Friday, April 17, 2009

McILROY WANTS NEW MASTERS MEMORIES

McILROY WANTS NEW MASTERS MEMORIES


It is no wonder really that Rory McIlroy has wanted to play The Masters ever since he became aware of it.

The first Augusta tournament he remembers - aged six at the time he admits it is a somewhat vague memory - was the 1996 one in which Greg Norman's collapse and Nick Faldo's charge made for some of the most riveting action golf has ever produced.

Twelve months later, his interest in the game that much greater, McIlroy was simply glued to his television as his hero Tiger Woods, in the first major he played as a professional, stormed to a record 12-shot win.

For decades to come those two Masters will always be recalled - and now, at the tender age of 19, McIlroy is about to become part of the tournament's history as well.

Climbing into the world's top 50 by the end of last year to guarantee himself an invitation was a feat in itself, but it is the way he started this year that has really thrust the Northern Ireland youngster into the limelight.

Winning his first European Tour title against a star-studded field in Dubai catapulted him into the game's top 20 and it came with a comment from former Masters and Open champion Mark O'Meara that his ball-striking was ahead of Woods at the same age.

Such praise heaps expectations on McIlroy's shoulders, but he appears to have taken it in his stride and at Augusta National he knows he is in the perfect "nothing to lose, everything to gain" position.

"I'm just going to treat it as a normal event," McIlroy said, fully aware that come the week that is far easier said than done.

"I'll try not to be too overawed by the occasion or the place. If I play the way I can then hopefully I can have a good finish. I've got to go there expecting to play well."

Being paired with O'Meara in Dubai could result in a real bonus at the start of Masters week as the American told him he would try to arrange a practice round with Woods.

McIlroy, who so admires the 14-major winner for "the way he plays with no fear", has already shown that majors do not scare him.

Winning the European amateur title when he was 17 earned him a place in the 2007 Open at Carnoustie and his opening 68 not only put him in third place, but it was also the only bogey-free round of the day.

He finished 42nd and as the only amateur to survive the halfway cut collected the silver medal in a prize-giving ceremony where top of the bill, of course, was his fellow Irishman Padraig Harrington.

Despite earning his Tour card in just his second start - he was third at the Dunhill Links event - McIlroy failed to make it into any of the majors last season.

This year will be different. He should be in all four.

Only in The Masters will he still be a teenager, but amazingly he is only the third-youngest player in the field.

New Zealander Danny Lee, 18, qualified as the youngest-ever US Amateur champion, while 17-year-old Ryo Ishikawa, Japan's new star, received a special invitation and becomes the second-youngest participant in Masters history.


John Madden retiring from broadcast booth
PLAYER TALKS UP ‘BRILLIANT’ McILROY

MONTY SEARCHES FOR NEW RESPECT

MONTY SEARCHES FOR NEW RESPECT


Newly-appointed captain Colin Montgomerie feels he needs to start winning tournaments again if he is to inspire the European team to Ryder Cup glory in 2010.

Following the demoralising defeat at Valhalla last September, the 45-year-old was handed the task in January of wresting the famous trophy from American hands at Celtic Manor in 18 months' time.

Montgomerie, though, has not tasted victory for almost two years. The last trophy he lifted was the World Cup at Mission Hills in November 2007, when he and Marc Warren triumphed for Scotland, and his last individual success was in the European Open at the K-Club in July of the same year.

Indeed he has not recorded a top-10 finish since he was runner-up to Pablo Larrazabal at last June's French Open while his best effort this season to date is a tie for 13th at the Dubai Desert Classic at the beginning of February.

The Scot, who will be looking to end that drought when the Volvo China Open gets under way tomorrow, underlined it is vital he rediscovers some of the form that brought him a record eight Order of Merit titles if he is to lead the European team with conviction and authority in Wales.

"It's very important to show that I'm still competing," he said.

"I've always thought it was very important for players to have respect of their captain and I think if I start and keep winning through this tenure, this 18 months to go before the Ryder Cup is played, it will be important for me standing on that first tee - and them as well looking at me knowing they have a captain that is competing at the very top level.

"I think that's one of the reasons I was appointed as captain in the first place because of that fact and I would love to show them and prove to them that I am still capable of winning."

But even if Montgomerie manages to accomplish that goal, he reiterated it would not change his mind about competing at Celtic Manor.

"No, I will not be playing in the Ryder Cup even if I win most of the tournaments never mind one." he added.

"I was selected as Ryder Cup captain and not Ryder Cup player on this occasion. We are very fortunate in Europe to have a number of players vying for those positions of higher standard than I right now.

"We're very fortunate to have that quality, that wealth of talent with European-born players far outweighs anything I can do so I'll stay on the sidelines and try to help them round as best I can.

"We can put out two or three teams of similar quality and I think that's the first time we can truthfully say that."

Montgomerie will return to a happy hunting ground when he tees off at Beijing CBD International GC tomorrow having enjoyed plenty of success in Asia over the years.

And he believes his game is in good enough shape to contend over the next four days in the Chinese capital.

"It's actually not too bad. I just need to cut out the mistakes," he underlined.

"I didn't used to make mistakes and now I'm making too many mistakes. The birdies are still as many but there's far too many mistakes so what I'm trying to do now is cut them out and I'll be okay.

"I would obviously like to win again, my performances in Asia over the years have been pretty good really. I've had a couple of wins and a load of top-three finishes but winning is what it's all about and I would like to get back into the winner's circle.

"It's been about 18, 19 months and it's been too long. I'd like to get back into that winning circle and there's no time like the present so we'll see how we go."


Buffalo Bills’ Donte Whitner arrested as police stop ‘near riot’
PERRY NOT THINKING ABOUT HISTORY

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

McILROY AVOIDS PUNISHMENT

McILROY AVOIDS PUNISHMENT


Rory McIlroy had a day at The Masters on Friday he will never forget - right through to a meeting with rules investigators that eventually cleared him to play the last two rounds.

Everything was going exactly as the 19-year-old hoped on his debut when he charged from 39th place to sixth with three holes of his second round to play.

Then he four-putted the short 16th for a double bogey five. And then he ran up a triple-bogey seven on the 18th which meant he tumbled down to 42nd spot and survived the halfway cut with nothing to spare at one over par.

It hurt him so badly that when told that reporters wanted to speak to him he said "I don't feel like it right now" and walked on.

That was at 4.15pm. But at around 8.40pm McIlroy returned to the club at the request of officials and was shown television coverage of him in a bunker by the 18th green.

Failing to get out first time, golf's most exciting young player had kicked the sand.

The incident was raised and an inquiry - a very long inquiry - began.

Eventually, over four hours later, a statement was issued saying that McIlroy, facing disqualification from his first major as a professional if it had gone the other way, was not being penalised.

Augusta National competitions committee chairman Fred Ridley said: "A question was raised regarding Rory McIlroy's actions.

"The Rules of Golf (13-4) prohibit a player from testing the condition of a hazard before playing a stroke in the hazard.

"The decisions interpreting the rule state that kicking the ground in the hazard constitutes testing the condition.

"However, the rules allow the player to smooth sand or soil in the hazard after making a stroke provided that, with regard to his next stroke, nothing is done to improve the position or lie of his ball, the area of his intended swing, his line of play or a reasonable extension of his line beyond the hole or the area in which he is drop or place a ball.

"At the request of the committee McIlroy returned to the club at approximately 8.40pm, met with the committee and reviewed the CBS tape.

"Based on the tape and Mr McIlroy's statement of what had taken place after he played the shot it was determined that no violation of the rules had occurred."

McIlroy resumes at 10.55am local time on Saturday - almost certainly too far back to have a chance of winning, but still in the tournament.

Much to his massive relief.


PLAYER TALKS UP ‘BRILLIANT’ McILROY
NFL draft: Defensive tackle B.J. Raji denies reports of failed drug test


PLAYER TALKS UP ‘BRILLIANT’ McILROY
NFL draft: Defensive tackle B.J. Raji denies reports of failed drug test

BIG GUNS FLAME OUT AT AUGUSTA

BIG GUNS FLAME OUT AT AUGUSTA


Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods both blew their chances of Masters glory after spectacular final-day charges at Augusta on Sunday.

Paired together for only the third time in the final round of a major, they stormed through from seven behind and with two to go were only one behind. But both blew it.

Woods, after an eagle and four birdies, bogeyed the last two holes like Kenny Perry and in the end finished only joint sixth.

Mickelson, who had covered the front nine in a tournament record-equalling 30, double-bogeyed the short 12th after going in the water, missed a four-foot eagle putt on the 15th and a six-footer for birdie at the 17th, then bogeyed the last.

After winding up fifth Mickelson, who would have taken the world No. 1 spot for the first time in his life by winning, said: "I got it going, but the double at 12 certainly hurt. You've got to get through there with par.

"I just yanked it, just quit on it and the ball went dead right.

