Monday, February 21, 2011

Baddeley wins at Riviera

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Finally a winner again, Aaron Baddeley raised his arms when his last putt dropped into the cup Sunday in the Northern Trust Open as his wife and two young daughters came over to share the moment.

They might have been among the few cheering him on at Riviera.

Baddeley could hear chants of "Freddie!" at every turn, and it got even louder when Fred Couples birdied the opening three holes to take the lead. Unfazed, Baddeley cared only about a victory that was just as meaningful to him.

"I thought Freddie was going to be tough today because winning is a skill, and Freddie has been winning quite often recently," Baddeley said. "When he got off to a good start, I was like, 'Freddie looks like he's going to have one of those days where he's going to play great.' I was still just trying to focus on my game, and try to do what I needed to do."

He did just enough.

In a battle of generations, the 29-year-old Australian made his best putt after his only big mistake and closed with a 2-under 69 to hold off Vijay Singh and Couples, and win for the first time in four years.

Baddeley wound up with a two-shot win over Singh, who turns 48 on Tuesday. The big Fijian closed with a 69 for his best finish in more than two years. Couples, who still had hope on the 16th, bogeyed two of the last three holes and shot 73 to tie for seventh in his bid to become the PGA Tour's oldest winner in more than 35 years.

"I'm a golfer, so I'm disappointed," Couples said.

With his tender back, it only took one hole for the 51-year-old Couples to fall apart. Tied for the lead, he pushed his tee shot into the barranca to the right of the seventh fairway in grass so thick he had trouble finding his ball. Couples gave it a ferocious whack, and the ball came out to the left and into a bunker. He wound up making double bogey, a three-shot swing when Baddeley holed a 20-footer for birdie from the fringe.

"I just didn't feel the same after that," Couples said. "I didn't really hurt myself, but I never hit a shot, and I just got it around. I mean, I couldn't hit an iron. I hit a few good drives, but I was afraid to hit the ground, hitting it that hard out of that stuff. I did get off to a good start, and that was where it ended.

"It's nothing bad," he said. "I'm not having any excuse. It's just after that point, I never hit a shot."

It was the third career PGA Tour win for Baddeley, whose game had slipped so much that he had plunged to No. 224 in the world. This isn't enough to get back into the top 50, but at least he can book a trip to Augusta National in April for the Masters.

Singh, who only three weeks ago had fallen out of the top 100 in the world for the first time in more than 21 years, had his highest finish since he won the Deutsche Bank Championship in 2008 on his way to the FedEx Cup. Despite back-to-back bogeys on the back nine, he gave himself a chance to the very end.

Singh said it was the best week with the putter in his career, which would include his 2000 Masters victory. He took only 105 putts for the week, including just one three-putt in the second round.

"That's a great, great thing to have when you're putting well," Singh said. "I haven't done that for a long, long time. This is going to get me some places."

Baddeley, who finished at 12-under 272, won for the first time since the 2007 Phoenix Open. He had been one of the early proponents of the "Stack & Tilt" swing method until deciding to go back to his old teacher, Dale Lynch, two years ago. His goal was to be able to move the ball both ways without having to think about it, and the swing held up just fine on a sunny afternoon along Sunset Boulevard.

"To be honest, it felt like coming home," Baddeley said of his return to Lynch, his first coach as a teenager in Australia. "Dale and I have spent a lot of hours together, and at times it's been frustrating, but like I said, that end product ... we knew what we were working toward, and that was the key."

Kevin Na made good putts on the last two holes for a 71 that put him alone in third place.

Couples was showing his age on the practice range, where his back is so tender that he only warms up with a driver and fairway metals to stay more upright. With a driver in hand, he teed up two balls at a time to keep from stooping over.

On the course, he looked like the Couples of old.

Couples opened with three straight birdies to bring Riviera to life, just like the old days. He chipped in for birdie from just off the second green, pointing his club to the cup with his left hand in a pose that has become familiar over the years. Then came a 20-foot birdie on the third to give him the outright lead.

But it started to come undone on the par-3 sixth, where the tee was moved forward and the pin was front and right, away from the bunker in the middle of the green. He flared it to the right and missed a 4-foot par putt.

And then came what he called a "comedy of errors" on the seventh.

Equipped with the lead, Baddeley never let it go. His only mistake was hitting into the trees on consecutive shots and missing a 2 1/2-foot putt to take double bogey on the 12th. Baddeley responded swiftly, making a 20-foot birdie putt from the fringe with 8 feet of break.

He made pars the rest of the way, and no one could catch him.

"It's definitely been a couple of long years, but it was worth every bit," Baddeley said. "I really feel that the last couple years is actually what made it easier today ... the character that was just built in me."



Couples back in the hunt at RivieraConfidence continues to build for rookie Gavin

Couples back in the hunt at Riviera

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Fred Couples was being shuttled down the hill at Riviera in a cart when he received a text from Tiger Woods.

Couples didn't share the message, only the reply.

"I texted him back when I was coming down here," Couples said after a 5-under 66 gave him a two-shot lead in the Northern Trust Open. "I said, 'I do love this place, but if you played here, you'd win 10 times.' And he didn't send me too polite of a text after that."

Woods stopped playing Riviera after 2006. As much as he loves the course, he only had one good chance to win.

"I'm shocked that he doesn't play here, but I guess he doesn't play well here, which I don't know why," Couples said.

That clearly isn't the case with Couples.

Even at 51, with a back so tender that it hurts to stoop over a short iron, Couples can play Riviera. He showed that over the past two days, opening with a 68 and then doing even better Friday before the rain arrived. With an eagle putt of nearly 100 feet, and two birdies of at least 30 feet, he made it around without a bogey to build a two-shot lead.

Rain and wind in the afternoon, long after Couples had left the course at 8-under 134, made it tough on everyone else.

When the second round was completed Saturday morning, Couples remained on top by two shots. It was his first 36-hole lead on the PGA Tour since 2004 in the old Buick Classic at Westchester.

Aaron Baddeley birdied the 18th hole for a 69, while Spencer Levin parred his last four holes for a 69. They were at 6-under 136 along with J.B. Holmes and John Senden, who finished their rounds of 69 on Friday.

The group at 5-under 137 included strong efforts by Stewart Cink and Trevor Immelman, who each shot 67 in the worst of the weather. Immelman didn't make a par over the last five holes - instead, he made four birdies and a bogey.

But the show belonged to Couples, who is playing this event for the 29th time and says, "I feel like I can play this course blindfolded."

Some of his peers couldn't believe what they saw.

"He played like he was my age," said 25-year-old Anthony Kim, who was paired with Couples and was nine shots behind. "He was loose, swinging hard. He hit some quality shots, some aggressive shots. It doesn't hurt that he's won here a couple of times. He just knows what he's doing out here."

Couples first played Riviera three years before Kim was born. He won in 1990 and 1992, back when his hair was brown, not mostly gray, and when he didn't have to get up at 4 a.m. to stretch out his back so he could make it to the first tee.

Paul Casey, who had a 67 and was four shots back, played in the group behind Couples. Asked how it felt to trail a 51-year-old who can barely bend over to tie his shoes, Casey started laughing.

"Every time I looked ahead, he's stretching his back, his hand is on his hip," Casey said. "We all know Freddie. He looks like he doesn't care. He looks like he's in pain. He could be on any score. And the fact he's on 8 under is brilliant."

Phil Mickelson struggled with his irons on his way to a 70 that put him seven shots behind, although not terribly worried.

"I'm not pleased being in the position where I'm at, but it could be a lot worse," Mickelson said. "And I should be within striking distance if I can go out and shoot some hot round tomorrow."

That he would be trying to catch up to Couples was surprising given his age and his health.

Such is his affection for Riviera that Couples didn't think twice about playing this week - even though he is the defending champion at the Champions Tour event in Naples, Fla.

"I don't think anyone is mad. Besides Augusta, it's my favorite spot," Couples said. "I don't think it's a slap in the face if they just look where I live and my schedule and how I play here. It would take two seconds to figure it out."

Couples not only has two wins at Riviera, he has four top 10s in the past decade and nearly had a chance to win two years ago until he butchered a 9-iron into the 18th with a chance to put pressure on Mickelson.

He was 49, and that figured to be his last chance to win on tour.

Yet here he is again, twisting and stretching, taking left-handed baseball swings with his putter while trying to keep loose. The hardest part for Couples after his round was climbing the 100-foot hill toward the clubhouse to sign his card.

When the tour asked him to visit The Golf Channel's booth, Couples said, "Can't do it."

"I'm ready for a nap," he said.

Riviera can make him feel young, but not to the point where he's going to act like he belongs in this generation.

Couples still doesn't know what Facebook is all about. Remember, it was only two years ago that he started sending text messages.

As for Twitter? Uh, no.

"If I did Twitter, would I tell people that I'm heading home and then going to eat at California Pizza Kitchen? Is that what you do? Or do you actually tweet information?" he said. "Well, what information do I have for my 500,000 followers? I'm 51. I live in the desert. They all know that already.

"If you guys write well enough, they'll know that I'm in good shape going into tomorrow. I don't need to tweet anybody."

