Kamis, 31 Januari 2013

Tour releases statement for Vijay: 'absolutely shocked' and 'angry'

Hi! My name is Stephanie Wei. I grew up in Seattle. I live in Manhattan, NYC. I played competitive golf for ten years in the junior and college ranks. I went to Yale, where I played on the women's golf team and graduated in '05 with a B.A. in History.

I still enjoy pegging it, but don't ask me my handicap because I stopped keeping one when I left for college. More important, I'm feisty and I like to smile a lot. I also love sports, spandex and surprises.

I'm a freelance writer and reporter, as well as a contributor for Sports Illustrated Golf+.

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Sports Illustrated (2012)

Wall Street Journal

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Read more about me here.



By the Numbers: Farmers Insurance Open

Driver the key to Tiger's success on the way to his 75th PGA Tour victory

Driver the key to Tiger's success on the way to his 75th PGA Tour victory

Welcome to By the Numbers, Farmers Insurance Open Edition. As you may have guessed, the column this week will be very Tiger Woods centric. Hey, you notch it your 75th win on the PGA Tour, you can have your own Numbers column, too. Without further ado, your Tiger at Torrey Pines Edition:

  • Tiger owned the par-5s. Over the four rounds, Tiger was 12-under-par on the 16 total par-5s. He also made birdie or better on 11 of them ' which results in a conversion rate of 68%. Whereas last year on the PGA Tour, Tiger ranked 14th with 48.3% rate. Rory McIlroy led the tour with a 53.1% percent rate. For the majority of his career, Tiger has ranked first or second on Tour in this stat.

 

  • He scored well even when he wasn't making putts. In the third round on Sunday, the longest putt Tiger made was six-and-one-half feet, and for the round he had a negative strokes gained putting number of -.758 and ranked 64th in the field. However, he had five birdie putts of less than five feet (he made 4/5), along with the aforementioned six-and-a-half footer. This allowed him to score even without a hot putter.

 

  • Tiger owned the par-5s and gave himself looks at numerous short birdie putts. This was because he was able to attack the course with his driver. He was T17th in driving accuracy, Woods pulled driver on the vast majority of par-4 and -5 holes throughout the four rounds, and still finished T17th in driving accuracy for the week. When he chooses to hit driver, he is one of the longest on tour. He ranked eighth in driving distance on all holes at Torrey Pines.

 

  • If you are a long driver on the PGA Tour, and you hit driver a fair amount, you are not going to be overly accurate. Of the ten longest drivers on Tour last year (measuring all drives, not just two-per-round), none of them ranked inside the top-120 on Tour in driving accuracy. Of the top ten on Tour in club-head speed, only two were inside the top-130 in accuracy: Tiger and Henrik Stenson ' both of whom sacrificed distance for accuracy (Stenson ranked 104th in distance, Tiger  was 37th).

 

  • Even when Tiger was dominant in his heydey (with the 'Butch (Harmon)' swing, he was not always long and straight. In 1999 he was 65th in accuracy, and in 2000 he was ranked 54th. However, he didn't crack the top-100 in driving accuracy again until 2009, which includes '01 and '02 (during the 'Butch' years). While he was 86th in accuracy in 2009, he was no longer ranked top-five in distance, and last year, Tiger often hit 3-wood and/or an iron off the tee, which is why he was 37th in distance (on all drives), despite being top-ten on Tour in club head speed, ball speed, and carry distance.


The reality is, Tiger is one of the best drivers of the golf ball on the PGA Tour, especially amongst the longer hitters. It is our expectations for how well PGA Tour players ' especially the longer guys ' hit the driver, which are out of whack. Mark Broadie (the Columbia professor who came up with strokes gained putting) is working on strokes gained statistics for all parts of the golf game. According to his metric, Tiger was 10th on Tour in strokes gained driving in 2012. The guy who was ranked first? No other than the world's number-one Rory McIlroy.

Did Woods miss a bunch of fairways in the fourth round at Torrey? Yes. But given the law of averages, we should have expected it. Does it mean that compared to his peers, Tiger is a bad driver of the golf ball? All evidence points to no. In reality, along with stellar wedge play, the driver was the key club to Tiger's victory at the Farmers Insurance Open.

'Shoshana

****************

 

[Ed. note: I was sick at the beginning of last week and didn't have a chance to publish Shoshana's column for the Humana Challenge. My apologies. She did the work, and unfortunately, I was unable to share it -- this stuff happens in the world of writing. It sucks, but hey, it wasn't a total waste: it counted toward her reps! Thanks for understanding. --Steph]



Behind the Scenes: Waste Management Phoenix Open, Wednesday edition

I know I should know better and use Word instead of WordPress to write my posts, but old habits die hard. The internet timed out and I just lost the last hour's worth of work'which is always fun'but it's my own fault. Anyway! It was a busy yet fun (and kind of weird) day on Wednesday at the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Above, you can watch the #WUPHangout that I did earlier this evening. What did we talk about?

Well, all things Phoenix Open and deer antler spray, of course!

I spent most of the day loitering and gathering info from players on the 16th hole and practice areas. Unfortunately, I have too much material and can't share it all. Sigh. But I'll do my best to hit all the highlights.

Because I've been asked by a gazillion people, yes, it was me photo-bombing Michael Phelps and Gary Woodland on the famed par-3 16th during Wednesday's pro-am. I was taking videos, pictures, 'gramming, Vine-ing, etc., so I could share them with you all!

And here's the Vine I was 'creating' when you saw me behind Woodland.

While I'm at it, I also made a Vine of the long-hitting Luke List bombing drives on the range.

It appears those lessons from Hank Haney has helped out Phelps, the most-decorated-Olympian in history. His swing looks way better than a few months ago. Here's the YouTube video of Phelps teeing off on 16 in the pro-am (he was playing with Bubba Watson). I'm betting this was the first time the world-class athlete has ever been boo'ed.

As you can see, the 'stadium' was packed. I mean, it looked like it was near maximum capacity. Okay, maybe a slight exaggeration, but it never ceases to amaze me how many people show up early in the week to this tourney. I don't blame them because they are obviously having the time of their lives!

****************

In regard to Vijay Singh and the deer-antler-spray scandal, I found perhaps the best player to speak to on the substance ' the one and only Boo Weekley, who is also an avid hunter.

'I use the deer piss ' I spray it on my boots and not on my skin,' said Boo when I asked if he'd heard of the product. 'Cause when I'm out there walking in the woods, I don't want them chase me down and get me. I want them to follow me.

'I hadn't heard of it used as ' the only deer spray I'd heard of is what we'd spray ' deer testosterone ' on our boots, which is deer urine. We spray it on a rag and drag it behind us. So the bucks will come in behind us and then they chase us. But I've never used it on me.'

Boo's dad happens to be a pharmacist, who knows about the substance as a medical professional. (Boo asked me not to identify his father by name because he works for corporate America.)

'I've talked to (my dad) about (deer antler spray),' said Boo by the putting green on Wednesday afternoon. 'He says it's been around for a while in the medical field, and other animals have been used to help prevent more injuries or to help recover from injuries faster'

'My old man he don't know the whole scenario of it. He's heard of it being a pharmacist. I don't know how spray could make that big of a difference, but I guess it can. The only thing I've used is deer urine.'

Does it work?

'As (my old man) says, yes,' said Boo, cautiously, after pausing for a second.

'There are a lot of deer farms around where I live (in the Florida panhandle and Southeast),' he said 'I've heard of things, people steeling horns off other people's property for black market sales overseas, where people crush them down and use them for medicine.'

Boo said he wasn't aware it was on the list of banned substances.

As you can imagine, deer antler spray and Vijay were popular topics on the range today. There was no sign of the Big Fijian, though, but as of Wednesday night, he is still in the field for this week's Phoenix Open.

**************

Onto more important things ' perhaps the most exciting news of the day: The 'stash is back. Of course I'm talking about Johnson Wagner, who shaved off his famed facial hair at the end of last season during the playoffs to switch things up. (See pic.)

Asked why it's making a return, Wagner said, smiling, 'Because I missed it.'

While he was reluctant to give a straight answer, I'm guessing ' and this is pure speculation ' that it's partly a result of superstition. He played well with it last year and so far this season, he missed the cut at the Sony Open, where he was defending champion. His best finish is T13 at 30-man Hyundai Tournament of Champions.

So perhaps it was time for a change. From personal experience as a former junior and college golfer, we're absurdly superstitious, not to mention ritualistic. Golfers will try anything to try and change their luck, or improve their performance. It doesn't matter if it actually works. In fact, it's usually the placebo effect in play, but hey, we know that belief is a powerful potion.

**************

Bo Van Pelt shot an 11-under 59 in the pro-am. Off the tee on the drivable par-4 17th ' a fantastic risk-reward hole ' BVP hit the flagstick on his drive. He had a tap-in for eagle. There was a back-up on the tee, and Phil Mickelson, who was in the group behind BVP, started jumping up-and-down and going nuts, telling Bo he needed to get after it because he could shoot 59.

Up until that point, Bo wasn't aware he was so close to golf's magic number because he'd forgotten it was a par-71. He came through in the clutch, making a ten-footer for birdie on 18 to post THE score.

He's probably thinking, damn, why didn't I save that for the tournament?!

**************

Alright, I was already half asleep an hour ago, so now it's way past my bedtime. It's going to be a fun week, per usual. Are you all ready for the Greatest Show on the Grass?? Well, it's here!



Rabu, 30 Januari 2013

Vijay Singh admits to using a banned substance (gasp!)

Deer in headlights

Deer in headlights!

Vijay Singh, known for his intense work ethic on the golf course and in the gym, is one of the athletes who have used a banned substance from a two-man company run in the back of a gym in Alabama called S.W.A.T.S. ' Sports With Alternatives to Steroids, according to a fascinating Sports Illustrated story.

Christopher Key and Mitch Ross sell products like deer antler spray, hologram chips and 'negatively charged' water that claim to help enhance an athlete's performance. The deer antler spray contains IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor), a 'natural anabolic hormone that stimulates muscle growth,' which is banned by the NCAA and every major pro league. 

Among the athletes named in the article is Baltimore Ravens linebacker Ray Lewis, who reportedly used the product to help heal his torn triceps. At Super Bowl media day in New Orleans on Tuesday, Lewis refused to address the SI story.

The PGA Tour and MLB warned its players in 2011 that the deer antler spray, which is advertised as containing banned IGF-1, was implicated in a positive drug test. Mark Calcavecchia was also told to stop promoting the product.