"Then at 15 I just made a tentative stroke - I didn't trust my read, I didn't commit to it.

"I enjoyed the opportunity to play with Tiger and I enjoyed the chance to try to win a golf tournament.

"I love the fact that I shot 30 to give myself an opportunity to win. I'm certainly disappointed with the way I played the back nine, though.

"It was a very emotional day. The crowd made the highs even higher and the moans made the lows even lower."

Woods commented: "When I birdied 16 obviously I was right there. I hit a good tee shot down 17, but the wind wouldn't let it cut back and consequently I was dead from there.

"I was just trying to shoot 65. I thought that would have been a good number to post. Obviously I didn't do it."

He shot 68 to Mickelson's 67, but as it turned down it would taken 64s to get them into the play-off.

Woods added: "I hit it so bad today warming up. I was hitting quick hooks, blocks, you name it and then on the very first hole I almost hit it into eight fairway."

That was almost 100 yards off line and he admitted: "It's one of the worst tee shots I've ever hit starting out.

"I fought my swing all day and and almost won the tournament with a 'band-aid' swing. It was just terrible - I don't know what was going on."


CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY
Duke Blue Devils’ Greg Paulus reportedly works out for Green Bay Packers
Kalas, longtime voice of NFL Films, dies at 73
MICKELSON ERRORS OUT OF SYSTEM


CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY
Duke Blue Devils’ Greg Paulus reportedly works out for Green Bay Packers
Kalas, longtime voice of NFL Films, dies at 73
MICKELSON ERRORS OUT OF SYSTEM

PERRY NOT THINKING ABOUT HISTORY

PERRY NOT THINKING ABOUT HISTORY


Kenny Perry is trying not to think about the possibility of becoming the oldest winner in major golf history before he tackles the final round in The Masters at Augusta on Sunday.

The 48-year-old American is joint leader with Argentina's Angel Cabrera on 11 under par, two ahead of Perry's Ryder Cup teammate Chad Campbell.

After a third round 70 he said: "I don't want to look at winning - I've got to stay in the moment.

"This course is very difficult and very demanding. When I have thought in the future at other tournaments I've not had much success.

"I had a tough day today. I didn't have my A-game and was struggling. I was nervous and it's going to be a big day for me tomorrow - this might be my last opportunity.

"But I am going to enjoy it for sure. I'm trying for something that will move me up a notch."

Perry turned professional in 1982, but did not earn a US Tour card for another five years and did not taste victory for a further four.

"When I started out it was tough. My wife and I were scratching and clawing to try to make ends meet.

"I went and borrowed money, lost all of it and was pretty much down to my last penny."

In 1996, in his home state of Kentucky, he lost a play-off for the US PGA championship to Mark Brooks and that remains the closest he has ever come in a major.

He has never had a top 10 finish in eight Masters and did not even qualify the last two years.

"The Ryder Cup last year taught me a lot," he added. "I set a goal and made it, so I am more of a goal-setter now. My physical skills are not as good as they were, but I am a lot better thinker and I am a lot more confident."


CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY
PERRY WON’T DWELL ON MASTERS FAILURE
Cincinnati Bengals reach deal with DT Tank Johnson
Bills wideout Roscoe Parrish being shopped in trade talks


CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY
PERRY WON’T DWELL ON MASTERS FAILURE
Cincinnati Bengals reach deal with DT Tank Johnson
Bills wideout Roscoe Parrish being shopped in trade talks

MICKELSON ERRORS OUT OF SYSTEM

MICKELSON ERRORS OUT OF SYSTEM


Phil Mickelson is hoping his missed cut at the Shell Houston Open will have taken the "ridiculous" mistakes out of the equation as he bids to win a third Green Jacket at the Masters next week.

The world number two crashed out of the final PGA Tour stop before Augusta National on Saturday following weather-interrupted rounds of 77 and 76 at Redstone Golf Club, nine over par for the tournament and eight shots adrift of the cut line.

Yet the American, a two-time winner already this season, tried to view his week in Texas in a positive light.

"I obviously didn't want to shoot what I did," Mickelson said.

"I made some ridiculous mistakes that you can't make, and it was great that I played because I didn't want to go into Augusta making those same mistakes, and some of the key shots that I hit like on five where I put two balls in the water... you can't do those things.

"Fortunately, those drives would have been fine at Augusta, but there's so much water here that it wasn't good.

"It was really good that I played here because I made some mistakes during the first two rounds that you just can't do competitively.

"Stuff like that I needed to get out of my system here."

Instead of getting in two more rounds of competitive golf at Redstone as he had intended, Mickelson, who took two weeks off following his victory at Doral in the WGC-CA Championship, had to resort to plan B, which involved extra practice time with instructor Butch Harmon.

"I've got to forget about the score," he said. "That wasn't close to what I was hoping for, but I'm looking forward to next week."

As for Augusta National, Mickelson added: "I expect to play a lot better than I did.

"I certainly am struggling on the greens, too. I can't see the break for whatever reason. They're immaculate. They roll perfect. I'm not able to make many putts on them.

"It doesn't feel like my game is far off. I'm not overly concerned with what the numbers showed. Butch is here, and we had some good work this morning. I hit a lot better iron shots today, and I'm looking forward to next week.

"Next week is going to be a severe challenge. It's in an area where I love. The short game is good. Much wider corridors off the tee without the penalty of a hazard.

"It's tough, I think. There's been times where I've missed cuts the week before and won.

"I needed to play because I needed after two weeks off to get back out and trying to get more of a scoring.

"I made some ridiculous mistakes and I'm glad I saw it and did it now as opposed to next week."


Buffalo Bills’ Donte Whitner arrested as police stop ‘near riot’
HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST
CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY


Buffalo Bills’ Donte Whitner arrested as police stop ‘near riot’
HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST
CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY

Monday, April 13, 2009

PLAYER TALKS UP 'BRILLIANT' McILROY

PLAYER TALKS UP BRILLIANT McILROY


Gary Player has tipped Northern Irish teenager Rory McIlroy to become the best player in the world.

The 73-year-old, who made a record 52nd and final appearance at The Masters this week, described McIlroy's swing as "unbelievable" and even better than Tiger Woods'.

"Rory McIlroy, if he goes about it and is managed correctly, could turn out to be the best player in the world in his time," Player told Radio Five Live's Sportsweek programme.

"This young man is brilliant. His golf swing is unbelievable and his theory side, his swing, is better than Tiger Woods'.

"But will he have the body of Tiger Woods? Will this young man go to the gym at six o'clock in the morning? I don't know. Will he have the intensity and all the other things that Tiger has? I don't know.

"He's an incredible talent and has excelled already at a very young age. I believe he's a very nice young man too and I hope he goes from strength to strength."


CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH
Bills wideout Roscoe Parrish being shopped in trade talks
NFL to expand number of players invited to draft

PERRY WON'T DWELL ON MASTERS FAILURE

PERRY WONT DWELL ON MASTERS FAILURE


Kenny Perry says he won't look back after his agonising failure to win the Masters at Augusta on Sunday night.

Perry led eventual winner Angel Cabrera by two with two to play, and missed a 15-footer to win the last, but couldn't seal the deal.

And eventually he was pipped at the post by the Argentine in a play-off.

Thirteen years ago Perry had been two ahead standing on the final tee of the US PGA championship, but took a bogey six, saw Mark Brooks birdie the hole and lost their play-off.

"I've got two to think about now. But if this is the worst thing that happens to me, I can live with it. Great players get it done and Angel got it done."


Bills sign former Browns Offensive lineman Seth McKinney
CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY

Sunday, April 12, 2009

MASTERS FACTS AND FIGURES

MASTERS FACTS AND FIGURES


Gary Player will extend his record number of Masters appearances to 52, two more than Arnold Palmer.

The 73-year-old South African, winner in 1961, 1974 and 1978, made his debut in 1957 and has missed only the 1973 tournament since then.

His 15 top-10 finishes - the last of them in 1980 - are seven fewer than Jack Nicklaus.

The British and American amateur champions take their place in the Masters field, but they are actually a Dutchman and a New Zealander this year.

Reinier Saxton became only the second player from Holland to capture the British title - the first was Rolf Muntz in 1990 - while 18-year-old Danny Lee took over from Tiger Woods as the youngest winner of the US Amateur.

Other amateurs lining up in the opening major of the season are

Americans Drew Kittleson, Jack Newman and Steve Wilson. Kittleson was runner-up to Lee, Newman won the Public Links title and Wilson the Mid-Amateur.

It was over 70 years ago that members of Augusta National began to wear green jackets, but not until 1949 that one was awarded to the winner of the tournament.

Sam Snead was the first recipient. The custom then developed of the new champion being helped into his jacket by the previous year's winner.

When Jack Nicklaus became the first to make a successful defence he put the jacket on himself, but Nick Faldo was helped into his by club chairman Hord Hardin in 1990 and Tiger Woods by Hootie Johnson in 2002.