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Final-round tee times at 2011 Northern Trust Open

( All times Eastern )

Riviera Country Club Tee #1
1:30 pm Baddeley, Aaron Na, Kevin Couples, Fred
1:20 pm Singh, Vijay Moore, Ryan Senden, John
1:09 pm Frazar, Harrison Walker, Jimmy Allenby, Robert
12:59 pm Rose, Justin Cink, Stewart Levin, Spencer
12:48 pm Holmes, J.B. Appleby, Stuart Laird, Martin
12:38 pm Choi, K.J. Immelman, Trevor Taylor, Vaughn
12:27 pm Stadler, Kevin Goosen, Retief Haas, Hunter
12:17 pm Tringale, Cameron Stricker, Steve Duval, David
12:06 pm Gainey, Tommy Kuchar, Matt Johnson, Zach
11:56 am Ogilvy, Geoff Palmer, Ryan Casey, Paul
11:45 am Marino, Steve Curtis, Ben Henry, J.J.
11:35 am Haas, Bill Collins, Chad Piercy, Scott
11:25 am Miller, Zack Tomasulo, Peter Putnam, Michael

Riviera Country Club Tee #10
11:25 am Lyle, Jarrod Oosthuizen, Louis Micheel, Shaun
11:35 am Karlsson, Robert Vegas, Jhonattan de Jonge, Brendon
11:45 am Jobe, Brandt Goydos, Paul Hoffman, Charley
11:56 am Fowler, Rickie Dufner, Jason Garrigus, Robert
12:06 pm McCarron, Scott Harrington, Padraig Mahan, Hunter
12:17 pm Mickelson, Phil Trahan, D.J. Pettersson, Carl
12:27 pm Glover, Lucas Overton, Jeff Flesch, Steve
12:38 pm Pavin, Corey Furyk, Jim Barnes, Ricky
12:48 pm Compton, Erik Howell III, Charles Atwal, Arjun
12:59 pm Bohn, Jason Romero, Andres Leonard, Justin
1:09 pm Jones, Matt Sim, Michael O'Hair, Sean
1:20 pm Ikeda, Yuta Petrovic, Tim Wilson, Mark
1:30 pm Merritt, Troy Davis, Brian



Gore holds on to win Nationwide Tour eventNowak confirms Union in market for players

Francesco Molinari to play in Match Play after all

MARANA, Ariz. (AP) — Francesco Molinari of Italy says he will play in the Match Play Championship.

Molinari won the HSBC Champions last year and is No. 17 in the world ranking. He had planned to skip the World Golf Championship because his wife was expecting their first child. She gave birth to a boy Feb. 6, so Molinari says he's going to Arizona.

The Italian announced the news on Twitter: "Decision made, leaving Sunday for Tucson. Looking forward to the Matchplay!"

He lost in the first round last year to Zach Johnson.

Molinari's decision means all 64 players intend to play at Dove Mountain. The tournament begins Feb. 23.



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Weir is on the slow road back, and thankful for it

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) — If the cashier at a Utah department store recognized Mike Weir, imagine the surprise of seeing the former Masters champion and eight-time PGA Tour winner buying a bag of plastic golf balls.

"No, I don't think I've ever bought those before," Weir said.

It spoke to the severity of pain in his right elbow, where he partially tore tendons a year ago at Hilton Head. Weir tried to play through it the rest of the 2010 season but missed the cut in seven of 10 tournaments and never cracked the top 30 in the other three.

"It was four or five months of poor golf and I shouldn't have been out there," Weir said. "It was kind of a year that was wasted. There's definitely a stubborn side to me, a hockey mentality that I can tough this out. I thought it was bad tendinitis. I was playing every day and it kept getting worse. To play when you're scared to hit the ball is not good."

That's where the plastic golf balls come in.

Weir didn't pick up a club for three months to rest his elbow, and he was eager to get back to work. In the basement of his Utah home, he grabbed a 6-iron to make an easy swing.

"Just the impact of the ball on the tee hurt," Weir said. "I called the doctors and said, 'That hurts.' And they said, 'That's good.' It's scar tissue and I had to break through that."

So he went to the store to buy plastic balls to soften the blow.

"That's how I started my rehab - little dink shots with plastic balls," he said. "After a month of that, I was hitting wedges off the ground."

Weir said he is at 90 percent strength. He can produce any swing, even digging a ball out of the rough without flinching. The Canadian is on a major medical exemption, but has only two tournaments remaining to earn $217,097 for full status the rest of the year.

He is not worried about that. Nor is he worried about a world ranking that has plummeted to No. 214, after ending 2009 at No. 36. This is a Presidents Cup year, and Weir risks being left off the International side for the first time since 1998.

He is not bitter about his lost year. All things considered, Weir feels fortunate.

"I just want to get back," he said. "Honestly, I feel lucky to be playing. When I came back after three months off and was chipping those balls, I thought, 'Wow, this is worse than I thought.' So I feel grateful to be out here. Whether it takes a few months or six months, I feel like I'm on the right track."

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MASTERS FIELD: Through six PGA Tour events this year, four players have earned a spot in the Masters. There are six weeks left before Augusta National again uses the top 50 in the world ranking to issue invitations. Seven PGA Tour events remain where the winner can qualify for the Masters.

Ninety-five eligible players are expected to compete at the Masters.

The good news for Augusta National is that everyone currently in the top 50 already is eligible. Depending on how the next seven weeks turn out, the Masters field has a chance to top 100 players for the first time since 1966.

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NEW NO. 1: The LPGA Tour finally gets under way this week in Thailand, and the player to beat is no mystery.

Yani Tseng, the 22-year-old from Taiwan, already has won three majors and was the LPGA Tour player of the year in 2010. She won two tournaments in Australia to rise to No. 1 in the world.

Tseng's goal was to get to No. 1. She just didn't think she would get there before the LPGA season began.

"I still have another 10 months to go," Tseng said. "I just need to be very patient and keep working hard. I still have a lot of things to learn, too."

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O'HAIR'S CUT: Sean O'Hair made his first cut of the year at Pebble Beach, but it's not as if he's off to a slow start.

O'Hair didn't start his season until Phoenix, staying home in Philadelphia as his wife neared her due date. Trevor Ryan was born Jan. 20, giving the O'Hair family - Sean is only 28 - four children.

Plus, the winter was particularly cold. O'Hair hasn't played much golf lately.

"I just wanted to be around the kids, and be around Jackie before the baby was born," O'Hair said.

He finally went down to Florida to get some practice before heading to Phoenix. O'Hair found himself struggling off the tee with the odd snap hook, and found that the parts of his game that should be solid (driving and long irons) have been bad, while his short game has carried him so far.

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COMEDY & MEMORY: Perhaps it was only fitting that Jesper Parnevik's partner at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am was comedian Tom Dreesen, a profession Parnevik knows well.

His father, Bo, was one of the most famous comedians in Sweden.

"I asked him if his father was funny at home and he said he really wasn't, which didn't surprise me," Dreesen said. "Most comedians, by nature, are insecure."

Parnevik's favorite memories of his father were on the road in the summer, for that's when they played golf.

"I toured with him in the summer," Parnevik said. "He's the one who got me into golf. He got the golf bug big-time. When he went on summer tours, he only hired musicians and technicians who played golf. And they only did shows by good golf courses. They performed at night, and we played all day."

There was one occasion, however, when young Jesper was too tired to go on.

"He brought me to a show and I got tired," Parnevik said. "I went up on stage and said, 'Daddy, it's time to go home now. I'm tired!' And the crowd went berserk."

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DIVOTS: The PGA Grand Slam of Golf has changed its criteria for alternates. Instead of taking the former major champion with the best record in the 2011 majors, the first alternate will be the defending champion. That would be Ernie Els for this year in Bermuda, provided the Big Easy doesn't qualify by winning a major. ... U.S. Women's Amateur champion Danielle Kang received one of five amateur exemptions to the Kraft Nabisco Championship. The others went to Cydney Clanton, Lisa McCloskey, Kristen Park and Meghan Stasi. The LPGA Tour's first major is March 31 to April 3. ... Lee Trevino, 71, said he will play in the Toshiba Classic on March 11-13 at Newport (Calif.) Country Club. It will be the only official, full-field event he plays this year on the Champions Tour.

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STAT OF THE WEEK: The Dubai Desert Classic, where Tiger Woods tied for 20th, was only the third time in 30 non-PGA Tour events overseas that he finished out of the top 10.

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FINAL WORD: "I really do believe that your game is based a lot on the physical place you were brought up playing golf. ... You'll rarely see somebody with a good golf swing coming from a windy golf course." - Padraig Harrington.



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Woods has work to do after disappointing Dubai

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The flashes of brilliance at the Dubai Desert Classic didn't blind Tiger Woods to the signs that his new swing remains a work in progress.

Even so, Woods has no doubt about his future after stumbling in the final round Sunday, shooting a 3-over 75 to finish seven shots behind winner Alvaro Quiros in a tie for 20th.

"I feel like I can still win golf tournaments," Woods said. "I'm not that old. I've still got some years ahead of me."

Woods drew cheers Thursday when he hit a 3-wood 250 yards to the 18th green for an eagle. But he had trouble finding the fairway for much of the week in Dubai, his putter ran hot and cold, and his once-dangerous short game continued to let him down.

Woods started the final round a shot behind, but opened with two bogeys on his first three holes. He came back with birdies on Nos. 6 and 11, but followed that with a bogeys on Nos. 12 and 14, and then a double bogey on the last.

Woods, who won in Dubai in 2006 and 2008, has now gone 16 tournaments and 15 months without a victory after previously winning 14 majors and 82 tournaments.

"Yeah, very frustrating," Woods said of his final round. "I got off to such a poor start, I was 2 over through three early and just couldn't make it up from there."

Quiros shot a 68, surviving a wild round that included a hole-in-one and a triple bogey to finish at 11-under 277, one stroke ahead of Anders Hansen of Denmark (70) and James Kingston of South Africa (67).

Woods opened with a 71, moved into contention Friday with a 66, and survived windy conditions Saturday for a 72 that put him in position for his first victory since the Australian Masters in November 2009. He just couldn't keep the momentum going Sunday in a final round that exposed the problems with his swing.

On the second, he drove over the green and then chipped past the hole, leading to his first bogey. On the third, he yelled at several photographers for disturbing his swing after his approach went left.

But the No. 3-ranked Woods also showed signs that the work he has been doing on his swing with coach Sean Foley is paying dividends. He hit a 160-yard approach to within a few feet of the pin for a birdie on the sixth and then on the par-3 11th hit a tee shot that settled a few feet away from the flag for an easy birdie.

Woods said he just needed "more work and more practice."

"As I said when I came in this week, I hit the ball pure, and that's the thing," he said. "When the wind blows, I have to shape shots and hit shots differently and all my old feels are kind of out the window. That's the thing about making changes. As I said, I've been through this before with my last two instructors and it will come around."

The former world No. 1 believes his performance this week was "a step in the right direction."

"I improved a lot considering where I was at Torrey Pines a couple of weeks ago," Woods said of the tournament where he had his worst season-opening performance. "Obviously, I didn't finish the way I needed to win. ... Put myself there after two rounds and just didn't get it done."

Woods tied for 44th at Torrey Pines, where he had won the last five times he had played and had never finished out of the top 10.

