Reliable and professional golf wholesale website where you can buy wholesale golf equipment and discount golf clubs, including golf drivers,golf irons,golf putters anywhere in the world!

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Angela Stanford made a hole-in-one during her opening round in Thailand

Angela Stanford made a hole-in-one during her opening round in Thailand



View photo
.

Angela Stanford — Getty Images
There is nothing quite like a hole-in-one. Okay, fine, I have no idea, I've never made one, but they look like they are a ton of fun to make and the celebrations always seem like something you would like to be involved in.
Angela Stanford got a chance to celebrate on Thursday at the Honda LPGA Thailand. Stanford was coming off a bogey on the par-5 7th hole when she got to No. 8, needing something to get her tournament going as she sat at 1-under.
That came when she knocked her tee shot in from 146 yards for the hole-in-one, a rarity for any player but especially when the pin is tucked that close to the front of the green.
Stanford's ball landed just on the front of the putting surface, released towards the cup and crashed into the pin, dropping for the one and the celebration with her playing partners.


 Her round didn't stop there, with Stanford adding two more birdies and one bogey to finish at 4-under for the day, just two shots off the lead held by Anna Nordqvist at 6-under.

Rose, McIlroy, Stenson ousted at WGC Match Play



Sergio Garcia of Spain hits a tee shot on the third hole during the second round of the World Golf Championships - Accenture Match Play Championship at The Golf Club at Dove Mountain on February 20, 2014 in Marana, Arizona
.
View gallery

  • .
  • .
Marana (United States) (AFP) - Top seeds Justin RoseRory McIlroy and Henrik Stenson were all ousted in Thursday's second round of the World Golf Championships Match Play Championship while second seed Jason Day needed 22 holes to advance.

Rose was the last lead man in his quarter of the bracket to fall, being taken out in 20 holes by four-time major winner Ernie Els.
South Africa's Louis Oosthuizen, the 2010 British Open champion, defeated Sweden's Stenson 4 and 3 while American Harris English dispatched McIlroy in 19 holes.
That put the South African into a third-round matchup with 2013 PGA Championship winner Jason Dufner, who eliminated Italy's Matteo Manassero 2 and 1.
Stenson's defeat continues a trend in which the overall top seed at the $9 million event has not gone beyond the second round since 2008.
Oosthuizen never trailed, going 2-up after an 18-foot eagle at the second. He took the 12th when Stenson missed a 16-foot par putt and then sank a 20-foot birdie at 15 for the triumph.
"I played pretty solid," Oosthuizen said. "I just kept it together. Just played solid and made nice putts on the back nine."
Oosthuizen will next face American Webb Simpson, who ousted countryman Brandt Snedeker 4 and 3, and could meet Australian standout Day in the quarter-finals.
Day, a second seed from Australia, took four extra holes to eliminate American Billy Horschel. Day, third at the event last year, next meets South African George Coetzee, who beat American Patrick Reed in 21 holes.
"It was a tough one," Day said. "Doesn't matter how you get it done, find a way to win."
McIlroy took a bogey at 10 and two penalty strokes in the Arizona desert on 11 to fall 2-down, but battled back with three birdies to go 1-up after 16, only to have English sink a 19-foot birdie at 17. McIlroy fell by making a double bogey on the first extra hole.
English next faces Jim Furyk with that winner to meet eitherSergio Garcia or American Rickie Fowler.
Garcia, another second seed, outlasted American Bill Haas 3 and 1 and Fowler edged US compatriot Jimmy Walker 1 up, beating the only winner of three US PGA Tour events this season.
Haas sank a six-foot eagle putt at the second hole to seize the lead and a par at the seventh put him 2-up, but Garcia eagled to win the eighth and squared the match with a par at 11, then birdied three of the next six holes to win.
"He played really well early on, then I was able to go on a very nice run from the eighth hole," Garcia said.
Fowler and Walker each won three of the first six holes in a match that was never more than 1-up in either's favor. Both players missed birdie putts at the 18th but Walker could not make par from 14 feet while Fowler two-putted for par from 51 feet, sinking a six footer to win.
"Finally got the putter to roll a couple in," said Fowler.
- McDowell 'really quite lucky' -
Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell edged Japan's Hideki Matsuyama 1 up.
"I'm really quite lucky to be standing here right now," McDowell said.
McDowell, the 2010 US Open champion, booked a third-round date with American Hunter Mahan, the 2012 Match Play winner and 2013 runner-up who ousted South African Richard Sterne 2 and 1.
Also through to the last 16 at the 64-player event is Victor Dubuisson, who dispatched Swedish 15th seed Peter Hanson 3 and 1.
"I started the first few holes and I made some good birdies," the Frenchman said. "Then he made three birdies and we were all square. Then I decided just don't watch him play, just play my stroke play and try to make some birdies."
Next up for Dubuisson is American Bubba Watson, last week's PGA winner at Riviera, who beat Swede Jonas Blixt 2 up.

