believe that Reeva went to the toilet when I went out on the balcony to bring the fan in. I cannot bear to think of the suffering that I have caused her and her family, knowing how much she was loved" - Paralympic sprinting champion Oscar Pistorius tells the court in an affidavit after he is accused of murdering his girlfriend, model Reeva Steenkamp, in his home on Valentine's Day.
South African Pistorius, the double amputee dubbed 'Blade Runner', said he shot dead his girlfriend by accident as he had mistaken her for an intruder.
Andy Murray
"I understand how much everyone wanted to see British winner at Wimbledon and I hope everyone enjoyed it. I worked so hard in that last game. It's the hardest few points I've had to play in my life. I don't know how I came through the final three points... that last game ... my head was kind of everywhere. That last game will be the toughest game I'll play in my career, ever" - Andy Murray after ending Britain's 77-year wait for a men's champion at Wimbledon.
The nerve-jangling final game dragged on for 13 minutes as Murray wasted three match points, then watched on as Djokovic squandered three break points before he finally clinched victory.
Bobby Charlton
"He is such a fantastic manager... He is a sensational person in every form. I am a director (at Manchester United) but I hardly do anything because we are winning all the time and it is all down to Sir Alex Ferguson. He would get up in the middle of the night and travel 300 miles if he thought there was a schoolboy that he could sign. He loves the game and we at the club have had nothing to do really" - England soccer great Bobby Charlton on Alex Ferguson who retired as Manchester United manager after more than 26 years.
The 71-year-old Scot stepped down after winning 13 league titles, two European Cups, five FA Cups and four League Cups with United.
Sachin Tendulkar
"My life's been 22 yards for 24 years. It's hard to believe that wonderful journey is coming to an end" - Indian cricketer Sachin Tendulkar struggled to hold back the tears as he ended his career by playing in a record 200th test. The 40-year-old hung up his bat as the sport's most prolific run-scorer, amassing 15,921 runs in tests, 18,426 runs in one dayers and a record 100 international centuries.
Lewis Hamilton
"Personally I feel for the fans because I remember the period of time when Michael Schumacher was winning. I remember waking up in the morning to watch the start of the race and then going to sleep, and then waking up when it ended because I already knew what would happen. I am pretty sure a lot of people were doing that today" - Britain's Lewis Hamilton on the domination of German Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel, who claimed his fourth successive Formula One championship with three races to spare, and also won a record nine races in a row to wrap up the season.
Muhammad Ali
"He made us realize, we are our brother's keeper and that our brothers come in all colors. He taught us forgiveness on a grand scale. His was a spirit born free, destined to soar above the rainbows. Today his spirit is soaring through the heavens. He is now forever free" - Boxing great Muhammad Ali on the death of former South African President Nelson Mandela, who long believed sport could be used as a powerful tool to unite people.
"I knew this was going to be a special year. When we started rolling, nobody ever stopped the train" - Slugger David Ortiz after the Boston Red Sox clinched their first MLB World Series at Fenway Park since the 1918 championship. The win came six months after the city was shocked by the deadly marathon bombings.
Rory McIlroy
"Golf's in a great place right now. You've got Tiger (Woods) with the five wins this year. Adam (Scott) breaks through for his first major (at the Masters). Phil (Mickelson) wins the major (British Open) he thinks he's never going to win, he's still waiting on another one (U.S. Open), and Henrik (Stenson) comes back (into form)" - Rory McIlroy on the remarkable strength in depth in the modern game.
"You've got to play really well to win now. That's why you see so many first-time winners because the fields are so deep. It is tough to win out here."
"I would find it very surprising if we encountered any enhancing drugs in golf. I don't know what you could take to help you perform better in golf. Viagra maybe - to hit it long and straight" - a cheeky Henrik Stenson told Reuters at the Abu Dhabi Championship as the scourge of doping cast a long shadow over the sporting world.
(Editing by Justin Palmer)