On Sunday Woods couldn't have missed the cheers as Quiros chipped in for an eagle on No. 2 and then added several more birdies to move to 11 under and five shots ahead of Woods after six holes. By the turn, most fans had started shifting their attention to the duel between Quiros, Anders Hansen of Denmark and James Kingston of South Africa.

Woods still had a mathematical chance as he came onto the 14th when he was four shots back with five holes to go.

But Woods hit his drive into the rocks, a second into the bunker and then missed an easy par put to settle for bogey that ended his chances. He finished with three more pars and the double bogey on 18.

A victory here would have drawn a line in the sand for the beleaguered Woods.

This would have been his 12th win outside the PGA Tour and perhaps his biggest since the Thanksgiving night car accident in 2009 that derailed his run as the world's top golfer.

For Woods, it's back to the driving range and the hope that he can make his mark at the upcoming Match Play Championships, starting Feb. 23 at Dove Mountain in Arizona.

"I know what I can do in the game and Sean and I are trying to get there," Woods said.



Tiger, Sergio try to settle old scores in Dubai instead of winning eventQ&A: Bolton midfielder Stuart Holden

Tiger, Sergio try to settle old scores in Dubai instead of winning event

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Dubai Desert Classic began with all eyes on the world's top three players: Lee Westwood, Martin Kaymer and Tiger Woods. It was supposed to end with a champion coming from third-round leader Rory McIlroy — or Woods and Sergio Garcia playing together one shot behind. But the star emerged from the supporting cast as Spain's Alvaro Quiros stepped out from the wings into the limelight to claim the $416,000 first prize and the fabulous and priceless giant silver coffee pot.

Quiros's final round of four-under-par 68 took him to a winning total of 11 under par. It wasn't as simple as that though. It never is with the big-hitting Spaniard who has a habit of sprinkling his game with equal measures of genius and garbage. His final round contained an eagle, a hole-in-one and a triple-bogey seven after firing his ball into a palm tree. Quiros posted every number from one to seven apart from a six. His scorecard looked like his cell phone number.

"I was lucky," Quiros said, flashing his trademark smile. "I don't know if it's quite normal to make an eagle at the second hole, birdie on the third, make a seven on a par four then make a hole-in-one and finish suffering to win by one. I don't think many people have been in this situation."

Woods finished with a double bogey for a three-over par 75 to end the tournament tied 20th at four under par. That's only the second time in 24 rounds in Dubai that he has failed to break par and the first time in six visits he has finished outside the top five. His calamitous finale epitomized his roller-coaster week, which included two eagles, 17 birdies, 11 bogeys, three double bogeys, 39 pars and one spit — on the 12th green. Nice. He can expect to find a letter and a fine from the European Tour stuck to his locker when he arrives in Tucson, Ariz., in two weeks for the WGC Accenture Match Play.

"A lot of positives from the week but some glaring examples of what I have to work on," a tired-looking Woods said after his round. "All my old feel is out the window when the wind blows. When it's calm I hit the ball pure. That's the thing about making changes. It'll come. Just need more practice. It's a step in the right direction."

A step in the wrong direction was perhaps the continuation of the feud between Woods and Garcia that peaked at the 2006 British Open. It was at Hoylake that Woods battered Garcia (dressed all in yellow) in the final group to win and then reportedly texted his inner circle, "I just bludgeoned Tweety Pie." The tension between them on the first tee was palpable. Their handshake was of the wet-fish variety, like when two kids caught fighting in the yard are forced to make up and be friends. They headed off down the first fairway 20 yards apart. It set the tone for their round. Not a word was spoken between them for four hours. No chitchat. Nothing. The awkward atmosphere hovered over them like their own personal gray cloud.

Garcia birdied the first and strolled off toward the second tee before Woods had tapped in his par. Gamesmanship perhaps? At the second hole Garcia was so slow and deliberate over every shot he was almost statuesque. Woods clunked a chip, missed a par putt from six-feet and looked hurried and unsettled. A call to prayer drifted across the course as the, ahem, two amigos stood on the third tee. Woods didn't have his answered. He smashed a drive into the right rough. It was all beef but too jerky. A beef jerky drive, if you like. Another missed putt. Another bogey. Can't drive, can't chip, can't putt.

The former World No. 1 was struggling in the gusting wind and clearly irritated by Garcia's seemingly endless twitching and lengthy pre-shot routines. Mind games from Garcia? If so, they were working. Woods was rushing as if to make up time. It took them 51 minutes to play the first four holes, which included a driveable par four and a par three. If they had been any slower they would have been playing backwards. There was no joy in their games and certainly it was painful to watch. This was a personal battle. They clearly have issues. But it was a mistake — by both of them. While they were waging their own little smoldering personal vendetta, the tournament got away from them. Woods and Garcia beat each other up into a stalemate to both finish at four under par.

World No. 1 Lee Westwood refused to do likewise despite finishing double bogey, bogey and tied 15th at five under par.

"My glass is always half full," he said. "I enjoyed playing even though I finished in an ambulance at the end."

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Thorrington's “invaluable” Man Utd experienceTiger, Sergio try to settle old scores in Dubai instead of winning event

Points wins Pebble Beach with Murray at his side

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) — D.A. Points won for the first time on the PGA Tour and wasn't even the biggest star.

That's what made this Pebble Beach National Pro-Am so special.

Points grew up idolizing Bill Murray, whether it was his "Caddyshack" role as the assistant greenskeeper at Bushwood or his antics at Pebble Beach over the years. To have him as an amateur partner made this week great before it even started.

Then came Sunday, when Points holed out from 100 yards for eagle on the diabolical 14th at Pebble Beach to take the lead. That carried him to a 5-under 67 and a two-shot victory. Making it even sweeter, they won the pro-am title, a first for Murray, who now gets his name on the wall below the first tee.

This really was a Cinderella story.

"It's a dream come true," Points said. "To win on the PGA Tour, and especially at Pebble Beach, and especially with Bill Murray ... I don't think I could dream this up."

Indeed, it was surreal at times.

One shot behind and facing the scariest shot at Pebble Beach that doesn't involve the Pacific Ocean, Points hit a gap wedge that barely cleared the bunker on the par-5 14th, landed in the first cut of rough and trickled down the slope and into the hole. He followed that with a bending, 30-foot birdie putt for a two-stroke lead that made Murray laugh because he didn't know what else to do.

And when Points felt his greatest pressure, he had some comic relief of his own.

He faced a 6-foot par putt on the 16th hole, and when his caddie asked him how he felt, Points replied, "Not very good." That's when he decided to take a page from Murray. As his partner stood over a long putt, Points hollered at him, "The crowd would be really happy if you could make that."

The gallery roared with laughter. Murray narrowly missed. More importantly, Points made his putt and sailed home with easy pars.

"It totally took me out of the moment for just enough to kind of help bring me back to life a little bit," Points said.

Hunter Mahan shot 31 on the front nine and twice was tied for the lead on the back nine. He birdied the 17th with a tee shot inside 3 feet, then reached the par-5 18th in two. But he three-putted for par, missing a 4-foot birdie putt.

Ultimately, it didn't matter. Mahan closed with a 66 and wound up alone in second, two shots behind.

Steve Marino, who had a one-shot lead going into the final round, never caught up after Points made his eagle from the 14th fairway. Marino missed a 12-foot birdie putt on the 16th to get within one, then slammed his driver to the turf on the 18th when his tee shot sailed into a bunker to the right.

Marino hit his third shot into the ocean and made a triple-bogey 8 that mattered only in his bank account. Not making a par to share second place was the difference of $327,200.

Tom Gillis closed with a 70 and finished along in third.

Points and Murray won the pro-am tournament by two shots. The trophy was locked up with Points' par on the 18th when Murray announced his "big putt" that was meaningless. He then mimicked some dialogue from the "Cinderella Story" scene in Caddyshack, when Murray swatted at flowers with his scythe and imagined the former greenskeeper on the verge of winning the Masters.

"It's in the hole!!!!"

Not quite. As the putt headed toward the cup, Murray jogged over to tap it while it was still moving, then thrust his arms in the air.

"The only chance D.A. had to win was if I could make it through the entire week without ever asking what the initials 'D.A.' stand for," Murray said. "And I didn't. And he's the champion."

In case he cares, they stand for Darren Andrews.

Murray also won the pro-am title in the Pebble Beach event on the Champions Tour with Scott Simpson, his longtime partner at Pebble Beach who played the straight man to Murray's routine.

It's not always easy playing with Murray, who constantly engages the crowd, bought ice cream bars for them on the back nine, and years ago enraged the PGA Tour brass when he flung an elderly woman into a bunker.

Some of his previous partners have quietly asked that someone else play with Murray.

Points was all too happy.

"Everybody all week kept saying, 'You got the short end of the stick,'" Points said. "I never, ever felt that way. I tried to embrace it. He just seemed to have fun, and he taught me to go ahead and have a little more fun. And in turn, it distracted me from trying so hard. It kept me loose and having a good time with Bill."

Is this a new tandem?

"I'm thinking of turning pro," Murray said. "I probably won't. It's really nice to play with a gentleman. He's a good person. He's from Illinois. He's Lincoln-esque in stature and unfailingly polite."

Points showed that as he walked off the 18th green and said to the gallery, "Everyone, thank you for coming."

He put on quite a show.

Points started the final round two shots out of the lead, stayed in range and was flawless on the back nine. His big run started with an 8-foot birdie on the 10th hole, and then came his magical run.

For the second straight year, the pivotal hole at Pebble Beach turned out to be the 14th - this time for a good score. A year ago, Paul Goydos, Bryce Molder and Alex Prugh all had a chance to win until they made 9s on the par 5.

A few groups earlier, Phil Mickelson hit a 64-degree wedge that landed a foot on the green and rolled off to the left, down the slope. Points hit a gap wedge that was perfect, because it had to be. The ball landed in the first cut of rough, hopped onto the green and had just enough spin to slow to a trickle as it dropped.

His only mistake on the back nine was the chest-pump he tried to execute with Murray. They ran toward each other, and Points began to leap as Murray was landing. It looked bad, but it was an eagle 3 on the card.

Equally important was the birdie that followed, and Points was on his way.

He won for the first time in 128 starts on the PGA Tour. This earned him $1.134 million - more than he has made in any of his previous four seasons on tour - a two-year exemption and his first trip to Masters.