The 11th, 12th and 13th holes are known as 'Amen Corner'. The description was used by American golf writer Herbert Warren Wind in 1958 and was taken from a jazz recording entitled "Shouting at Amen Corner".

Twice winner Seve Ballesteros used the name when he formed a company promoting golf events.

Of all the trees at Augusta none is more famous than the Eisenhower pine in front of the 17th tee.

The former United States president was a club member and hit the tree so often he proposed it was cut down, but then chairman Clifford Roberts ruled him out of order and adjourned the meeting.

If there is a tie after 72 holes a sudden death play-off will start at the 18th. The 18th and 10th will then be played alternately until the champion is determined.

Since sudden death was introduced in 1976 it has never taken more than two holes to settle the outcome - much to the relief of everybody as daylight is fast disappearing by that stage.

The defending champion hosts a dinner for all other winners in the Augusta National clubhouse on Tuesday evening of Masters week.

Sandy Lyle had haggis, neeps and tatties on his menu, Tiger Woods went for cheeseburger and milkshakes the first time he won, Bernhard Langer had wiener schnitzel and Mike Weir came up with wild boar and elk.

Three bridges on the course are dedicated to Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson and Gene Sarazen, while there are plaques to Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus.

The winner of the eve-of-tournament par-three competition has never gone on to be crowned Masters champion four days later.

Ray Floyd was the closest in 1990, losing a play-off to Nick Faldo. Sandy Lyle won the par three in 1997 and 1998, Padraig Harrington shared it with David Toms in 2003 and then won it outright 12 months later.

The halfway cut sees the field reduced to the lowest 44 players and ties, plus those within 10 strokes of the leader.


Buffalo Bills reward DT Marcus Stroud with two-year extension
CLARK JINXED?
PLAYER READY FOR FINAL FLING AT AUGUSTA

CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY

CABRERA HOLDS NERVE TO EDGE PERRY


Argentina's Angel Cabrera tonight added a Masters green jacket to his 2007 US Open victory - and stopped 48-year-old American Kenny Perry becoming the oldest major champion in history.

The pair had tied with Perry's Ryder Cup team-mate Chad Campbell on 12 under par after a day earlier dominated by magnificent charges and bad finishes from Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods.

Campbell went out when he missed a par putt of under four feet on the first hole of the sudden-death play-off.

Cabrera made a seven-footer to stay alive there and triumphed when Perry, who had bogeyed the final two holes when two ahead, missed the green at the second extra hole and failed to get up and down.

At 69th in the world Cabrera became the lowest-rated Masters champion since the rankings began in 1986 - and his triumph came 41 years after his compatriot Roberto de Vicenzo became one of the unluckiest losers ever in major golf.

De Vicenzo was all set to go into a play-off with American Bob Goalby at the same Augusta National course, but signed for a par four on the 17th when he had actually taken three.

The rules stated that he had to accept the higher score and so he is forever listed as a Masters runner-up.

That looked likely to be Cabrera's final position as well, but Perry brought back horrible memories of his finish to the 1996 US PGA championship.

On that occasion he was two ahead with one to play, but carded a closing bogey six, sat in a television studio and watched Mark Brooks birdie, then lost the play-off.

Cabrera, 39, had teed off with the chance to become the first Masters champion to have four rounds in the 60s. But as it turned out a one-under 71 was good enough.

Japan's Shingo Katayama finished fourth, Mickelson fifth and Woods joint sixth with fellow Americans Steve Flesch, Steve Stricker and little-known John Merrick.

In their worst collective showing since 2000, no European finished in the top 16. Ulsterman Graeme McDowell was best, four under and joint 17th after a 69.

Woods and Mickelson had earlier served up what for most of the round was one of the great head-to-head duels ever in majors.

They both came from seven back to be only one behind with two to play, but could not eliminate the mistakes which would have put more pressure on the leaders over the closing stretch.

Woods bogeyed the last two like Perry, but it was of no comfort to Mickelson that he beat his deadly rival by one. He made the bigger blunders at the crucial moments.

The 2004 and 2006 champion, out in a dazzling record-equalling 30 that brought electricity to the atmosphere around the entire course, first messed up the short 12th by going in the water and taking a double bogey five.

When he two-putted the long 13th he re-ignited his chances and at the 15th he drilled a majestic iron to four feet. If the eagle putt had gone in he would have joined Perry out in front, but he missed.

Woods had also birdied the 13th and after missing a 20-foot eagle putt two holes later hit his tee shot to the 170-yard 16th to four feet and drew level with Mickelson.

They were both one behind, but Woods blocked himself out off the 17th tee, could not find the green and bogeyed.

Mickelson, meanwhile, hit his approach to six feet, but missed that as well and then, while Woods was in more tree trouble on the last, found the cavernous fairway bunker and, unlike Sandy Lyle so famously in 1988, came up short of the green and could not save par.

Perry, joint overnight leader with Cabrera, parred the first 11 holes, then made a 30-footer from the fringe of the short 12th.

Three-putting the next for only a par heightened the tension, but after being joined on 12 under by Campbell's birdie at the 15th he did the same to get his nose back in front - and then almost holed-in-one at the short 16th.

The tap-in birdie looked as if it might be the shot that won it, but it was not to be.

He went long at the 17th, chipped off the front of the green and failed to get up and down.

At the last he found the fairway bunker, but still had a 15-foot chance to eclipse Julius Boros - US PGA champion in 1968 - as golf's oldest major champion.

He could not make it, though, and was made to pay the price.

Ian Poulter and Lee Westwood were joint 10th with Woods and Mickelson when they resumed, but the former shot 74 for two under and Westwood, having double-bogeyed the seventh, dropped a shocking seven shots in the last four holes for a 79 - the worst round of the day.

As for Open and US PGA champion Padraig Harrington, he lost a ball up a tree and added a seven on the ninth to his nine on the second on Saturday.

Having started with a 69 to keep the "Paddy Slam" dream alive he closed with three successive 73s for level par.

Nineteen-year-old Rory McIlroy completed a memorable debut - for all sorts of reasons - with birdies at six of his last 10 holes for a 70 and two under aggregate.

On the same mark were last week's Houston Open winner Paul Casey, Poulter, Justin Rose and, in a performance few would have expected, 51-year-old Sandy Lyle, the 1988 champion.

Rose eagled the 13th and 15th and in his second round Lyle had five successive birdies.

But in the end the 2009 Masters will be mostly remembered for errors - by Mickelson, Woods and Perry in regulation play and then by Campbell and Perry in the play-off.

Cabrera went in the trees when the three-man shoot-out began and although his second shot hit a tree and finished way short of the green, he salvaged par and minutes later was being helped into his jacket by last year's winner Trevor Immelman.


Bills sign former Browns Offensive lineman Seth McKinney
Source: Kansas City Chiefs, seven-time Pro Bowl linebacker Zach Thomas agree to deal
CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH
MASTERS FACTS AND FIGURES

CLARK JINXED?

CLARK JINXED?


South African Tim Clark, runner-up to Phil Mickelson in the 2006 Masters, will have to break a hoodoo if he is to triumph on Sunday.

Clark won the annual par-three competition by two from Jose Maria Olazabal and American amateur Jack Newman - and did it with a hole-in-one on the 135-yard ninth and final hole.

No winner of the annual fun competition played on the short course adjoining the main Augusta National lay-out has ever gone on to win the tournament proper four days later.

There were other aces from American John Merrick at the second and from Greg Norman at the sixth, with wife Chris Evert acting as his caddie in the fun event.

Sandy Lyle and Ian Poulter both won nearest-the-pin prizes, while Gary Player, who plays his record 52nd and final Masters this year, was joined by fellow greats Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer for the competition.

Player holed his last tee shot just like Clark, but it was his second attempt over the water.


POULTER MAKES HAY AFTER FIGHTING FEVER
PLAYER READY FOR FINAL FLING AT AUGUSTA
Bills sign former Browns Offensive lineman Seth McKinney

ROSE HOPES FOR A HAPPY RETURN

ROSE HOPES FOR A HAPPY RETURN


Justin Rose could almost write a book on what it is like to lead The Masters.

But there would be no chapter on what it is like to win it. Not yet at least.

In 2004 Rose's second appearance at Augusta saw him two in front after both an opening 67 and a second round 71, but he then crashed to an 81 and finished 22nd.

It took him until 2007 to return, but when he did he shared the first day pace with American Brett Wetterich after a 69 which was the only round of the day not to contain a bogey.

With two holes to play on the final day Rose was only one behind, but a double-bogey six on the 17th crushed his hopes.

Last April he was there again. Only Trevor Immelman could match his opening 68, but while the South African went on to capture his first major Rose was kept waiting for his. He finished 36th.

"Augusta is a magical place and the experiences I've had here have been powerful experiences," he said.

"I've had good ones and bad ones and you learn from both.

"I think the biggest thing about winning a major is believing you can and what's happened to me here has been key for me in terms of making that step.

