Friday, March 7, 2014

Stuart Appleby takes one-shot lead as soggy Sony Open's first round finally played

stuart appleby
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Stuart Appleby felt more relaxed in his round Friday than he did during last week's Hyundai Tournament of Champions.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
The Sony Open took a while to get started. So did Stuart Appleby.
Appleby was humming along Friday on rain-soaked Waialae Country Club, no bogeys on his cards but not many birdies, either. That changed when he holed a 163-yard shot from the fairway and a 35-foot putt on the next green to finish with a 6-under 64.
That gave him a one-shot lead over nine players from Matt Kuchar and Justin Rose to a pair of rookies in Nate Smith and Ben Martin. In soft conditions and only a light breeze, 65 players in the 144-man field broke par.
Appleby shot 30 on the back nine, including a chip-in from the front of the 12th green. Then came a strong finish, with a 5-iron that he holed out for eagle on the 16th and the long birdie putt on the 17th.
"Less than two hours, really went from a pretty plain round to a good round," Appleby said.
No one could catch him in the afternoon. Shigeki Maruyama, a popular figure in these parts, was at 5 under through 12 holes until he dropped a few shots on the back and had to birdie the 18th for a 65.
Martin, who just graduated from Clemson last year, wasn't sure what to expect. It wasn't the ideal preparation for his first regular PGA Tour event, although it was out of his hands. He had to do a commercial shoot on Tuesday, then couldn't practice Wednesday because the range was closed and didn't play Thursday when rain washed out the opening round.
"I hadn't hit a golf shot in three days," he said.
He hit most of them quite well in the opening round. Five of his birdies were from inside 8 feet, and two others came on the par 5s that he reached in two. It helped to have some experience on the bag. Martin sent his caddie to California to study the four courses used in the Bob Hope Classic, and he used Frank Williams, the longtime caddie for Stewart Cink, who was coming to Hawaii on vacation.
Martin hadn't never seen Waialae until this week, so the soft conditions didn't feel different.
That wasn't the case for the veterans.
"I have never seen the course like this," Steve Stricker said after rallying for a 69. The fairways were too wet to mow, and grass clippings that had been floating in water created yellow patches of debris.
Appleby said the course was "heavy," but he had no complaints. Players were allowed to lift, clean and place their golf balls through the fairway, although some players felt by the end of the day it wasn't necessary.
"Much better than I expected," said Kuchar, who made a long eagle putt on the ninth and made only one bogey.
Appleby was among those who started his season last week on Maui, and it was a struggle. The Sony Open offers a completely different test, minus the mountainous terrain and the severe slope on the greens with a strong grain.
He felt more relaxed here, and the finish helped.
Appleby chipped in for birdie from in front of the 12th green -- "sort of freshened up that par, par, par I had the first couple hours on the front nine," he said -- added a birdie on the 13th and then finished with a flourish. With a slight breeze off the Pacific, from a 163 yards away on the 16th, he hit an easy 5-iron right of the flag and was surprised to hear the cheer when it went in for an eagle.
Before long, a good score was a great one. It was his lowest opening round in 10 years at the Sony Open.
Appleby played in the same group with Rose, and Appleby thought the Englishman played far better from tee to green, the difference perhaps being that Rose didn't hole any full shots from the fairway.
Rose opened with a 75 last week and played well from there, finishing in a tie for 12th.
"I didn't panic, just really realized that it was a good week to knock off some rust and start growing some good habits," he said. "And the week kind of evolved and I got better every day. It was nice to carry that on into this week."
This week figures to be different. Because an entire round was washed out, the plan is to play the second round on Saturday, followed by a 36-hole marathon on Sunday.
Some players did well to rally. Vijay Singh, playing for only the second time in the last four months, was 4 over through six holes. He birdied four of his last six holes for a 70. And then there was Charles Warren, who got into the Sony Open through his top-10 finish at Disney in the final tournament of the year. Warren birdied his last hole at Disney, which not only put him in Honolulu to start the year, but got him inside the top 150 on the money list to give him at least conditional status.
He promptly made three straight bogeys to start his season and was 4 over through six holes. It took him until the eighth hole to take honors from 67-year-old Dave Eichelberger, playing as a PGA Club Professonal for winning the Aloha PGA Section title. But Warren turned it around by playing 5 under over his last 10 holes for a 69.
Eichelberger had a 76, and that wasn't the worst of it. Michael Thompson, one of 27 rookies at Waialae, posted the first 80 on the PGA Tour this year. One of the veterans, Jeff Maggert, had a 75.
"Almost shot my age," said Maggert, who at 46 has been around long enough to laugh at himself.