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Confidence continues to build for rookie GavinMarino hangs onto the lead at Pebble

PGA Tour Confidential: AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am

Every week of the 2011 PGA Tour season, the editorial staff of the SI Golf Group will conduct an e-mail roundtable. Check in on Mondays for the unfiltered opinions of our writers and editors and join the conversation in the comments section below.

POINTS, MURRAY WIN PEBBLE PRO-AM
Jim Gorant, senior editor, Sports Illustrated: D.A. Points seemed so thrilled to be playing with Bill Murray and so relaxed by Murray's antics that he got out of his own head and played great golf. Should he hire Murray as a caddie or at least split the purse with him?

Jim Herre, managing editor, SI Golf Group: That's the beauty of these pro-ams. They're not for everyone, but some guys, like Points and defending champ Dustin Johnson, seem to thrive when they're slightly distracted and aren't grinding so hard.

Mark Godich, senior editor, Sports Illustrated: Mark O'Meara made a career of it.

Stephanie Wei, contributor, SI Golf+: Hire Murray as a caddie (but the act could get really old after this week). Split the purse only if Murray splits his appearance fee.

Jeff Ritter, senior producer, Golf.com: Murray's probably a little tied up with his day job (whatever it is), but maybe Points can have his regular Tour caddie sell Ben and Jerry's on tee boxes and lie down in the grass between shots, a la Murray on Sunday. How can you get nervous with that happening around you?

Michael Bamberger, senior writer, Sports Illustrated: Bill Murray as a Tour caddie — that's a good idea. I'd like to see him on Tiger's bag.

Herre: Former Tour commish Deane Beman didn't care for Murray's act way back when, but the fans always loved him.

Gary Van Sickle, senior writer, Sports Illustrated: It was nice to see CBS finally embrace Murray. For years, he has been ignored and given tee times away from the camera while CBS focused on its sitcom stars (who were never remotely funny on air) or the impressionist from Vegas whose name escapes me. This is great vindication for Murray and the best thing to happen to this tourney in a long time.

Farrell Evans, writer-reporter, Sports Illustrated: D.A. was definitely in the zone this week if he was able to concentrate around Murray, who obviously played well for the two to take the pro-am title. At any rate, D.A was due. He's been good enough to win for a long time.

David Dusek, deputy editor, Golf.com: I think it's easy to not fully appreciate how important a good mindset is to playing good golf. Anyone who earns a PGA Tour card has all the shots and has put in the work to get there, but having a guy like Bill Murray hanging around could provide just enough distraction to let a good-natured pro play well.

Van Sickle: The Murray distraction was great, but if Points doesn't get a break and hole out from the fairway at 14 for eagle, we would've enjoyed an even more exciting and close finish. Who knows?

Gorant: On the other hand, Murray can be a distraction for the pros out there trying to make a living. Not saying it was a factor, but Points's playing partner, Bryce Molder, closed with a 74. Should Murray tone it down when he's in the final group?

Van Sickle: Murray did tone it down for the final group.

Damon Hack, senior writer, Sports Illustrated: Nah, Murray's got to be Murray. Straight no chaser.

Bamberger: If you asked him to tone it down he'd walk.

Evans: Murray should comport himself more like a professional. There is too much money at stake on the PGA Tour for Murray's routine. I don't want to sound old-fashioned, but Jack Lemmon and Bing played the crowds and the game with a mix of reserve and fun that made the tournament appealing for fans. The old-timers always had a healthy respect for the guys playing for real money.

Dusek: Sorry, you sound old-fashioned.

Wei: Murray just shows up and everyone laughs. He doesn't really have to do anything. If he waves, we laugh. If he doesn't, we still laugh. But how about that really awkward chest bump attempt between Points and Murray on No. 14? Might have been the funniest moment of the day.

Van Sickle: Murray made sure it was an intentionally lame chest bump.

Cameron Morfit, senior writer, Golf Magazine: Murray should just do his thing. He was asking Bryce if he wanted to putt first on 17, and I'm sure he was respectful in his own way. He knows the drill.

Dusek: Agreed. If you are playing the AT&T, you've got to know there are going to be comedians, celebrities and other semi-famous people on the course who will be nervous and out of their comfort zone. If you're lucky enough to get into a fun-loving group, embrace the experience. If you don't think you can do that ... don't sign up to play this week.

Godich: It was backed up all over the course. I thought Murray did a pretty good job of staying out of the way. As Dave said, if you don't like the format, take the week off.

Hack: Beyond his antics, Murray can flat out hit it. One of the best scenes in "Lost in Translation" — non Scarlett Johansson edition — is when Murray is playing golf. For a knucklehead, he's really got a great move.

Van Sickle: Murray is like Jim Herre. His best shot is the shot of a 2-handicapper. His bad shots — never mind.

Alan Shipnuck, senior writer, Sports Illustrated: Murray has long been this tourney's biggest draw, bigger than Phil or Tiger or Costner or anyone else. If any of the pros don't love his schtick, they're vastly outnumbered.

Click here to submit a question for Alan's next mailbag.

Herre: Watching Murray do his thing is a much better show than watching Bryce Molder do his.

Ryan Reiterman, senior producer, Golf.com: Marino and Walker probably weren't thrilled to be playing behind Murray's group either. But Murray is Murray. It was a lot of fun to watch today.

Morfit: Good point, Ryan. Marino looked like he just wanted to get on with it starting on 16 or so, when he still had a legit chance.

Godich: Yeah, shame on Murray for stopping to chat up the soldier at the 16th green. Where is the golf etiquette?

Shipnuck: Golf is a stuffy, country club sport? Today I think Murray has done more for the game's image than a decade of First Tee commercials.

Evans: Alan, Murray is a country club golfer who dresses like a yeoman. Don't be fooled by the routine. He's not rushing to make tee times at his local muni. I don't think anybody is fooled by his act or drawn to the tournament because of him. I'm probably wrong, but my instincts tell me that the Tour probably wishes Murray had taken a backseat on 18 and let Points be the star.

Van Sickle: Murray is the tournament's biggest non-pro attraction. He packs 'em in and treats them to six hours of improv. The show he puts on is amazing. Try following him for 18 holes someday, and you'd begin to appreciate him. He's been The Man among the celebrities there since he started playing in the early '90s — yes, even when CBS was trying to make us believe George Lopez and Ray Romano and Kevin James were superstars. Even the CBS guys in the booth, Nantz and Faldo, said they wanted to see Murray finish on 18, and who's squarer than them?

Dusek: Today was the first broadcast my stepfather has seen all season, and he watched because it was Pebble Beach and he knew Bill Murray would be on at some point. He didn't know the leaders, but he knew he'd be entertained by both the course and the guy if he came on the screen. I don't think he's alone.

Tell us what you think: Was Murray's act appropriate for the final group on a Sunday? Do you enjoy watching him at Pebble?

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PGA Tour Confidential: Hong Kong OpenKC's Espinoza reflects on his World Cup experience

Tiger Woods apologizes for spitting in Dubai event

VIRGINIA WATER, England (AP) — Tiger Woods apologized after he was fined an undisclosed sum by the European Tour on Monday for spitting on the green during the final round of the Dubai Desert Classic.

The tour said in a statement that tournament director Mike Stewart reviewed the matter and "feels there has been a breach of the tour code of conduct."

"The Euro Tour is right - it was inconsiderate to spit like that and I know better," Woods said on Twitter. "Just wasn't thinking and want to say I'm sorry."

The tour would not give the amount of the fine but it is probably between $400 and $16,000 for a minor breach.

Woods spit on the 12th hole after missing a par putt on his way to a 3-over 75. He began the final day one shot off the lead but never recovered after making two bogeys in his first three holes.

The 14-time major winner, now ranked No. 3, tied for 20th place at 4-under 284. Woods has gone 17 tournaments without a victory for the first time since turning professional in 1996.

Almost a year ago, following a sex scandal that ended his marriage and rocked the golf world, Woods promised to "make my behavior more respectful of the game."

The tour's code of conduct states that when a player becomes a member he "voluntarily submits himself to standards of behavior and ethical conduct beyond those required of ordinary golfers and members of the public."

Television cameras spotted Woods spitting in an earlier round in the Dubai tournament. Ewen Murray, a commentator for Britain's Sky Sports, said on air after seeing Woods spit on the second tee during the second round that it was "one of the ugliest things you will ever see on a golf course."

On Sunday, after Woods spit on the 12th green, Murray said that "somebody now has to come behind him and maybe putt over his spit. It does not get much lower than that."

See what our experts had to say about Tiger's spitting incident in this week's PGA Tour Confidential roundtable

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Tiger, Sergio try to settle old scores in Dubai instead of winning eventGoats earn historic win in Houston

Sunday, February 13, 2011

Tiger, Sergio try to settle old scores in Dubai instead of winning event

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The Dubai Desert Classic began with all eyes on the world's top three players: Lee Westwood, Martin Kaymer and Tiger Woods. It was supposed to end with a champion coming from third-round leader Rory McIlroy — or Woods and Sergio Garcia playing together one shot behind. But the star emerged from the supporting cast as Spain's Alvaro Quiros stepped out from the wings into the limelight to claim the $416,000 first prize and the fabulous and priceless giant silver coffee pot.

Quiros's final round of four-under-par 68 took him to a winning total of 11 under par. It wasn't as simple as that though. It never is with the big-hitting Spaniard who has a habit of sprinkling his game with equal measures of genius and garbage. His final round contained an eagle, a hole-in-one and a triple-bogey seven after firing his ball into a palm tree. Quiros posted every number from one to seven apart from a six. His scorecard looked like his cell phone number.

"I was lucky," Quiros said, flashing his trademark smile. "I don't know if it's quite normal to make an eagle at the second hole, birdie on the third, make a seven on a par four then make a hole-in-one and finish suffering to win by one. I don't think many people have been in this situation."

Woods finished with a double bogey for a three-over par 75 to end the tournament tied 20th at four under par. That's only the second time in 24 rounds in Dubai that he has failed to break par and the first time in six visits he has finished outside the top five. His calamitous finale epitomized his roller-coaster week, which included two eagles, 17 birdies, 11 bogeys, three double bogeys, 39 pars and one spit — on the 12th green. Nice. He can expect to find a letter and a fine from the European Tour stuck to his locker when he arrives in Tucson, Ariz., in two weeks for the WGC Accenture Match Play.

