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Sunday, December 1, 2013

勇太、強行スケジュールも20位タイ発進「今日は練習ラウンド」




2011年08月18日18時52分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -6
S・コンラン -6
3 白 佳和 -5
武藤 俊憲 -5
5 M・ママット -4
吉永 智一 -4
小平智 -4
C・プラポール -4
9 谷口 徹 -3
N・ベーシック -3


順位の続きを見る





2番はティショットを左に曲げ、赤杭の中へ。ドロップして3打目(撮影:上山敬太)











<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部を舞台に開幕した、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の初日。先週の「全米プロゴルフ選手権」で日本勢でただ1人予選を突破、火曜日に帰国し強行スケジュールでこの試合に臨んでいる池田勇太が1アンダー20位タイとまずまずのスタートを切った。

【関連リンク】池田勇太の今季成績をチェック!

 池田は出だしの2番でティショットのミスからボギーとするが、5番で約2メートルのバーディパットを沈めたのを皮切りに3連続バーディを奪取。9番パー5でも2オンに成功、惜しくはイーグルは逃したが、きっちりバーディを奪い4アンダーで折り返す。後半も10番でバーディを奪取、13番はボギーを叩いたものの、続く14番で取り返す。

 しかし、15番でここまでの良い流れが一転する。「右の木にぶつかって入ってしまったらしいので、仕方がない」ティショットが痛恨のOBとなるとこのホールダブルボギー。気持ちを切り替え、17番ではバーディを奪取するも、最終18番ではティショットを池に落としてしまい、2つ目のダブルボギー。スコアを1アンダーまで落としホールアウトした。

 「体は重いし、睡眠もとれていない。この暑さだから体もしんどいと思う」と強行スケジュールがたたり、万全とはいえない体調の池田。しかし、「体が動かないのに、よくアンダーパーで回れた」とスコアには納得といった様子だ。この日はティショットのミスでスコアを崩したが、そこが修正できれば十分に上を狙える状況。「今日は練習ラウンド。明日から3日間が本番だと思ってやりますよ」上々の位置で練習ラウンドを終えた池田が、2連勝へ向けギアを上げていく。

【初日の結果】
1位T:チョ・ミンギュ(-6)
1位T:スティーブン・コンラン(-6)
3位T:白佳和(-5)
3位T:武藤俊憲(-5)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-4)
5位T:吉永智一(-4)
5位T:小平智(-4)
5位T:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)
9位T:谷口徹(-3)
9位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-3)
11位T:塚田好宣(-2)他8名
20位T:池田勇太(-1)他9名

武藤俊憲、後半怒涛の5バーディ!「ドライバーが気持ちよく振れた」




2011年08月18日19時05分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -6
S・コンラン -6
3 白 佳和 -5
武藤 俊憲 -5
5 M・ママット -4
吉永 智一 -4
小平智 -4
C・プラポール -4
9 谷口 徹 -3
N・ベーシック -3


順位の続きを見る





久々の好発進を見せた武藤俊憲(撮影:上山敬太)






<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県の小野ゴルフ倶楽部を舞台に開幕した、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の初日。スティーブン・コンラン(オーストラリア)とチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)の海外勢が6アンダーで首位。1打差の3位タイには武藤俊憲白佳和が入った。

【関連リンク】勇太、強行スケジュールも20位タイ発進「今日は練習ラウンド」

 武藤は前半でスコアを1つ伸ばして折り返すと、後半で爆発。10番バーディ後、13番から3連続バーディ、最終18番もセカンドショットを1メートルにつけバーディ締め。首位と1打差の5アンダーと絶好のスタートを切った。

 「久しぶりにドライバーが気持ちよく振れた」フェアウェイが狭くティショットに苦戦する選手が多い中、安定したショットでバーディを量産。「気分転換に、ドライバーをR11からバーナーに変更したのがバッチリ合った」とクラブ変更が奏功したようだ。明日からについては、「これから徐々に上に上がれたらいいですね」と笑顔で抱負を語った。

 武藤は08年、09年とトータルドライビング1位に輝いたドライバー巧者。飛んで曲がらないティショットを武器に09年の「The Championship by LEXUS」以来となるツアー通算4勝目を狙う。

【初日の結果】
1位T:チョ・ミンギュ(-6)
1位T:スティーブン・コンラン(-6)
3位T:白佳和(-5)
3位T:武藤俊憲(-5)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-4)
5位T:吉永智一(-4)
5位T:小平智(-4)
5位T:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)
9位T:谷口徹(-3)
9位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-3)
11位T:塚田好宣(-2)他8名
20位T:池田勇太(-1)他9名

首位は海外勢、期待の若手・小平智が2打差5位タイ発進




2011年08月18日19時19分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 チョ・ ミンギュ -6
S・コンラン -6
3 白 佳和 -5
武藤 俊憲 -5
5 M・ママット -4
吉永 智一 -4
小平智 -4
C・プラポール -4
9 谷口 徹 -3
N・ベーシック -3


順位の続きを見る





首位タイ発進のチョ・ミンギュ(撮影:上山敬太)








もっと写真を見る(7)




<関西オープン 初日◇18日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県の小野ゴルフ倶楽部を舞台に開幕した、国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」は初日の競技を終了。スティーブン・コンラン(オーストラリア)とチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)の海外勢が6アンダーで首位に立った。1打差の3位には武藤俊憲ら2選手。2打差5位タイグループには新鋭・小平智ら5選手がつけている。

【関連リンク】勇太、強行スケジュールも20位タイ発進「今日は練習ラウンド」

 首位に立ったチョ・ミンギュは「アイアンが良かったです」と好調のショットを武器に8バーディ・2ボギーの6アンダーで首位タイ。「小野ゴルフ倶楽部はティショットが一番重要。フェアウェイだったら良いスコアが出るけど、曲がったら難しい」と明日も丁寧なゴルフを心がけて、初優勝を狙いに行く。

 小平はアマチュアだった昨年、チャレンジトーナメント「鳩山カントリークラブ・GMAチャレンジトーナメント」で優勝。昨年末にプロ宣言し、今季からツアーに参戦している。1イーグル・3バーディ・1ボギーの4アンダー発進に「久々に自分の納得のいくゴルフができました」と満足げなコメント。昨年ブレイクした薗田峻輔とは同学年で「峻輔をみて、俺にもできるんじゃないかと思った」という期待の若手が真夏の大会をさらに熱く盛り上げてくれそうだ。

【初日の結果】
1位T:チョ・ミンギュ(-6)
1位T:スティーブン・コンラン(-6)
3位T:白佳和(-5)
3位T:武藤俊憲(-5)
5位T:マーダン・ママット(-4)
5位T:吉永智一(-4)
5位T:小平智(-4)
5位T:チャワリット・プラポール(-4)
9位T:谷口徹(-3)
9位T:ネベン・ベーシック(-3)
11位T:塚田好宣(-2)他8名
20位T:池田勇太(-1)他9名

「関西オープン」2日目スタート!武藤俊憲が首位タイに




2011年08月19日11時25分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 N・ベーシック -13
2 チョ・ ミンギュ -9
3 武藤 俊憲 -8
4 吉永 智一 -6
M・ママット -6
白 佳和 -6
7 田保 龍一 -5
8 星野 英正 -4
ドンファン -4
10 小泉 洋人 -3


順位の続きを見る


<関西オープン 2日目◇19日◇小野ゴルフ倶楽部(6,929ヤード・パー71)>

 兵庫県にある小野ゴルフ倶楽部を舞台に開催中の国内男子ツアー「関西オープンゴルフ選手権」の2日目がスタート。初日、日本人最高位の3位タイに立った武藤俊憲が、13ホールを消化し、トータル8アンダーまでスコアを伸ばし首位タイに立っている。

 INコースからスタートした武藤は出だしはスコアカード通りのプレー。14番で初バーディを奪取すると、16番でもバーディを奪取。昨日はこのINコースで5バーディと爆発したが、この日はティショットがフェアウェイをとらえられない場面も目立った。初日よりもさらに重くなったグリーンに苦しんだが、後半の2番でも3つ目のバーディを奪っている。

 初日首位のスティーブン・コンラン(オーストラリア)とチョ・ミンギュ(韓国)は午後組でのスタート。「全米プロゴルフ選手権」から強行日程で本大会に挑み、初日1アンダー20位タイとまずまずのスタートを切った池田勇太は12時24分にスタートする予定。

Friday, October 11, 2013

Lateral Hazard: Tiger Woods' climb back to No. 1 ranks as one of his greatest accomplishments


Lateral Hazard: Tiger Woods' climb back to No. 1 ranks as one of his greatest accomplishments











Brian Murphy March 25, 2013 4:17 PMYahoo Sports




Like most of a fascinated sports world, I waited patiently for Tiger Woods to grant his post-Bay Hill victory interview on The Golf Channel on Monday. It took him about 15 seconds to get to Steve Sands for the greenside chat, and I imagine that's because he told Sands: "Hang on, Sandsy. Let me slip on this giant foam finger that reads 'I'M NUMBER ONE,' flash it toward the haters, the press and the haters in the press and I'll get right to you."