However, Vijay Singh, who turns 50 next month, admitted to SI that he uses S.W.A.T.S. products:

(Vijay Singh, however, remains a vocal supporter. In November, Singh paid Ross $9,000 for the spray, chips, beam ray and powder additive ' making him one of the few athletes who is compensating S.W.A.T.S. He says he uses the spray banned by the PGA 'every couple of hours . . . every day,' sleeps with the beam ray on and has put chips on his ankles, waist and shoulders. 'I'm looking forward to some change in my body,' Singh says. 'It's really hard to feel the difference if you're only doing it for a couple of months.')

It may not start and end with Singh, either ' though this was around two years ago:

The chips and spray also had recently begun to spread through golf after a friend with whom Ross sold Christmas trees introduced him to a PGA caddie. In short order, Ross says, the caddie 'was passing me around the golf world like a prostitute.'

The caddie ' we'll call him Bob ' of a player who will remain unnamed was paired with Tom Pernice at Disney last November and said he saw Pernice's caddie, Tony, spraying something in his mouth as he was walking down the fairway. Bob, a fitness freak, knew about deer antler spray and asked Tony if he was using the substance. Tony said yes and mentioned he got it from a friend who owned a warehouse or something that produced it.

Bob saw that Tony kept the spray in his player's bag. Guess who Tony caddies for currently? Vijay.

According to GolfChannel.com, Ty Votaw, the Tour's czar of communications and international affairs, declined comment, but he did say, 'We were just made aware of the report and are looking into it.

'While IGF-1 is on the Tour's banned-substances list, Votaw confirmed that, like many other professional sports leagues, the circuit does not test for either IGF-1 or HGH. 'We have not determined a reliable test for it,' Votaw said.'

Singh is known for his somewhat absurd practice schedule and intense workout program. He's been plagued with injuries the last few years, but in 2011 he went to Germany for a back procedure, which is not legal or practiced in the U.S. Singh, who isn't known to be the most press-friendly player, has not yet been reached for comment.

Now does this stuff actually work? The SI story presents both sides, including testimonials from NFL players, but remains a skeptical tone. And of course, S.W.A.T.S. will tell you: 'This stuff is beyond real.'

Geoff Shackelford dug up this beauty:

 

I hate to admit that I'm kind of intrigued and curious as to the products' validity.

(Photo via)



Selasa, 29 Januari 2013

LPGA unveils global throwdown (and 2013 schedule)

A global game and a global tour

A global game and a global tour

The LPGA has created a new event that appears to be its own version of the Presidents Cup on the men's tour. The ladies have the Solheim Cup (biennial matches between the U.S and. Europe, like the Ryder Cup), but the game, especially on the LPGA tour, is an international affair.

Last week the LPGA announced the International Crown, 'a first-of-its-kind, biennial, global match play competition commencing in 2014 that will feature teams from eight countries battling for the right to be 'Crowned' the world's best golf nation,' according to the press release. 

More from the media blast:

Showcasing the strength of Golf's Global Tour, this even-year tournament will feature a four-day, match-play format with a total purse of $1.6 million ' of which $100,000 will go to each member of the winning team. Each of the eight countries will be represented by four players.

'At the LPGA, we celebrate great players from all over the world on a weekly basis, but this is the first time we'll pit country versus country for global bragging rights,' said LPGA Commissioner Michael Whan. 'Only countries that have produced the best female teams can compete and only four players from any one country will be invited. The International Crown will take women's golf to the next level and allow fans to rally behind their homelands. In sports, there is simply nothing greater than wearing your nation's flag, fans singing your national anthem, and bringing the CROWN home.'

The inaugural tournament will debut July 21-27, 2014 at Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Maryland, outside Baltimore.  In 2016, the Crown will be played at Rich Harvest Farms in Sugar Grove, Illinois, host of The 2009 Solheim Cup.

Qualification criteria for the International Crown are:

  • Eight teams based on cumulative Rolex Rankings of each country's top four players at the conclusion of the 2013 CME Group Titleholders
  • Four players from each country based on Rolex Rankings at date to be determined.

Whan formally announced the International Crown today at the PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando, Fla. If teams for the Crown were selected according to the current Rolex Rankings, South Korea, the U.S., Japan, Sweden, Australia, Taiwan, Spain and England would battle for the inaugural title.

'Our Tour is so global and we need this type of event,' said Stacy Lewis, the top-ranked American. 'People always want to know why golfers from Asia are so good. Well, now we can see how all the countries stack up. The more we can showcase our Tour around the world, the better. Representing your country is the ultimate thing. Getting announced on the first tee when you are representing the USA, it doesn't get any better than that. It's a goal of mine to be in the event.'

The format of the International Crown will feature three days of Four Ball matches wherein countries will be seeded into two brackets with four countries in either bracket. Each country will play every other country in their bracket over the course of the first three rounds to determine which five countries will advance to Sunday singles play. All points from the Four Ball matches will carry over to Sunday's matches where each country will play a singles match against every other country. The total cumulative points for the four days of competition will be used to determine the overall champion.

'It's like preparing for the Olympics,' said Rolex Rankings No. 1 Yani Tseng, of Taiwan. 'In Taiwan and in Asia, we don't have a team event like this. This is a good opportunity for us to play for our countries. It's really going to be awesome. Right now, we have three Taiwanese players that play fulltime on the LPGA Tour. Hopefully in the next two years, we can improve our junior program and get more Taiwanese players on the LPGA. This tournament will really help us with that goal.'

In a unique twist, prior to play on Saturday and Sunday, each team will turn in a sealed envelope with the name of one player who will represent their team if a playoff is necessary to break a tie the following day.

Paige Mackenzie, a member of the LPGA Board of Directors, says it's kind of like the amateur event, the Spirit Cup.

Sounds like a fun and great concept. The only problem is that only eight countries will be represented, so some of the game's best will still be left out ' like  Suzann Pettersen, who is ranked sixth in the world. Because  there are only two players ranked in the top 500 from Norway, there aren't enough players to form a team (four), according to the AP:

Based on this week's world ranking, three players from the top 15 would not be eligible ' Pettersen, Feng and Catriona Matthew of Scotland.

'I was talking about this last year with Suzann Pettersen and she said, `I like the idea, but aren't you building something I'm not going to be in?' Whan said. 'It's an interesting situation. But we don't need another event to identify the best in the world. Our tour does that.'

The LPGA Tour years ago had the Lexus Cup, which was designed for the players who couldn't compete in the Solheim Cup. It never gained much traction, however, with Asia competing against the rest of the world. Whan found it to be far more compelling to have players competing for their own country.

'I've been asked many times whether we should add other countries or regions to the Solheim Cup,' he said. 'One thing you learn quickly as commissioner when you go to the Solheim Cup is you're not going to mess with that. ' Korea wants to play Japan, not be teammates. This gives the fans what they want.'

 

Still, it seems like the LPGA has finally found some momentum after enduring a tough time in the past five- six- years due to the tough economic climate. Below is also this year's schedule, with the season beginning in Australia before heading to Asia again. At first glance, it appears there will be less blackout periods, where the ladies would have months off between tournaments.

Onward and upward!

************

2013 LPGA schedule

Feb. 14-17: ISPS Handa Women's Australian Open

Feb. 21-24: Honda LPGA Thailand

Feb. 28-March 3: HSBC Women's Champions

March 14-17: RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup

March 21-24: Kia Classic

April 4-7: Kraft Nabisco Championship

April 17-20: LOTTE Championship Presented by J Golf

April 25-28: North Texas LPGA Shootout

May 2-5: Kingsmill Championship

May 16-19: Mobile Bay LPGA Classic

May 23-26: Pure Silk-Bahamas LPGA Classic

May 30-June 2: ShopRite LPGA Classic Presented by Acer

June 6-9: Wegmans LPGA Championship

June 20-23: Walmart NW Arkansas Championship Presented by P&G

June 27-30: U.S. Women's Open

July 11-14: Manulife Financial LPGA Classic

July 18-21: Marathon Classic Presented By Owens Corning & O-I

Aug. 1-4: Ricoh Women's British Open

Aug. 15-18: The Solheim Cup

Aug. 22-25: CN Canadian Women's Open

Aug. 29-Sept 1: Portland Classic Presented by Safeway

Sept. 12-15: The Evian

Oct. 3-6: Reignwood Pine Valley LPGA Classic (Beijing)

Oct. 10-13: Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia

Oct. 17-20: KEB Hana Bank Championship

Oct. 24-27: Sunrise LPGA Taiwan Championship

Nov. 7-10: Mizuno Classic

Nov. 14-17: Lorena Ochoa Invitational

Nov. 21-24: CME Group Titleholders



Happy 75th, Tiger!

Diamond and Gold for Tiger

Diamond and Gold for Tiger

Tiger Woods looked like his lost interest ' or rather, patience and concentration ' on his way to a four-shot victory at the Farmers Insurance Open, in what was a long, drawn-out Monday finish, where play was so slow that you could take a solid power nap without missing a shot. You think I'm exaggerating? Hardly.

At one point, Woods held an eight-shot lead and for obvious reasons, like the fact he's never missed a cut in 13 starts at this event, or that he had already won the PGA Tour tourney seven previous times, not to mention his eighth victory at Torrey Pines, counting the 2008 U.S. Open, his last major (number 14), in a dramatic 18-hole playoff against Rocco Mediate. 

 

'I played really well through 13 today, and built myself a nice little lead, made a few mistakes coming home, but I had a big enough cush that it was fine,' said Tiger after posting a final-round even par 72, 14-under total, and winning by four shorts over defending champ Brandt Snedeker and Sergio doppelganger Josh Teater.

'In the end I just started losing my patience.  It was so slow out there.  We played nine holes in just over three hours and three of them are par3s.  That's not fast.  As I said, I had an 8shot lead.  So just needed to stay up right, and I was going to be fine.'

Not that this necessarily means something, but in the past when he's won his PGA Tour season opener ' which he's achieved six times from 1997-2012 (1997, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2008) ' he went on to win 37 total events (average 6.16 wins per season). He also won a major in five of those six years, with 2003 being the only one where he came up major-less.

Ten years later, we still have to wait until April when the azaleas and dogwood are blooming in Georgia for Tiger to take his first stab at snapping his almost-five-year-majors drought.

Woods was destined to win the event after he opened with a four-under 68 on the South Course, which he followed with a seven-under 65 in the second round. I know I was just about ready to hand him the trophy. Saturday's third round turned out to be a wash due to fog, and after almost everyone ' besides guys like Tiger and Phil ' played the waiting game and sat around at Torrey all day, hoping for the marine layer to clear.