"A lot of positives from the week but some glaring examples of what I have to work on," a tired-looking Woods said after his round. "All my old feel is out the window when the wind blows. When it's calm I hit the ball pure. That's the thing about making changes. It'll come. Just need more practice. It's a step in the right direction."

A step in the wrong direction was perhaps the continuation of the feud between Woods and Garcia that peaked at the 2006 British Open. It was at Hoylake that Woods battered Garcia (dressed all in yellow) in the final group to win and then reportedly texted his inner circle, "I just bludgeoned Tweety Pie." The tension between them on the first tee was palpable. Their handshake was of the wet-fish variety, like when two kids caught fighting in the yard are forced to make up and be friends. They headed off down the first fairway 20 yards apart. It set the tone for their round. Not a word was spoken between them for four hours. No chitchat. Nothing. The awkward atmosphere hovered over them like their own personal gray cloud.

Garcia birdied the first and strolled off toward the second tee before Woods had tapped in his par. Gamesmanship perhaps? At the second hole Garcia was so slow and deliberate over every shot he was almost statuesque. Woods clunked a chip, missed a par putt from six-feet and looked hurried and unsettled. A call to prayer drifted across the course as the, ahem, two amigos stood on the third tee. Woods didn't have his answered. He smashed a drive into the right rough. It was all beef but too jerky. A beef jerky drive, if you like. Another missed putt. Another bogey. Can't drive, can't chip, can't putt.

The former World No. 1 was struggling in the gusting wind and clearly irritated by Garcia's seemingly endless twitching and lengthy pre-shot routines. Mind games from Garcia? If so, they were working. Woods was rushing as if to make up time. It took them 51 minutes to play the first four holes, which included a driveable par four and a par three. If they had been any slower they would have been playing backwards. There was no joy in their games and certainly it was painful to watch. This was a personal battle. They clearly have issues. But it was a mistake — by both of them. While they were waging their own little smoldering personal vendetta, the tournament got away from them. Woods and Garcia beat each other up into a stalemate to both finish at four under par.

World No. 1 Lee Westwood refused to do likewise despite finishing double bogey, bogey and tied 15th at five under par.

"My glass is always half full," he said. "I enjoyed playing even though I finished in an ambulance at the end."

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Thorrington's “invaluable” Man Utd experienceTiger makes up no ground in the rain

Marino hangs onto the lead at Pebble

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) — The best break for Steve Marino might have come moments after he finished his round Saturday at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, nowhere near where he had just three-putted from 4 feet for a bogey.

Across the Del Monte Forest, where the crowds gathered in sunshine to watch the celebrity show at Pebble Beach, D.A. Points had a chance to catch Marino atop the leaderboard with a birdie on the par-5 18th. Instead, he couldn't escape a fairway bunker and took bogey, which made a difference in the Sunday pairings.

A big difference.

That final hole is what kept Points and his amateur partner - Bill Murray - from joining Marino in the final group.

"That would have been a trip," Marino said. "I don't know about that."

Despite his struggles on the green, Marino had a 1-over 71 at Monterey Peninsula and had a one-shot lead over Jimmy Walker, who had a 63 at Monterey Peninsula, and Bryce Molder, who had a 68 at Spyglass Hill while playing before a gallery of about a dozen.

Points shot 71 and was another shot behind.

Marino couldn't imagine trying to win his first PGA Tour event while playing alongside the assistant head greenskeeper at Bushwood, the famous role Murray played in "Caddyshack."

What's there to worry about?

All Murray did Saturday was wear an Elmer Fudd hat (to signal that he and Points were in the hunt). As Points faced a short birdie putt on the second hole, Murray offered him a bite of his doughnut if he made it.

Late in the round on the par-3 17th, Murray playfully tossed it to a young girl in the bunker. And after Points made a birdie, Murray and Points held hands and jumped into the bunker.

Welcome to the PGA Tour, Pebble style.

"He gave everybody Ben and Jerry's ice cream bars on 17," Points said. "He did plenty of stuff. It doesn't really bother me. I hope he does it tomorrow. I'll be interested to see what the guys we play with tomorrow feel about it, but it doesn't bother me."

Marino doesn't have to worry about it.

He was at 12-under 202 and will be in the final group with his partner, Irish amateur Dermot Desmond, and Walker.

Molder and amateur Harry You, who have a one-shot lead in the pro-am portion of the tournament, will be in the second-to-last group with Points and Murray, who are one shot behind.

The four players atop the leaderboard have as many PGA Tour victories as Murray, which would be none.

Marino might be the most tested, having lost in a playoff at Colonial a year ago and finishing with one of the best shots of the young season at the Sony Open last month in Honolulu to finish second.

"I felt like I've had the game to win out here for a while," Marino said. "It just hasn't happened. I'm not going to say that I'm due. But I feel like I'm good enough to win on this tour."

Marino was not too bothered by a round that featured a trio of three-putt bogeys, an unplayable lie from a bush and an eagle. He said he hit the ball better than he has all week, but could not get used to the pace of the greens on the Shore course.

"A strange round," he said.

Alex Cejka and Tom Gillis were at 9-under 205, while the group another shot back included J.J. Henry, Kevin Sutherland and Aaron Baddeley. They were the only players in the top 10 on the leaderboard who have won on tour.

Molder has some experience being in contention, although he is trying to bury part of that memory. A year ago at Pebble Beach, he was closing in on the lead when he took a quintuple-bogey 9 on the 14th hole. Two other players also made 9 on that hole, which is quickly growing a reputation as one of the toughest par 5s on tour without a water hazard.

"I don't remember what you're talking about," Molder said with a grin. "You know, all you can do is laugh. I got there this year (on Thursday) and made a mess of it, had a good up-and-down for bogey."

Phil Mickelson moved into contention for a fourth title at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am by making three birdies over his final five holes for a 69. That moved him to 7-under 207, only five shots back going into the final round.

"I thought that the round could have been a lot better, but toward the end ... I probably got as much out of the round as I could have," Mickelson said. "But throughout the course of the day, I had many opportunities to go low and I didn't take advantage of them. I've got to go really low tomorrow to give myself a chance."

That was all Mickelson had time to say. He rushed off to the airport to fly home to San Diego for daughter Sophia's dance recital.

Only three times in the last 20 years has a player won the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am for this first PGA Tour victory, the last one being Arron Oberholser in 2006.

They might not be rookies, but not many of them have been tested.

"I was talking to my coach, and he says, 'Don't do anything different tonight than if you were 50th or missing the cut,'" Walker said.

Marino isn't sure that matters.

"All these guys are good," he said. "Everybody is going to get their experience somewhere, and for some people, it might be tomorrow."

It figures to be crowded Sunday, inside and outside the ropes.

Because the top 20 pro-am teams play the final round, the cut is top 60 and ties. However, 73 players finished at 2-under 212. That includes two-time defending champion Dustin Johnson, who had to make a 3-foot par putt on the 18th at Pebble to make the cut.

David Duval opened his tournament with no birdies and a 77 at Pebble Beach, but he rallies with rounds of 65 and 70 to make it on the number. Perhaps even more impressive was Jeff Maggert, who opened with 75-74 and shot 62 at Monterey Peninsula.

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Goats earn historic win in HoustonBettencourt leads Pebble Beach Invitational

Saturday, February 12, 2011

Blake leads Lehman by shot at Allianz Championship

BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) — A lack of practice didn't hurt Jay Don Blake in his Champions Tour debut this season.

Blake opened with an 8-under 64 at the Allianz Championship on Friday to take a one-stroke lead over Tom Lehman after the first round of the over-50 circuit's first full-field event.

"I'm still trying to knock the icicles off my body from living in Utah," said Blake, who has been busy remodeling his house in St. George. "It's been crazy with how bad the weather's been."

Blake didn't look rusty or frozen in shooting eight birdies in a bogey-free round on the Old Course at Broken Sound. The 60-degree temperatures felt downright balmy and Blake wasn't bothered by the occasional drizzle.

"I felt I kept my composure out there and executed the shots I needed to," said Blake, whose wife, Marci, is his caddy. "You have to make some putts to shoot a round of 64 and I felt like I putted really well."

Lehman had no complaints about his 65 coming off the PGA stop in Phoenix, where he played 54 holes in 29 hours because of bad weather.

"Bogey-free round - pretty stress-free," Lehman said. "There were a lot of good scores. The greens were perfect. The wind wasn't too strong. So if you hit good shots and a few good putts, you could definitely have a good round of golf.

"And I started my round out beautifully. I birdied the first three holes and kind of got the run going right off the bat."

Lehman was in position to tie Blake with a birdie on the par-5 18th, but he hit a short chip about 9 feet past the pin, then missed the putt and settled for a par.

"It was just disappointing to not make a four with such a good tee shot," he said. "Chip on 18 didn't come off the club face like I expected at all. It was a disappointing chip."

Scott Simpson, Peter Senior, Tom Jenkins and Jeff Sluman were tied for third at 6 under.

Simpson, Senior and Jenkins birdied 7 holes and bogeyed one, while Sluman had six birdies.

Defending champion Bernhard Langer shot a 68 to tie for 14th with seven other players. The German had five birdies to offset a bogey on the par-4 fourth.

Olin Browne hit the third hole-in-one in Allianz Championship history, hitting a 6-iron on the 176-yard eighth. He finished with a 69.

Jim Colbert, the winner of 20 senior titles and the 1995 and 1996 Player of the Year, became the ninth player in Champions Tour history to make his 500th start.

"I feel like I have more game now than I had the last few years," said Colbert, who shot a 75. "It's my hobby. I don't do anything else. And I feel like I'm still working at it."



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Ailing back knocks Lovemark out of Pebble

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) — PGA Tour rookie Jamie Lovemark has withdrawn from the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am with a back injury that will keep him out of Riviera next week.

A spokesman for Lovemark says he withdrew Thursday night after opening with an 81. Dave Haggith at IMG says Lovemark intends to have doctors look at his back as a precaution.

Lovemark won the Nationwide Tour money list last year. He had made only one cut in four starts on the PGA Tour, when he tied for 58th at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines two weeks ago.