"You certainly never get tired of seeing your name up there, for sure. That's exciting."

It remains the case, however, that Rose's best major finish was his fourth place in the 1998 Open at Birkdale when he was a 17-year-old.

He explained: "The thing I did so well there was that I was blissfully unaware of the level I was actually playing at.

"I think if you can sort of kid yourself into being in that mindset again, just letting your natural abilities take over and not tend to worry too much about 'this is The Masters' or things like that, then you have a good chance.

"Sometimes you learn more from situations that go badly than when things go well.

"You've got to really pace yourself during the week and obviously when your tee times are quite late you've got to try to find ways to fill your day up until your tee time to occupy yourself."

That 81 five years ago was his worst score in a major until an 82 in the third round of The Open back at Birkdale last summer.

It left him "shell-shocked", but it has not affected how he feels about Augusta National.

"The magic about this place is that you never tire of it and it can be your 20th year and you drive up Magnolia Lane as if it's your first time.

"You still get that special feeling and obviously that helps to get you really fired up to play some good golf."

If learning how to handle pressure is part of the process towards winning a major then last September's Ryder Cup should certainly be of assistance.

Valhalla was Rose's debut and he won three of his four games, two of them with close friend Ian Poulter and then his singles against Phil Mickelson no less.

Rose won that three and two, but just like his last three visits to Augusta the week did not have the ending he hoped for.

Maybe it will be different this time.


HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST
NFL draft: Defensive tackle B.J. Raji denies reports of failed drug test

Saturday, April 11, 2009

HARRINGTON STEELED FOR TOUGHER TIMES

HARRINGTON STEELED FOR TOUGHER TIMES


Padraig Harrington happily tucked into the chasing pack with an opening three-under-par 69 at The Masters on Thursday - and is ready for whatever Augusta National decide to throw at him.

"That was definitely one of the more generous days ever here," said the Irishman after a successful first leg of his quest to capture a third successive major.

"Thursday is all about staying in the tournament, but you've got to feel it's going to get tougher.

"At some stage I really expect a course that's really difficult, right to the limit."

The Dubliner was three behind clubhouse pacesetter Jim Furyk, but out on the course the American's Ryder Cup team-mate Chad Campbell had moved to seven under par after 13 holes and led by one.

Campbell took advantage of some relatively easy pin placings with birdies at the first five holes and then picked up more strokes at the 12th and 13th.

Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell, on his debut in the event, took over as leading European from Harrington and England's Ross Fisher when birdies at the 15th and 16th lifted him to five under and joint third.


Buffalo Bills’ Donte Whitner arrested as police stop ‘near riot’
HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST

HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST

HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST


Padraig Harrington goes for an incredible third major in a row next week rating Augusta National as the ultimate test for a golfer.

"I rate it incredibly highly," said the Open and USPGA champion.

"The Open is very close to my heart, but, in terms of sternness of test and ability to play golf, if you can win The Masters you can really play this game.

"Whenever I'm practising I'm always thinking 'Is this up to the standard that will get me around Augusta?'

"If it is that means it would cover any golf course. If you can play Augusta you can play anywhere.

"You're not going to win by luck. You're going to be on top of your game and you're going to have the ability to play golf in all departments of your game.

"You're not going to get away with just being a good putter or a good chipper or a good driver. You have to have all departments that week.

"You've got to be in top form with your putter to be in contention because you're going to get some difficult putts.

"Strategy is probably the biggest play at Augusta, certainly the biggest difference in Augusta from all other golf courses.

"You see courses where every player will hit the same club off each tee and every player will hit to the same pins and whatever. Augusta it all changes.

"When to go at a pin, when not to, where is the place to play safe, it gives you so many options that you've got to be right on top of your mental game that week.

"I think the two things are to putt well and to make the right decisions. If I do those two things I know I'll have a good week."

Even if his build-up form has not been stellar, Harrington has to draw huge strength from what happened at Birkdale and Oakland Hills last summer.

"It's nice that I am going for three in a row. It means I did something right in the last two majors.

"But I'm not going to this major and thinking it has to happen. I'm working on the principle that there are a number of major championships ahead of me.

"If I can win some of them that's fair enough. If you said to me I was going to miss the cut at this Masters and win the Masters next year I'd be very happy with that.

"If it happens it will be a bonus, but I'm not going to put any pressure on my ability to win this one. A lot of my rhetoric and talk is about trying to manage this as a stand-alone event."

When he became the first European since Tommy Armour in 1931 to win back-to-back majors Harrington had centre stage to himself.

Things have changed in the run-up to Augusta - and Harrington could not be more pleased about that.

"Tiger is back playing, Phil (Mickelson) is obviously playing great golf, you've got Rory McIlroy taking a lot of the attention at home in Ireland and in Britain, you've got Retief Goosen back in form, you've got Greg Norman sentimentally coming back.

"All of this is helping take a little bit of the attention away from me. It means that I can get back to doing my thing and get back to a little bit of normality in my preparation."

And that preparation includes playing the traditional par-three competition next Wednesday - with his five-year-old son Patrick as caddie - and trying to win it for a third time.

No par-three winner has ever gone on to win the tournament proper four days later, but Harrington's intention is to do just that.

"I'm starting a campaign to end superstitions forever," he stated.


Bills sign former Browns Offensive lineman Seth McKinney
Cincinnati Bengals reach deal with DT Tank Johnson
HARRINGTON STEELED FOR TOUGHER TIMES
PLAYER READY FOR FINAL FLING AT AUGUSTA

Friday, April 10, 2009

PLAYER READY FOR FINAL FLING AT AUGUSTA

PLAYER READY FOR FINAL FLING AT AUGUSTA


Three-time winner Gary Player will play his 52nd and final Masters this week, he announced on Monday.

South African Player, 73, first played the Augusta National event in 1957, aged 21, winning the event for the first time in 1961 and collecting two more Green Jackets in 1974 and 1978.

"I've decided that I would like to make this my last appearance in the tournament," Player said.

"I've enjoyed it so much.

"We all have our favourite tournaments, majors, tournaments around the world, but this has been the best-organised golf tournament that I have ever played in.

"This will be my last major championship that I will ever play on the regular tour. Obviously I'll play some on the Senior Tour."

Despite shooting a 78 last year in the Masters second round, nine-time major winner Player said the course was getting too tough.

"The hole is getting the size of a Bayer aspirin, you wonder whether you can press it in there or squeeze it in there.

"I'm exercising profusely, but it's very difficult at 73 to build strength. The golf course is so long. It is just so long. I mean, I'm hitting a wood to almost every single hole.

"It's just too long for me. I cannot get around. I've managed to break 80 the last two years, but it's getting to a stage now where I don't know whether I can do that out here, it's so long and I'm getting weaker."

That said, Player credited his physical fitness for allowing him to play as long as he had at the Masters.

"It is encouraging when you have exercised as hard as I have and watched my diet pretty well, that I'm able to play 52 Masters. It's a very encouraging thought.

"I stood on the tee last year when I was waiting to play and there was a bit of a hold-up, and I thought, damn it all, most of my friends at 72 are dead and I'm playing at the Masters?

"Most guys at my age, 73, have not seen their knees, never mind their private parts, for seven years," he joked.

"There's a lot of feeling going on. At least I can see where I am."


Bills sign former Browns Offensive lineman Seth McKinney
Cincinnati Bengals reach deal with DT Tank Johnson
POULTER MAKES HAY AFTER FIGHTING FEVER
CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH

POULTER MAKES HAY AFTER FIGHTING FEVER

POULTER MAKES HAY AFTER FIGHTING FEVER


Ian Poulter is hoping a visit to an allergy specialist will help him make the leap from Open runner-up last July to Masters champion this Sunday.

Poulter suffers from asthma and hayfever and he said on Wednesday: "The hayfever was really bad at Bay Hill two weeks ago and I was quite happy to get off the course on the Friday."

The 33-year-old, top-scorer in last September's Ryder Cup with four wins out of five, missed the halfway cut in the Arnold Palmer Invitational and then sought out the specialist.

"I hadn't been able to shrug off a cold for a couple of weeks, so just wanted an opinion on what could be done.

"He gave me a different inhaler, different nasal spray, eye drops and tablets.

"Every time I've come to Augusta in the past it's been a problem because of the pines and the pollen, but so far this week it's been great."

The Masters will be just his fifth event of the year after undergoing eye surgery to correct poor vision in fading light and astigmatism in both eyes.

"It's made a big difference and because I've played so little I'm really fresh for this week and I've done some good work in practice."

Paul Casey, Nick Faldo's other wild card at the Ryder Cup, won the Houston Open last Sunday and Poulter added: "It was nice to see, for sure.

"There's no reason why it shouldn't have a snowball effect for other Europeans - there are so many good ones now and a lot are in their early thirties, which we all know is a good age in golf."