The Tour had to improvise and decided to start the third round first thing in the morning on Sunday morning, with a 30-45- minute break in between the third and fourth rounds. They didn't repair, so hopefully the guys liked their fellow playing partners for those brutally slow final 36 holes.

As one caddie, whose player notched a top ten, quipped, 'There was nothing fast about those last 36.'

It was already a foregone conclusion Tiger would notch his 75th career win on the PGA Tour, but the pace to make it official was glacial. Because of the weather and the large group pf players who made the cut, it contributed to the slow play, but still, that shouldn't be an excuse. Usually, the network does a decent job of covering up or distracting viewers from this tour epidemic, but it was so bad on Sunday and Monday that there was nothing CBS/Golf Channel could do to try and hide the fact that the last group had to wait 5-10 minutes on every shot. It was like that for several groups spread around the course. Some were fast and some were slow, but one thing's for sure, it was a massive problem.

It also led to Tiger hitting some'err'interesting shots on the back nine. I'd never seen him look like he cared so little and just wanted to get the round over with. On the 14th he rushed his greenside bunker shot. His playing partners Billy Horschel and Casey Wittenberg were still walking toward the green when Tiger decided to go ahead and hit the shot. That rarely ' or never ' happens. He ended up hitting a less-than-mediocre out from the sand, leaving him with a 50-footer for par, which me missed to card his first bogey of the day.

Then, on the 15th tee he snap hooked it off the tee so far left that it was in hazard and buried amongst the ice plants. He had to take a penalty shot and drop. Woods posted a double-bogey, but there was never a doubt he wasn't going to pull this one out. It was just a matter of finishing. The closing holes were ugly, but it's challenging to keep your rhythm and patience when you're playing at a pace that may rival Congress, as CBS funny man David Feherty quipped.

'Well, the group ahead of us was a hole behind most of the entire back nine,' said Tiger in his press conference as tactfully as possible. 'I don't know if they were warned or not or they were timed.  But we were just playing slow.  We were just having to wait on every shot, so it got a little slow.

'The three of us were losing our patience a little bit out there.  I certainly was.  Unfortunately, it affected my play a little bit.'

Apparently it varied for everyone. There was some groups faster than others, and then several that were very far behind and slow.

Woods attributed to his fine play (with the exception of the last five or so holes) to his driving (huh? ' he certainly hit some interesting ones, but that's the 'old' Tiger, who would miss it a handful or so times, but managed to still make par or birdie from somewhere other than the fairway, while his iron play, recovery shots and short game compensated for stray drives.

'Well, I drove the ball beautifully all week,' said Woods, who was mysterious about his next start but all signs point to the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship at the end of February. 'As I was explaining that my short game has been coming around.  It came around at the end of last season, and you're not going to hit every par-5 in two, but you need to get up-and-down, and I did that this week.

'My short game was back to how I know it can be.  My shots that I hit, especially out of these nasty little lies, I hit some really good ones this week.  And that allowed me to save some pars, save some birdies, and move my way up the board, and basically that's what I did.'

Like I said, vintage Tiger.

Added Woods: 'I think it's a product of, as I said, my short game and getting that organized.  I was hitting the ball beautifully most of the year and driving the ball better than I have probably in my entire career last year.  It was nice to not have to hit so many golf balls on the range and work on the little things.

'You only have so much time in a day, and obviously, with family responsibilities, that's a priority.  It was nice to be able to now not hit so many golf balls and work on my short game.  I think that's where you're seeing the rounds evolve.  I'm saving a shot here, saving a shot there, and that's leading to a birdie here and a birdie there.  Next thing you know, it's a three, fourshot swing.'

Naturally, everyone is jumping the gun and comparing Tiger's victory on Monday to his previous seasons.

'Well, I think it's efficient,' said Woods when asked about his game back in '07-'09 (pre-scandal).  'I'm not going to compare it to those years, because each one's different.  I had a different swing then, just like I did back in '99, 2000, 2001.  Those are all different swings.  But the commonality is I won golf tournaments, and that's what I'm doing again.'

Good answer. C'mon guys, we're in a different, new Tiger era. Can we just move on and appreciate the Tiger of 2013? I know there's a lot of pressure and anticipation for his quest to win major number 15, but I'm so sick of the comparisons to the old Tiger.

Asked during his post-victory press conference, 'Are you back?' (Ugh, I can't stand that storyline.)

Woods, smiling, quickly replied, 'Never left.'

Another great answer.

How he felt to (finally finish) capture his 75th Tour victory?

'Joy,' he said, simply.  'I feel great.  It's nice to actually walk around here without any discomfort.  That was a different kind of week, but this week was just, I played great and built a nice little lead there.'

*************

Meanwhile, defending champion Snedeker, who finished hours before Woods did, wasn't pleased with the way he closed.

'It was a good week,' said the 2012 FedExCup champion. 'I was a little disappointed with the way I finished today.  Just didn't roll the ball the way I wanted to all week.  Had a good little stretch in my third round, being the fourth round, end of the third round.  But you've got to roll the ball really well around here, and I didn't do a good job of that in the second round.  It's a little frustrating because it's normally something I think I can do well.

'It was a good last 36 holes, but I've still got a lot of stuff to work on for next week.'

Brandt was hoping to get to 14-under, which would have forced a playoff with Woods.

'I thought if I could get out and play 14-under that I might have a chance,' said Snedeker, who shot a final-round 69.  'The conditions are tough.  The wind is blowing.  It's cold.  The ball is not rolling real far.  So I knew this course could yield some bogeys, but that being done, you've still got to post it'

'I guess it was a good title defense.  I'm not really excited about the way I finished.  If I had made three birdies going into today, I'd probably be more excited about it.  But that's how you judge it is how you finish, and I didn't finish very well, so that's very frustrating.

'But at the beginning of the week if you had told me I'd have a chance on the back nine on Sunday, I probably would have taken it.  So it's something to build on.'

I'll leave you with something to think about: Tiger has won more times at Torrey Pines alone, whereas about 90% of his fellow competitors have no titles to their name.

Tiger Woods, y'all!

*************

2013 Farmers Insurance Open statistics:

Driving Distance                  307.3                                                      8th

Driving Accuracy                 32 of 56 (57.1 percent)                       T17

Greens in Regulation          50 of 72 (69.4 percent)                       T34

Putts Per Round                   28.5                                                        T11

*************

 

Random notes on Tiger and his win:

*With his win today, Woods becomes the first player in TOUR history to win on the same golf course eight times. Woods has seven victories in the Farmers Insurance Open and one U.S. Open win at Torrey Pines. Sam Snead won the Greater Greensboro Open eight times between 1938 and 1965 but those wins came at different courses ' four at Starmount Forest CC and four at Sedgefield CC.

*Woods has now converted 50 of 54 third-round leads/co-leads on TOUR. He has converted his last three third-round leads: 2009 BMW Championship, 2012 Arnold Palmer Invitational and 2013 Farmers Insurance Open.

*The largest winning margin in tournament history is eight shots by Tiger Woods in 2008. Tom Watson (1977) and Fuzzy Zoeller (1979) own the next-largest victory margin of five shots. Wood's victory margins in this event:

1999     2 strokes

2003     4 strokes

2005     3 strokes

2006     playoff

2007     2 strokes

2008     8 strokes

2013     4 strokes

*In the years that Woods has won this event, he has gone on to record multiple wins in each of those years:

1999     8 wins

2003     5 wins

2005     6 wins

2006     8 wins

2007     7 wins

2008     4 wins

2013     TBD

*Woods has never missed a cut in 13 starts at the Farmers Insurance Open. Through 54 rounds at Torrey Pines now, Woods is 51/54 at par-or-better and 47/54 for sub-par rounds. Of his 47 sub-par rounds, 37 have been in the 60s.

*Woods has won seven times at the Farmers Insurance Open, and has held the 54-hole lead four times (1999, 2003, 2008 and 2013).

*For the week, Woods played the par-3's in 4-under par, the par-4's in 2-over par and the par-5's in 12-under par.

*This week was the second time that Woods has held the 36-hole lead in the Farmers Insurance Open. In 2008, he led by four after 36 holes, before winning by eight over Ryuji Imada.

*With his win this week, the Farmers Insurance Open becomes the third event on the PGA TOUR which he has won seven times. The others are the World Golf Championships-Bridgestone Invitational and the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

*Woods' average winning margin of victory in his seven wins at the Farmers Insurance Open is 3.285 strokes.

*Woods collects his 75th career win on TOUR. Sam Snead is the all-time leader with 82 wins.

*************

Finally, what I thought was the shot of the day. I said, WOW, aloud, so it had to have been. Just kidding. I know how difficult that shot could have been (long bunker shots like that are challenging). Check it out. (OK, video won't embed, so here's the link.)

 

*************
We had a WUP Hangout on Monday morning around the time that the players re-started the final round on Monday. Thanks again for those who contributed, watched and asked questions. Again, constructive criticism and feedback welcome and appreciated.

(Photo via Bleacher Report)



Senin, 28 Januari 2013

Tiger's Turf

Tiger in cruise control

Tiger in cruise control

Tiger Woods continues to cruise on what will very likely be his seventh victory at the Farmers Insurance Open (and his eight at Torrey Pines when you include the 2008 U.S. Open) and his 75th on the PGA Tour, which will occur on Monday afternoon Eastern Standard Time.

Saturday was a wash-out due to fog ' err, excuse me, the marine layer.

With eleven holes left to play in the final round, Woods has a seven-shot lead, with defending champion Brandt Snedeker and Nick Watney as his closest contenders. 

'I've got to make some more birdies,' said Snedeker, who is four-under through 14 holes (11-under total).  I've got a long way to go.  I've got a guy at the top of the leaderboard that doesn't like giving up leads, so I have to go catch him.'

Snedeker was in a similar position last year, starting the final round seven shots off the lead. As you may recall, he posted an early 63 and sat around and waited to see if Kyle Stanley, who was gunning for his first win, would blow it. And the craziest thing happened: Stanley triple-bogeyed the 72nd hole and fell back to a tie with Snedeker. Stanley, who was still shell-shocked during the playoff, ended up losing on the first extra hole to Snedeker.

'I was 7 back to start the day, and I had an outside chance, not a great chance, but an outside chance of winning a golf tournament,' said the 2012 FedExCup champion. 'That's a great start of the day.'

He also mentioned the greens being bumpy ' and they were ' so he was glad the horn blew when it did. (So was everyone, it was getting cold ' though I know I shouldn't mention 'cold' since most of you are in freezing temperatures or snowed in, etc.)