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Sorenstam makes rare appearance at Pebble BeachNew Yorkers enjoyed authentic “fan fest” experience

Monday, February 7, 2011

U.S. Open field to be determined more on ranking

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — The U.S. Open will rely more on the world ranking than money list in America and Europe to determine which players will be exempt from qualifying.

In sweeping changes to the criteria, the U.S. Golf Association said Saturday that players now will have two chances to crack the top 50 and get into the U.S. Open - on May 23 and June 13, the final ranking before the championship.

Thomas O'Toole, the USGA's chairman of competition, said the change was a "direct response" to last year, when Memorial winner Justin Rose and runner-up Rickie Fowler moved into the top 50 two weeks after the cutoff.

"Our mission is to always provide the most competitive fields for our national championships," O'Toole said.

Two other changes to the criteria are effective for this year's U.S. Open, to be played June 16-19 at Congressional.

-Instead of the top 15 and ties from the 2010 U.S. Open being exempt, it will be the top 10 and ties. O'Toole said players were made aware last year that this would be changed. Among those hurt by the change are Justin Leonard and Ben Curtis.

-The Players Championship winner now will get a three-year exemption instead of a one-year exemption.

The bigger changes involving the world ranking start next year.

For the last decade, players who finished in the top 30 on the PGA Tour money list and the top 15 on the European Tour money list in the previous year were exempt from qualifying for the U.S. Open. Also exempt were the top two on the money list in Australasia and Japan, provided they were in the top 75 in the world. Those exemptions will be eliminated, along with any other reference to a money list.

Instead, the 2012 U.S. Open will take the top 60 - instead of the top 50 - from the world ranking published three weeks before the U.S. Open and the ranking the week of the championship.

Also to be eliminated in 2012 is an exemption for anyone winning multiple PGA Tour events in a 12-month period between U.S. Open. Over the last 10 years, only four players were exempt through multiple wins, and never more than one player per year. Usually, anyone winning twice in a year will qualify some other way.

The U.S. Open prides itself in being the most democratic of all majors because typically about half the field has to go through qualifying. One reason the cutoff for the world ranking being the third week of May was so the USGA would know how many spots would be available in the final stage of 36-hole qualifying.

Now it can assign alternates that would be added to the field depending on how many players cracked the top 50 in the final week.

Meanwhile, the PGA Tour still doesn't lose very much for its members. It managed to keep the FedEx Cup criteria - the 30 players who reach the FedEx Cup finale at the Tour Championship remain exempt for the U.S. Open - and recent years have shown a majority of PGA Tour members in the Nos. 51-60 spots in the world ranking.

The U.S. Women's Open will continue to rely on the LPGA Tour money list, even expanded it for this year from the top 50 to the top 70. This means fewer spots in the 36-hole qualifying, although the Women's Open gets only about 1,000 entries, compared with 9,000 entries for the men's championship.



Nationwide pros seeking PGA Tour spotsQ&A: Bolton midfielder Stuart Holden

Tseng wins Women's Australian Open

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — Taiwan's Yani Tseng successfully defended her Women's Australian Open title, shooting a final-round 2-under 71 Sunday to win by seven strokes.

Tseng finished with a four-round total of 16-under-par 276 on the par-73 Commonwealth Golf Club course.

No. 1-ranked Jiyai Shin was tied for second with two others. Shin shot a final-round 74, level with South Korean Ji Eun-hee (74), and England's Melissa Reid, who shot 68.

Jennifer Song of the United States finished fifth after a 71, nine strokes behind Tseng.

Four-time champion Karrie Webb shot 70 Sunday, 11 behind Tseng. Laura Davies of England shot 74 and finished at 290, 14 strokes behind the winner.



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Gainey, Wilson lead frosty Phoenix Open

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Slugger White only had to look at the temperature gauge in his car to know that a Monday finish was inevitable in the Phoenix Open.

"It's been in the 20s, 25 every morning in my car," said White, the PGA Tour's vice president of rules.

Because of frost and frozen greens, 7 hours, 24 minutes of anticipated playing time was lost Thursday and Friday - after the pro-am and all course activity were wiped out Wednesday at TPC Scottsdale.

"Someone made the comment, 'When can you ever remember' - and I can't - 'did we ever have a Monday finish with no precipitation?'" White said. "I mean, for us to get knocked out for frozen greens just doesn't happen. Frost, yeah. Frost goes away in an hour, hour and a half, and then we can just keep going, we can catch up."

The second round resumed Saturday in 46-degree conditions, the first time in three days the frost-delayed event has started on schedule.

On Friday, play was delayed until just after 11 a.m. - 94 minutes after the scheduled start that was already nearly two hours later than normal. Only half the field finished the first round Thursday after a four-hour morning delay. In announcing the Monday finish, PGA Tour officials said the cut will remain at the top 70 and ties.

"In a perfect world, probably finish Monday, maybe four or five holes, best-case scenario," White said. "So much depends on tomorrow morning and Sunday morning. ... It's unbelievable how frozen these greens get and they just don't thaw out."

It was fitting that a guy called "Tommy Two Gloves" had a share of the lead, not that Tommy Gainey thinks the extra glove really helps in cold conditions.

"I don't necessarily think it's an advantage when it's real cold, and I'll tell you why, because when the temperature started dropping, I mean, my hands, even though I had the gloves on, they were still freezing," Gainey said. "I didn't have much feel in my hands at that time. Wearing a glove or not, it's still freezing, and your hands are feeling kind of numb. And that's the way my hands were feeling, kind of numb."

Gainey and Mark Wilson reached 11 under before second-round play was suspended because of darkness. Wilson played 14 holes, and Gainey finished nine.

On the sunny day, the temperature was 42 when play started, reached 52 and was 48 when play was suspended a little after 6 p.m. If the players started a hole before the suspension, they had the option of finishing it.

Only six players completed the second round and 64 - the entire early wave from the first round - didn't get on the course Friday.

The temperature dropped into the mid 30s overnight, but the frost had cleared by 9:30 a.m. when play resumed. It is supposed to be warmer the next three days, with expected highs of 65 Saturday, 68 Sunday and 73 Monday.

Gainey, a two-time winner last year on the Nationwide Tour, birdied six of the final eight holes to take the first-round lead at 8-under 63, then had four birdies and a bogey on the first nine in the second round.

The 63 was his lowest score on the PGA Tour after missing the cut in his first three events this season. The round also was his first in the 60s this year.

"I've played absolutely terrible," Gainey said. "Right now, I'm starting to hit the ball like I'm supposed to. I'm starting to score. Putts are dropping ... Once the putts start falling, you can shoot an unbelievable low number. It just so happens that I'm making putts right now and I'm tied for the lead."

Wilson opened with a 65 and was 5 under for 14 holes in the second round. He won the Sony Open in Hawaii last month in a 36-hole Sunday finish for his third tour title.

"We're just going to ride this train as long as I can," he said.

Geoff Ogilvy was third at 9 under with two holes left. He's making his first start of the year after gouging his right index finger on a coral reef in Hawaii before the Tournament of Champions. He needed 12 stitches to repair the cut.

Phil Mickelson, on the leaderboard Thursday after a 67, didn't play Friday.

The weather has hurt attendance, with an estimated 74,723 fans attending Friday - down from 101,709 last year. Only 38,323 showed up Thursday, down from 69,475 in 2010.

Admission will be free Monday.



Goats earn historic win in HoustonBjorn takes 1-shot lead at Qatar Masters

Bjorn takes 1-shot lead at Qatar Masters

DOHA, Qatar (AP) — Denmark's Thomas Bjorn shot a 6-under 66 Saturday to take a one-shot lead into the final round of the Qatar Masters.

Bjorn birdied four of the last five holes to finish at 11-under 205. He leads overnight leader Markus Brier, who had a 69. Defending champion Robert Karlsson finished with a 69 and trails the leader by two shots. He had five birdies in six holes to finish with a 31 on the back nine.

Martin Kaymer had a 68 and is 10 shots behind Bjorn. He needs a second-place finish to overtake Lee Westwood at the top of the rankings. Westwood missed the cut on Friday.

Bjorn, who shot a 74 on the opening day before coming back with a 65 on Friday, picked up shots at the first and seventh holes. He added a late birdie spree at the Doha Golf Club.

"When you finish a round with four birdies in the last five, you have to walk off very happy," Bjorn said. "I played fantastic yesterday and felt comfortable this morning."

Austria's Brier was even with Bjorn with a hole to play, but sent his drive right. He needed four to reach the green and two-putted for a bogey on the 18th.

"It was a lot of good things, except the par 5s, which I had two bogeys and two pars," Brier said. "But the rest was really good. Still up there."

South Africa's Thomas Aiken shot a 69 to trail by four shots. England's Richard Finch (71) and 2009 champion Alvaro Quiros of Spain (66) are five shots back.



Poulter takes 2-stroke lead in Hong Kong OpenDynamo turn a corner in tie vs. Crew

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

The world's best players are banned from using rangefinders. Seriously?

Dear USGA,

First, let me say thank you for your good work as guardian of the game. If not for your quick reaction in the 1970s, metal woods might have ruined the game and made 300-yard drives on the PGA Tour as common as halter tops at the Colonial. You stopped long-shafted putters in their tracks too. Well done. The last thing we would want is a bunch of old guys with the yips still playing golf. Big-headed drivers? You were all over that like drool on a baby. Balls that fly farther and straighter? Not on your watch. Square grooves? Hah! You nipped that in the bud.

Anyway, I’m writing to make sure that you’re not going to drop the ball now and allow the use of laser rangefinders or GPS devices in real competitions such as the U.S. Open or on the Tour. Think about it. During practice rounds, every Tour player and his caddie use a rangefinder to measure yardages from every conceivable angle. The lasers are universal. Obviously, that’s why they should continue to be banned.

I know you had to cave to politics a few years ago and approve rangefinders by local rule. (FYI, they were allowed in 49 of 50 state amateur competitions last year—Maryland was the lone holdout.) However, you cleverly disallow them for your serious competitions. I love it that the best golfers in the world, the ones who most need a precise yardage, are the only players who can’t use a rangefinder. That makes perfect sense.