Last year at Augusta Poulter opened with rounds of 70 and 69 to be in joint third place at halfway, but he closed 75-78 and finished joint 25th.

(reopens) Poulter's preparations concluded with the nine-hole par-three competition, where he teed off with close friend Justin Rose - another hayfever sufferer - and three-time champion Faldo.

As with the last two years, Faldo is concentrating on television work rather than competing in The Masters this week.


NFL draft: Defensive tackle B.J. Raji denies reports of failed drug test
PLAYER READY FOR FINAL FLING AT AUGUSTA
CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH
Buffalo Bills reward DT Marcus Stroud with two-year extension

Thursday, April 9, 2009

CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH

CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH


Paul Casey goes into The Masters this week at a career-high sixth in the world after his play-off victory at the Houston Open.

Casey, who beat American JB Holmes at the first extra hole for his first US Tour success, moves up six places.

He began the year 41st and without a win for almost two years, but so far in 2009 has lifted titles in Abu Dhabi and the United States and reached the final of the WGC-Accenture Match Play in Arizona.

Tiger Woods retains the number one spot for a 200th successive week, making it a total of 542 weeks in his career.

Northern Ireland's Michael Hoey is now 148th after his first European Tour title in Portugal. That is a leap of 125 places for the former British amateur champion.

Latest leading positions:

1 Tiger Woods 9.83pts, 2 Phil Mickelson 8.37, 3 Sergio Garcia 7.28, 4 Geoff Ogilvy 6.43, 5 Padraig Harrington 5.86, 6 Paul Casey 5.55, 7 Vijay Singh 5.52, 8 Henrik Stenson 5.12, 9 Robert Karlsson 4.94, 10 Camilo Villegas 4.84

11 Kenny Perry 4.79, 12 Steve Stricker 4.29, 13 Lee Westwood 4.23, 14 Anthony Kim 4.20, 15 Jim Furyk 4.13, 16 Ernie Els 4.09, 17 Rory McIlroy 3.96, 18 Stewart Cink 3.63, 19 Mike Weir 3.59, 20 Martin Kaymer 3.40

Other leading Europeans:

25 Justin Rose, 27 Alvaro Quiros, 30 Miguel Angel Jimenez, 33 Ross Fisher, 34 Luke Donald, 38 Ian Poulter, 39 Oliver Wilson, 41 Soren Kjeldsen, 45 Graeme McDowell, 57 Peter Hanson, 58 Anders Hansen, 61 Soren Hansen, 67 Francesco Molinari, 72 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, 78 Carl Pettersson, 81 Darren Clarke, 84 Anthony Wall, 86 Alexander Noren, 92 Gareth Maybin.


SEVE LETTER SPARKS EMOTION AT AUGUSTA
Cincinnati Bengals reach deal with DT Tank Johnson

SEVE LETTER SPARKS EMOTION AT AUGUSTA

SEVE LETTER SPARKS EMOTION AT AUGUSTA


Augusta National chairman Billy Payne on Wednesday spoke of the emotional response to a letter from Seve Ballesteros read out by Jose Maria Olazabal during the annual Masters champions dinner.

Ballesteros, winner in 1980 and 1983, is currently undergoing his fourth series of chemotherapy as he continues treatment of a cancerous brain tumour discovered in October.

Payne said: "The letter was to his fellow champions. It was very emotional, very loving and as it was read you could feel in the air the reciprocation from his friends and former champions going all the way to Spain.

"It was an amazing, amazing moment."

At an eve-of-tournament press conference Payne paused to express "our heartfelt affections and prayers for the complete recovery" of Ballesteros.

"A true champion and fierce competitor, Seve continues to inspire us all with his passion and determination," he said.

"We look forward to his return."

The 52-year-old Spaniard announced his retirement from competition before the 2007 Open at Carnoustie. His last major was The Masters two months earlier.

This week will be the last major of 73-year-old Gary Player's career and Payne confirmed that he will have conversations with the South African and with Jack Nicklaus about the possibility of them joining Arnold Palmer as honorary starters.

Nicklaus, the record six-time winner, stopped playing the tournament in 2005.

Payne also spoke about how criticism of the course changes in recent years "hurts a little bit", but said he felt the next four days was an important test because the players should not be having to contend with strong winds.

"Since the changes we've not had good weather over the weekend and the players have not had the opportunity to test their skills against the competitive test of the course.

"I think we are going to see some good scores shot and the course played as it was designed to be played when those changes were made.

"No-one wants to hear the roars and excitement more than the members and volunteers who put on the tournament.

"It is true that through the years we've been accustomed to those and over the last couple of years there have not been as many.

"I maintain that it has been a consequence of the difficult playing conditions."


CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH
NFL draft: Defensive tackle B.J. Raji denies reports of failed drug test

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH

CASEY CLIMBS TO SIXTH


Paul Casey goes into The Masters this week at a career-high sixth in the world after his play-off victory at the Houston Open.

Casey, who beat American JB Holmes at the first extra hole for his first US Tour success, moves up six places.

He began the year 41st and without a win for almost two years, but so far in 2009 has lifted titles in Abu Dhabi and the United States and reached the final of the WGC-Accenture Match Play in Arizona.

Tiger Woods retains the number one spot for a 200th successive week, making it a total of 542 weeks in his career.

Northern Ireland's Michael Hoey is now 148th after his first European Tour title in Portugal. That is a leap of 125 places for the former British amateur champion.

Latest leading positions:

1 Tiger Woods 9.83pts, 2 Phil Mickelson 8.37, 3 Sergio Garcia 7.28, 4 Geoff Ogilvy 6.43, 5 Padraig Harrington 5.86, 6 Paul Casey 5.55, 7 Vijay Singh 5.52, 8 Henrik Stenson 5.12, 9 Robert Karlsson 4.94, 10 Camilo Villegas 4.84

11 Kenny Perry 4.79, 12 Steve Stricker 4.29, 13 Lee Westwood 4.23, 14 Anthony Kim 4.20, 15 Jim Furyk 4.13, 16 Ernie Els 4.09, 17 Rory McIlroy 3.96, 18 Stewart Cink 3.63, 19 Mike Weir 3.59, 20 Martin Kaymer 3.40

Other leading Europeans:

25 Justin Rose, 27 Alvaro Quiros, 30 Miguel Angel Jimenez, 33 Ross Fisher, 34 Luke Donald, 38 Ian Poulter, 39 Oliver Wilson, 41 Soren Kjeldsen, 45 Graeme McDowell, 57 Peter Hanson, 58 Anders Hansen, 61 Soren Hansen, 67 Francesco Molinari, 72 Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, 78 Carl Pettersson, 81 Darren Clarke, 84 Anthony Wall, 86 Alexander Noren, 92 Gareth Maybin.

NORMAN READY TO ADD NEW CHAPTER

NORMAN READY TO ADD NEW CHAPTER


When Greg Norman left Augusta National in 2002 he took with him a pair of crystal goblets and a host of memories. Many of them painful, of course.

A closing 75 for a share of 36th place looked like being an undistinguished final episode - undistinguished, that is, apart from the eagle on the 15th which earned him the goblets - in a duel with The Masters that went all the way back to 1981.

But now, thanks to his astonishing third-place finish in The Open last summer, Norman has the chance to add another chapter to the story.

And what a story.

The first time he played the tournament he led after the first round and came fourth. In 1986 his bogey at the last gave Jack Nicklaus his 18th and final major. Twelve months later Larry Mize had his incredible chip-in to deny him.

In 1989 he lost by one again. In 1995 he was third again. Then in 1996, having begun with a course record-equalling 63, he led by six with a round to go and crashed to a 78 to hand the title on a plate to his arch-rival Nick Faldo.

That will be The Masters for which he is most remembered. He gave himself another chance in 1999, but the happy ending then was for Jose Maria Olazabal and not for him.

No green jacket, no lifetime exemption then. To fight his way back in as he has ranks as one of his greatest achievements, even for a former world number one.

Whether he scores another 63 or 83, Norman's return this spring will be a week to savour - his son Gregory will be on his bag and tennis legend Chris Evert, who last June became his second wife, will be sharing the experience too.

Indeed, his daughter Morgan-Leigh could well be there as well since she is back dating Sergio Garcia.

At 54 some might think he is too old to do anything more than a trip down memory lane on a course which now measures over 7,400 yards.

But Nicklaus has reminded him of the 1998 Masters.

"I almost won it on one leg at 58, so a man who's in a lot better shape than I was and younger can certainly do pretty well. His talent is still there," said the six-time champion, who managed the last of his famous charges 11 years ago before slipping to sixth place.

Like all sports fans, Nicklaus marvelled at Norman's performance at Royal Birkdale.

"I watched a fair amount of it and I thought that what he did is something that is pretty special to the game of golf.

"I liken it a little bit to what happened to me in '86. Greg's a champion and all of a sudden you play a good first round and you say 'gee, that was nice. That was fun. Maybe I can do that again tomorrow'.