Steve Wheatcroft closes out record week with 12-shot victory at Nationwide Melwood Prince George's

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By 
PGA.com news services 

Series:
It wasn’t even close. Steve Wheatcroft eagled the final hole Sunday to polish off his first career win in record-setting fashion at the Melwood Prince George’s County Open. The 33-year old Indiana University grad shot a final round 7-under 64 and lapped the field by a Nationwide Tour record 12 strokes. 
Wheatcroft finished at 29 under par and splattered his name all over the record book while picking up a first-place check for $108,000, which moved him from No. 32 to No. 2 on the season money list.
“I’m absolutely over-the-top ecstatic. I’ve been out here for five years and never won,” he said. “I wanted to make that next step and I wanted to do it in a big way.”
It wasn’t big, it was huge. The list of his accomplishments would take several pages but perhaps the most impressive was his score of 255, the lowest 72-hole total in the 22-year history of the Nationwide Tour. The old mark of 258 was set by Chris Smith at the 1997 Omaha Classic and later matched by Daniel Chopra at the 2004 Henrico County Open.
His margin of victory is also the largest in tour history, topping Smith’s 11-stroke win 14 years ago and Marc Leishmann’s 11-shot margin at the 2008 WNB Golf Classic.
“I had the pedal to the floor all day,” said Wheatcroft. “I didn’t’ want anybody thinking they had a chance today.”
Nobody had much of a chance the last three days.
The Pennsylvania native moved to the front with his 10-under 61 in the second round and never turned around to see who was following. He set tour records for the largest 36-hole lead (seven) and the largest 54-hole lead (eight) before slamming the door in Sunday’s finale.
“Friday was one of those crazy days and I just tried not to look back,” he said.
Ryan Armour posted a 9-under 62 to finish at 17 under par and grab a share of second place with Jon Mills (65). Nicholas Thompson (69) ended the week at 16 under to take solo fourth. Thompson had the best seat in the house Sunday, playing alongside Wheatcroft.
“He played phenomenal,” said Thompson. “There was no catching him.”
Wheatcroft eased into the day but left little doubt that he was headed to his first win when he rolled in birdies at Nos. 4, 6 and 8.
“Everybody behind me had nothing to lose and I knew they were going to be firing at pins. They were going to go as low as they can,” he said of his challengers. “The goal was to try and birdie as many as I could and get as far ahead as I could.”
Wheatcroft’s bandwagon started slowly but began to build as the record-setting day wore on.
“Making a birdie I look up and see ‘Terrible Towels’ waving,” said the Pittsburgh-area native. “I hear everyone cheering and hear voices I recognize. My family was here, my girlfriend was here, my friends were here. We probably had 25-30 with us and we picked up a few more (fans) as we went along.”
His lead was in double digits at the turn and the only questions left to be answered would be about the final numbers.
“The first time I felt really safe was on 14 green. I probably had 18 feet left for par,” he said. “That was a huge boost for me. Fourteen and 15 are nasty holes if you don’t get it in play and things can change. You give one or two back and it shrinks and all of a sudden everyone’s thinking they have a shot.”
They were wrong. Wheatcroft kept the pressure and closed with a 5-foot birdie at No. 15, two-putted for birdie from 40 feet at No. 16 and then finished with a flourish.
“I wanted to go out with a bang,” he said. “I’m kind of a TV ham and the 18th green on Sunday is about as good as you’re going to get.”
Wheatcroft rolled in the eagle from 20 feet to finish off the week but the celebration will have to wait. He will join fellow pros and amateurs on Monday as they try to qualify for the U.S. Open, which will be played about 30 minutes away at Congressional Country Club.
“I’ll delay it one more day,” he said. “The U.S. Open is my biggest tournament. It’s my dream tournament. I’m pretty sure Monday night will be a big one.”
The celebration, like everything else, will pale in comparison to all that he accomplished over the past four days.
Armour made a huge move with a 9-under 62 that vaulted him to 17 under for the week and a tie for second. Armour was even par through his first six holes before chipping in for eagle at the par-5 seventh.
“It three-hopped into the hole and it just ignited stuff,” said Armour, who felt the momentum change. “All sports are a game of momentum. People say you try to keep an even keel on the golf course but you can feel the ebb and flows of everything going on. I hit it solid on the back and gave myself every opportunity to make birdies on every hole out there.”
This was Armour’s best finish since he tied for second at the 2005 Jacob’s Creek Open Championship in Australia.
Fourth-Round Notes:
--Erik Compton all but owned the par-4 eighth hole this week. Compton played the 346-yard, dogleg left at 6 under par for four days. He eagled the hole each of the first two days and then birdied it twice on the weekend.
--Matt Davidson continued his solid season with his fourth top-10 finish. Davidson has made the cut in five of seven starts and has finished in the top-25 in each of those five events. The Furman University fired a 5-under 66 and tied for ninth. In his last five starts he has tied for ninth, tied for 10th, tied for 15th, missed a cut and tied for ninth. He moved from No. 19 to No. 9 on the money list.
Steve Wheatcroft put his name in several places in the Nationwide Tour record book this week:
--He became the 19th player to shoot 60 or better in a single round; tied the fourth-lowest opening 36-hole score with his 126 total (66-60)
--tied the seventh-lowest 36-hole score (consecutive rounds) history with his 126 total, in rounds 1-2
--tied the third-lowest mark for fewest putts in a single round with 19 during the second round
--his seven-stroke lead was the largest 36-hole lead
--his eight-stroke lead was the largest 54-hole lead
--his 191 total matched the second-lowest opening-54 score
--his 125 total in rounds 2 and 3 (60-65) tied the second-lowest 36-hole total for consecutive rounds
--his 96 total putts was one shy of the all-time best of 95 set by Grant Waite at the 2003 Miccosukee Championship
--his winning score of 255 broke the record by three strokes for the lowest 72-hole total
--his 12-stroke win also set a new mark for the largest margin of victory
--his 31 birdies tied the record for most birdies in a single tournament; his finishing score of 29 under par is the second-best in tour history.