Plus, these intolerable gadgets speed up play, and nobody wants that. Last summer I went to Battle Creek, Mich., to play in a qualifier for the U.S. Mid-Amateur Championship. One of your tournament officials warned my threesome on the 1st tee about slow play. When I asked if we could use rangefinders, he barked, “No!” So our group spent the day at this public track looking for sunken 150- and 200-yard plates, some of which Indiana Jones would’ve had a tough time finding, and then pacing off the distance back to our balls. Instead of getting a laser yardage in three seconds, we ate up precious time. It made me smile.

Last week I talked to a guy who runs a laser rangefinder company, and he said PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem told him that the Tour will never allow rangefinders because, he said, the Tour is in the entertainment business and doesn’t like the way the contraptions look.

I second that emotion. Looks totally matter. If you let pros use lasers, some Facebooking teenager may look up from Call of Duty and see a Tour player on TV wielding a high-tech electronic yardage device. The kid might ­actually get interested in golf, a game he had previously thought of as ­bassackwards, low-tech dumb. That’s exactly what we don’t want, some digitally savvy geeks taking up our game. We have too many golfers already—especially the hacks playing in front of me.

We all know that golf is emerging from an economic slump, but I know why . A few years ago, when the PGA Tour allowed caddies to wear shorts, the golf industry went in the crapper. Coincidence? I think not.

I urge you to stay strong and just say no to rangefinders and GPS devices. I want to play slower. I want inaccurate yardages when I compete on poorly marked courses. I don’t want anything to change in our perfect, technology-free game. Our future is in your hands.

Yours in long pants,

Gary Van Sickle



Report: GM negotiating to sponsor world eventNowak confirms Union in market for players

For decades, 59 was the magic number on Tour. That may be about to change

It is a feat so rare that it can forever define how a player communicates with the outside world. The first man to do it on the PGA Tour, Al Geiberger, has a phone number ending in 5959. The second player to shoot golf’s magic number carries an e-mail prefix of ­ChipBeck59. The fifth and most recent fellow to shoot a 59 on Tour, Stuart Appleby, is researching vanity license plates that will include the score that now defines him. “It is something that follows you forever,” says Geiberger, still spry at age 73. “How many U.S. presidents have there been? [Forty-four.] How many players have won a Masters? [Forty-four.]” Point taken.

The 59 club may be golf’s most exclusive, but in 2010 the number came under siege as never before. Since Geiberger’s Bannister­esque breakthrough in 1977, a 59 had been shot about once a decade: Chip Beck in ’91, David Duval in ’99, Paul Goydos in July 2010. But it was only 24 days after Goydos’s 59 that Appleby shot his, ending a torrid stretch in which three other Tour players fired 60s and Ryo Ishikawa shot a 58 on the Japanese PGA Tour. For more than 30 years the 59 has been golf’s ultimate symbol of mastery, even as the game’s equipment, playing fields and athletes have evolved dramatically. Last year’s barrage of crazy-low scores raises the question: Is a 59 still a 59?

Geiberger’s historic achievement came during the second round of the Danny Thomas Memphis Classic. It was played under lift, clean and place, not because of rain but because of Colonial Country Club’s spotty fairways. “What grass there was was new and tight, and it was hard to find a place to get a really good lie,” Geiberger wrote in his book Tempo . He was 39 and nearing the end of a productive Tour career that would see him win 11 times, including the 1966 PGA Championship. He went to Memphis having missed the cut in his previous two tournaments, one by a lone stroke after he blew a three-footer on the 36th hole. He was so discouraged that he didn’t touch a club during the week before Memphis. But once he showed up, his caddie, Lee Lynch, gave him a putting tip, and Geiberger felt a little surge of confidence during the first round.

He began the second round on the back nine. Geiberger birdied two of his first four holes, and then on number 14 he was standing over an eight-footer for birdie when a fire truck roared by. He backed off but then missed the putt, and smoke was pouring out of his ears as he idled on the tee of the 15th hole, a 200-yard par-3. Geiberger was known as Skippy for the peanut-butter sandwiches he was always eating on the course; on the 15th tee a friend handed him five peanut-butter crackers, and thus fortified, he laced a three-iron to 15 feet and made the putt. Birdies at the next three holes followed, and Geiberger made the turn in 30. On number 1, a 582-yard par-5, he holed a 30-yard pitch for an eagle. Geiberger was aware that the Tour record for most under-par holes in a row was eight and matching that feat was his consuming thought as he rolled in an 18-footer on the 2nd and a 20-footer on the 3rd. The streak ended on the next hole, a par-4, where Geiberger missed a 13-footer. He suddenly felt drained—by the June heat and the intensity with which he had been pursuing the record. Geiberger parred number 5 and remained at 10 under par with four to play. He needed three more birdies to shoot 59, but that was not yet on his mind. To that point there had been seven rounds of 60 in Tour history but none since Sam Snead’s in 1957. No, Geiberger was simply hoping to match his career low of 61, shot in a casual round at La Cumbre Country Club, his home course in Santa Barbara, Calif.

On Colonial’s 6th hole Geiberger split the fairway with a three-wood, knocked a pitching wedge to 13 feet and made the putt. (For the day he hit every fairway and green.) His gallery had been steadily growing throughout the round, and when the birdie putt disappeared, a chant suddenly rang out: “Fif-ty nine! Fif-ty nine! Fif-ty nine!” Says Geiberger, “On the 6th tee the crowd was still going crazy, and I thought, What the hell have I gotten myself into? Holy criminy, what do I do now? I honestly thought about making a bogey to release the tension.” Instead he thought of his former coach at USC, Stan Wood. “Mentally, how do you let yourself go lower? I can’t explain it,” Geiberger says. “I’m not sure I even understand it. Sometimes you have to play tricks on yourself. So I decided I’d play the last three holes for Coach Wood. He had always told me I needed to be more aggressive on the course. So I decided that’s how I’d play the last three holes. If I screwed up, it would be his fault, not mine.”

On the par-5 7th hole Geiberger produced three textbook shots and nailed a nine-footer for birdie. Twelve under par. On the long par-4 8th hole, his five-iron came up 20 feet short and he missed the putt. So it all came down to number 9, a 403-yard par-4, dogleg left. Geiberger took a fearless line off the tee and flew the bunker on the inside of the dogleg. (Minus the adrenaline, he landed in the trap in each of the next two rounds.) From 122 yards he smoothed a three-quarter nine-iron eight feet left of the hole. The event was not televised, but a local TV crew filmed Geiberger’s final hole. He says the tape was destroyed in a fire, and he has never seen footage of himself draining the putt. But it lives in his mind’s eye: “Uphill, a little left to right. It dove right in the center. What a great feeling!” Geiberger won without shooting a round in the 60s (72-59-72-70).

The set of mostly Spalding clubs Geiberger used are as outdated as black-and-white TV. His highest lofted wedge was 56 degrees. His steel driver shaft was 431/2 inches long—now they’re two to three inches longer—with a little wooden head. “I don’t even know the loft,” he says. “We never talked about that stuff. If I had to guess, I’d say nine degrees.” During his 59 Geiberger used the same Ben Hogan brand balata ball for all 18 holes. “Boy, did that thing get up in the air and spin,” he says, not entirely fondly.

Fourteen years later Beck was using the same model of ball. The vagaries of the manufacturing process were such that he carried a metal ring and would test the roundness of every ball. A surprisingly high number didn’t pass muster. Beck’s Ping driver had a metal head and a steel shaft one quarter of an inch longer than Geiberger’s. Beck was carrying an old-school one-iron but also a 60-degree lob wedge, a game changer that had been popularized in the 1980s. In Beck’s mind the biggest technological advance he benefited from was the frequency-matched shafts in his Hogan Apex irons. “Early in my career I was using a regular women’s shaft and didn’t even know it,” says Beck, who reached the Tour in 1979, the year of Geiberger’s final victory.

By 1990 Beck had become one of the top Americans, winning three times and taking the Vardon Trophy for lowest scoring average on Tour in ’88. Earnest and relentlessly positive, he emerged as an unlikely team leader during the combative 1991 Ryder Cup at Kiawah Island, where he scored a crucial singles victory over Ian Woosnam, who at the time was No. 1 in the World Ranking. A week and a half later Beck turned up for the Las Vegas Invitational, which was contested on three courses. On the 1st hole he fatted a seven-iron to the front of the green and then canned the ensuing 60-footer. “Kiawah was such a grueling week, with all that pressure and that brutal course,” says Beck, 54. “I was pretty beat up when I got to Las Vegas. Making that putt put me in such a good frame of mind, and that lasted the whole week.”

For his third round Beck journeyed to Sunrise Golf Club, which had opened a mere 10 months earlier. Its generous fairways were lined by saplings and a five o’clock shadow of rough. At 6,914 yards Sunrise was more than three football fields shorter than the layout Geiberger had torched. “All week long there had been talk that someone might shoot a 59 there,” Beck recalls. He got a jump on it with an opening 29, having begun the round on the 10th tee. For Beck the key moment was not one of the seven birdies but the 20-foot par putt he rattled in on 16.

At the turn an ESPN camera crew picked up Beck. A warm breeze blew in, and the greens began to get dry and crusty. “The putting surfaces were so much more challenging back then,” says Beck. “It was the era of hand mowers and metal spikes. On the back nine the ball was bouncing on every putt.”

Still, he holed three birdie putts on the first six holes of his second nine. Beck needed to birdie the final three holes, and like Geiberger before him, he let his mind wander. “I started thinking about the money,” he says. At the start of the ’91 season a $1 million bonus was being offered to any golfer who shot a 59. “Back then that was a lot of money,” Beck says with a laugh. Half of the dough had to be earmarked for charity, and that was what Beck really lusted for because he and his wife, Karen, had recently started a charitable foundation. The feeling of playing for something larger quieted Beck’s nerves.

He reached the par-5 7th with a 227-yard two-iron and two-putted for birdie. Then he got a break on the par-3 8th when his leaky tee ball, with a five-iron, bounced off a greenside mound to within eight feet. Beck shook in the putt. After a perfect drive on the 9th hole Beck had 157 yards left and only one swing thought: Hole it! Seriously. “I didn’t want to have a putt that meant so much,” he says. His eight-iron was brilliant but not quite perfect, leaving a 31/2-footer. Sure enough, two spike marks were in his line. “If I hit my putt where I wanted to, it looked as if my ball would get pushed slightly to the right of one of the spike marks and catch the right side of the hole.” That is precisely what happened. “Oh, baby!” hollered Beck, who just like that was $1 million to the good.