"Then you play a good second round, and all of a sudden you're 'gee, I'm really doing pretty well'. You remember how to play. It sort of lights a fire under you and you get excited.

"I think a lot of people were pulling for him and hoping that he would pull it off. He came very close."

Norman, who had been playing more tennis than golf in the run-up to the championship, led with nine to play, but could not match the blitz of playing partner Padraig Harrington over the closing stretch.

Only when he was asked about it afterwards did Norman realise that third place still got him into The Masters.

"I didn't think I'd ever get back into The Masters and obviously playing my way back I'm proud of doing that," said the Australian.

"I hadn't played much leading up to the British Open and then wham, bam, there it is."

He knows he cannot be cavalier with this build-up if he hopes to do himself justice.

"If you're going to go play in The Masters then you've got to start getting your game into preparation. I've had to get back to the special exercises which are golf-specific.

"I know it's been lengthened. I've been up there with friends in the winter months and I hit a three-wood into 11, so the days of hitting eight-iron there are long gone.

"Admittedly that was January and it's going to be different in April, but there is a dedicated focus leading up to it."

He insists he has fond memories of the event and the club.

"Absolutely," he said.

"I still think Augusta is the purest golf tournament in the world. There's no hype of corporate tents and all that stuff - you just go there and play golf.

"A lot of people don't like a dictatorship, but dictatorships work well when they're done right. Augusta is managed and operated on an extremely high level and they do an extremely good job.

"Of course I've had a lot of pain there, but I'm not going to single out Augusta and it was a huge turning point in my life.

"When I had that six-stroke lead and it didn't work out I was elevated in the public eye by losing, not by winning.

"That changed my life, I can tell you, dramatically, just by the outpouring of e-mails and letters and support that I got.

"I won in a lot of ways, but I didn't win the green jacket."

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

TIGER FIRE BURNS BRIGHT AS EVER

TIGER FIRE BURNS BRIGHT AS EVER


One son, one daughter, one Swedish model wife, two good knees, 14 majors, countless millions in the bank. What more could Tiger Woods possibly want?

The answer is another Masters title next Sunday and after that, at least four more majors.

Woods's reaction to the 16-foot birdie putt which won him the Arnold Palmer Invitational last week said it all.

He is as pumped-up as ever and still hungry for the quintet of victories which will take him above Jack Nicklaus and leave nobody in any doubt about who is golf's greatest-ever player.

Now he returns to the Augusta National course where his name is already stamped into history.

Twelve years ago, aged 21, Woods competed in his first major as a professional and after going to the turn in 40 on the opening day - playing alongside defending champion Nick Faldo - he went on to become the youngest Masters champion.

Not just that, he did it with a record 18-under-par score and by a record 12-shot margin.

He has not matched either of those feats since, but he has not done badly. Further wins on the lay-out came in 2001 - he became the first player ever to hold all four majors at the same time - 2002 and 2005.

In the past three years he has come third, second and second and last April's runner-up finish to Trevor Immelman was achieved at a time when very few really knew how bad his left knee was.

Soon they did. He had an operation the following week, did not return until the US Open in June and after his staggering victory there underwent reconstructive surgery and was out of the game for eight months.

Now he is back and with a win in only the third event of his return he is back with a bang.

"You can understand when some of the older players haven't been in contention in a while and they come back and then all of a sudden they put themselves in contention and then they win," he said.

"You just remember how to do it. It hasn't been that long for me, but you just have that feel of what to do and it's a matter of getting it done.

"It feels great. As I look back at my three tournaments I've played this year, I've got better at each one and the whole idea was to keep progressing to Augusta."

Woods's rivals might like to be reminded that he has won "only" two of the last six majors he has played in.

The fact that he has finished second in three of the other four, however, tells you that whenever he is around it is hard to take your eyes off him.

That has always been the case since his golf-changing 1997 display.

Padraig Harrington remembers being interrupted in church that year by a fan wanting to discuss Woods.

And he spoke recently about how Woods's score is always hard to avoid.

"He's created that and he deserves that little advantage that he gets," said the Open and US PGA champion. "Tiger has a presence."

Sergio Garcia was asked last week about Woods's apparent ability to will a putt into the hole.

"He's able to do that when it matters the most, down the stretch, more than the rest of us - and that's why he's a little bit above us, I guess," commented the world number three.

The long injury lay-off brought Woods back to the chasing pack on the world rankings, but he did what he had to do to deny Garcia the chance to overtake him in his second event back and by winning at Bay Hill, Phil Mickelson was denied the opportunity in Houston this weekend.

Woods doing what he has to do. Nothing new there.


Denver Broncos end Jay Cutler talks, hope for reconciliation with quarterback
IMMELMAN: TIGER WILL REWRITE HISTORY
WOODS IMPRESSED BY CONFIDENT HARRINGTON
Chad Ocho Cinco set to lose $250K from Cincinnati Bengals

Sunday, April 5, 2009

McILROY WANTS NEW MASTERS MEMORIES

McILROY WANTS NEW MASTERS MEMORIES


It is no wonder really that Rory McIlroy has wanted to play The Masters ever since he became aware of it.

The first Augusta tournament he remembers - aged six at the time he admits it is a somewhat vague memory - was the 1996 one in which Greg Norman's collapse and Nick Faldo's charge made for some of the most riveting action golf has ever produced.

Twelve months later, his interest in the game that much greater, McIlroy was simply glued to his television as his hero Tiger Woods, in the first major he played as a professional, stormed to a record 12-shot win.

For decades to come those two Masters will always be recalled - and now, at the tender age of 19, McIlroy is about to become part of the tournament's history as well.

Climbing into the world's top 50 by the end of last year to guarantee himself an invitation was a feat in itself, but it is the way he started this year that has really thrust the Northern Ireland youngster into the limelight.

Winning his first European Tour title against a star-studded field in Dubai catapulted him into the game's top 20 and it came with a comment from former Masters and Open champion Mark O'Meara that his ball-striking was ahead of Woods at the same age.

Such praise heaps expectations on McIlroy's shoulders, but he appears to have taken it in his stride and at Augusta National he knows he is in the perfect "nothing to lose, everything to gain" position.

"I'm just going to treat it as a normal event," McIlroy said, fully aware that come the week that is far easier said than done.

"I'll try not to be too overawed by the occasion or the place. If I play the way I can then hopefully I can have a good finish. I've got to go there expecting to play well."

Being paired with O'Meara in Dubai could result in a real bonus at the start of Masters week as the American told him he would try to arrange a practice round with Woods.

McIlroy, who so admires the 14-major winner for "the way he plays with no fear", has already shown that majors do not scare him.

Winning the European amateur title when he was 17 earned him a place in the 2007 Open at Carnoustie and his opening 68 not only put him in third place, but it was also the only bogey-free round of the day.

He finished 42nd and as the only amateur to survive the halfway cut collected the silver medal in a prize-giving ceremony where top of the bill, of course, was his fellow Irishman Padraig Harrington.

Despite earning his Tour card in just his second start - he was third at the Dunhill Links event - McIlroy failed to make it into any of the majors last season.

This year will be different. He should be in all four.

Only in The Masters will he still be a teenager, but amazingly he is only the third-youngest player in the field.

New Zealander Danny Lee, 18, qualified as the youngest-ever US Amateur champion, while 17-year-old Ryo Ishikawa, Japan's new star, received a special invitation and becomes the second-youngest participant in Masters history.


McILROY IS TOP OF THE SHOTS
Washington Redskins release defensive end Jason Taylor
McILROY IN AGGRESSIVE MOOD
New Orleans Saints reach deal with Darren Sharper

WESTWOOD TAMES TEXAS COURSE

WESTWOOD TAMES TEXAS COURSE


Lee Westwood got off to a hot start in Texas on Thursday before howling winds brought the Shell Houston Open to halt for the day with only half the field having started.

Play was halted in bright sunshine at 12.50pm local time at Redstone Golf Club as winds of up to 45 miles per hour caused havoc on the closely-shaved fast greens and the Tournament Course was deemed unplayable by PGA Tour officials.

At 4pm they then officially postponed for the day after a wind advisory was issued for the area until 7pm local time in Houston.

During play earlier in the day, golfers had seen their golf balls blown from their position on the greens.

"We just couldn't conduct the competition so we had to call it," PGA Tour vice president of rules Mark Russell said.

The first round was not set to resume until Friday morning with 72 players still to tee off in an event many are using as a final tune-up before next week's Masters tournament.

England's Westwood will begin the day with a two-shot lead over the field at a par-72, 7,457-yard course that has been set up to imitate conditions at Augusta National.

Redstone, though, had the added challenge of high winds and exposed greens but Westwood was more than a match for the task as he went into the early lead at four under after nine holes of his opening round.

"It's a bit early in the tournament to be doing interviews," Westwood told the PGA Tour Network , "but I'll take it anytime, leading the tournament.

"It's just unfortunate we've had to stop playing today because it's such beautiful weather."