A chance to start over in Match Play

A chance to start over in Match Play

MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- It's easy to love the format at the Match Play Championship on Tuesday.
Thomas Bjorn flew halfway around the world to La Costa in 2005 just to play 13 holes. He took the next year off with a neck injury, then came all the way to Arizona in 2007 and again lasted only 13 holes.Opinions can change quickly Wednesday on the way out the door.
Tiger Woods won three times. And then there was the year he lost to Peter O'Malley in the opening round, walking from the 17th green all the way to the clubhouse at La Costa with an army of reporters walking behind him, no one saying a word.
There is no such thing as an upset in Match Play. That doesn't mean there aren't 32 guys who are plenty upset when they lose in the first round. They call Ernie Els the ''Big Easy.'' They might as well call him ''Heisman'' when he loses on Wednesday and sees a reporter approaching.
The do-or-die nature of Match Play is what makes it so compelling to fans - and so maddening to sponsors and fans.
This tournament operates in reverse. Any other event, the drama builds toward the back nine on Sunday. Wednesday is one of the most exciting days in golf at Match Play. Thursday is not far behind. Friday is pretty good, too. On Sunday, there are only two possibilities - one guy wins, one guy loses, and it's like that for four hours.
Now might be the best time for a change.
Accenture is in the final year of a title sponsor. This most likely will be the final year at Dove Mountain. With the never-ending, globe-trotting nature of the golf schedule, there's not even a guarantee the Match Play Championship will be at the end of the West Coast Swing on the PGA Tour.
As one top tour official said, the future of this World Golf Championship is wide open.
The tour is talking to one potential title sponsor, and so much would depend on that. It's not as simple as finding a great golf course to host 64 of the world's best players. The modern era of professional golf is about entertainment, and that includes a company that pays some $10 million a year to entertain clients.
There was chatter about Harding Park, but it was nothing more than that, especially after one potential sponsor was not interested. Colombia is at least in the conversation - the country in South America, not the golf club that hosted the 1921 U.S. Open outside the nation's capital.
Of more interest is the format.
Woods gets all the attention, and rightly so, as the guy everyone hates to see leave on Wednesday. That has happened three times (though he didn't leave until Thursday last year because the first round was postponed by snow). And it doesn't help when he has company - three of the top four seeds lost in the first round last year.
The European Tour has a blueprint for its World Match Play Championship - four groups of four players, each playing 18-hole matches, and then players advancing out of those groups. But that's only 16 players. This WGC has 64 players. But if the tournament can move to a 36-hole complex, then there are more options. It's not about the course in match play. You're only trying to beat your opponent.
''You can have lots of fun with it,'' two-time winner Geoff Ogilvy said. ''The format can be better, don't you think? Some guys are there for three hours and you go home. You can see why some guys don't want to go. I've been 5-under on the 14th hole and shaking hands. You're driving home saying, 'How fair is that?' I beat 30 of these guys and I'm going home.''
Rory McIlroy and Ernie Els raised the idea of 36 holes of stroke-play qualifying, with the top 32 players advancing to match play. That's how the U.S. Amateur works (it uses two courses). That would keep players around for at least three days, and eliminate some of the luck factor.
''I see nothing wrong with that,'' McIlroy said.
Lee Westwood is among those - and it's a longer list than some might realize - who like it the way it is. His one beef is the consolation match for third- and fourth-place. The difference is $120,000, along with world ranking points (both important in a Ryder Cup year). But as Westwood points out, the points and money is easily split.
No one cares about the consolation match. It just gives TV something to show between shots of the championship match. One year, the consolation match was moving so slowly that it actually held up the main event.
Woods has lost in every round except the semifinals. Imagine him on the golf course Sunday playing for the third place. Who are the fans following? Who is TV showing?
We won't find out this year. Woods isn't around, and Dove Mountain plays no small part. Woods only saw the weekend one time in Arizona, and that was the year he won. He won't have to worry about that next year as the Match Play is sure to move - at least off the mountain.
As far as changing the format? That would be assuming it's actually broken.
''If you get defeated, you should be packing your bags and going home,'' Ian Poulter said. ''That's how I've always known match play, rather than a round-robin affair where you get a couple of bites of the cherry. The loser should go home. I think it's perfect. I think it's a great format.''
He plays the opening match Wednesday against Rickie Fowler.