Holy smokes. Tiger Woods just accomplished one of the greatest feats of his career.

Right next to winning four consecutive majors from 2000-01, right next to winning six consecutive U.S. Junior Amateurs and U.S. Amateurs, right next to 77 PGA Tour wins by age 37, I'll put "The Long Climb Back" on Tiger's all-time ledger. By winning at Bay Hill on Monday, Tiger Woods is No. 1 in the world again – for the first time since October 2010, for the first time since falling to No. 58 in the world, and for the first time since his cloak of invincibility disappeared with a public fall from grace.

And right next to that statistical fact – Numero Uno says the computer – I'd put perhaps an even more important, less numerically definable achievement: The Reclaiming of The Aura.

[Related: Tiger Woods wins at Bay Hill, regains world No. 1 ranking | Slideshow]

It's taken six wins in his last 20 PGA Tour starts, it's taken the miracle resurrection of a putter last seen in George W. Bush's first term, and it's taken the convenient digression of Rory McIlroy's career arc, but Tiger is back to being, well, Tiger.

By that, I mean The Big Kahuna, El Grande Queso, His Tigerness. No, he doesn't need to win a major to regain his status as the Elvis Presley/Mick Jagger/Jay-Z of golf. He's back in players' heads already, back rattling their comfort zones, back to the point where his name on the leader board causes bouts of gastric discomfort among the field.

Surely, you saw Justin Rose on Saturday throw four bogeys on his back nine to cough up an afternoon lead and hand the 54-hole lead to Tiger. Surely, you saw Rickie Fowler rinse two golf balls and post a snowman on the 16th hole Monday when he had crept within two shots of Tiger.





View gallery.

Woods has six wins in his past 20 PGA Tour starts. (AP)And surely you saw this quote from Keegan Bradley, a player you'd think was so young and so free of Tiger-issued scar tissue that he'd represent the new breed of challenger: "I feel like this is the Tiger I grew up watching."



Heavenly choirs and Bach sonatas could never sound as beautiful to Tiger Woods than those words from one of the poster boys of the next generation. It's the best of all possible worlds for Tiger. He spent the past 15 years obliterating one generation of golfers, only to fall on his face in humiliating fashion, opening the door for the Rory-Keegan-Rickie generation to charge in, carrying the "If It's Too Loud/You're Too Old" flag for the new millennium.

And they tried to do their parts, really. Rory won those two majors in historic style, and ascended to the top rung. Keegan even won a major and became a star. But now, over the course of three years, and with – as Tiger said on Monday after his win – "hard work and patience," those time-tested virtues, he's right back in their faces. He's their childhood TV idol, in the flesh and in a red shirt. He's a mythical figure, now very real trying to take what they thought could be theirs: victory and glory.

From 2010-12, things were different. Tiger had lost his aura. Tiger had lost his putter. Tiger had lost his health. Tiger's personal life was a mess. Rory was the new star. Everybody saw it, everybody said it. Johnny Miller said it. Nick Faldo said it. Any number of scribes, including yours truly, said it.

But things change. Putting mechanics get fixed. Young stars change golf clubs for big money. Knees heal up. New love and emotional security blossoms. Time marches on. The present is ever fluid, ever ripe for a new moment. Tiger seized on this Zen philosophy, got better, got fixed and created a new narrative.

The future is so tantalizing, so fun to ponder. Miller wondered on The Golf Channel if being relieved of the No. 1 spot will "free" McIlroy, will allow him to play unburdened. Some still wonder if Tiger can win a major now, given the obvious self-imposed pressure he places on himself to topple Jack Nicklaus. Some wonder if Tiger is a "horse for a course," meaning his wins at Torrey Pines and Doral and Bay Hill are as much about familiarity and muscle memory as anything else, that doing it at Merion's U.S. Open is a different deal.

[Related: What has happened in the world since Tiger Woods was last ranked No. 1]

Well, if Tiger is a "horse for a course," Augusta National is a familiar paddock. We'll see him there next, on Thursday, April 11, for the first round. You'll recognize him. He'll be the No. 1-ranked player in the world, playing like it, acting like it and, best of all, knowing that everybody knows it.

SCORECARD OF THE WEEK

65-72-70-70 – 11-under 277, Justin Rose, second place, Arnold Palmer Invitational, Bay Hill GC, Orlando, Fla.

In three stroke-play events on the PGA Tour this year, Rose has a tie four fourth (Honda), tie for eighth (Doral) and now a first-place medal in the Bay Hill "Non-Tiger Flight." What to make of this intriguing 32-year-old Englishman who looms as a dark horse at Augusta National in two weeks? That is, if the No. 3-ranked player in the world can fairly be called a dark horse.

Just last year, Rose finished top-10 at both the Masters and the PGA Championship, although he remains major-less in his career, despite eight wins in America and Europe since turning pro in 1998. He's won Jack's Memorial, last year's Doral and a FedEx Cup playoff event, so he doesn't shy away from the big stage.

But to see Rose pin those four bogeys on the board on Saturday's back nine, and to see him putt the ball – not always pretty – is to wonder if this red-hot player with a world of talent can be the man to wear green one day soon.

His ball-striking and driving of the golf ball remains among the best on tour, and his gentlemanly ways have earned him many a friend in the press tent. Plus, he's playing dynamite golf so far this year. Justin Rose remains a hot name to watch, but frustrating in some ways, as well.

MULLIGAN OF THE WEEK





View gallery.

Rickie Fowler made a charge at Woods in the final round at Bay Hill. (AP)Didn't have to dig too deep for this week's Mully o' the Week. There stood Rickie Fowler, 24 years old and still in search of a career-defining moment. Paired with Tiger Woods in the final twosome at Bay Hill, Fowler had to fight many things – Tiger's otherworldly record with a 54-hole lead, Tiger's "home course" factor, Fowler's own nerves and the searing memory of his last final-round, last-group pairing with Tiger at the 2012 Memorial, where Fowler shot – cough, cough – an 84.



Yes, I wrote it. Eighty-four.

And after playing level par through eight holes while Tiger played the holes in 2-under, it appeared Fowler would slowly fade away, wearing another uninspiring performance when he had a chance to inspire.

But! The orange-slacked wonder stood up! He made birdie on No. 9. And on No. 12. And on No. 14. And when he and Tiger traded bogeys on the 15th hole, Fowler came to the 16th hole only two strokes down, with a real chance for drama. Plus, Tiger drove into a fairway bunker at No. 16. If Fowler could make eagle from the fairway on the very eagle-able 16th hole, Bay Hill would rattle with roars of a challenge.

[Related: Tiger Woods nearly holes 73-foot putt on 72nd hole]

Except … from the fairway, 180 yards out, Fowler dunked his shot in the water hazard. Wet. Cue sad trombone.

But don't put that trombone away. He rinsed a second ball, too. He'd make triple-bogey eight on one of the Florida Swing's easiest holes. Cue sad trombone again.

Since we all like Rickie Fowler, and we all like his "I'm Goin' Flat Bills" chorus in the very fun Golf Boys video, and since the young Californian would benefit so much from a smack-down with Tiger, let's go back out to No. 16, relax Rickie with a chorus of some Golf Boys tunes in his head and … give that orange-slacked man a mulligan!

BROADCAST MOMENT OF THE WEEK

"He needs a tree iron." – Bill Kratzert, The Golf Channel, as Sergio Garcia pondered a shot in between the limbs.

Rimshot! Pretty good line from Kratzert as a surreal three-minute span of video played out early Sunday at Bay Hill. Sergio Garcia's tee shot on the 10th hole, incredibly, nestled in a tree. Perhaps more incredibly, it rested in full sight from the ground, at the base of three limbs.





View gallery.

Sergio Garcia hit a daring shot from the trees in the final round.And perhaps most incredibly, Sergio went up, up, up into the tree – and played a golf shot.



It took El Nino in El-Tree-o about two minutes to figure out the best way to straddle the limbs and make a pass at it, and if you ever doubted Garcia's ability to best figure out how to hit a golf shot in a maze of thick tree limbs after climbing the tree while wearing expensive slacks, you've been selling the Spaniard short.

Sports hadn't seen such a dramatic tree climb since Ahmad Abdul Rahim of "The Bad News Bears" took refuge in the branches after dropping fly balls, only to be talked down by Walter Matthau's Buttermaker.

Garcia wasn't pouting like Ahmad, though. He was there to hit a sweet golf shot. Sergio looked at his golf ball's lie through different stances, different angles, different swing thoughts, all the while eight feet off the ground. Incredibly, the shot he decided on featured him facing away from the ball, hitting a wedge with one hand, backward – cleanly and purely, on to the fairway, as the gallery roared its respect for the wizardry.