Sporting comebacks of 2013

Sporting comebacks of 2013

Reuters 
(Reuters) - Great sporting comebacks of 2013
1. Oracle Team USA's comeback to win the America's Cup
Few challenges can have seemed as hopeless as that facing Larry Ellison's Team USA when trailing Emirates Team New Zealand 8-1 in the best-of-17 series in San Francisco Bay in September.
The Jimmy Spithill-skippered Team USA kept their heads, however, and after replacing their tactician with Olympic champion Ben Ainslie, displayed vastly improved tacking and teamwork to ride a huge wave of momentum into a winner-takes-all showdown.
Team USA duly crushed the Dean Barker-skippered Team New Zealand in the decider to retain the trophy they won three years before and reinvigorate a once-troubled regatta.
2. Rafa Nadal's brilliant comeback season
Diagnosed with a tear in his patella tendon and inflammation in his left knee, Spaniard Nadal was unable to defend his Olympic title last year and missed the second half of 2012.
A stomach flu delayed his comeback further and saw him miss the year's first grand slam at the Australian Open, but after a low-profile re-entry at a tournament in Chile in February, Nadal won an astonishing 10 titles, including an eighth French Open crown and the U.S. Open.
The Mallorcan also re-captured the world number one ranking from Novak Djokovic and though the 13-times grand slam champion was pummeled by the Serb in the season-ending ATP World Tour Finals, he finished the year with the top ranking for the third time in his career.
3. All Blacks comeback win over Ireland to complete perfect rugby season
A shining season by a world champion rugby team attained mythical status when New Zealand came back from the brink to defeat Ireland 24-22 in the final test of the year in November to complete the first perfect season of the professional era.
New Zealand trailed 19-0 after 18 minutes and 22-7 at halftime, but came storming home to win in the most dramatic of circumstances and courtesy of two of their stand-in men.
A stoppage time try to replacement back Ryan Crotty left Aaron Cruden, who had replaced the injured Dan Carter at flyhalf, with the conversion kick to seal the win.
The kick sailed wide but agonizingly for the Irish, they were penalized for rushing out too quickly at the kicker, allowing Cruden to coolly slot it on the second attempt and secure the All Blacks their 14th win from 14 for the year.
4. Adam Scott shrugs off British Open disappointment to win U.S. Masters
Pundits had consigned Australia's Adam Scott to a life on the psychiatrist's couch after he blew the biggest chance to win his maiden major at the British Open at Lytham last year, when he gave up a four-stroke lead with four holes to play to gift Ernie Els the trophy.
Long regarded an unfulfilled talent, Scott shrugged off the meltdown and told his critics that the disappointment only confirmed that he had it in him to win majors.
When presented with his next chance at Augusta in April, Scott sunk a 25-foot birdie putt to force his way into a playoff with Argentine Angel Cabrera and closed out an emotional victory, the first by an Australian at Augusta, with a 15-foot putt on the second extra hole.
5. Miami Heat's comeback to beat San Antonio in NBA finals
The reigning NBA champions trailed 3-2 in the best-of-seven finals series and were five points down and 20 seconds away from giving up their title during game six on their home court in June.
Officials had started roping off the court for the trophy presentation and spectators were leaving in their droves when the Heat's Ray Allen made a three-pointer with five seconds on the clock to tie the game 95-95 and put it into overtime.
Fired by LeBron James, Heat closed out the game 103-100 to force the decider and returned to the court to seal back-to-back titles with a 95-88 win in game seven.
6. Australia take Ashes back from England
Unfancied Australia entered their home series against England in November after a tumultuous year marked by abysmal performances on the field and strife off it.
Australia had lost the first of back-to-back Ashes series 3-0 to England in August, their worst result against their traditional rivals in decades and one that followed a 4-0 drubbing in a test series away to India.
Marshalled by new coach Darren Lehmann and fired by the renaissance of seamer Mitchell Johnson, Michael Clarke's team stunned England with a 381-run victory in the series-opener in Brisbane before confirming their dominance with a 218-run win in the second test in Adelaide.
They sealed the five-test series two matches early with a 150-run victory in the third match in Perth on Tuesday, completing a stunning revival from one of their lowest ebbs in the modern era.
7. Borussia Dortmund sink Malaga in stoppage-time during Champions League quarter-finals
Trailing 2-1 in second half stoppage time in the second leg of their quarter-final in April, Dortmund refused to lie down and die, despite the exit of hundreds of their fans from their home stadium.
Last-gasp goals from Marco Reus and Felipe Santana sent the Germans through in a stunning finish that sealed their first appearance in the European competition's last four for 15 years.
The magic continued for Dortmund as they upset Real Madrid in the semi-final before their fairytale run was ended by fellow Germans Bayern Munich in the final.
8. New England Patriots win NFL overtime thriller against Broncos
The Patriots trailed the Denver Broncos, favourites to win the Super Bowl, 24-0 at halftime during the regular season game in November but came to life in the second half courtesy of quarterback Tom Brady's heroics.
Brady struck with 31 straight points to set up a dramatic overtime finish and allow Stephen Gostkowski to kick the 31-yard field goal for a thrilling 34-31 win.
9. New Zealand's McCullum fells Sri Lanka in four balls
A final-over blitz by New Zealand's Nathan McCullum elevated a rain-hit one-day international cricket match against Sri Lanka into a thrilling last-ball victory in Hambantota last month.
The bowling all-rounder and older brother of captain Brendon McCullum needed 20 runs from the last four balls to reach Sri Lanka's 198.
McCullum smashed a six and a four off the first two balls from the hapless left-arm spinner Rangana Herath, then blasted two consecutive sixes to win the match and finish unbeaten on 32 runs from his nine deliveries faced.
10. Serial comeback king Tommy Robredo inspires at Roland Garros
While Rafa Nadal took the trophy at this year's French Open, it was the achievements of a far lower-profile Spaniard that lit up the first week of the grand slam.
At 31, Robredo advanced to his fifth quarter-final at Roland Garros by mounting a record three consecutive comeback victories from two sets down.
Beginning with a a 6-7(2) 4-6 6-3 6-1 6-1 turnaround against Igor Sijsling in the second round, Robredo then upset local favorite Gael Monfils 2-6 6-7(5) 6-2 7-6(3) 6-2 in the next match before stunning eleventh seed Nicolas Almagro 6-7(5) 3-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 in the round of 16.
That made the Spaniard the first man to achieve the feat since Henri Cochet at Wimbledon in 1927.
(Writing by Ian Ransom; Editing by Justin Palmer)