The comparisons to Geiberger’s 59 were immediate and generally unflattering, given that the first had been shot on one of the Tour’s toughest tracks. Beck was never bothered. “A 59 is a 59 is a 59,” he says. “But it’s fun for fans to compare them. And if you ask me, I think David’s is the best.”

Duval had won eight times in the preceding 15 months when he arrived at the 1999 Bob Hope Classic, but he still lacked a signature victory. This was early-period Duval, when he was a taciturn enigma hiding behind wraparound sunglasses. The final round of that Hope was an unlikely Sunday for a defining performance—Duval was seven strokes off the lead as he teed it up on the 6,950-yard Palmer Private course at PGA West, a quirky layout with five par-5s and five par-3s. While Geiberger and Beck both holed a number of mid-range putts, Duval’s 59 was a monument to ballstriking. He birdied the first three holes, knocking it stiff each time. In the middle of his round Duval became even more precise, hitting a pitching wedge to four feet on the 11th hole and a six-iron to two feet on the 12th. That brought him to eight under par, and Duval never took his foot off the gas. On the par-3 15th hole he stuck his eight-iron a foot from the hole. “It was an easy 59,” Jeff Maggert, one of Duval’s playing partners, would later say. “I’ve never seen anyone hit the ball that close for an entire round. It was sort of like a no-hitter. I didn’t want to say the wrong thing. Finally, [on 15] after he stiffed it for the fourth straight time on a par-3, I said, ‘I didn’t realize we were playing par-2s today.’&nbsp”

On the par-4 16th Duval stuffed a sand wedge to six inches. “It helped me that this happened when I was trying to win,” he says. “I didn’t think about my score until I got to 11 under, on the 16th hole. I simply kept trying to make more birdies.”

These first fleeting thoughts of a 59 temporarily sidetracked Duval, as he produced a so-so nine-iron on the par-3 17th and then missed the 20-footer. So to attain golf’s magic number, he needed an eagle on 18, a watery par-5. Duval began by smashing a 320-yard tee ball, using his 6.5-degree Titleist 975D driver with a 44-inch shaft. From 226 yards he flushed a five-iron that cozied to within six feet of the hole. If he made the putt, Duval would be in a great position to win the tournament, but he admitted, “I was more excited about the score than having the chance to win. The 59 was first and foremost in my mind.” He made the putt and then loosed a series of uppercuts, the most passionate, spontaneous display of emotion in a career that includes a win at the 2001 British Open. None of the players behind him could match Duval’s torrid pace, and his 59 stood up for a rousing comeback victory, which explains Beck’s (and others’) affection for the round.

Doing it on Sunday certainly earns Duval bonus points, but he did enjoy certain advantages over Geiberger and Beck, notably the absence of spiked-up greens and scrubby fairways. Duval did not have to deal with oppressive Memphis heat or the weight of a much ballyhooed $1 million bonus. His tools were significantly better too. He was playing a Titleist Professional 90 wound ball, which was significantly longer than the balatas used by Geiberger and Beck. At 260 cubic centimeters Duval’s titanium-faced driver was larger and much hotter than his predecessors’. This was the dawn of the launch-monitor era, and Duval was able to scientifically identify the perfect lightweight graphite shaft to max out his driver’s efficiency. Yet 11 months shy of the turn of the century, golf’s equipment possibilities were not yet fully realized. A year and a half after Duval’s 59, solid-core balls would begin to spread on Tour, a revolution that was comparable in importance to the transition from hickory shafts to steel.

Driver heads would balloon to their current maxed-out size of 460 cc. The power game that had first been glimpsed with the ascendency of Duval and Tiger Woods would sweep the sport. The game was changing, but how much so wouldn’t be obvious until the end of the aughts.

On May 2, 2010, Ryo Ishikawa, then 18, shot a final-round 58 to win the Crowns tournament in Japan. (He missed a 15-footer on the final green for a 57.) It was a stunning achievement but instantly dismissed by some because Nagoya Golf Club was a mere 6,545 yards and played to a par of 70.

Two months later Paul Goydos turned up for the John Deere Classic, a few weeks removed from his 46th birthday. He was in his 18th season on Tour, having earned only two victories but a lot of admirers with his glib sensibilities and throwback, ball-control game. Goydos turned pro two years before Beck’s 59, and his configuration of TaylorMade clubs was a testament to how much the game had changed: Whereas Beck carried a one-iron, Goydos had nothing lower than a four. He carried (and still does) two hybrids, two wedges and a driver with a 441/2-inch shaft. For his 59 he used a Titleist Pro V1, the gold standard of solid-core balls, which was introduced in October 2000.

Goydos had little reason to feel optimistic about his chances at the Deere—he had missed the cut in six of his 13 previous starts. The 7,257-yard, par-71 TPC Deere Run had been softened by rain, leading to lift, clean and place. Goydos caught another break; he was sent off in the second group of the day, on flawless greens. He birdied two of the first four holes and then made a key par at the 5th. Goydos is old enough to have learned the game before square grooves were popularized. Last year he was happy to go back to the less aggressive grooves because “the flyer helps you sometimes.” On the 5th hole he hit a “really dumb” drive into the right rough. He had 160 yards to the flag. “With square grooves I couldn’t have gotten a seven-iron to the green. With the V-grooves I caught a flyer and knocked it on.” He salvaged a par, then birdied the next two holes with 40 feet of putts, making the turn in four-under 31.

And then all heaven broke loose: eight birdies on the back nine, including the final three holes. Goydos’s shotmaking included a “chippy” 102-yard nine-iron on 10 and an adrenaline-fueled 173-yard seven-iron on the 18th to seven feet. “I played good and shot 59,” Goydos said, “but I could have played good and shot 65. There’s something going on that’s maybe a little unexplainable.” Actually, it was quantifiable: For the day he made 1871/2 feet of putts. (Duval needed barely a third of that.) Goydos’s 13 holed putts of longer than five feet tied the most for any player in any round since the arrival of ShotLink in 2003.

“It always comes down to the putting, doesn’t it?” says Geiberger, momentarily overlooking Duval’s 59.

Goydos said he was speechless to have shot such an iconic number, but the euphoria was diminished somewhat when he showed up for his second round to find himself four strokes out of the lead. That’s because a few hours after Goydos’s 59, Steve Stricker had fired a 60 and just kept going.

On July 8, 2010, Goydos and Stricker navigated a legit PGA Tour course in a combined 119 strokes; then the levee broke.

Sixteen days later Carl Pettersson shot a 60 at the Canadian Open that included a bogey on the 2nd hole and a 30-footer on the last that grazed the cup. Six days after that, at the Irish Open, Ross Fisher needed two birdies on his final four holes to become the first player to shoot 59 on the European tour, but he parred in. The next day two more players took a run at 59 at the PGA Tour’s Greenbrier Classic, played in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., on the 7,020-yard, par-70 Old White course. D.A. Points was 10 under par standing on the tee of the par-5 17th hole, but he made a soul-crushing bogey and settled for 61. J.B. Holmes shot a 60 that included a bogey on the 3rd hole, a lipped-out three-footer for birdie on 11 and a missed 10-footer for eagle on 17. Afterward he said, “Oh, yeah, there’s definitely a 59 out there.”

The following day Stuart Appleby made Holmes a prophet. The round fell into the familiar pattern: a hot start (28 on the par-34 front nine), a crucial mid-round burst (eagle at 12), a little lull as he contemplated the magnitude of the opportunity (pars on 13 through 15) and then a heroic finishing flourish (birdies on 16, 17 and 18). Like Duval, Appleby’s 59 resulted in a one-stroke victory. He was asked if it was any less special as the first 59 to come on a par-70. “Look, I’ll debate it with you,” he said. “It is a number. I shot that number. Who says par is supposed to be 72?”

For Appleby the key blow was his eagle on the 568-yard 12th, which he reached with a four-iron despite clipping a tree with his drive. (Duval laid up on four of his five par-5s.) Appleby is more of a power player than Geiberger or Beck or Goydos, but he’s hardly an animal off the tee. Still, Appleby rendered Old White defenseless. On the 440-yard 2nd hole he hit a nine-iron to 11 feet. On the 445-yard 16th he hit a “punchy” eight-iron to 15 feet. “Benign” was the word he used to describe the course.

The lengthening of classic tracks for major championships gets a lot of attention, but other Tour venues have not grown fast enough to keep up with advances in equipment, agronomy and fitness. Appleby, Duval and Beck shot 59s on courses that were shorter than Geiberger’s, while Goydos’s was basically the identical yardage. “In my day a 450-yard par-4 was a monster,” says Beck. “It was something to be feared. Now that hole is driver-wedge.” Appleby doesn’t disagree. “When I showed up on Tour [in ’96], there was long and very long, and I was long. Now there’s long, very long and oh-my-God.”

In addition to a shrinking playing field, the modern pro also has a lot more help to fine-tune his performance. On his payroll Appleby has a swing coach, a sports psychologist, a personal trainer and an osteopath. How big was Geiberger’s entourage? “Me, myself and I,” he says with a laugh. “Now it’s a team sport.”

Yet 59 retains its aura. But for how long? Goydos is not an alarmist. “I think we’re going through a phase—especially last year, the weather was so good,” he says. “We’ll see how things go this year. Golf courses aren’t getting any easier. I think the players are getting better. But no, I think it’s a pretty cool number. I don’t see an outbreak of 59s anytime soon.”

Beck has a different take. “It amazes me that no one has shot 58 on the PGA Tour,” he says. “It will happen. Soon. And I expect we’ll see more 59s too. The courses simply can’t contain these guys anymore.”

As more players reach the 50s, does it devalue the accomplishment? “I don’t think so,” says Geiberger, who is still widely referred to as Mr. 59. “It’s fun for those of us who have already done it. It calls attention to our accomplishment and makes us relevant to a different generation of fans and reporters.”

Indeed, it is left to the rest of us to debate the merits of the 59s and attach a larger meaning to them. For the five men who have shot that number on Tour, doing so remains an intensely personal experience. Near the end of a long interview Geiberger drifted into a dreamy reverie. “I was out of my mind,” he said softly. “I’d have to say it was the best four hours of my life.”



Goydos shoots 59 in John Deere’s opening round