Watney has ten holes left to play, and like Snedeker, he has to get hot quickly and hope Tiger loses a shot or two. Thing is, I really don't see Tiger, who treats Torrey Pines like his personal playground, giving any back. I think he'll get to 18-or -19-under easily.

Woods was in good spirits and even came in to answer the media's questions after the horn blew just before 5pm local time.

'I drove it great in the morning,' said Tiger after shooting a three-under 69 earlier on Saturday. 'Just drove it on a string all day  at least all morning.  Then we had a little bit of a wait before we teed off again, and I hit a couple left on 1 and 2, and hit the one right at 4.  But that wasn't left of the cliff.  You can hit 400 yards to the right and still have a shot, so I was fine.

'I was able to play those holes (the first four) at 2-under par, and from then, I hit three great drives right in a row.'

He is striping the ball. It's a little like circa 2008 Tiger, where he hit some stray drives but excellent iron and recovery shots.

'Well, yeah, as I said, I didn't play poorly,' said Tiger when asked about missing the cut in Abu Dhbai last week (though he still raked in $3 million for showing up). 'I was really close.  It's a very tight golf course with a lot of crosswinds.  I felt like I didn't really hit it that poorly.  I had an unfortunate ruling there.  I broke a rule and missed the cut.

'I played well enough to be there on the weekend, and could have gotten two more rounds in competitively, but I didn't really play poorly.  I thought I did a lot of good things.  Just want to continue that this week, and I have.'

He sure has. Woods is absolutely dominating.

'I think it's probably the whole package,' said Tiger, referring to what he attributes to the key to his success at Torrey Pines. 'I've driven the ball well, I've hit my irons well, and I've chipped and putted well.  Well, I've hit good putts. They all haven't gone in.

'Today was certainly you're just trying to get your speed right, because it was wobbling all over the place.'

Yeah, the greens were pretty bad, but what are you going to do? They're poa anuua and getting stomped all over by 87 guys. Plus, they're damp, so they were super bumpy. There was a lot of grumping about the less-than-perfect greens.

Now the question seems to be, how many will Tiger win by?

Tiger has won 49 of the 53 times he's had the 54-hole lead. Though he doesn't have the same intimidation factor as he did in the pre-scandal era, I don't think that makes a difference. Everyone knows he loves Torrey Pines and plays well here. They know it will be hard to catch them. I'm not sure anyone will admit it, but they're basically playing for second place.

Guys like rookie Brad Fritsch is trying to top ten so he gets in the field for next week's Waste Management Open in Phoenix, otherwise known as the Greatest Show on Grass or the Best Party on Tour.

There are over a dozen players who are in San Diego that are hoping to get to Phoenix in time for the Monday Qualifier or the 'three spot' (most tournaments it's a 'four spot,' meaning the top three or-four finishers in a one-day shoot-out. Sounds like there would have been very little chance for them to get there in time on Monday.

Now, because of the network requested a later re-start so they could finish at 5:30pm EST, it ain't happening. (But word from my source in Phoenix says the guys trying to three-spot might get some help from Mother Nature, ironically. Heavy rains may cause delays due to flooding.) PGA Tour rules czar Mark Russell said that CBS requested the 11:10am local time start.

'They're our television partner, and if that's what they want to do, that's what we're going to,' said Russell on Sunday evening. 'Normally it would be Golf Channel, but the network decided they wanted to do that and that's what we set the times for.'

Golf Channel will broadcast the remainder of the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open from 2:10-4:00 EST, then it will go to CBS from 4:00 EST to finish.

Going back to 1975, the inaugural year to this tour event, it has never concluded on any day except Sunday. Well, there's a first for everything! See you back at Torrey on Monday morning/early afternoon.

*****************

WUP hosted another Google+ Hangout on Sunday. We talked Tiger and Torrey. Thanks to everyone for watching and submitting their questions via Twitter. You can check it out below ' and we're planning on doing one on Monday afternoon. Let me know the best time of day to hold it, please.

 


(AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)



Sabtu, 26 Januari 2013

Report: Lindsey Vonn and Tiger Woods are the latest hot celebrity couple

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New couple?

Olympic skier Lindsey Vonn and Tiger Woods have been reportedly dating since November, according to HollywoodLife.com, citing sources close to both individuals. 

Tiger, 37, has been seeing Olympic Gold medalist Lindsey, 28, for two months, and HollywoodLife.com can EXCLUSIVELY reveal how met. 'They met through the ski community, because Tiger is an active skier,' a source close to Lindsey reveals. 'Lindsey has been teaching Tiger's kids Sam and Charlie how to ski.'

It must be serious if she has met his kids! The pair is currently busy with their respective sports careers, but they are trying to make time for each other and their budding romance.

'Their busy schedules mean they don't get a lot of time together, but they constantly talk on the phone,' a Tiger source tells Star. 'And Tiger has made more of a commitment to Lindsey lately ' he's pulling out all the stops.'

The website is also reporting that Woods took Vonn to Antigua for a 'romantic vacation,' and a few weeks ago, Tiger allegedly visited Vonn in Austria, where she was competing in the Audi FIS Alpine Ski World Cup event, before he headed to the Middle East for the Abu Dhabi Championship.

Following Woods' infamous apology to the world in 2010, Vonn mocked the staged event, according to Time.com:

When a member of her Vonn-tourage tells her that Woods gave a few friends hugs after ending his statement, she cracks, 'They're like, 'Yeah, you're awesome, you go have that sex.' ' The room breaks into a laugh. Then she describes a skit she would want to perform if asked to host Saturday Night Live: picture Vonn at Woods' podium, blue backdrop and all. 'There's something you don't know about me,' Vonn says in a faux solemn, apologetic voice. 'Tiger, you're like my idol, and I too have a sex problem.' More laughter. 'That would be freaking funny.'

Well, as we've discovered in recent years, Tiger has more of a sense of humor than he leads on.

Vonn's publicist issued a statement neither confirming or denying the'umm'romance:

'Lindsey is currently in the midst of the World Cup season in Europe,' the statement read. 'Her focus is solely on competing and on defending her titles and thus she will not participate in any speculation surrounding her personal life at this time.'

Woods, unsurprisingly, would not comment on his personal life.

(Photo via NY Daily News)

 



Tiger tames Torrey (again)

Tiger and a towel

Tiger and a towel

I thought we were in San Diego, not Seattle (where I grew up ' well, Bellevue, to be exact)! For the second round at Torrey Pines, it was gray and dreary, but calm ' no wind. It rained steadily all day, but it was bearable for the most part. Right as Tiger Woods and his playing partners Rickie Fowler, who rebounded nicely after his first-round 77 and matched TW's 65, and Nick Watney were playing their last hole on the North Course, it started to pour. 

Good news because he hates rain gear. He even went gloveless on his pitch shot on No. 8 (his 17th).

'I'd much rather play in sweaters, if I can,' said Tiger, in the interview room after firing a seven-under 65 to take the 36-hole lead at the Farmers Insurance Open,. 'Hey, you can only get wet, right? Once you're wet, you're wet. Deal with it.'

Fair enough.

He's 11-under at the halfway point and leads by two shots. He'll play with rookie (sorry inside joke) Billy Horschel, who is nine-under, on Saturday. Six players are clumped at eight-under, including two-time heart transplant recipient Erik Compton.

Interesting stat: This is the first time has had the solo 36-hole lead on the PGA Tour since 2009. Crazy, huh?

Tiger has fared well at Torrey Pines, to say the least. In fact, he's dominated in the past, winning this event six times. As you may recall, he also captured his 14th major here ' on one leg, no less! ' in dramatic fashion, beating Rocco Mediate in an 18-hole playoff in 2008.

The key to Tiger's success this week so far has been conquering the par-5s. Since 2010, he's struggled on them, by his standards. From 2000- 2009 he absolutely dominated them, which was a major factor in his wins.

In the first two rounds, TIger is nine-under on the par-5s.

'I drove the ball great and took advantage of the par-5s, and I think I played them 5-under,' said a cheerful Tiger. 'So, that's basically where the round could be had.

'On the North Course, drive the ball well here and you're going to probably have 4iron shots into the par5s.  Just happened to have the wind turn into us on nine, so I ended up hitting 5-wood.  But, you sprinkle that in with probably four or five wedge shots in there, a round of 6- or 7-under par is definitely conceivable.'

*************

Now in the spirit of my new favorite medium to interact, I'm starting a Google+ Hangout in a few minutes. Please tweet or email your questions NOW! Or you can watch in the livestream below (or on YouTube or Google+, etc.). Thanks!

 (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)



Talking Tiger, Lindsey and all things Torrey

Hi! My name is Stephanie Wei. I grew up in Seattle. I live in Manhattan, NYC. I played competitive golf for ten years in the junior and college ranks. I went to Yale, where I played on the women's golf team and graduated in '05 with a B.A. in History.

I still enjoy pegging it, but don't ask me my handicap because I stopped keeping one when I left for college. More important, I'm feisty and I like to smile a lot. I also love sports, spandex and surprises.

I'm a freelance writer and reporter, as well as a contributor for Sports Illustrated Golf+.

Golf.com

Sports Illustrated (2012)

Wall Street Journal

Mediaite

Read more about me here.



Jumat, 25 Januari 2013

Note to PGA Tour: 'Tear down this wall'

Hi! My name is Stephanie Wei. I grew up in Seattle. I live in Manhattan, NYC. I played competitive golf for ten years in the junior and college ranks. I went to Yale, where I played on the women's golf team and graduated in '05 with a B.A. in History.

I still enjoy pegging it, but don't ask me my handicap because I stopped keeping one when I left for college. More important, I'm feisty and I like to smile a lot. I also love sports, spandex and surprises.

I'm a freelance writer and reporter, as well as a contributor for Sports Illustrated Golf+.

Golf.com

Sports Illustrated (2012)

Wall Street Journal

Mediaite

Read more about me here.



Scoring frenzy in first round at Torrey Pines (Oh, and Tiger shot 68)

Tiger holes out from the bunker for an eagle on no. 6

Tiger holes out from the bunker for an eagle on no. 6

On a calm and mostly cloudy day with delectable conditions, nineteen players shot five-under or better, with K.J. Choi and defending champion Brandt Snedeker firing a pair of seven-under 65s to take a share of the first round lead at the Farmers Insurance Open.

Not a knock to Brandt at all, but K.J.'s was probably more impressive since he played the South Course, the harder of the two tracks. 

Snedeker, who is a career 28-under on the North Course dating back to 2007, played flawlessly. In addition to his win last year, he has three top-tens at Torrey Pines, including T9 in 2011, T2 in 2010 and a third-place finish in 2007 when he tied the course record (61) on the North Course.