[Related: Watch: Eight is great | Watch: Snead record next]

As if to punctuate the madness of the scene, Sergio then leaped down from the tree, like un gato. Someone on The Golf Channel cracked that he earned a "9.8 for the dismount."

Sadly, Garcia made a double-bogey six on the hole, and then announced his withdrawal when the storm hit, citing an Achilles injury. In truth, he had to W/D. After all, how could he top "The Lay Up From the Limbs"? It was the golf equivalent of dropping the mic and walking off the stage.

WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?

Cue "Dueling Banjos." Young Rory plays his final pre-Masters tuneup at the Shell Houston Open this week. How does he answer Tiger in the golf equivalent of Eminem's rap-off in "Eight Mile"?

If Rory McIlroy wins at Houston, he supplants Tiger at No. 1. What a story that would be – especially because Rory McIlroy's golf game this year, with the new Nike irons, with the attendant scrutiny, with the memory of the walk-off, does not indicate anything close to victory is possible. But, as a wise man once said: That's why they play the game. You never know.

Except, after Tiger's statement this week, we sometimes do know.

Course Source: Cozumel CC, Troon North GC


Course Source: Cozumel CC, Troon North GC










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange March 25, 2013 7:40 PMThe SportsXchange


IN THE PUBLIC EYE: Cozumel Country Club in Cozumel, Quintana Roo, Mexico.


THE LAYOUT: The Mayans founded magnificent communities by slicing through the jungle along the Yucatan Peninsula some 1,500 years ago.

Nicklaus Design Group has done much the same in creating a splendid golf course at Cozumel Country Club, clearing away red mangroves and other native flora in the natural wetlands on this island in the Caribbean Sea, just off the Eastern tip of Mexico.

It took five years and more than $12 million to sculpt the acclaimed 6,734-yard, par-72 course in the limestone, coral and saltwater marshes along Cozumel's northwest shore before it finally opened late in 2001.

Explorer Hernan Cortez landed on Cozumel in 1519 and the Mayans began to disappear, with the population dwindling from 40,000 when the Spanish arrived to about 300 in 1570.

Pirates Jean Lafitte and Henry Morgan used the island as a refuge in the 17th century.

It was another 300 years before Nicklaus arrived.

GENERAL MANAGER: Benny Campos, who came to Mexico after serving as head professional at Redhawk Golf Course in Sparks, Nev., near Reno, and at Apple Mountain Golf Resort near Placerville in Northern California.

LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: Tropical Storm Rita soaked the course last month, but after being close for a while before a restricted re-opening, Cozumel Country Clubs expects to be back up to full speed this week.

Because of the omnipresent wind and the lay of the land, Nicklaus Design actually created two nine-hole golf courses. The South Texas Golf Assn. has given the back nine a slope rating of 142 from the tips, while the front nine is rated at only 123.

In addition to the wind, sometimes a breeze and at others a gale, water comes into play on 13 holes at Cozumel Country Club. Be on the lookout for the crocodiles, especially in the ponds in front of the second tee and between the 14th green and 15th tee.

Even more menacing is the finish, despite the fact that the 172-yard, par-3 17th hole is rated as the easiest on the course. That's because the 16th (571 yards, par 5) and 18th (382 yards, par 4) probably are the two most difficult since they generally play into the wind and require long carries over the mangroves.

There is varying terrain at Cozumel Country Club. After playing the first two holes with jungle bordering both sides of the fairway, the golfer reaches a clearing where Nos. 3 and 6 play alongside a large lake.

The 499-yard third hole is a reachable par-5 that tempts the golfer to go for the green in two. The seventh is rated No. 1 on the card, a dogleg left par-4 that measures 407 yards, usually into a wind that blows left to right.

OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: There are no other courses on Cozumel, but there is plenty more golf on the Mayan Riviera.

Cancun offers the Caesar Park Cancun Golf and Beach Resort plus the Hilton Cancun Beach and Golf Club, and the Melia Cancun Golf Club, an 18-hole par-3 course.

The Golf Club at Moon Palace near Playa del Carmen is a Jack Nicklaus Signature Course, and the Playacar Club de Golf near Xaman-ha was designed by noted architect Robert Von Hagge.

Also on the golf map are Club de Golf de Yucatan in Merida and the 9-hole Puerto Aventuras Club de Golf on the Cozumel-to-Chetumel Highway.

WHERE TO STAY: There are plenty of resort hotels near Cozumel Country Club, including the Presidente Cozumel Resort, the Paradisus Cozumel, Sol Cabanas, the Reef Club, Plaza Las Glorias, Playa Azul Hotel, the Fiesta Americana, El Cid Ceibas, the Iberostar Cozumel and the Melia Cozumel -- most offering stay-and-play packages.

Cozumel Country Club was built with cruise ships in mind, as nearly two million tourists and one million crew members, many who play golf, arrive by sea every year.

Princess, Carnival, Norwegian, Celebrity, Disney and Holland America all have Cozumel on their itineraries and are in port often.

On the web: www.cozumelcountryclub.com.mx



THE LAST RESORT: Troon North Golf Club in Scottsdale, Ariz.

THE LAYOUT: Considered the pioneer in high-end desert golf experiences, the 36-hole Troon North Golf Club remains a coveted destination for any Arizona golf excursion.

The Monument Course was Tom Weiskopf's first golf course design project, along with Jay Moorish in 1990, and the Scottsdale resident returned in 1996 to solo design the Pinnacle Course. Ask the locals, and Monument will get an ever so slight tip of the scale, but the overwhelming sentiment is both courses are among the truly elite layouts in the Phoenix area.

Part of the genius of Weiskopf's designs was his ability to create unique layouts hole after hole on two separate courses in a desert landscape. Of course, the canvas he had to work with was second to none in Arizona. In the shadow of Pinnacle Peak, the courses weave majestically through the rugged landscape of the Sonoran Desert, with enough elevation changes to present unique challenges shot after shot.

At 7,070 yards (72.9/147) from the tips and 7,616 yards (71.6/137) from the gold tees, the Monument course provides a stiff test. There are five tee boxes in all, down to the Jade at 5,099 yards. It's not where you want to cut your teeth as a novice golfer, but it's an honest test for golfers of all levels, and a truly unique overall experience.

GENERAL MANAGER: Mitch Harrell.

LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: There aren't many stressful forced carries, but accuracy is put at a premium because good angles into the small greens are paramount. There are a number of shorter par 4s, and it's wise to consider playing to distances where you can take a full swing with a wedge. Approach shots inside 100 yards will require dealing with a false front or tight landing area on several holes, making anything off the mark difficult to hold the green.

If you're in between clubs, always play to the front of the green. The landing surfaces are hard and good shots aren't always rewarded as the ball rolls out. If you're going to miss your target, don't short-side yourself in a greenside bunker, it will be almost impossible for the amateur golfer to get up and down.

Most important, bring your "A" chipping game and an even better blade because the well maintained greens are fast and the valley pulls putts on the Bentgrass more than the eye can imagine.

The gem of the front nine is the par-5 third. The first of several enticing risk/reward tee shots you'll encounter during the round, "The Monument" is 544 yards from the gold tees. There is plenty of room for a safe drive, as long as you can avoid the massive rock in the middle of the fairway 237 yards out. But a solid drive that carries at least 210 and avoids out of bounds on the right takes the bit out of hole with only a long iron into the green.

Water doesn't come into play until the testy 206-yard downhill par-3 13th. The back nine really gets churning on the par-4 15th, and it's helpful to have a local in your group, or at least one forecaddie happy to share advice.

At 283 yards, it's tempting to pull out the driver and let one rip on "Canyon Pass," but a good poke with your 250-yard club is all that's needed, along with a soft draw and a little good fortune into a small opening that feeds downhill and left into a narrow green. It's an excellent short par-4 that is score-able, but also requires good shot-making. Come up short and you have a dicey half-wedge into a small green that's, say it with us, challenging to hold.

The road back to the clubhouse provides a trio of fun and distinctive challenges that might be the highlight of the Monument experience. The 234-yard downhill par-3 16th is the most visually stunning on the course, and is backed up by a 455-yard par-4 that will require a fairway wood if you don't connect well off the tee.

The 18th hole doesn't appear overly intimidating at 365 yards and water safely pushed off to the left. But pay attention to the pin placement and don't leave your approach short and vulnerable to a massive false front.

OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: The Phoenix area is chock full of wonderful course options for golfers of every skill level. You can't go wrong with the Troon Golf-managed facilities and there are 11 in the greater Phoenix area. Locals favorites are Ocotillo in Chandler, and Westin Kierland and Talking Stick in Scottsdale.

Your golfing imagination in Scottsdale is limited only by the time of year and your pocketbook. The crown jewel is the TPC Scottsdale Stadium course, home of the Waste Management Phoenix Open. Grayhawk is one of the area's treasures, with the two 18s highlighted by the highly acclaimed Talon course.

