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."

Olazabal calls on European Tour to back Royal Trophy

Olazabal calls on European Tour to back Royal Trophy

Reuters 
Spanish golfer Jose Maria Olazabal acknowledges the audience's applause after receiving the Prince of Asturias award for Sports in Oviedo
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Spanish golfer Jose Maria Olazabal acknowledges the audience's applause after receiving the 2013 …
(Reuters) - Spaniard Jose Maria Olazabal has criticized the European Tour's decision to launch the EurAsia Cup team match play event next year and said they should have re-established ties with the Royal Trophy.
Olazabal is captaining Europe in the seventh edition of the ongoing Royal Trophy matchplay event, which was launched in 2006 by his former Ryder Cup team mate and compatriot Seve Ballesteros and is backed by the Japan Golf Tour and China Golf Association (CGA).
The European Tour supported the venture before dropping it and then opted to launch a similar tournament in Malaysia next year with the Asian Tour, which used to host CGA tournaments before the Chinese opted to side with the rival OneAsia Tour.
"I know the European Tour sanctioned this event for two years and then a split occurred for some reason," Olazabal said in a statement released by the Royal Trophy on Saturday.
"But I do think they must sit down with the Royal Trophy people and work out their differences because it is such an important issue.
"The Royal Trophy will continue even if it is not sanctioned by the European Tour because it has great support from the Japan Golf Tour, the China Golf Association, and other important parties in Asia.
"But I know the organizers are keen to resolve this issue, and I would call on both sides to sit down and sort this thing out."
The Royal Trophy is being staged in China for the first time after Brunei hosted it last year and Thailand for the first five.
While the inaugural Royal Trophy boasted famed major winners Nick Faldo and Ian Woosnam as well as then world number 12 David Howell, Swede Henrik Stenson and Ireland's Paul McGinley, the current edition lacks the same gloss.
Thailand's Thongchai Jaidee is the best ranked player competing in China at world number 46, while Howell is back but now number 93. Spaniard Alvaro Quiros is the worst ranked of the 16 players at 278.
Thongchai will be team captain for the inaugural EurAsia Cup in March, but Olazabal thinks the new tournament is not necessary and European Tour chief George O'Grady should focus on finding new full field strokeplay events instead.
"We do not need another Asia v Europe match involving a maximum of twenty players when we already have a well-established Royal Trophy," said the twice U.S. Masters champion.
"But we do need more full field events, and I know other players feel the same way," he added.
The biennial EurAsia Cup will be held over three days at the Glenmarie Golf and Country Club in Kuala Lumpur from March 27-29 with Spain's Miguel Angel Jimenez playing and captaining Europe.
Former U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell and world number 26 Jamie Donaldson of Wales, Frenchman Victor Dubuisson ranked 32 and Spain's world number 35 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano have already committed to playing.
Four more players will qualify for the European team via the world rankings, while the Asia side will feature Thongchai and the leading four players from the Asian Tour order of merit, the top three available from the world rankings and two captain's picks.
"Our relations with players from Malaysia, China, India, Thailand, Korea and Japan have been important to us for many years," O'Grady said last month at a promotional event for the new tournament which has been backed by the Ballesteros family.
"We see the development of the EurAsia Cup as a further commitment by us to assist in the development of golf throughout the region and to strengthening one of The European Tour's most important partnerships."
(Writing by Patrick Johnston, editing by Pritha Sarkar)

Skier Vonn's knee fails number one fan Tiger Woods

Skier Vonn's knee fails number one fan Tiger Woods

AFP 
USA's Lindsey Vonn grimaces as she leaves after missing a gate during the downhill race at Alpine Skiing World Cup in Val d'Isere in the French Alps on December 21, 2013
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Val-d'Isère (France) (AFP) - American speed queen Lindsey Vonn failed to put together a winning run for onlooking boyfriend Tiger Woods on Saturday as her unstable right knee gave way halfway down the course.
Vonn insisted the incident would not have major ramifications, saying she would race a maximum of two more events before heading to Sochi to defend her Olympic downhill title in February.
But the manner in which her knee failed to provide any stability on a turn coming out of a compression will have worried not only her but the US ski team.
Vonn sustained the injury to her knee in a horrific crash in last February's World Ski Championships in Schladming.
With reconstructive surgery and 10 months out, it surprised some that she even made it back to competitive skiing this season.
"Unfortunately I have no ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) and it just gave out on me," Vonn said, with Switzerland's Marianne Kaufmann-Abderhalden going on to win the downhill.
"It was a small compression and it was fully loaded on the right ski and my knee just completely gave out. I tried to pressure the ski again and it gave out again.
"I'm going to be as safe and smart as I can and give myself as much time as I can give myself to really get as strong as I can."
Vonn added: "I have no ACL, so unless I get surgery there's not anything really magical I can do to make it better. I can just get my leg and muscles stronger to try to support it more, but that has a small impact.
"My knee is loose and it's not stable and that's the way it's going to be from here on out, I just have to get used to it."
But she insisted that her morale remained high and that Sochi was firmly in her sights.
"My goal is the Olympics. I'm not winning any World Cups this year, any titles, as long as I'm skiing well and I have good confidence that's all I really need," she said.
"I just need to be careful about how many races I do. I'm at risk of doing more damage to my knee and my meniscus and things like that.
"So I'm going to play it safe and race minimal races, probably maybe one or two, before the Olympics just so I can get the confidence and the timing and the feeling of racing again."
The onlooking Woods, whose relationship with Vonn was revealed in March, featured regularly on the big screen in the build-up to his girlfriend's run.
In brilliant sunshine, the world's number one golfer positioned himself in the team area at the bottom of the slope and kept his eyes straight ahead.
When French racer Marie Marchand-Arvier suffered a brutal crash, he visibly flinched and rocked up on his toes.
With Vonn in the starting gate, Woods remained stock still, hands dug deep into his jacket.
As she failed to come out cleanly from that compression and missed a gate, there was no reaction from the golfer despite the gasps from the spectators, the giant screen showing a close-up of Vonn slumped on the side of the slope, crying.
"He was nervous," was Vonn's explanation of the statuesque pose taken on by Woods, with camera crews jostling to get a shot of the 14-Major winning golfer.
"He's very supportive and it's really fun to have him. This is his first World Cup and he's a little more nervous because of me, he's worried about me but he's happy to be here and I'm happy to have him.
"I love having him around and the more races he can come to, the better. But I'm not really racing much this year unfortunately so you probably won't see both of us around very much.
"He likes skiing and he wants to understand my sport more and he's interested in what I do because he loves me and wants to support me."
Vonn said she had felt less pressure with Woods watching on.
"Just having someone support you always makes you feel better," she said.
"I didn't feel any pressure, I'd had two really good training runs and I felt really confident today and I'm just disappointed because my knee didn't hold up like I was hoping it would."