The Ryder Cup star birdied the first, second and seventh holes before sinking a 45-foot putt for a birdie two at the ninth.

He added: "I hit lots of good shots over the nine holes. Four under and it could probably have been a couple better than that but I'm please to be four under par, especially in those conditions and I'm looking forward to just hopefully carrying it on for the rest of the week."

Westwood was about to putt for birdie from 17 feet at the par-four 10th when the hooter sounded to halt play.

"We were given the option of putting out while it was unplayable or coming back in the morning when maybe the wind will have dropped and the greens have been cut.

"Even I'm clever enough to go with the second option."

Westwood's birdie on the ninth gave him a two-stroke lead over eight players at two under including including Americans JB Holmes and Justin Leonard and Korea's Charlie Wi.

Fellow Englishman Greg Owen had been among that group before a bogey five at the 11th sent him a further shot back alongside six players including veteran American and University of Houston graduate Fred Couples, the 49-year-old US 2009 Presidents Cup captain having played seven holes starting on the back nine.

Australia's Greg Norman, Couples' rival captain for this year's matches against the Rest of the World at Harding Park in San Francisco this autumn, was level par after eight holes as he prepares for his first Masters tournament since 2002.

At even par after seven holes was Ireland's Padraig Harrington, who had birdied his second and third holes having started at the 10th tee, only to bogey his sixth and seventh.

Sweden's Daniel Chopra was also at even after six, while Alex Cejka of Germany was one over after nine with Luke Donald of England and Fredrik Jacobsen of Sweden both two over having played 10 and 11 holes respectively.

Also struggling in the windy conditions was world number two Phil Mickelson, playing for the first time since winning the WGC-CA Championship at Doral two weeks ago. The left-handed American was three over after eight holes alongside fellow major winner Angel Cabrera of Argentina.

Spain's Alvaro Quiros was having a terrible time as he sunk to nine over par after 12 holes thanks to two double-bogeys and five bogeys.

His compatriot Sergio Garcia was among the players who will have to wait until Friday to get their tournament under way following a day that had already been delayed more than two hours due to heavy rain.

Northern Ireland teenager Rory McIlory, his compatriot Darren Clarke, Colombia's Camilo Villegas, Swedish duo Robert Karlsson and Henrik Stenson and England's Paul Casey and Justin Rose were also among those who failed to get going.


Source: Houston Texans agree to contract with former Detroit Lions defensive tackle Shaun Cody
WILSON MISSES CHANCE OF LEAD
MICKELSON CLOSES GAP
Defensive end Antonio Smith, Houston Texans agree to 5-year, $35 million deal

HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST

HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST


Padraig Harrington goes for an incredible third major in a row next week rating Augusta National as the ultimate test for a golfer.

"I rate it incredibly highly," said the Open and USPGA champion.

"The Open is very close to my heart, but, in terms of sternness of test and ability to play golf, if you can win The Masters you can really play this game.

"Whenever I'm practising I'm always thinking 'Is this up to the standard that will get me around Augusta?'

"If it is that means it would cover any golf course. If you can play Augusta you can play anywhere.

"You're not going to win by luck. You're going to be on top of your game and you're going to have the ability to play golf in all departments of your game.

"You're not going to get away with just being a good putter or a good chipper or a good driver. You have to have all departments that week.

"You've got to be in top form with your putter to be in contention because you're going to get some difficult putts.

"Strategy is probably the biggest play at Augusta, certainly the biggest difference in Augusta from all other golf courses.

"You see courses where every player will hit the same club off each tee and every player will hit to the same pins and whatever. Augusta it all changes.

"When to go at a pin, when not to, where is the place to play safe, it gives you so many options that you've got to be right on top of your mental game that week.

"I think the two things are to putt well and to make the right decisions. If I do those two things I know I'll have a good week."

Even if his build-up form has not been stellar, Harrington has to draw huge strength from what happened at Birkdale and Oakland Hills last summer.

"It's nice that I am going for three in a row. It means I did something right in the last two majors.

"But I'm not going to this major and thinking it has to happen. I'm working on the principle that there are a number of major championships ahead of me.

"If I can win some of them that's fair enough. If you said to me I was going to miss the cut at this Masters and win the Masters next year I'd be very happy with that.

"If it happens it will be a bonus, but I'm not going to put any pressure on my ability to win this one. A lot of my rhetoric and talk is about trying to manage this as a stand-alone event."

When he became the first European since Tommy Armour in 1931 to win back-to-back majors Harrington had centre stage to himself.

Things have changed in the run-up to Augusta - and Harrington could not be more pleased about that.

"Tiger is back playing, Phil (Mickelson) is obviously playing great golf, you've got Rory McIlroy taking a lot of the attention at home in Ireland and in Britain, you've got Retief Goosen back in form, you've got Greg Norman sentimentally coming back.

"All of this is helping take a little bit of the attention away from me. It means that I can get back to doing my thing and get back to a little bit of normality in my preparation."

And that preparation includes playing the traditional par-three competition next Wednesday - with his five-year-old son Patrick as caddie - and trying to win it for a third time.

No par-three winner has ever gone on to win the tournament proper four days later, but Harrington's intention is to do just that.

"I'm starting a campaign to end superstitions forever," he stated.


New Orleans Saints re-sign backup quarterback Joey Harrington
Pittsburgh Steelers-Arizona Cardinals rematch to open Monday Night Football preseason on ESPN
WOODS IMPRESSED BY CONFIDENT HARRINGTON

ROSE HOPES FOR A HAPPY RETURN

ROSE HOPES FOR A HAPPY RETURN


Justin Rose could almost write a book on what it is like to lead The Masters.

But there would be no chapter on what it is like to win it. Not yet at least.

In 2004 Rose's second appearance at Augusta saw him two in front after both an opening 67 and a second round 71, but he then crashed to an 81 and finished 22nd.

It took him until 2007 to return, but when he did he shared the first day pace with American Brett Wetterich after a 69 which was the only round of the day not to contain a bogey.

With two holes to play on the final day Rose was only one behind, but a double-bogey six on the 17th crushed his hopes.

Last April he was there again. Only Trevor Immelman could match his opening 68, but while the South African went on to capture his first major Rose was kept waiting for his. He finished 36th.

"Augusta is a magical place and the experiences I've had here have been powerful experiences," he said.

"I've had good ones and bad ones and you learn from both.

"I think the biggest thing about winning a major is believing you can and what's happened to me here has been key for me in terms of making that step.

"You certainly never get tired of seeing your name up there, for sure. That's exciting."

It remains the case, however, that Rose's best major finish was his fourth place in the 1998 Open at Birkdale when he was a 17-year-old.

He explained: "The thing I did so well there was that I was blissfully unaware of the level I was actually playing at.

"I think if you can sort of kid yourself into being in that mindset again, just letting your natural abilities take over and not tend to worry too much about 'this is The Masters' or things like that, then you have a good chance.

"Sometimes you learn more from situations that go badly than when things go well.

"You've got to really pace yourself during the week and obviously when your tee times are quite late you've got to try to find ways to fill your day up until your tee time to occupy yourself."

That 81 five years ago was his worst score in a major until an 82 in the third round of The Open back at Birkdale last summer.

It left him "shell-shocked", but it has not affected how he feels about Augusta National.

"The magic about this place is that you never tire of it and it can be your 20th year and you drive up Magnolia Lane as if it's your first time.

"You still get that special feeling and obviously that helps to get you really fired up to play some good golf."

If learning how to handle pressure is part of the process towards winning a major then last September's Ryder Cup should certainly be of assistance.

Valhalla was Rose's debut and he won three of his four games, two of them with close friend Ian Poulter and then his singles against Phil Mickelson no less.

Rose won that three and two, but just like his last three visits to Augusta the week did not have the ending he hoped for.

Maybe it will be different this time.


Running back Larry Johnson could return to Chiefs, agent says
NORMAN ‘SHOCKED’ BY AUGUSTA CHANGES
HARRINGTON: AUGUSTA THE TOUGHEST
Jacksonville Jaguars agree to terms with Tra Thomas

Saturday, April 4, 2009

HOWELL AIMS TO KEEP REBUILDING

HOWELL AIMS TO KEEP REBUILDING


From beating Tiger Woods to watching his comeback in an Arizona television studio less than 3 1/2 years later is not quite what David Howell had planned for his career.

But when you fall from ninth in the world to outside the top 200 that is what can happen.

At the Portuguese Open starting today, however, Howell hopes to feed off some happy memories and point himself towards a brighter future.

Twice a Ryder Cup winner, the 33-year-old from Swindon failed to register a single top 20 finish during an injury-hit 2007, but at Oitavos Dunes last April shot a closing 64 and was in a play-off for the title with France's Gregory Bourdy and Scot Alastair Forsyth.

It was his lowest round for over two years and although Bourdy won in sudden death - Howell has lost all four he has been involved in - it did not put all his troubles behind him.