Dove Valley Ranch, Cholla, Continental, Eagle Mountain and the Sanctuary Golf Course at Westworld make most Top 10 lists.

WHERE TO STAY: The Four Seasons Resort at Troon North was rated as the No. 25 golf resort in North America by Golf Digest in 2011.

The Sanctuary was rated the No. 1 resort in the country by Conde Naste, and there is no shortage of great lodging options in the area. Copperwynd, The Phoenician and The Hermosa Inn also lead the luxury list.

The Camelback Inn by JW Marriott is also a short drive away.

On the web: www.troonnorthgolf.com



--Troon North report By Derek Harper, The Sports Xchange

Inside the Ropes: McIlroy's game is coming together


Inside the Ropes: McIlroy's game is coming together










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange March 25, 2013 7:40 PMThe SportsXchange


Good things have finally started happening again for Rory McIlroy.


McIlroy, who lost his No. 1 spot in the World Golf Rankings to Tiger Woods this week, got off to a miserable start this season after his lucrative and ballyhooed switch from Titleist to Nike equipment.

However, he can regain the top position with a high finish this week in the Shell Houston Open, and he seems to have regained his confidence.

"There's been a significant improvement," McIlroy said after posting his first two rounds in the 60s this season in the WGC-Cadillac Championship, including a 7-under-par 65 in the final round that left him in a tie for eighth.

"I found something; I'm a lot more comfortable with what I'm trying to do. A lot more playability with my swing. Just goes to show ... it's not as far away as you think. That's been one of my problems. I always think when I'm playing bad that it's further away than it is."

McIlroy started the season with a missed cut in the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship, only days after Nike introduced him in a Hollywood-like media event.

Then he was eliminated in the first round of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship by his friend, Shane Lowry of Ireland, but the worst came in the second round of the Honda Classic.

The 23-year-old was 7-over-par through eight holes when he hit his ball into the water on the ninth hole and walked off the course. Even though he later claimed he was bothered by a painful wisdom tooth, he was roasted in the media on both side of the Atlantic.

McIlroy apologized in a press conference when he got to Doral a few days later and then seemed to get his game going in the right direction in the last three rounds on the TPC Blue Monster.

"I had a really good range session (after the first round) and felt like I hit the ball better," said McIlroy, who is making Houston his final tune-up before the Masters in two weeks. "I saw a lot of positives.

"You go through these periods in golf where you have a tough time and things don't click. It would be great if it wasn't like that and would make the game a lot easier, but I saw a lot of good signs which shows that I'm going in the right direction."

During his two weeks off, Rory continued to work on his game, played in the Els for Autism Pro-Am and spent time in South Florida with his girlfriend, tennis star Caroline Wozniacki, who was coming off a runner-up finish in the BNP Paribas Open, losing to Maria Sharapova in the final.

McIlroy also visited PGA of America headquarters in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., where he picked up the 2012 PGA Player of the Year Award and the Vardon Trophy, for low scoring average on the circuit.

"It was a huge honor to win both of these awards in 2012 and it really showed what a great year I had," McIlroy said. "Hopefully I'm able to replicate that a few more times in my career."

Despite his slow start this season, he still has plenty of time to equal or surpass it by winning multiple majors, especially if he can pull things together before he gets to Augusta National, which seems to be a perfect fit for his game.

Overlooked during his struggles is the fact that in the last major, he blitzed the field to capture the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island by eight strokes last August.

"Rory played all right ... ," Tiger Woods said after they played together in round two at Doral, where McIlroy posted a 69. "He made some nice swings and holed a few putts. Certainly he's trying to work his way through making some changes in his swing.

"It's not easy, especially at this level on difficult courses; it's tough. But he's put in some time this past weekend, this past week, and you know, from what I can see, it certainly is improving.

"He still has got a lot of time till Augusta, so he's on the right track."

There was speculation that McIlroy might add, and perhaps needed another tournament before Augusta, but he considered it and decided to stick with his original schedule.

The way he described his plans, it was something of a two-week working vacation. He even passed up a chance to partner with Michael Jordan in the Seminole Golf Club member-guest near his home in Palm Beach Gardens.

"I'm looking forward to just getting back and working on my game a bit more, I guess," McIlroy said before leaving Doral. "I'm not secluding myself, but sort of get away from this whole thing a bit and work on my game a bit more in peace and quiet, and get out to Houston and hopefully my game is in even better shape going into there."

After the Honda, there was no direction to go but up.



COMING UP

PGA TOUR: Shell Houston Open on the Tournament Course Redstone Golf Club in Humble, Texas, Thursday through Sunday.

TV: Thursday and Friday, 4-7 p.m. EDT on the Golf Channel; Saturday and Sunday, noon-2 p.m. EDT on the Golf Channel and 3-6 p.m. EDT on NBC.

LAST YEAR: Hunter Mahan, who also captured the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship, became the first two-time winner on the PGA Tour in 2012 when he posted a one-stroke victory over Carl Petterson of Sweden. Mahan, who became the highest-ranked American in the World Golf Rankings at No. 4, began the final round two strokes behind Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa, who lost his lead with two double bogeys on the front nine and finished third by closing with a 3-over-par 75. Mahan closed with a 71, carding eight consecutive pars before sinking a five-foot birdie putt to take the lead at No. 9 and held off Petterson, who also shot 71, on the back nine. The Swede missed an 18-foot birdie putt on the final hole that would have forced a playoff.



CHAMPIONS TOUR: Greater Gwinnett Championship at TPC Sugarloaf in Duluth, Ga., April 19-21.

TV: Friday, 12:30-2:30 p.m. EDT; Saturday and Sunday, 3-6 p.m. EDT, on the Golf Channel each day.

LAST YEAR: Inaugural event.



LPGA TOUR: Kraft Nabisco Championship on the Dinah Shore Tournament Course at Rancho Mirage in Mission Hills, Calif., April 4-7.

TV: Thursday and Friday, noon-3 p.m. EDT and 6-9 p.m. EDT; Saturday and Sunday, 5-9 p.m. EDT, on the Golf Channel each day.

LAST YEAR: Sun Young Yoo of South Korea sank an 18-foot birdie putt on the first playoff hole to defeat I.K. Kim, also of South Korea, minutes a after Kim inexplicably gave the title away. The 23-year-old Kim, who had taken the lead by holing a 15-foot birdie putt on the 16th and a 20-footer for birdie on the 17th, had a one-foot putt to win the tournament on No. 18. Incredibly, she missed, her ball circling the cup before lipping out. Yoo, who claimed her second LPGA Tour victory and first major title, and Kim both finished with 3-under-par 69s. Yani Tseng of Thailand shot 73 and squandered a 54-hole lead in the first LPGA Tour major of the season for the second consecutive season, winding up third.

Monday, October 7, 2013

Sergio Garcia and Fred Couples – yin and yang at the Masters, and in the hunt


Sergio Garcia and Fred Couples – yin and yang at the Masters, and in the hunt











Jay Busbee April 11, 2013 7:55 PMYahoo Sports






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Sergio Garcia hits his tee shot on the 11th hole during the first round of the Masters. (USAT Sports)AUGUSTA, Ga. – They are the yin and yang of this golf course, its warmest ambassador and its coldest detractor. They are aging optimism and youthful pessimism, victory with a smile and defeat with a scowl. They are Fred Couples and Sergio Garcia, and after the first round of the 2013 Masters, they sit within arm's length of each other atop the leaderboard.



This was one of those Augusta afternoons that's like a day off from school; you don't want to waste it because you don't know when it's coming around again. It's not getting any easier than this, so Thursday was the day to go low.

Fred Couples, hands down the coolest golfer on the course, sidled his way to a 4-under afternoon marred only by two bogeys, including a late one on 18 that kept him two strokes off the lead of Garcia and Marc Leishman, who are tied at 6-under.

At 53, Couples is grayer now, walking a little more gingerly thanks to persistent back pain, but he's still the same suave player that captured the 1992 Masters with a combination of skill and insane luck. His Sunday tee shot that year on 12, which rolled back to within inches of Rae's Creek but somehow hung on the bank, still stands as one of the most fortunate shots in Masters history.







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Fred Couples tips his cap as he walks off the 11th green. (USAT Sports)



Something about Augusta, then, brings out the best in Couples. He hasn't won on the PGA Tour since 2003, but in that time has carded three top-6 finishes and another two top-15s at Augusta. He was tied for the lead after round two last year, and held the solo lead in 2010.

Can Couples hold on for another green jacket two decades after his first? Honestly, it's doubtful; this is a rugged course and it hurts even the ones who love it the most. But it's impossible to deny that this place keeps Couples playing young … and he passes along the feeling to his fans.

[Related: Tianlang Guan, 14, is in the hunt after Round 1]

Garcia, meanwhile, is a player old before his time. Still only 33, he's been his own worst enemy almost since he arrived on Tour as the first of Tiger Woods' supposed rivals back in 1999. He's borne the "best player without a major" mantle for so long that it might as well bear his name. And the farther he goes in his career, the farther away that goal seems.