'First of all, it's great to be here,' said Snedeker. 'I love being here, which is great, puts you in the right mindset for the rest of the week when you're excited about being in a place.  The golf course for some reason just fits my eye really well.

'The greens, I have no problems adjusting to these greens whatsoever.  I come in hitting the ball right speed, reading the right lines, and when you do that, and you have that kind of confidence, it kind of bleeds into the rest of your game.  So I never really panic around here.  I always know I'm one round away from playing really well.  So it kind of all blends into being a great fit for me.'

For sure. (Picked him for my Fantasy Golf team this week, just saying. Woot!)

Choi, who is making his first start here since 2010 when he placed T15, said he found 'something' on the range while warming up Thursday morning. He started hitting the ball more solid at impact and spinning it more. In practice the previous days the greens were extremely firm and he had trouble holding them. The overnight rain helped, though.

'Today starting on No. 10, 11, 12, my ball very quickly stopped and I was hitting it higher,' said Choi, whose game doesn't necessarily 'fit' the beastly Torrey Pines (especially the South). 'My goal today was to shoot a couple under par, but I shot five strokes lower and my mindset was very calm. Hitting, driving and starting on the back nine was very nice, and then all day, short irons, long iron, mid-irons all were inside 20 feet. Four or five holes I hit it almost in the hole or three-four feet and made the putts.

'It's more difficult to read the greens on the South Course with the grain on the ocean side, but I read them good today, and I make a lot.'

He only needed 24 putts.

Choi was thinking five- or six-under would be a good score today, so he was more than happy with a 65.

'I'm so happy I'm in a good position, and three more days of good weather like today, hopefully ' I pray a lot,' he said, laughing.

Many people don't know this, but K.J. has a wonderful sense of humor and is quite funny (in English, too!).

Choi said he wasn't planning on playing the event, but his fans were disappointed and he was convinced to come.

'In the past, the course is pretty long, the greens are pretty hard, so I felt like the course didn't really fit me well before,' he said. 'But now, as I mentioned before, I found something on the range this morning. Surprisingly, today all of my iron shots were kind of stopping into the green.'

Like I said, the conditions were perfect ' the fairways were rolling well (they literally rolled them) and the greens were more receptive because of the overnight rain.

'These fairways are zipping,' said Tiger Woods, who shot a four-under 68 on the South Course, despite a double-bogey early and two late-round bogeys. 'At least the greens are receptive than in the practice round.'

Woods opened the 2013 PGA Tour season by draining a 25-footer on the first hole. He was missing his driver left early, but making up for it with great iron play. After he double-bogeyed No. 4, he got fired up and rebounded by playing the next five holes five-under, including a hole-out from the bunker for eagle on No. 6.

'It was more important to get that birdie right out of the way, and get back to even par with the par-5 to play,' said Woods, referring to his bounce-back.  'I knew I had two par-5s on the front side so I could get it down to par, and then maybe get two or three on the back.  I thought that would be a good score.  And lo' and behold, I get it rolling.  Get to 6 and a chance to go to 7, so it can change quickly.

'But, we had the perfect conditions for it.  We couldn't ask for better conditions to score than we had today.'

***************

Thanks to those who asked questions via Twitter and watched the livestream of my first Google+ Hangout. Appreciate you guys bearing with me as I was a little nervous and awkward since it was new, but I really enjoyed it as a way to interact with people. I think I might try it again tomorrow. After all, it's all about reps! Feedback is welcome.

You can watch today's casual Hangout below'

(AP Photo/Lenny Ignelzi)



Kamis, 24 Januari 2013

Phil Mickelson apologizes for publicly whining about his taxes

Phil: You see, I had a brain fart and forgot that 99% of Americans really don't give a sh*t about my #multimillionaireproblems

Phil: You see, I had a brain fart and forgot that 99% of Americans really don't give a sh*t about my #multimillionaireproblems

After spending nearly an hour in the parking lot in a top-secret huddle with his PR lackey and a PGA Tour media official, Phil Mickelson graced the press with his presence in the interview room at Torrey Pines and apologized for publicly airing his grievances with tax laws.

Mickelson, a native and current resident of the San Diego area, asked for a mulligan, referring to the comments he made last Sunday, and compared his mangling of state and federal tax hikes with the time he blew a one-shot lead on the 18th hole at Winged Foot in the final round of the 2006 U.S. Open.

Yep, that image of Mickelson floundering past those white hospitality tents is still pretty clear in our memories.

'This reminds me a lot of Winged Foot in 2006, where I hit a drive way left off the tents,' said Mickelson on Wednesday afternoon, smiling. 'So this happened to be way right, but way off the tents. You know, I've made some dumb, dumb mistakes, and, obviously, talking about this stuff was one of them.

'Like Winged Foot, where I tried to carve a 3-iron around a tree and get it up by the green, I make double bogey and lose the U.S. Open, I think I'm going to learn my lesson and take a wedge and get it back in play.

'I made a big mistake talking about this stuff publicly, and I shouldn't have done that.'

After finishing T37 at the Humana Challenge last Sunday, Mickelson, who is worth a reported estimate of $180 million, told the media he was being taxed '62-63%, and he would have to make 'drastic changes' as a result. However, experts say that figure is closer to 50%.

Forbes.com criticized the 60-something-percent figure Phil crafted incorrectly cited, and pointed out that one of his sponsors ' ironically ' the accounting giant KPMG, paid him an estimated $44 million in 2012. Forbes also listed Mickelson as the second-highest compensated golfer, raking in an estimated $46.7 million in 2012. Just in career earnings on the PGA Tour ' not counting endorsements ' Mickelson has made almost $70 million, which ranks him third on the all-time money list.

Due to the massive backlash, Phil issued a statement late Monday night via his PR flak:

'I absolutely love what I do. I love and appreciate the game of golf and the people who surround it. I'm as motivated as I've ever been to work on my game, to compete and to win championships.

'Right now, I'm like many Americans who are trying to understand the new tax laws. I've been learning a lot over the last few months and talking with people who are trying to help me make intelligent and informed decisions. I certainly don't have a definitive plan at this time, but like everyone else I want to make decisions that are best for my future and my family.

'Finances and taxes are a personal matter and I should not have made my opinions on them public. I apologize to those I have upset or insulted and assure you I intend to not let it happen again.'

Mickelson implies he wasn't apologizing for his personal issues with it, rather for speaking out about it ' because, well, again, we don't really care about his #multimillionareproblems. (Which, to be clear, is fine that he has an opinion, as everyone is entitled to his/her own point of views. After all, it's a free world!) He reiterated this on Wednesday.

'My apology is for talking about it publicly, because I shouldn't take advantage of the forum that I have as a professional golfer to try to ignite change over these issues,' he said the eve before the Farmers Insurance Open, an event he's won three times. 'I shouldn't have talked about it because I don't have a plan formulated yet on what I'm going to do. And when I do come up with a plan, and Amy and I have talked about it, and we've been working through this for a while, and I'll be able to talk more about it publicly then. But I shouldn't have brought it up publicly and used this platform as a way to say what I had to say.'

Added Phil: 'I think that it was insensitive to talk about it publicly to those people who are not able to find a job, that are struggling paycheck to paycheck. I think that was insensitive to discuss it in that forum. So that's why I issued a statement, because I shouldn't have brought it up at all, and I didn't want to wait until today.'

Mickelson (finally) making his way from the parking lot to the interview room after "gathering his thoughts"

Mickelson (finally) making his way from the parking lot to the interview room after successfully 'gathering his thoughts'

His comments on Sunday ignited speculation that he planned to uproot his family from California to a state with friendlier income-tax laws (a la most athletes, who resides in Florida, like Tiger, and Texas). Don't worry, Cali, he's not going anywhere'soon.

'Well, I brought up some of the options that I shouldn't have said on Sunday, and I don't know what I'm going to do yet,' he said. 'So I should not have brought it up then. I'm not going to bring it up now until I know exactly what I'm going to do. I don't want to speculate, but I'm not sure what we're going to do yet'

'I love it here. I grew up in San Diego. And even though I went to college in Arizona, I dreamed of moving back here, because it's beautiful. My family's here. Amy's family is here. Our kids' grandparents are here. I love the community I live in.'

Mickelson also implied on Sunday that the new tax laws was tied to the reason why his deal as one of the partners in a group to buy the San Diego Padres fell through.

'There were a number of reasons that that just wasn't the right fit,' he said on Wednesday when asked to clarify what he went. 'As I said earlier, I wasn't in a position at that time to make a commitment to the team and the community, and the current owners are. They're moving to San Diego. They're getting intricately involved in the community, and I think they're going to be great owners.'

OK, you still didn't answer the question, Phil.

'I just didn't feel I was able to commit to being a part of the community at the time,' he insisted.

Mickelson said the controversy wouldn't be a distraction for him this week on the golf course.

'I've said some stupid things in the past that have caused a media uproar before,' he said, smiling. 'It's part of my life, and I'll deal with it. It's just part of the deal. One of the things I pride myself on is whatever it is I'm dealing with in my personal life, once I get inside the ropes, I need to be able to focus on the shot at hand and be able to focus on shooting a low score.'

Fair enough. (And I do believe he really means and gets 'the game' ' which should be noted with respect.)

So, what's the next dumbest thing you've said?

'The next dumbest was probably right here in San Diego ten years ago talking about equipment,' he said, laughing, referring to the comments he made in 2003 about Tiger's 'inferior equipment.' 'What a dumb thing that was. Yeah, I'm sure we can think of some pearls over the years, too.'

Back to taxes. He has no problem paying his 'fair share' ' what that is, he didn't say.

'Well, I love this country, and I love the opportunities that it's afforded me to be successful and to do what I love,' said Phil. 'So I've never had a problem with that before. I've never had a problem paying my fair share, because I know there are very few countries in the world that let you do what you do and live in this environment and have your personal possessions be secured through the court systems, through the police, through all the many things that this country offers.'

As anyone who knows Mickelson knows, he enjoys spirited debates, but he was firm in clarifying that he should have left taxes and politics to discussions in closed doors.

'I'm always up for an individual debate, but I should have never done it publicly,' he said.

All credit to Phil, who is an ultimate PR genius that can spin gold from straw and charm a crowd as artful as a cunning politician. By next week, the uproar will be forgotten and everyone will be back to vowing their undying love for Lefty and his thumbs-ups.