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Golf-Split fourballs leave Asia close to Royal Trophy defence

Golf-Split fourballs leave Asia close to Royal Trophy defence

Reuters 
Dec 21 (Reuters) - Asia require three-and-a-half points from Sunday's eight singles matches against Europe to defend the Royal Trophy after the teams split Saturday's fourballs at the Dragon Lake Golf Club in Guangzhou, China to give the holders a 5-3 advantage.
Leading 3-1 after Friday's foursomes, Asia stretched their advantage to three points thanks to Thai pair Kiradech Aphibarnrat and Thongchai Jaidee's 2&1 victory over Scots Paul Lawrie and Stephen Gallacher.
Europe, led by Ryder Cup-winning captain Jose Maria Olazabal, looked set for victory in the second match with Britons David Howell and Marc Warren two-up on the 17th tee against Liang Wenchong and Wu Ashun only to crumble at the finish.
Chinese duo Liang and Wu went birdie-birdie over the closing holes to snatch what looked to be a crucial half with Howell and Warren only able to bogey the par-four 18th.
Austria's Bernd Wiesberger and Dane Thorbjorn Olesen managed Europe's only win of the day with a 2&1 victory over out-of-sorts Japanese pair Ryo Ishikawa and Hiroyuki Fujita to make the score 4.5-2.5 in Asia's favour.
South Korean duo Kim Hyung-sung and Kim Kyung-tae appeared on the verge of restoring Asia's three-point cushion in the final match but they too let slip a two-up lead with two to play against Spain's Alvaro Quiros and Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts.
Quiros hit a brilliant approach from the trees to within four feet that set up a birdie on the last to grab the unlikely half and stay within two points of Asia. (Writing by Patrick Johnston; Editing by John O'Brien)