Augusta in particular has bedeviled him. The course has given him more cuts than a cheap razor, and in 15 attempts he's only managed two top-10 finishes. He melted down here in 2009, cursing the course conditions in a rant that left many observers thinking he'd spat on the Mona Lisa.

"I don't like it, to tell you the truth," he said at the time. "I don't think it is fair. Even when it's dry you still get mud balls in the middle of the fairway. It's too much of a guessing game. … They can do whatever they want. It's not my problem. I just come here and play and then go home." (Naturally, he backpedaled in a statement two days later.)

On Thursday, at least, he and the course reached something of a truce. Garcia birdied the first and never looked back, never surrendering a stroke back to par as he finished with six birdies.

[Watch: Sergio's fragile confidence at Augusta]

"It's obviously not my most favorite place, but we tried to enjoy it as much as we can," Garcia said on Thursday evening. "Sometimes it comes out better than others. Today was one of those good days. We'll enjoy it while it lasts."

If that quote sounds resigned, even flat-out defeatist, it sounded that way as he was speaking it. Thursday, Garcia had to defend himself against the suggestion that he was only marking time until another defeat at Augusta.

"Every time I tee off in a tournament, my goal is to play the best I can and win the tournament," he said. "It doesn't change this week."

Both Garcia and Couples have a long way to go to get within sight of a green jacket, much less win one. Both men have history working against them. But at Augusta, history might, just possibly, work in your favor.

[Related: Slideshow: Lindsey Vonn at the Masters]

"The beauty and the bad thing of this game is that it can have such highs and such lows," Garcia said. "The most important thing is to make sure you get through those [lows] nicely."

They won't have long to wait. Garcia tees off at 8:39 a.m. Friday, and Couples follows 11 minutes later. If they're both still in the red by midafternoon, a historic weekend for both men could be in the making.

Garcia and Leishman share Day 1 Masters lead


Garcia and Leishman share Day 1 Masters lead











PGA.COM April 11, 2013 8:21 PM

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Sergio Garcia matched his best-ever Masters score with a 66 on Thursday.(Getty Images)


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Sergio Garcia is still chasing that first major title.


It never figured to come at Augusta National.

But there he was Thursday, after a bogey-free opening round, sharing the top spot on the leaderboard at the Masters.

"Obviously, this is not my most favorite place," Garcia said, trying to be diplomatic. "But we try to enjoy it as much as we can every time we come here. Sometimes it comes out better than others. Today was one of those good days. Let's enjoy it while it lasts."

Garcia's 6-under 66 tied him with Aussie Marc Leishman, on a cloudy day that was made for going low. There wasn't much wind until late in the afternoon, when a storm front approached Augusta. There wasn't a blistering sun to bake out the greens, which were receptive to accurate shots.

The Spaniard took advantage, rekindling memories of the teen phenom known as "El Nino," who seemed certain to win numerous major titles after he battled with Woods at the 1999 PGA Championship, losing by a single stroke.

Garcia has challenged in other majors, but rarely at the Masters -- a course that doesn't seem to fit his style or shaky putter. In 14 previous appearances at Augusta National, he has finished in the top 10 only twice.

Last year, after a dismal third round took him out of contention, he bluntly conceded that he didn't think he was capable of winning a major.

Obviously, he feels different now -- though there's still some trepidation in his voice about what's still to come.

"Every time I tee off in a tournament, the goal is to play the best I can and have a chance at winning. That doesn't change this week," Garcia said. "Today was a nice day, one of those days you really enjoy. Hopefully I'll have three more of those and we'll see what happens on Sunday night."

With all eyes on Tiger Woods, the overwhelming favorite, plenty of others stood out amid the azaleas and towering Georgia pines.

There was Leishman, who had played two whole rounds at Augusta National.

There was David Lynn, a Masters rookie who was just two strokes back.

Lynn was the early clubhouse leader, then Leishman surged to the front with four straight birdies on the back side starting at No. 13. The Australian sure didn't play like someone who had missed the cut in his only other Masters appearance, in 2010.

"The first time I was here," Leishman recalled, "I was like a bit of a deer in headlights, I guess. I found myself looking around a little bit too much and not concentrating on getting the ball in the hole."

He was hardly on a roll coming into Augusta, having missed the cut in his two previous PGA Tour events. But it all came together, for one day at least.

"To be sitting here is pretty cool," Leishman said. "But it's only Thursday afternoon, so a lot of golf to play."

No Australian has ever won the Masters.

Lynn, a runner-up to Rory McIlroy in last year's PGA Championship, birdied four of five holes around the turn and rolled in a testy 15-foot putt at the final hole to save par.

"It's about playing the percentages," the Englishman said. "When I was on the ninth, I turned to my caddie and said, `We're leading the Masters.' He just looked at me and smiled. I told him, `I'd rather be leading it Sunday afternoon.' But it's not a bad thing to see your name up there leading the Masters. That's always something I can look back on."

Lynn moved from the European to the American tour this year, a change that seems to have rejuvenated his passion for the game.

"It's given me a second wind," Lynn said. "Everything is new. I'm going to different places every week, different courses. It's like I've started my career again almost."

Dustin Johnson was one shot off the lead after a 67. Lynn was joined at 68 by a group that included Rickie Fowler, who went on the wildest ride of the day -- a 4-under score despite two double-bogeys.

Jamie Donaldson turned in the shot of the day, acing the 180-yard sixth for the 24th hole-in-one in Masters history. He is only the fifth player to make a 1 at the hole known as Juniper, with its towering tee box and a green at the bottom of the hill. Donaldson was the first to do it since Chris DiMarco in 2004.

Woods was still the favorite after opening with a 70.

But it appears he'll have a lot of competition.

"I felt like I putted well today," said Woods, whose only lower opening-round score at Augusta was a 68 in 2010. "We've got a long way to go. I've just got to out there and play shot for shot. The golf course is going to change dramatically. You've just got to make adjustments."

Woods has already won three times this year and reclaimed his No. 1 spot in the world rankings. But he hasn't captured a major since 2008, and it's been eight long years since he claimed his fourth green jacket at Augusta. He is still four majors shy of tying Jack Nicklaus' record 18 championships -- a mark that becomes a little more daunting each time the 37-year-old Woods fails to win one of golf's biggest events.

Guan Tianlang of China is just getting started. At age 14, he was the youngest player to ever qualify for the Masters, but showed he belonged with a solid 73 that included a 15-foot birdie from the fringe at the final hole.

His playing partner, two-time Masters champion Ben Crenshaw, led the cheers.

"I felt a little bit nervous on the first tee," Guan said. "But I hit a great tee shot and, after that, everything feels comfortable."

Shortly after dawn, the tournament began with ceremonial shots from three of golf's greatest players -- 83-year-old Arnold Palmer, 77-year-old Gary Player and the 73-year-old Nicklaus.

Palmer was clearly pleased with his effort, which settled right in the middle of the fairway. He pumped his right fist as the crowd roared.

"The only nerves are to make sure you make contact," Nicklaus quipped. "It doesn't make a diddly-darn where it goes."

Lynn contending in his second straight major


Lynn contending in his second straight major











PGA.COM April 11, 2013 8:49 PM

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David Lynn is high on the Masters leaderboard after a runner-up finish at the 2012 PGA Championship.(Getty …


By Paul Newberry, Associated Press


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- David Lynn spotted the leaderboard as he was making the turn in front of Augusta National clubhouse.

Yes, it was something to behold.

"It's obviously not a bad thing to see your name up there leading the Masters," Lynn said after Thursday's opening round. "But there's a lot to be done for the rest of the week, and hopefully I can keep my name up there."

The lead slipped away on Day 1, but a 4-under 68 left the Englishman just two strokes behind the front-runners, Sergio Garcia and Marc Leishman.

Not bad for someone playing their first Masters. But maybe not that big of a surprise, considering Lynn was the runner-up to Rory McIlroy in last year's PGA Championship.

He certainly had to be patient. This moment was 17 years in the making.

"It's taken me a golfing lifetime to get here," Lynn said.

The 39-year-old Lynn first played on the European Tour in 1996, his lone victory coming eight years later. But his career took a new direction after his performance last August at Kiawah Island -- McIlroy won by eight strokes but Lynn was next after back-to-back 68s on the weekend.

He cashed an $865,000 check, moved across the Atlantic to play on the PGA Tour, and began prepping for the Masters.

"It's given me a second wind," Lynn said. "Everything is new. I'm going to different places every week, different courses. It's like I've started my career again almost."

Heading into Augusta, he got some tips from old friend David Gilford, who shot 67 the first time he played the Masters in 1995.

The advice: "Don't be too intimidated by the greens. There are birdies out there. Try and be aggressive when you can be."

Lynn must have listened.