(AP Photos/Denis Poroy)



Rabu, 23 Januari 2013

Tiger Woods is happy to be back at Torrey Pines

Hi, I won the U.S. Open here in 2008

Hi, I won the U.S. Open here in 2008

After missing the cut due to a rules infraction at last week's Abu Dhabi Championship, Tiger Woods is making his 2013 debut on the PGA Tour this week at the Farmers Insurance Open, where he's traditionally opened his season in the U.S. He graced the press corps on Tuesday morning after playing some practice holes at Torrey Pines South Course.

Woods seemed like he was in good spirits, but if you've been here or seen Torrey in any form, then you know it's one of the prettiest places on earth (and if you can afford it, it's worth playing the 62% in taxes if you're a multimillionaire coughPhilcough). (Aside: I'm super excited to cover this event since my favorite tourney was held here as a junior golfer ' Junior World.) He won the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines in dramatic fashion, beating Rocco Mediate in an 18-hole playoff on one leg, basically.

Here are some excerpts from Tiger's kind-of-blah presser:

*On returning to Torrey Pines: Well, it's nice to be healthy to be able to train and practice and do all of the things that I know I can do.  It's definitely a very different feeling, so it's nice to be back. It's nice to get out there and play a course that I know.  Obviously, it's different than what I remembered, because it's normally not this dry, not normally this quick.  So we get this every now and again with the Santa Ana's blowing.  It's a little dry, but normally it's not like this.

*On last week's penalty in Abu Dhabi:     Q.  Go back to last week for a second.  Have you ever been penalized in your professional career?  When is the last time it ever happened to you and do you remember the scenario?

TIGER WOODS:  Penalized?  Yeah, I've hit the ball in the water, out of bounds, lost ball, I've had it all.  You mean those types of penalties?

Q.  No, a penalty like you had.

TIGER WOODS:  No, I don't recall ever having one like that, no.

*On the fields being deeper than when he first arrived on the scene: I'd say it's deeper, yes.  There is no doubt.  Each generation, it gets a little more difficult.  The spread between the leader and the cut is no longer 13 shots, 12, 13 shots.  Sometimes it's as few as 8, so you've got 70plus guys within 8 shots of the lead going into the weekend.

That's a big jump.  That's certainly been probably the biggest difference is that you have more guys going into a weekend with a chance to win, and they are.  They can win from anyplace.  The gap's gotten smaller in that regard.  You have the equipment changes, the balls just don't move as much.  The faces are bigger and faster, and consequently, the guys hit the ball straighter.

*On whether he feels responsible for that: Maybe on the training side.  But as far as equipment, no, because that's  obviously, I don't control that.

*On Phil's comments after the last round of the Humana Challenge: Well, I moved out of here back in '96 for that reason.  I enjoy Florida, but also I understand what he was, I think, trying to say.  I think he'll probably explain it better and in a little more detail.

*On the good memories he's had at Torrey: To be honest with you, I didn't really think about any of the past stuff because, as I said, this golf course is playing different.  I can't remember it playing this dry this time of the year.  It's been a while. I couldn't remember, as I said, being this dry.  Maybe when they first made the changes, I think when Ollie and Mark and myself were up there with a chance. But to compare it to the Open, we don't have the roughs like we do now  the rough's not up like it is during the Open, but it's that dry, but the greens aren't as fast.

For me, I was just trying to get a feel for the golf course, how I was playing.  What clubs I'm going to hit, what my lines are going to be, and getting a feel for if the Santa Ana's are going to blow this week or not blow off the ocean.  So trying to get an understanding of how this golf course is playing at this time.

*On whether he feels he's been deprived of several wins due to players who anchor the putter (in other words, is he against anchoring because he's gotten his butt kicked by some guys): No.  I'm not going to look at it like that.  Generally, in the past if guys switch methods, it's usually because they're uneasy, they're a little twitchy or just don't feel comfortable, so they'll switch methods. But we have a whole other generation that have never experienced having those twitches or having any of those type of problems, and they've grown up with anchoring the putter.

And I think that's what Mike (Davis) was trying to explain when he was trying to implement this new rule is that we're getting a whole 'nother generation that have only putted with anchoring the putter, and they've just learned that one method.  He believes every club should actually swing, and I agree with that.

**********

Have to run to a TaylorMade-Adidas event. I'll be back to update this post shortly! For now, discuss Tiger's form and how you think he'll fare this week.

 *On goals for the 2013 season: Yeah, just improving what I'm doing.  Becoming more efficient with what I'm doing.  I would have to say the majority of the year I hit it pretty good, but my putting and short game weren't quite there.  I spent so much time on ball striking that that finally came around. So towards the end of the season, I was able to spend more time with my chipping and putting and that's come around.  So now I've got to marry up both of those two combos and hopefully I can do it this year and do it on a consistent basis

*On his upcoming schedule: I don't know.  We'll just see.

*On what stands out in his memory with the five-year anniversary of his U.S. Open win here coming up: I do look at that week often.  I remember several things.  Number one that comes to my mind every time I look at it or see highlights of it is just pure pain that I was in.  I don't ever want to experience that again.  That was a very, very difficult week.

Having to go five days, I really don't know how I quite got the five days and got through it.  But I definitely never, ever want to experience that again, that part of it. The other part was how I got off to such beautiful starts on the first hole each day, beautiful starts.  Then having to recover from there and work my way back.  Then I think Saturday afternoon was a pretty cool little back nine stretch where I had a little bit of a run.  And the putt on 18 to get into it was certainly a putt I'll never, ever forget.

*On specific moments: I had three doubles, and then I bogeyed ten.  I teed off;  it was my first hole, so 7over.  Sweet, huh?  Yeah. I think I also had three eagles that week too, so that offsets it.  Yeah, it was one of those things where it just I got off to terrible starts and I just fought my way back.  I had two runs of nine-hole stretches that got me into the tournament.  And if you look at most U.S. Opens, you're looking for one nine-hole run, and that's usually what wins you a tournament.  You hang in there, hang in there and you have one little stretch of holes of nine holes that basically wins you the tournament.

*More on memories from playing through the pain in '08: There were a lot of amazing things, but, man, here I am just talking about it and my hands are sweating just thinking about the feeling I had to get through each and every day.  Just trying to get up and having to warm up again and go to the gym.  I just don't want to move.  Then having to get out here and warm up and trying not to show you guys and any of my competitors what I was feeling.  It was a very difficult week.

*On his first trip to Torrey Pines:  I first came down here during the old Andy Williams.  And I went out and watched some Cali guys, and I watched Mo play, (John) Cook, I think Corey I saw hit a couple shots.  I saw Andy Bean hit the ball on the green on 2 and 18.  I must have been probably, what, single digits in age, somewhere around there, because I was just now starting to come down here for the junior world at the time. My dad took me to two events that year.  It was here as well as the L.A. Open, and got a chance to watch  I think one of the years, Lanny just went off and played really well at L.A., and I was there for nine of those holes where he just tore it apart.  I've got a good story about (Tom) Watson there, but it was fun.  It was a fun time.

*On the Watson story: Well, it's the late Bruce Edwards, and I used to give Bruce some grief about it all the time, right?  So number eight, Tom snipes it to the left off the tee, and I'm right there.  And took a look, blah, blah, blah.  He hits it again, left of the green.  Pins back left, hit it's left of the green.  I'm up there, and Bruce moves me out of the way, twice. He basically yelled at me saying I moved you out of here once, and basically moved me out of there twice.  So I just wanted to see, you know.  Tom Watson, blah, blah, blah.  He sniped one, and sniped another one, and I happened to be right there on both of those shots, and Bruce let me know about it.

 (AP Photo/Kamran Jebreili)



Inside the Players Meeting: Anchors away'?!

Yep, it's the week of the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines, which means it's that time again! ' the 'mandatory' players' meeting historically takes place on-site on Tuesday evening. Longtime WUP readers know that I have fervidly covered the annual event, though it's always been from NYC or Florida. See here, here, and here.

Well, I'm actually on-site this time, where the vibe at the golf course has been energetic and spirited.

Although it's the fourth event on the PGA Tour calendar ' and no offense to the first three, which I've covered with love for the past three years and enjoy thoroughly ' but this feels more like the start of the season. Maybe because most of the 'big names are in the field, like Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson. (I know others will argue it doesn't start until the Masters.) But I digress.

This year, in light of the proposed rule to ban anchoring, the PGA Tour invited a special guest: USGA executive director Mike Davis, who gave a presentation and then fielded questions from the audience. He reportedly left the room unscathed, or at least without any visible bruises.

The meeting lasted two hours, of which approximately an hour- and-ten minutes were dedicated to the USGA part of the program, where they discussed anchoring and bifurcation. A number of players questioned the validity of golf's governing bodies. The other 50 minutes were spent with the usual introductory 'State of the Tour' presentation, along with an open forum, which was led by Commissioner Tim Finchem after the rules czar left, according to a source inside the room.

I was able to reach three players, independent of each other, Tuesday evening, who all spoke on condition of anonymity due to, well, obvious reasons, and fear of sustaining costly fines. I would have liked to include a few more voices, but it was tough since the meeting ended so late. The following will have to do for now, and I'll update it as needed.

*Oh, for sake of clarity, let's call the players as 'Player Albert,' 'Player Bart' and 'Player Cal' ' each guy roughly represents one-third of the Tour, with Albert being against the ban, Bart being for the ban, and Cal being indifferent.

'I really just don't care' because I'm a good putter,' cracked Cal.

Meanwhile, Tim Clark, who was born with a condition that prevents him from turning his wrists/hands inward, flew in from his home in Scottsdale, AZ, to attend the players' meeting. He spoke ardently against the anchoring ban and dominated the Q&A portion (in other words: he talked the most).

*Let's start with an amusing anecdote. It's no secret or surprise that Tiger Woods gets a hall pass from the MANDATORY players' meeting. In order to ensure compulsory attendance, there's a Tour official who checks off names on a list based on the tourney's field at the door where the players enter. I'll use Player Bart's words:

(Unnamed pro) looked at the list and noticed that Tiger Woods' name was missing, and he jokingly said,'Oh, I didn't know Tiger Woods withdrew from the tournament!' The person checking names off said, 'Move along, please, move along, please.'

Everyone laughed or smirked.

*The PGA Tour is in great shape. (Duh.) Players and suits alike are thrilled with the state of the Tour. It came through the recession unscathed, sponsorship is up, and the TV deal is fantastic. Tour suit said, according to Player Al, 'it starts with the image of the players and the players do a good job of doing all the right things.'