"A bit like a new manager coming into a Premier League side and winning his first match," he said. "You hope it's going to kick start things, but it doesn't always work out like that."

Finishing seventh in The Open and third at the Johnnie Walker Championship helped him improve from 142nd to 45th on the Order of Merit, but in seven starts so far this year he has yet to finish in the top 30 and is down at 147th in the Race To Dubai.

And that is why he was able to say 'Yes' when Sky Sports asked him if he wanted to join their commentary team at the WGC-Accenture Match Play in Tucson five weeks ago.

"It was strange being around a tournament and not playing in it - I didn't enjoy that side of it - and there were a couple of American players who hadn't really taken note of the fact I wasn't in the field.

"It gave me a bit of a kick up the arse and I want it to be a long time before I even start thinking about doing that full-time."

This time last year he had just started working on his game with Jamie Gough, brother of former Scotland soccer star Richard.

At Christmas Howell went back to former coach Clive Tucker, but now he and Gough are linking up again.

"You've just got to keep searching," he added. "Things I was working on were not taking shape, but I've enjoyed my golf more lately and I'm looking forward to the Portuguese."


FROM HENMAN HILL TO HENMAN HOLE
GOOSEN BREAKS TOUR DROUGHT
Tampa Bay Buccaneers makeover at linebacker includes Angelo Crowell

SPOTLIGHT AWAITS WIE AGAIN

SPOTLIGHT AWAITS WIE AGAIN


A player who has not won a single tournament for six years and has never won a 72-hole event will again be a centre of attention at the first of the women's majors this week.

The player is, of course, multi-millionairess Michelle Wie - still only 19, but at the point now where people in and around the sport are making up their minds whether she deserves all the publicity and money that continues to come her way.

Wie plays the Kraft Nabisco Championship in California for the first time since she finished joint third in 2006, missing an eagle chip on the last that would have made her the youngest-ever major champion at 16 and then missing the putt which would have put her into a play-off with eventual winner Karrie Webb and current world No 1 Lorena Ochoa.

"I guess it wasn't meant to be," she said.

The feeling then - of just about everybody, not only herself - was that such a prodigious talent would not have long to wait to confirm herself as the biggest star of the women's game.

During that year she was named in a "Time" magazine article as "one of 100 people who shape our world."

There was no need to ridicule that assessment when she was fifth and third in the next two majors, but this is her record in the last eight: did not play, 84th, withdrew, missed the cut, did not play, did not play, missed the cut, did not play.

To say her career went off the rails would be putting it kindly.

Her attempts to take on the men became something of an embarrassment, setting back women's golf rather than advancing their cause.

A wrist injury did not help, of course, but there was controversy along the way as well.

At an event hosted by Annika Sorenstam she withdrew at 14 over after 16 holes, thus avoiding the possibility of a ban imposed on anybody scoring 88 or worse.

When Wie was then seen practising two days later Sorenstam - now retired and expecting her first child - accused the youngster of "a little bit of lack of respect and class."

Despite her game going downhill fast in December 2007 Wie was placed fourth in the Forbes Top 20 Earners Under-25 with an annual earnings of well over Ј10million.

She was not even a member of the women's tour at that stage, but she is now after coming through their qualifying school at the end of last year and her second place in Hawaii in early February has put her back in the majors.

Not without another incident to add to the long list, though.

Although Wie finished well down the field in last week's tournament in Phoenix, her comment beforehand that she "got here Saturday afternoon, so I just played nine holes" raised a lot of eyebrows.

The rule had been that Tour members were not allowed to practice on the course until 5pm Sunday if they had skipped the previous week's event.

As questions were asked about whether she would be fined it came to light that in the rules regulations for the season it stated Friday 5pm rather than Sunday.

That was a mistake, though, and LPGA senior vice-president of competitions Jane Geddes stated: "It's a huge error and I feel terrible. Michelle happened to read the rules."

It was being changed back to Sunday, however, and presumably Wie was being alerted to that.

Or at least her new handlers - the giant International Management Group whose clients include Tiger Woods - were.

That is another story that has put Wie in the news. On turning professional just before her 16th birthday she joined the William Morris agency, but two weeks ago the switch was announced.

"I'm very excited about this season which represents a fresh new start for me," she said. "There is such great talent and competition on the LPGA Tour and my focus is on building the foundation for a long and successful career - and of course, getting that first tournament win."

Last week, though, it was reported that William Morris had "booted" her out after the discovery that her family were working on their own deal with a sports-drink company.

While others much higher up the world rankings - she is not in the top 80 - have a much lower profile, Wie's every move is still followed.

And not just by the media. On Friday she had around 500 watching her and a police officer was assigned to her group, with more on mountain bikes among the crowd.

This week will be a real test - a major test indeed - of where she is at. On a course and in a championship where she finished ninth aged 13, fourth a year later and third three years ago can she deliver again?

Her fans will be hoping she can and so, of course, will her sponsors.


DUO CHASING MASTERS BERTHS
Washington Redskins release defensive end Jason Taylor

Thursday, April 2, 2009

MASTERS RECORDS

MASTERS RECORDS


Most wins: 6, Jack Nicklaus

Youngest winner: Tiger Woods, 21, 1997

Oldest winner: Jack Nicklaus, 46, 1986

Lowest total: 270, Tiger Woods, 1997

Biggest win: 12 strokes, Tiger Woods, 1997

Lowest round: 63, Nick Price (1986) Greg Norman (1996)

Lowest front nine: 30 Johnny Miller 1975, Greg Norman 1988, KJ Choi 2004

Lowest back nine: 29, Mark Calcavecchia (1992), David Toms (1998)

Most under par front nine: 12 under, Ken Venturi (1960), Jack Nicklaus (1965), Steve Jones (1990), Ray Floyd (1992), Chris DiMarco (2005)

Most under par back nine: 16 under, Tiger Woods, 1997

Lowest 1st rd: 63, Greg Norman, 1996

Lowest 2nd rd: 64, Miller Barber (1979), Jay Haas (1995)

Lowest 3rd rd: 63, Nick Price, 1986

Lowest 4th rd: 64, Maurice Bembridge (1974), Hale Irwin (1975), Gary Player (1978), Greg Norman (1988), David Toms (1998)

Lowest 1st 36 holes: 131, Raymond Floyd, 1976

Lowest last 36 holes: 131, Johnny Miller, 1975

Lowest 1st 54 holes: 201, Raymond Floyd (1976), Tiger Woods (1997)

Lowest last 54 holes: 200, Tiger Woods, 1997

Highest winning score: 289, Sam Snead (1954), Jack Burke (1956), Zach Johnson (2007)

Highest front nine: 49, Charles Kunkle, 1956*

Highest back nine: 49, Jess Sweetser (1936), Richard Chapman (1955), Tony Manero (1955), Frank Conner (1982)*

Highest round: 95, Charles Kunkle, 1956*

Highest total: 340, Charles Kunkle, 1956

Lowest cut: 145 (1979, 1992, 1995, 2001)

Highest cut: 154 (1982)

Best last-round comeback to win: 8, Jack Burke, 1956

Highest last round to win: 75, Arnold Palmer (1962), Trevor Immelman (2008)

Debut winners: Horton Smith (1934), Gene Sarazen (1935), Fuzzy Zoeller (1979)

Consecutive winners: Jack Nicklaus 1965-66, Nick Faldo 1989-90, Tiger Woods 2001-02

Biggest 18-hole lead: 5, Craig Wood, 1941

Biggest 36-hole lead: 5, Herman Keiser (1946), Jack Nicklaus (1975), Raymond Floyd (1976)

Biggest 54-hole lead: 9, Tiger Woods, 1997

Most attempts before win: 15, Mark O'Meara

Lowest amateur round: 66, Ken Venturi, 1956

Best amateur finish: Second, Frank Stranahan (1947), Ken Venturi (1956), Charles Coe (1961)

Most birdies: 506, Jack Nicklaus

Most birdies in a round: 10, Nick Price, 1986

Most birdies in a tournament: 25, Phil Mickelson, 2001

Most birdies in a row: 7, Steve Pate (1999 - holes 7-13), Tiger Woods (2005 - holes 7-13)

Most eagles: 24, Jack Nicklaus

Most eagles in a tournament: 4, Bruce Crampton, 1974

Most top-five finishes: 15, Jack Nicklaus

Most top-10 finishes: 22, Jack Nicklaus

Most appearances: 51, Gary Player

Most cuts made: 37, Jack Nicklaus

Most sub-par rounds: 71, Jack Nicklaus

Most sub-70 rounds: 39, Jack Nicklaus

Most 72 holes below par: 22, Jack Nicklaus

Wire-to-wire winners: Craig Wood, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Raymond Floyd


TIGER BACK IN HUNT FOR MORE MAJORS
Sources: Mike Peterson agrees wtih Atlanta Falcons
TIGER READY FOR PHYSICAL CHALLENGE