He got off to a strong start, knocking a wedge to 8 feet at the very first hole and rolling in the birdie putt. A 6-footer on the par-5 eighth pushed him to 2 under, then a perfect wedge that plopped down 6 feet below the hole left him with another easy birdie at No. 9, sending him to the back side with a 33.

Lynn finally stumbled at the 10th, where a tricky 3-footer slid by the hole for his first bogey. But Lynn birdied the next two holes, banging in a 40-foot putt at the tough 11th.

After giving back a stroke with another short miss at the 17th, Lynn rolled in a 15-footer to save par at the final hole.

"Obviously, it was great to make par there, finish on a high," Lynn said.

Lynn was still talking about his round in the media center when another name surged to the top of the board. Leishman ripped off four straight birdies on the back side to seize the lead.

That did little to dampen Lynn's mood.

"I know when I'm on my game, I can compete at that sort of level. What happened at Kiawah Island was basically confirming it to myself," he said. "Although McIlroy ran away with it that week, it was still, for me, an environment that I had not been in before."

Seems like he's getting used to it now.

"If you speak to more or less every golfer who is out here on various tours, they will all believe that they have performances in them as good as the top guys," Lynn said. "I've always believed that I could perform well. I just don't do it consistently enough. And why, I don't know. I guess right place, right time at the PGA and everything going right for me."

If he's in contention going into the weekend, he'll feel more comfortable with the role.

"You come out the other side with a bit more confidence," Lynn said. "I'm not going to sit here and say I'm going to be there Sunday night, but deep down, I know that I've got performances in me that could put me there Sunday night."

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Course Source: Olivier Breaud International Golf Course, Palmilla Resort


Course Source: Olivier Breaud International Golf Course, Palmilla Resort










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange April 22, 2013 2:10 AMThe SportsXchange


IN THE PUBLIC EYE: Olivier Breaud International Golf Course d'Antimaono in Papara, Tahiti.

THE LAYOUT: California-based designer Bob Baldock found his way to Tahiti in 1968 and carved a sporty championship course out of the jungle across the road from the beach on the south coast of the island, not far from the Paul Gaugin Museum and Botanical Gardens.

Baldock, whose more than 350 courses in California, Nevada and Hawaii include the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula Country Club in Pebble Beach, designed a challenging par-72 course that stretches 6,944 from the professional tees, 6,550 from the men's tees and 6,370 for women.

The Tahiti Open, an event on the Australasian PGA Tour, is held every June at Olivier Breaud.

Brett Ogle of Australia, winner of the 1994 Hawaiian Open and 1993 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on the PGA Tour, won the Tahiti Open in 1986, and Simon Owen of New Zealand, who tied for second behind Jack Nicklaus in the 1978 British Open at St. Andrews, claimed the title in 1991.

It's not exactly Magnolia Lane at Augusta, but the picturesque, narrow drive into Olivier Breaud International Golf Course is lined by mombat trees, whose fruit resembles a cumquat.

OWNER, GENERAL MANAGER: Skip Anderson.

LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: Anderson, a transplanted Floridian, used to say he had the best golf course for 2,500 miles in every direction. That's because this layout about 20 miles from the Tahitian capital of Papeete was the only one in this part of the South Pacific until recently.

But it's not so remote that it's off the golf map. Arnold Palmer passed through in the 1970s on a business trip with golf powerbroker Mark McCormack, founder of IMG, and played the course.

Most memorable at Olivier Breaud is as difficult a set of par-3 holes as any golfer might want to play. Anderson can remember only a single hole in one on this quartet since he came to Tahiti in 1982.

The second hole is 209 yards through the trees, No. 8 is a tight 196 yards, the 14th hole is a challenging 216 yards from an elevated tee to a narrow green guarded by three bunkers and a large gully, and No. 17 is 214 yards to a green surrounded by bunkers.

Another hole to be reckoned with is No. 7, rated No. 1 on the card, a par 4 that measures 462 yards to a green protected by a wide creek. Balancing out the difficulty of the course are two relatively short par-5s and No. 4, a very reachable, 255-yard par 4 from an elevated tee.

The course finishes with a par 5 that measures 559 yards, with a large lake and creek coming into play down the left side some 200 yards off the tee. The approach shot must be precise, with several large bunkers surrounding the green.

Anderson bought the corporation that has a contract with the Tahitian government to run the golf course, which now has a legitimate pro shop and an open-air restaurant that serves three meals a day prepared by a French chef.

OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: There were no others until the first nine holes of Moorea Green Pearl Golf Club in Temae, created by Nicklaus Design, opened early in 2007, with the second nine opening later in the year.

The course's location near the ferry dock at Vaiare and the Temae airport have created tourism golf packages on Tahiti and Moorea.

This magnificent golf resort was the first new course in Polynesia in 35 years. South Pacific Golf Resort Development, headquartered in Papeete, is planning to build a 5-star, 154-room hotel and a hotel residential housing estate with 84 rooms and suites, adjacent to the course

WHERE TO STAY: Most Americans visiting Tahiti stay at the Beachcomber Intercontinental Resort, the Sheraton Tahiti, Le Meridien Tahiti or the Sofitel Maeva Beach.

On neighboring Bora Bora are the Hotel Bora Bora, the Bora Bora Lagoon Resort and the Pearl Beach Resort.

On Moorea are the Beachcomber Intercontinental Moorea, the Sheraton Moorea, Moorea Pearl Resort, the Sofitel Ia Ora and the Moorea Village Hotel.

The larger neighboring islands can be reached from Papeete by ferry several times a day.


Princess Cruises and Radisson Seven Seas cruise through French Polynesia on a regular basis and ships from other cruise lines also call at Papeete on longer voyages.

Tour operators provide transportation from your hotel or cruise ship to the golf course.

ON THE WEB: www.worldgolf.com/course-reviews/south-pacific/olivier-breaud-golf.htm; www.international-golf-olivier-breaud-tahiti.com.



THE LAST RESORT: Palmilla Resort in Los Cabos, Mexico.

THE LAYOUT: The first Jack Nicklaus-designed course in Latin America, opened in 1992, is one befitting the elegant Palmilla -- one of the great hotels of the world that was a hideaway for the likes of President Eisenhower, John Wayne and Bing Crosby in days gone by.

Palmilla Golf Club, managed by Troon Golf, is located in the foothills of the Sierra de la Laguna Mountains and has views of the Sea of Cortez on virtually every spectacular hole.

The Palmilla course is known as the "Grand Dame of Los Cabos golf."

The course plays to roughly 6,900 yards, with a rating 74.3 and slope of 144 from the back tees, no matter which combination of the Ocean, Mountain and Arroyo nines the golfer takes on.

The Arroyo Nine and the Mountain Nine are of traditional Mexican design, and Jack Nicklaus said creating the newer Ocean Nine was like "designing desert mountains by the sea."

There is 600 feet of elevation change on the first six holes of the Ocean Nine, which runs right down to the rocky coast.

CLUB MANAGER: Jason Ballog.

LOCAL KNOWLEDGE: There was no golf in Los Cabos -- a world-class sport-fishing destination -- until the early 1990s, but now there are seven places to play, and 63 of the 144 holes have Golden Bear tracks on them.

Golf at Palmilla is like playing a great desert course -- arid weather, target golf -- only with the Sea of Cortez as a backdrop.

The most unique hole is No. 5 on the Mountain Nine, a 401-yard par-4 on which the drive must carry 150 yards across a canyon to a plateau fairway. The approach shot is downhill across another abyss to a green nestled in a box canyon.

Most spectacular is the third hole of the Ocean Nine, a par-5 that plays 485 yards downhill to within a few steps of the beach. The drive from an elevated tee must carry the old highway and a dry wash, with magnificent homes lining the cliffs.

High point of the facility comes on the Arroyo Nine at the 566-yard par-5, which offers a panoramic view of the Sea of Cortez.

OTHER COURSES IN THE AREA: About 10 miles down the road from Palmilla is another Nicklaus creation, the Ocean Course at Cabo del Sol, which the best golfer of all-time has called "The greatest piece of golf property on earth." Tom Weiskopf, Nicklaus' former teammate on the golf team at Ohio State, added the Desert Course at Cabo del Sol in 2001.

Also located on the 18-mile tourist corridor from Cabo San Lucas to San Jose del Cabo are the Nicklaus-designed El Dorado Golf Club; Querencia Golf Club, which was Tom Fazio's first venture outside the United States; Cabo Real Golf Club, designed by Robert Trent Jones II; the Raven Golf Club, formerly Cabo San Lucas Country Club, designed by Pete Dye and featuring the longest hole in Baja, at 620 yards; and the 9-hole Campo de Golf Los Cabos, a municipal layout (with plans to add a second nine) in San Jose del Cabo that was the first course in the area when it opened in 1991.