Player Bart added: 'They were complimentary of the players. Everyone grumbles (and snickers) when they talk about the Commissioner's compensation, but it's pretty amazing how much the Tour has grown'if you go from 1994 ' 2012, when you talk about player compensation, it's grown at a cliff of just over 10% each year, which rivals the best corporations in the world.'

No doubt, Finchem has earned every penny of his millions in salary and bonus(es).

*Now for the entertainment portion of the evening's festivities: rules boss Mike Davis explained to 150-something guys the rule and provided the reasons (with four main points) why they've proposed the rule to ban the anchoring of the club, most applicably the putter, to the body in making a stroke.

'The USGA feels the integrity of the game is being questioned, and the recent trend of the increasing amount of people using the anchored putter is not something they're terribly comfortable with,' recounted Player Albert.

Davis, then, opened it up to a Q&A. What was the atmosphere like? 'I would describe it as rather standoffish and very awkward.' Another called it relatively 'civil,' all things considered. Another player chimed in: 'It was kind of a weird meeting, a lot of hypotheticals (sic).'

*****************

I had long conversations with Player Albert and Player Bart (separately). It just so happened that one was for banning anchoring and the other, who uses a belly putter, was passionately against the proposed rule (the USGA made it clear that it was still proposed, but sentiment from both players that the governing bodies have already decided it's a done deal).

So, the easiest way to keep things straight and provide you the most thorough account of the meeting is to detail each player's opinions and comments separately. Let's start with Player Albert, who was certainly fired up and spoke passionately against the ban and questioned the legitimacy of golf's rules-decision makers. He stressed it wasn't just players who use unconventional putters that stood up in defense of the anti-anchoring faction.

'The issue is not necessarily about anchoring the putter,' he said. 'It's about the actual governing of us as players. I'm not so sure that if PGA Tour members voted, anchoring would NOT be illegal. The real issue is, why do people the USGA Board of Directors, people who don't play golf professionally, get to make rules for guys that do? That's the main sentiment.'

'What makes these guys the governing board? Who is elected? Why do they get to make rules for the PGA Tour? How are you elected to be the governing body of golf and not let us have a say?' wondered Albert.

Well, what Davis say to that?

'Very dodgy response,' said Albert.

'They were there to explain rule to us and the reasoning of the rule. Players brought up why they have the right to implement the rule.'

And?

'It's hard for me to say what they said because they didn't really say anything because they just said, 'Next question, please,' Albert said, dryly.

'It had to be hard for them to come and explain to the best players in the world when we (Tour pros) don't have a say. The USGA guys can go home, and they sleep like babies, whereas guys who have been putting with anchored putters for years aren't sure if they can play'the issue is guys dictating rules who don't play professionally.

'I play guitar every now and again for fun, but I would never try to make a rule saying how many strings a guitar had to have because I don't play the guitar very well. Someone who doesn't play golf very well probably shouldn't be dictating the rules for us. It doesn't add up to me.

'I don't necessarily think anything needs to be done. I think the USGA should take a progressive look at this. Instead of dictating rules, try to go along with what's happening. I don't understand the problem with anchoring is. If they said, 'You guys are making too many birdies, we want to make it a little tougher, then okay. It's just frustrating because I haven't seen where anyone has voted on this.

'There are 15 guys that are on the USGA Board of Directors who vote. They don't have a stake out here on the PGA Tour and they don't make money based on these rules, so why do they get to decide on how we putt on the PGA Tour?'

'Why not 30 years ago and what are we accomplishing? They wouldn't say why now. Why not four years ago? Well, they don't have an answer for that.'

Player Albert believes without a doubt that it's a reaction to Keegan Bradley, Webb Simpson, and Ernie Els winning three of the last five major championships. Keegan, who was in attendance but didn't speak out on Tuesday's meeting, became the first player to ever win a major wielding a belly putter at the 2011 PGA Championship. Player Albert also thinks the USGA is going forward with implementing the anchoring rule in 2016, but he implied it's not a done deal with the PGA Tour, which follows the Rules of Golf with several exceptions (i.e. PGA Tour has one-ball rule and the embedded ball rule through the green).

The general vibe of the meeting?

'Awkward,' said Player Albert. 'Unelected voices telling guys who just want to play professional golf how to putt, and a lot of guys could care less about how someone else putts. They just don't give a crap. There was a lot of murmuring and a lot of not very nice things being said.'

After Mike Davis was finished with being abused bombarded with some angry Tour pros, Commissioner Finchem took over and held an open forum for players to voice their concerns and queries.

'We talked and asked questions to Finchem about where we are going to proceed from here,' said Player Albert. 'A lot of guys were upset, a lot of guys who don't use anchored putters were upset with how (the announcement of the proposed rule) came about, and the way other players are being treated; a lot of guys who don't use anchored putters stepped up and were heated about the issue.'

This portion of the meeting was much less standoffish because 'Finchem wants what's best for the door.' He really does. Obviously.

'He cares about the players and he wants to hear from everybody,' said Player Albert. 'The USGA has put Tim Finchem in a very interesting situation. He's basically going to decide ' well, it's up to the PAC and board of directors to decide whether we accept this or say no. It's a proposed rule and the PGA Tour hasn't accepted every rule the USGA has put fort and this is no exception.'

*****************

Alright, next up is Player Bart, who offered a different perspective from Player Albert. It was a great counter after I'd heard Player Albert's fiery reaction.

Player Bart acknowledged that one player who used an unconventional stroke spoke most of the time (Tim Clark), but most of the players who don't have a vested interested wanted to know why the USGA had dropped the ball on banning anchoring for as long as it has.

'Mike Davis kept saying, they were concerned about it before, but it was never a big issue to them because not enough people used the stroke. Due to the growing trend both on the PGA Tour and recreational level, they saw a need to address it.'

He said the atmosphere was civil, but it did get a little contentious when players' livelihoods came up.

The bottom line is each player is looking out for No. 1, himself, but that's where the whole point got lost that the Rules of Golf are written for the game of golf, not the PGA Tour.

'Guys have lost the fact that the rules aren't written for just pros or two-hundred guys, but for millions of people,' said Player Bart.

As to Player Albert's question on why the USGA gets to write the rules, Player Bart said that golf's governing bodies have always written the rules and the PGA Tour has always followed them. He was bothered by the 'arrogance' of his colleagues who have forgetten that the world doesn't revolve around them.

'In my opinion, the height of arrogance is thinking the Rules of Golf should be tailored to us (Tour pros),' said Player Albert. 'The beauty of golf as an individual game is that everyone plays by the rules. Guys are asking, why do we play by THEIR rules? That's arrogant to me. One of the guys who talked a lot admitted,'Yeah i am looking out for no. 1, I'm looking out for me.'

Player Albert said Mike Davis unabashedly admitted the USGA had dropped the ball for so long, but Davis also pointed out that it's not an excuse to NOT right a wrong.

Good point. That's part of life sometimes, isn't it?

There were some difficult questions about the timing of it and the reasons how the proposed rule change came about.

'Most players think they started looking at anchored putters when Webb and Keegan and Ernie won majors'the guy from the USGA said that was not the reason ' one of the reasons was the growing trend of players using it ' not just pros but amateurs and juniors. Mike Davis readily admitted the USGA made a mistake by not addressing it earlier, but it doesn't mean we can't fix it to what we believe is the right way of doing things.

'Another reason was the definition of a stroke: the club swinging freely with the hand. Obviously when it's anchored, it's not swinging freely. (Davis) compared strokes that have been banned in the past, like the croquet style, billiard style (like playing pool), and scooping it ' you used to be able to push it without hitting the shot.

'He used a lot of historical precedence.'

Bobby Jones won the 1933 U.S. Amateur with 22 clubs in his bag because there wasn't a limit on number of clubs. Does anyone ever talk about that? No. Because it wasn't a rule back then.
Ben Crenshaw won his first Masters with the Paddle Grip ' a type grip you physically put on the club ' with the implication being his grip is no longer legal.

Meanwhile, Player Bart said another point someone brought up was the ability for them (Tour pros) to make a living, and 'the Tour is in a good spot right now, probably the best it's ever been and we're in the entertainment business.'

Davis' response? Well that's more of a comment, not a question.

Player Bart said he wishes Davis would have said: 'We're not in the business of making rules so you can make a living off of them.

'It's so arrogant'it's not YOUR game. It's a product, but the rules were here before you played the PGA Tour and the game of golf will be here after you're done playing the PGA Tour.'

Oh, snaps!

He added: 'A couple of people said they were so upset that it caused sleepless nights because they didn't know what was going to happen. If you don't know how you're going to make a living three years down the road when they change it, and I totally agree with the sentiment, but then again, it's not YOUR game. There are two organizations that make the rules, the USGA and the R&A. That's just the way it is. You can counter it by saying the PGA Tour doesn't have to follow it, but most would probably agree that its' in their best interest to do so.'

*****************

Now what is the PGA Tour going to do?

Sounds like Commissioner Finchem sides on following the USGA's and R&A's decision, because otherwise, it'd cause a lot more problems that aren't worth the battle.

As Player Bart pointed out, do we really want, say, Keegan Bradley making a putt to win the Masters, and then for Jim Nantz to comment that it's illegal for anyone else in the world who plays the game to use a belly putter? Do you want that image shown to millions of fans and recreational golfers? Eh, not so much.

Finchem basically said they had two options, according to Player Bart: 'You either accept the rules change and implement it to the detriment of some of your members, or you don't and that's to the detriment of years and years of following the rules set forth by the USGA and R&A.'

Someone asked Finchem a question like, 'Are you in more in favor of different set of rules or same set of rules? Finchem gave a long, meandering answer, and the player said, 'Well, is it yes or no?' Then, Finchem said, 'Yes it's in our favor to have the same set.'

Added Player Bart: 'The Commissioner said, honestly we don't have to do what they say but the vast majority of instances it's in our best interest to do so. Some of the examples he gave were reasonable of how we differ a little bit, like the one ball rule we have on Tour.'

Of course, the Commish mentioned that the issue has to be and will be addressed ' and voted ' by the Player Advisory Council and the Board Members.

'In the end it's a game of golf versus 200 or so members, so I don't see how, in my opinion, we would have anchoring in a couple of years,' said Player Bart. 'I'd venture guess that it would be put into effect in 2014.'

The USGA won't enforce it until 2016 because of the 'technicality' that the next edition of the Rules of Golf won't be published until then (it's every four years). Players voiced their concern with the timing and a prolonged three-year transition period, particularly with players who use anchored putters getting heckled or called cheaters. Which has already happened ' Keegan Bradley reported he was called a cheater by a fan behind the 18th green at Tiger's World Challenge event in December.