Fowler, Matsuyama, Molinari among 14 to get Masters invite

Fowler, Matsuyama, Molinari among 14 to get Masters invite

Reuters 
Fowler of the U.S. walks off the 14th green during the third round of the Barclays PGA golf tournament in Jersey City
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Rickie Fowler of the U.S. walks off the 14th green during the third round of the Barclays PGA golf tournament …
(Reuters) - American Rickie Fowler, Hideki Matsuyama of Japan and Italy's Francesco Molinari are among 14 players who have been invited to compete at the U.S. Masters in April.
Thomas Bjorn, Jamie Donaldson, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, Miguel Angel Jimenez, Matteo Manassero, David Lynn, Thongchai Jaidee, Peter Hanson, Victor Dubuisson, Joost Luiten and Branden Grace are the other 11 invitees, the European Tour said on its website (www.europeantour.com) on Friday.
The 14 earned their places in the first major championship of the year at Augusta as a result of their positions in the final world rankings list of the season published on Monday.
Ninety golfers have already secured a spot at the Masters, raising the prospect of more than 100 players competing in the event for the first time in almost half a century.
A total of 103 players took part in 1966.
Players not already qualified can still book a ticket for the Masters by winning one of the early-season U.S. PGA Tour events, apart from the Puerto Rico Open, or by being in the top 50 of the world rankings at the end of March.
(Writing by Tony Jimenez; editing by Toby Davis)

Pressure on Vonn as Tiger appears in Alps

Pressure on Vonn as Tiger appears in Alps

AFP 
US golfer Tiger Woods (R) and US Alpine skier Lindsey Vonn (C) walk on December 20, 2013, in Val d'Isere, in the French Alps
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US golfer Tiger Woods (R) and US Alpine skier Lindsey Vonn (C) walk on December 20, 2013, in Val d'Isere, in the French Alps (AFP Photo/Franck Fife)
Val d'Isere (France) (AFP) - Lindsey Vonn will take to the piste for Saturday's World Cup downhill in Val d'Isere under increased pressure as high-profile boyfriend Tiger Woods pitched up in the glitzy French resort.
While Vonn has been a regular spectator of the world's number one golfer, it will be the first time Woods has been seen at one of his girlfriend's ski races since they confirmed in March they were a couple.
Her return from injury to racing at Lake Louise, Canada, coincided with the World Challenge golf tournament in Thousand Oaks, California, that Woods hosts for the benefit of his charitable foundation.
The 14-time Major champion and Vonn were spotted in a cafe on the main drag of Val d'Isere, after Woods' car was barred from driving up to the doors of his swanky hotel as the street was pedestrianised for the bib draw for the downhill.
"It's been tough with my ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) injury, but I'm feeling good," Vonn told the crowd after she drew number 19.
Vonn was referring to a savage crash at last February's World Ski Championships in Schaldming which left her needing reconstructive knee surgery and 10 months of rehabilitation.
After Woods, wearing a dark puffa jacket buttoned to his chin and hood up, hands dug deep into the pockets, realised he had been spotted by photographers, he quickly sought sanctuary in the hotel used for the World Cup event.
Woods had hinted in a posting on Thursday on his tigerwoods.com website that he was going to pass on golf for a while to spend more time with Olympic downhill champion Vonn and his children.
"I'm going to put my clubs away for a while to spend more time with my kids and support my girlfriend Lindsey Vonn as she tries to prepare for the Sochi Olympics," Woods said.
"Having experienced reconstructive surgery on my knee and the ensuing rehab, and the amount of pain associated with it, it's really hard to explain to anybody unless you've been through it.
"And then coming back on it athletically, to trust that it's going to be there, that's a whole different ballgame.
"I've had my share of experiences in that regard - unfortunately - but I think it helps her in a sense because she can bounce ideas off me about what to expect. It is a frustrating process and really difficult to go through."
Woods also admitted to having found a sychronicity with the American skier.
"We see our sports through the same looking glass in how we approach them," he acknowledged.
"We both work very hard and are prepared for our seasons. And when we're ready to go, we give it everything we possibly have and there's no holding back. I think that's some of our commonalities.
"But she has to be way more aggressive in her sport than I have to be in mine. You're trying to make your way down a mountain at 80-plus mph, and you have to have the adrenaline and the aggressiveness to do it.
"But for me, I'm trying to tone everything down mentally. I'm trying to play within myself and do all the little things. So that part of it is way different."
Woods added: "I think it's the preparation that we both appreciate and the fact that we can do it time and time again, and we've done it for a long period of time.
"It's not a flash in the pan, and you just don't do it for one year -- she's done it for 13 years, and I've done it for 18 years. As far as Lindsey competing in Sochi, we're very hopeful. It all depends on how that knee is."
Vonn has credited Woods with making her a "better athlete" for showing her unprecedented levels of professionalism, dedication to fitness and a mental toughness to resist pressure.
"This experience with Tiger will really help me at big events," she told the January edition of the Red Bulletin.
"At the Olympics or World Cup, it's not just about the one-and-a-half minutes of racing: you're there for two weeks and permanently in racing mode, everything's significant, everyone's looking at you."