Los Cabos was the site of the PGA Senior Slam five times. Raymond Floyd won in 1995 on the Ocean Course at Cabo del Sol and repeated at Cabo Real in 1996, Hale Irwin won at Palmilla in 1997, and Gil Morgan won on the Ocean Course at Cabo del Sol in 1998 and at Cabo Real in 1999.

WHERE TO STAY: The Palmilla Resort, which has been one of the most elegant beach hideaways in the world since 1956, was given an $80-million renovation a few years ago by One&Only Resorts. Palmilla annually is listed among the World's Best Golf Resorts by Travel & Leisure. It is located minutes from Cabo San Lucas on the southernmost tip of Baja California, Mexico, where the Pacific Ocean meets the Sea of Cortez.

Among the many other resorts in Los Cabos are the Fiesta Americana Grand Resort, the Sheraton Hacienda del Mar Resort, the Westin Regina Resort, Las Ventanas al Paraiso, the Crown Plaza Los Cabos, the Fiesta Inn Hotel, the Presidente Inter-Continental Los Cabos Resort, the Grand Baja Resort and Spa, the Playa Grande Resort, the Hotel Twin Dolphin, the Pueblo Bonito Rose Resort, the Casa del Mar Golf and Spa, and the Villa del Palmar Beach Resort.

ON THE WEB: www.palmillagc.com/index.html.

Golf notebook: Jimenez returns from skiing injury


Golf notebook: Jimenez returns from skiing injury










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange April 22, 2013 2:10 AMThe SportsXchange


Miguel Angel Jimenez, out all season because of a broken right shinbone sustained skiing in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in Spain over the Christmas holidays, made his return last week by playing in the Open de Espana for the 25th time.

Jimenez, who turned 49 in January, became the oldest winner in European Tour history when he captured the UBS Hong Kong Open last November. That came one week before he tied for 16th in the DP Dubai World Championship, his final event of 2012.

"My leg is improving daily," said Jimenez, a 19-time winner on the European Tour who fell 27 spots to 81st in the World Golf Rankings during his absence. "I work out every morning in the gym and I'm actually a little ahead of schedule on my rehab.

"I am not 100 percent fit, but I want to test myself and see how I feel. ... I'd hate to miss the chance of playing at El Saler."

The Spanish Open was the 599th event of his career on the Euro circuit and was played on Parador de El Saler Golf Course in Valencia, not far from his home in Malaga.

Jimenez, nicknamed "The Mechanic," shot 76-74 -- 150 and missed the cut by four strokes in his return.

--Inbee Park of South Korea moved to No. 1 in the Rolex Women's World Rankings one week after capturing the Kraft Nabisco Championship, the second major championship of her career and second title of 2013.

The 24-year-old moved past Stacy Lewis, whose No. 1 ranking lasted four weeks, becoming the second South Korean and eighth player overall to take the top spot since the rankings were instituted in February of 2006.

"This is a very big day in my golf career," Park said when the rankings were released at the beginning of last week before the start of the Lotte LPGA Championship at Ko Olina Golf Club in Kapolei, Oahu, Hawaii.

"I'm so happy to share it with my family, who are here in Hawaii with me. It's nice to reach this goal, but I know a lot of players are close to No. 1. It gives me something else to play for every week."

Park, who won the LPGA Thailand in February, captured two events on the LPGA Tour last year and finished second six times, in addition to leading the money list with $2,287,080 and earning the Vare Trophy for the low scoring average of 70.212.

Lewis dropped to second, an average of 0.04 points per event behind Park in the rankings, which are determined on a formula covering the last two years, and Tseng Yani of Thailand remained No. 3.

Annika Sorenstam of Sweden was the first No. 1 player in the rankings and held the top spot for 61 weeks, followed by Lorena Ochoa of Mexico (158), Ai Miyazato of Japan (12), Cristie Kerr (5), Jiyai Shin of South Korea (25), Tseng (109), Lewis (4) and Park.

In her first tournament at No. 1, Park finished in a tie for fourth last week in the Lotte LPGA Championship.

--Guan Tianlang of China, who two weeks ago became the youngest player in Masters history and the youngest to make a cut on the PGA Tour, has accepted a sponsor's exemption into the Zurich Classic in New Orleans this week.

The 14-year-old Guan, who qualified for the Masters by winning the Asia-Pacific Amateur champion, earned low amateur honors at Augusta National by finishing 58th at 73-75-77-75 -- 300, 12-over-par, despite being assessed a controversial one-stroke penalty for slow play in round one.

"They didn't give me a lot of advice, but Mr. Ben Crenshaw said just play my own game and have fun," Guan said after the Masters. " ... It's a great week for me, and I learned a lot from the top players, and it's an honor to play with the top players here, and I learned a lot and had fun."

Guan had no three-putts on the treacherous greens at Augusta and nothing worse than a bogey on his scorecards.

A year ago, he spent a month in New Orleans and worked on his game at Lakewood Golf Course, not far from TPC Louisiana, site of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

"I'm really happy to come back (to New Orleans) this year," Guan said. "Every tournament I want to play well. I just want to have fun and hopefully post a good score."

Guan was planning to return home to Hawaii before receiving the sponsor's exemption to his first regular-season PGA Tour event.

--Despite a setback late last month, Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark has earned enough money on the PGA this season to earn special temporary membership on the circuit.

The 23-year-old Olesen had 60 days to accept, but wasted no time in signing on late last week.

Olesen's tie for sixth in the Masters, five strokes behind winner Adam Scott, was his second top-10 finish of the season on the PGA Tour and lifted his 2013 earnings to $632,300.

That's more than the $474,295 that Brendon Todd earned while finishing 150th on the 2012 money list, making Olsesen eligible for the special temporary membership, which would mean he can accept unlimited sponsor's exemptions on the PGA Tour for the rest of the year.

Olesen shot 68-68 on the weekend at the Masters to record his second top-10 finish in four career starts in the majors, following a tie for ninth last year in the Open Championship at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.

By finishing in the top 12 in the first major of the year, Olesen also earned a return trip to Augusta next year.

"It's a dream for me," said Olesen, who bounced back from a 6-over-par in the first round. "It's lovely to be here at a major and especially at the Masters. It's a great golf course and the atmosphere here is amazing.

"I definitely learned a lot about the greens. I missed a lot of putts the first round and it got better and better every day. So that was good. I felt like I hit the ball very good every day, actually."


After finishing seventh in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, Olesen was forced to withdraw from the Shell Houston Open because of whiplash following a 10-over-par 82 in the first round after being involved in an auto accident the night before.

Olesen, who claimed his first European Tour victory at the Sicilian Open last year, climbed to No. 34 in the World Golf Rankings following his finish in the Masters.

The Dane is having a big season on both major tours, as he tied for second at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship and tied for third at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic on the Middle East Swing of the Euro Tour.

Olesen is in the field the week for the Zurich Classic of New Orleans.

Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano of Spain, who tied for 20th in the Masters, also has joined the PGA Tour on a special temporary membership.

Fernandez-Castano has played five times on the U.S. tour this season and earned $592,020, thanks to a tie for third in the Arnold Palmer Invitational and a tie for ninth in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.

To earn a PGA Tour card for next season, Fernandez-Castano and Olesen must earn more than the player who finishes the year 125th on the money list, as Nicolas Colsaerts of Belguim and David Lynn of England did in 2012.

--Jamie Donaldson of Wales missed the cut in his first Masters, but he took home more than simply a rewarding experience and a trophy from his initial trip to Augusta National.

Donaldson is hoping it will lead to a full-time gig on the PGA Tour.

The 37-year-old earned an engraved cut-glass bowl for making a hole-in-one with a 7-iron from 180 yards on the sixth hole in the first round, the 24th ace in tournament history and the first at No. 6 since Chris DiMarco's in 2004.

"It's funny as it's a tough shot, with the pin high up on the right side," said Donaldson, who has claimed two victories on the European Tour and six in his professional career. "So you don't know whether to take it on or sort of play just short left, so you've got a putt up the hill.

"It was pretty much trying to land the ball in a cup on a car roof. It was very special. Making an ace on a hole where you would accept par any day of the week is incredible and a memory I will treasure."

Donaldson, whose first victory after nearly 12 seasons on the Euro Tour came last year in the Irish Open, shot 74-75 -- 149, 5-over-par, and missed the weekend by a single shot despite carding birdies on the last two holes of his second round.

However, the couldn't overcome double bogeys on the ninth and 16th holes.

"For most of Friday I was making the cut, but Jason Day came in with that late birdie, which knocked out all the 5-overs," said Donaldson, who was keeping his eye on the scoreboard. "That's the way it goes sometimes, but you shouldn't be on the cut line hoping to get in. You simply need to play better golf.

" ... The Augusta experience overall was very special and the course was even better than seeing it on TV. The greens are more undulating than it looks on the television and the course itself is very hilly. The course itself is very much like Wentworth, only Americanized."

Donaldson was planning to try to earn his PGA Tour card at qualifying school late last year, but decided to concentrate on the Euro Tour because he was getting close to the top 50 in the World Golf Rankings, which would put him in the majors and other top tournaments.