'In that sense, if you said the rule was going to be adopted by the PGA Tour ' I'm speculating ' but it'd be unanimous to put it into effect in 2014 since we want to eliminate the instances of players being called cheaters when they're playing within the rules,' explained Player Bart.

'In reality we can do whatever we want to do. We're not bound by a contract or obligation. We follow the rules of golf that are set forth by the R&A and USGA because we think that's the right thing to do.'

Is bifurcation even a faint possibility? Doesn't sound like Finchem thinks it's the ideal option. Imagine the paperwork, legal fees and tedious bureaucracy and B.S. you'd have to go through to have two sets of rules. It would mean players drawing up the rules and voting on the language and dealing with all the stuff that goes along with the process.

'It's a contentious issue with anchoring,' said Player Bart. 'People are trying to look out for themselves. It's amazing to me that people would ' not even players who anchor ' say, why don't we have our own rules? The USGA guy said, do you really wanna go down that road? ' it's not going to be an easy process. Who's going to write those rules? Who's going to vote on them? 156 guys? The PAC?'

I don't think the vast majority of players in favor of bifurcation are a bit naive to how irksome it actually is. (I mean, I don't know, either, but I have experience in working in the legal field, so I have a decent idea of what it entails') I can't see a group of players sitting down for hours with lawyers to decide whether the proper wording is correct for every single darn rule. It's not as easy as snapping your fingers and just saying, OK, these are the rules we like and want to follow.

The conclusion: Upset players, lots of questions and gray areas, and not enough answers. Standard, I'd say.

*****************

Whew, that's it for now. I made that a lot more difficult than I needed to, but what else is new? Carry on.

 

 

(Photo via Watoday.com.au)



Senin, 21 Januari 2013

Humana Challenge Sunday tidbits: Gay prevails in desert shoot-out

Gay has his eye on the prize...

Gay has his eye on the prize'

I probably shouldn't admit what I'm about to say, but it'll give you an idea of just how glamorous my life on tour is. On Saturday evening at dinner a few friends and I were chatting about golf (what else? /eyeroll) and we were guessing what 54-hole leader Scott Stallings had to shoot or the other guys that we thought had a shot at catching him.

See, thing is, a five-shot lead at the Palmer Private isn't much of a lead. There were tons of guys who were in range to catch him' with some help from Stallings ' because you have to assume at least one or two guys will shoot a 62 and/or 63. One friend said, 'Four-under. Scott needs to shoot four-under to guarantee a victory.' I agreed.

And he was right.

(I even thought someone as far back as eight shots could potentially come back. 36-hole co-leader James Hahn, who fell off the leaderboard after a third-round even par 72, almost pulled it off, firing a ten-under 62 to launch him into a tie for fourth.)

Stallings, who missed the three-way playoff by one after dunking a shot on the 72nd hole, posted a final-round two-under 70 on Sunday at the Humana Challenge.

After a fortuitous drop by the 18th green, Stallings had to get up-and-down for par to get into the playoff at 25-under with Charles Howell, David Lingmerth and of course, eventual champ Brian Gay.

Zach Johnson, who has served as one of Stallings' unofficial mentors, Blake Adams, William McGirt and Richard H. Lee were standing behind the green while Stallings was playing the 18th. It's rare to see players stick around and root for their buddy, so it's always nice when that happens ' says a lot about both parties. (Stark contrast from the LPGA, where a bunch of girls always hang around and drench the champ with champagne or water.)

I asked Blake, that should be a pretty straightforward chip, right? He paused, smiled and said, 'On a Tuesday it is.'

Yep, not on Sunday when it actually means something and under real pressure. Even though Stallings has been in those situations before and proven he can handle them, it doesn't get that much easier. In fact, if you don't feel nerves at all, then something is probably wrong.

Stallings, whose wife Jen is ready to give birth to their first child in a week or two, missed his eight-footer to save par, and had no one to blame but himself.

'I felt great,' said Scott, referring to the approach shot he pulled in the water on the 18th. 'There wasn't any nerves or anything like that going into it. Just hit a bad shot. Same thing that happened on 14. Felt like I made a good swing, just ball came off a little right and got a bad kick and went in the water.

'But it is what it is. Coming down the stretch on the 72nd hole, you can't make mistakes like that. And it stinks, but it's something that I'll definitely learn from.'

He was obviously upset, but he handled it with poise.

'I shouldn't have been there in the first place,' he said, speaking about where he took a drop. 'I know that. Everyone knows that.'

Well, yeah, it wasn't the best place to miss, I guess, but it happens.

'Anyone who thinks they're going to run away with it is fooling themselves,' he said. 'I never ever once said I was running away with it. I was very fortunate to have a very big lead.

'I played good for three days and it's kind of weird in this kind of marathon, low-round tournament, you're going to kind of catch a skid here and there. And the person that survives the best, wins. And unfortunately, I just hit a bad shot.'

After the media scrum, Scott was greeted by Zach Johnson, who gave him a friendly hug.

'I'm proud of you, brother,' said Zach.

**********

Brian Gay played the two extra holes like a champ, posting birdies on both, to best rookie David Lingmerth and ATM-machine Charles Howell III. Gay birdied nine of his first 13 holes and then finished with five straight pars to fire 63 in the final round.

Gay, who now has four-career victories, started Sunday six strokes behind Stallings.

'The thoughts were just be aggressive, shoot as low as you can,' said Gay in his post-win press conference. 'I knew Scott was five ahead. It was going to be, even with a great round, a really low round, it would be tough to catch him, if at all.

'I played great on the front, just tried to stay aggressive and shoot low.'

Gay felt like this win was a second-coming for him after struggling (to his standards) last season due to a swing change and new instructor. He made about $960,000 in earnings in 2012, which was the first time he had made under a million since 2005.

Gay has never been known for his length off the tee (elatively speaking), so because the PGA Tour venues favor power-hitters, he felt the need to hit it farther. He said he's gained about 10- to- 15-yards in distance since he started working with instructor Grant Waite.

'Just over a year ago I went to Grant and my whole game's been about accuracy and short game, and I've always been a short hitter on the Tour and I felt like I was getting older,' said Gay. I'm only going to get shorter and shorter. So I kind of went to Grant initially to get his thoughts and to work on some stuff to try to hit the tee ball farther. Thought it would help my game.

'And it was tough last year trying to play making those changes. I feel like it's coming around. It's helped me a lot and just was trying to get more efficient with my driver numbers to kind of max out my distance.'

The 41-year-old veteran has relied on his excellent putting to a solid career ' he's earned approximately $15.8 million on the golf course.

Gay, who always seems calm and composed, looked a little nervous after he posted his round, especially since he felt like he gave one back by parring the 72nd hole.

'Yeah, it was a roller coaster,' said Gay, referring to the waiting game. 'When I first finished, there was four guys on the same score. I didn't know who was done, who was still out. And then Scott and Charles are long hitters, I knew they had a mid iron into 18. I figured at least one, if not both of them, would birdie 18.

'So I was fortunate for that not to happen and have another chance. And boom, there we go. And just felt like I kind of had a second life, another opportunity.'

Turned out Brian had a second chance and he birdied no. 18, the first playoff hole. Howell hit a beautiful approach to about 25 feet, but missed the eagle putt. Lingmerth, a rookie, dunked it in the water and was eliminated after Howell and Gay both parred.

On the second extra hole, the par-4 10th, Gay knocked it to about six feet and made the putt for birdie, while Howell bogeyed.

By the way, in case you were wondering, his caddie Kip Henley was wearing what he calls a 'vucket.'

Congrats to Kip and Brian!

**********

James Hahn rebounded from his even-par 72 in the third round and posted a ten-under 62 to jump up the leaderboard and finish tied for fourth. During my conversation with him, I think, like 5 people, stopped to congratulate James and tell him he was in fifth place (at the time). He was aware and beyond ecstatic. He stuck around and spoke to the press for almost an hour (gotta love the rookies).

Hahn took home his biggest paycheck of his career ' around $350,000. It was kind of unfathomable for Hahn, who remembers a time when he had $271 dollars in his bank account.

He isn't planning on splurging on anything, rather proceed cautiously and save for a nice watch or something in the off-season.

'I can wait to buy a nice car or watch.'

The top-5 finish puts him in a good place at the start of the season and carry the momentum ' especially since it's super important for the rookies in the shortened 2013 schedule. He also won't have to stress over coupons for hotels and spending an hour on Priceline trying to save $S20 bucks here and there. Instead he can spend that time practicing putting or working on his game.

James even shared a great tip with me for next week in San Diego.

'Del Mar, $70 for Holiday Inn on Priceline,' he said. 'It's really nice. It's a 2 1/2 stars.'

(Thanks!)

Oh yeah, you may have heard his nickname is 'The Asian Brad Pitt.' The origin? Well, it dates back to a Travis Mathew photo shoot in the Palm Springs area in December 2011, the day after Q-school finals that year. Travis Brasher, one of TM's co-owners, and fellow TM ambassador and player John Mallinger decided James needed a nickname and they thought 'The Asian Brad Pitt' was fitting. Word got to Peter Tomasulo, who told Paul Claxton, who apparently told everyone. Got that?

Then, when James was speaking to a reporter in Knoxville at a Web.com Tour event last year, Claxton walked by and said, 'You know what they call him? They call him the Asian Brad Pitt.'

The newspaper printed it and that was that ' it stuck.

**********

I can't wait for Phil's press conference! See you in San Diego.

Oh, I regret to inform those who care that I won't be at the PGA Show in Orlando next week. I've been the past two years, and I've always wanted to cover the tourney at Torrey Pines because of sentimental reasons ' Junior World was held there every year and it was my favorite tournament, so by default, it's one of my favorite courses.

Update: Check out Forbes' take on Phil and his tax crisis. Here's an excerpt, but worth reading the full article:

To be honest, it's hard to blame Mickelson ' who has compiled a net worth approaching $180 million by repeatedly striking a tiny white ball until it falls into a hole ' for putting all options on the table, which according to some, include the possibility of prematurely shutting down his career to avoid his rising tax burden. Let's take a look at what Mickelson is up against in 2013:

For starters, courtesy of President Obama's re-election and the subsequent fiscal cliff negotiations, Mickelson will experience an increase in his top tax rate on ordinary income from 35% to 39.6%, and an increase in his top rate on long-term capital gains and qualified dividends from 15% to 20%. Clearly, when faced with tax hikes of that magnitude, it stops making economic sense for Mickelson to continue to swing a metal stick up to 70 times a day in exchange for the $48 million he earns on an annual basis.

(AP Photo/Ben Margot)