The move paid off when he shot 4-under-par 68 in the final round to beat Justin Rose and Thorbjorn Olesen of Denmark by one stroke earlier this year to win the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

That put him inside the top 50, qualifying him for the majors and the four World Golf Championships, plus the Players Championship, and giving him an avenue toward earning his PGA Tour card.

"I have to play well in the tournaments I play this year to get enough money to earn a PGA Tour card for next year," said Donaldson, who is playing next month in the Players Championship, followed by the U.S. Open in June, and is looking for sponsor's exemptions into any other tournaments.

"I think I played three tournaments (on the PGA Tour) last year and I've already played more this year (five) in the States. That's where the highest standard of golf is, so that's where you have to go.

"The world ranking points are bigger and you're playing against the best players in the world. Everything about it is set up slightly differently than what I'm used to. To be a better golfer, I've got to play against the best all the time."

Donaldson was No. 35 in the World Golf Rankings last week, which should ensure that he will play in all four majors in one season for the first time this year.

The Welshman showed what he can do last year when he tied for seventh in the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island.

--Dick Hart, who captured one of the longest playoffs in PGA Tour history, died recently at the age of 77 in Covington, La.

Hart, a native of Salem, Mass., who joined the PGA Tour in 1959, beat Phil Rodgers with a par on the eighth hole of a sudden-death playoff at Cape Fear Country Club to win the 1965 Azalea Open in Wilmington, N.C.

During his PGA Tour career, Hart made 78 cuts while serving full-time as head professional at Hinsdale Golf Club in Hinsdale, Ill., a position he held for 43 years. During that stretch, he qualified for the U.S. Open five times.

Hart played in the PGA Championship for 10 consecutive years and his 36-hole score of 66-72 -- 138 not only led the 1963 PGA at Dallas Athletic Club, it was the low two-round score of in tournament history until that point. Hart finished in a tie for 17th in Dallas, with Jack Nicklaus claiming the Wanamaker Trophy.

Inducted into the Illinois PGA Hall of Fame in 1990, Hart captured the Illinois Open and Illinois PGA Championship three times each and the Illinois Match Play Championship twice. He scored eight holes in one during his career.

"(Dick was) a real leader in the IPGA's history," said PGA pro Dan McGuire, vice president of business development at Blue Golf.

Hart was preceded in death by his wife, Joyce Hain Hart. He is survived by his daughter, Dalyce Burvant, and two sons, Rick and Ross, along with five grandchildren. His family held a private service.

The family asked that memorial contributions be made to the American Cancer Society or the American Heart Association.

Inside The Ropes: Watson still seeks cure for Masters hangover


Inside The Ropes: Watson still seeks cure for Masters hangover










Tom LaMarre, The Sports Xchange April 22, 2013 2:10 AMThe SportsXchange


Bubba Watson's one-year reign as defending Masters champion is over and he enjoyed the ride as much, if not more, than most first-time major champions.

Watson is playing this week in the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, his first tournament since tying for 50th in the Masters two weeks ago and then putting the Green Jacket on his successor, Adam Scott.

"You know, it's been a crazy year, a great year, golf and off the course," said Watson, whose life might be starting to get back to some sort of normal. "But you know, coming back, it was fun, defending champ, I got to bring a guest, so my wife played 18 holes with me on Sunday (before the tournament). What a dream, what an honor.

"So for me, no, I don't see that I'm a hero, a great of the game. But to myself, I can see that I can see that I can compete at a high level at certain moments. You know, I'm not as consistent as some of the guys, I'm not up there every year, but any moment I have a chance to win.

" ... So it was fun, it was a blast."

Things haven't been the same for Watson since his hook shot out of the trees on the second playoff hole at Augusta National led to an unlikely par that beat Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa.

When he returned to Augusta, he didn't go back and try to recreate that shot from the pine straw on the 10th hole, but he's been in plenty of other places since becoming a major champion.

In the year following his surprise victory in the Masters, Bubba made two whirlwind media tours of New York, one right after winning and the other the week before defending his title.

His life already had been altered drastically when he and his wife, Angie, adopted an infant son, Caleb, right before the first major of 2012, and he recently moved his family from Scottsdale, Ariz., to Orlando, Fla.

Also in the last year, Watson bought the original General Lee, the Dodge Charger from the television series "Dukes of Hazzard," and taped his second "Golf Boys" video with Ben Crane, Rickie Fowler and Hunter Mahan.

Bubba signed a big endorsement deal with Oakley, and made the news when he filmed a video driving the company's new hovercraft golf cart.

And he hasn't won a golf tournament.

"I think when he won the Masters, it became overwhelming," said Ted Scott, Watson's caddie. "It's a real adjustment for a guy like Bubba. Bubba plays golf because he loves the game and it's fun. He's not saying, 'Hey, I can't wait to sign autographs and do all that other stuff.'

"He does it out of the kindness of his heart, but it's not something he looks forward to. I think some guys are better prepared to deal with the extra stuff that comes with success, but maybe the game of golf is harder for them.

"Before he was a winner, Bubba had a fan base because of his pink-shaftin', curvin', left-handed, kind of wild type play. Make him a Masters champ and there was kind of a frenzy. ... It just added to the pressure, and made it a lot more to deal with. So it really didn't surprise me that he wasn't out there competing to win every week."

In his 18 starts on the PGA Tour since donning the Green Jacket, Watson has finished in the top 10 only five times, and he also has missed the cut on four occasions.

It's not as bad as those numbers might indicate because he also has wound up in the top 25 in 13 tournaments and his finish at the Masters was his worst result other than those missed cuts.


"I think it's just golf," said Watson, who hopes to get his game back on track this week at TPC Louisiana, where he won two years ago and tied for 18th last year as defending champion in his first event after winning at Augusta.

"It goes a few years this way, a few years that way."

Bubba wasn't even fazed by hitting three balls into the water on the 12th hole in the final round of the Masters and taking a 10 on the treacherous par-3 hole at Amen Corner.

Kevin Na also hit three balls into the water and took a 10 on the same hole earlier in the day.

"So we tied, so we were even after that hole," Watson said in good humor after signing his scorecard for 5-over-par 77 as he ended his reign at Augusta, finishing with a smile on his face when he birdied No. 18.

"You know, it's funny, if you're not going to win, you've got to get in the record books somehow, so I'm a guy that got a double digit score on a par 3. When you look back at this week I had nine three-putts, three balls in the water on 12, a 10. So when you add all that up, a tie for 50th is a pretty good week."

And, as Bubba sees it, the end to a pretty good year.





COMING UP

PGA TOUR: Zurich Classic of New Orleans at TPC Louisiana in Avondale, La., Thursday through Sunday.

TV: Thursday and Friday, 3-6 p.m. EDT on the Golf Channel; Saturday and Sunday, 1-2:30 p.m. EDT on the Golf Channel and 3-6 p.m. EDT on CBS.

LAST YEAR: Jason Dufner two-putted from 60 feet on the second playoff hole, tapping in from two feet, to turn back Ernie Els and claim his first victory on the PGA Tour a week before he was to be married. Duf closed with a two-under-par 70, allowing the Big Easy to catch him with a 67, before both missed seven-foot birdie putts on the first extra hole. Els drove into a fairway bunker on the second playoff hole and was forced to lay up, then barely missed his 19-foot birdie putt that would have prolonged the playoff. Dufner, who lost playoffs in 2011 to Mark Wilson at the Phoenix Open and Keegan Bradley in the PGA Championship, claimed his second victory a few weeks later at the HP Byron Nelson Championship and Els captured his fourth major title at the Open Championship in July at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.



CHAMPIONS TOUR: Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf at the Club at Savannah Harbor in Savannah, Ga., Friday through Sunday.

TV: Friday, 12:30-2:30 p.m. EDT; Saturday and Sunday, 1-3 p.m. EDT, on the Golf Channel each day.

LAST YEAR: Michael Allen and David Frost shot a better-ball total of 10-under-par 62 in the final round to win by one stroke over John Cook and Joey Sindelar. Frost chipped in for eagle on the 14th hole when his teammate Allen was out of the hole, which gave the team a two-stroke lead, and that turned out to be the difference. Moments later, Cook holed a 45-foot birdie at No. 18 to slice into the lead and complete a round of 61. However, Allen and Frost parred in, with Allen sealing the victory by two-putting for a par from 40 feet on the final hole in a heavy downpour, one week after he won the Encompass Insurance Pro-Am at TPC Tampa Bay.



LPGA TOUR: North Texas LPGA Shootout at Las Colinas Country Club in Irving, Texas, Friday through Sunday.

TV: Thursday, 12:30-2:30 p.m. EDT, Friday, 6:30-8:30 p.m. EDT, and Saturday and Sunday, 3-6 p.m. EDT, on the Golf Channel each day.

LAST YEAR: Inaugural event.