Entries Tagged as 'PGA Tour'

Look Back to the Ten Years in Golf—-Ten Moving Moment (I)

Look Back to the Ten Years in Golf—-Ten Moving Moment (I)

New Year is coming. Ten years past, we should leave some space and time to enjoy the highlight. Look back the decade, you can find the amazing moment in golf. There are 10 moments in golf worth burning into people’s memory. These moments can be made into history.

 

1. The Tiger Slam. Give Tiger a mulligan on two swings at the 2000 Masters, and maybe he wins the straight-up Grand Slam that year. Instead, Vijay Singh won at Augusta and Woods ran the table for the next four major championships — the 2000 U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship, and the 2001 Masters. That wasn’t a surprise to Woods, who had talked with swing coach Butch Harmon before the 2000 season about a possible sweep because of the Tiger-favorable courses: Pebble Beach, St. Andrews and Valhalla.

 

He was scary-good as he won by a record 15 shots at Pebble Beach with a record score of 12 under par, and by eight shots at St. Andrews with a record score of 19 under. The 2001 Masters victory, the culmination of what was dubbed the Tiger Slam, meant Woods had all four major trophies on his mantle at once. (You can toss in the ‘01 Players Championship if you like.) As he stood on Augusta’s 18th green, the Slam won, Woods pulled his cap down over his face to cover his tears, then shook hands with Phil Mickelson after he putted out. “As a kid, I never dreamed about winning four straight majors. Kids don’t dream that big,” Woods said later. SI writer Frank Deford later opined: “His 2000 was the greatest year ever in golf. He changed golf, the way we feel about golf and the entire golf industry.” It was a once-in-a-lifetime moment — so far.

 


 

Bests of Decade in Golf

 

2. The shot heard ’round the world. With apologies to Gene Sarazen and Larry Mize, the most famous shot in Masters history is now the reverse chip-in at the par-3 16th by Tiger Woods in the final round when he won in 2005. You’re in a minority of earthlings if you don’t know CBS announcer Verne Lundquist’s excited call — “In your life have you seen anything like that?” — which CBS replays annually. Thanks to TV, Tigermania and the Internet, Tiger’s chip that rolled up the hill, then rolled back down and ever-so-slowly toppled into the cup is surely the most viewed golf shot ever. It didn’t matter that Woods bogeyed the next two holes to fall back into a playoff with Chris DiMarco, which he won. That glorious chip is The Shot of Augusta’s modern era.

 

3. Swede success. It was a watershed year for Annika Sorenstam in 2003. Not just because she played great golf, as usual, and won six times, including a pair of major titles, or because she was named Player of the Year for a sixth time. It all changed for her in May when she accepted an invitation to play in the PGA Tour event at Colonial in Fort Worth. In the wake of several critical comments from male players, Sorenstam became a Seabiscuit-like international underdog. She also loosened up in pre-tournament press conferences, giving folks a first look into a pleasant personality that she’d previously kept under wraps.

 

Sure, Sorenstam was the first woman to shoot 59 in competition (in 2001) and the best woman golfer of her era, but she earned more respect for her gritty showing at Colonial than for anything else she’d done up to that point. Notable trivia: Kenny Perry won the event; Sorenstam was paired with Dean Wilson and Aaron Barber; she shot 71-74, tied for 96th; she finished ahead of Mark Brooks and Geoff Ogilvy, among others. “When people talk about Colonial,” she said later that year, “the hair on my arms stands on end.”

 A lot of fans felt the same way.

4. Watson’s last stand. All four major championships in 2009 were remarkable, but they shared a common theme — they weren’t supposed to end the way they did. Kenny Perry’s bobble at Augusta, Phil Mickelson’s three-putt at Bethpage Black and Tiger Woods’ lost 54-hole PGA lead scuttled what would have been incredibly dramatic stories.

 

Then there was the British Open at Turnberry, where an aging legend returned like something out of a dream. Five-time Open champion Tom Watson, long a revered figure in Scotland, played the golf of his life on the old links at Turnberry and appeared poised to win a major championship at 59, 13 11 years older than any major champion in history. It still looked good when Watson swung a sweet 8-iron at the final hole … until the ball rolled over the green and part-way down an embankment.

 

Watson didn’t get up and down for the par he needed to win, leaving a 10-foot putt woefully short. He suddenly looked his age in the four-hole playoff and lost badly to Stewart Cink. The Scots wanted this one for Old Tom, and the trophy presentation felt like a funeral as fans silently filed out, many of them teary-eyed.
Watson’s amazing week was the golf story of the year.

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Ten Moments in golf decade

Ten Moments in golf decade

10) Rory McIlroy’s cheerful, freckled face is perhaps the golf countenance I’ll most remember as representing 2009, partly, I suppose, because, we all saw so much of it as his teenaged heroics brought his World Ranking down from 50th after his first European Tour victory at the Dubai Desert Classic in January to an incredible 9th after his third place finish at the season closing Dubai World Championship, but more so, I guess, because I saw his curly-topped visage as golf’s new face of the future. Right now he stands where Tiger Woods once stood. Let’s hope Northern Ireland’s Holywood star can emulate Tiger’s on-course brilliance, but stay away from the kind of things that right now threaten to cost the World No.1 so much.

2009’s Shots Stick in Memories

9) There were some great shots played around the world this year, but to me the most unforgettable of all of them was the magnificent approach South Korea’s YE Yang fired off at the 18th hole on the final day of the season’s final major, the US PGA Championship. He needed to make a birdie there to become the first Asian winner of a major in history and the first man ever to beat Tiger Woods in a major in which the world’s greatest golfer of the 21st Century had led heading into a last round. The fact that Yang was playing alongside the hugely intimidating figure of Woods himself made things even tougher, yet despite being under the greatest pressure imaginable, underdog Yang hit the shot of his life. The ball seemed to be radar guided as it arrowed in on the pin and plopped down four or five feet away for the easy birdie that gave him his famous victory and me a rare memory.

New Year 2010 celebration

8) Gary Player has his critics, especially in his native South Africa where some see him as boastful - “I do 1,000 sit-ups a day” - and too quick to lecture people on how they should live their lives, but for a man in his eighties, he is still a wonderful ambassador for golf. And he proved this a few months ago at a public driving range in Cape Town where I noticed him practicing quietly by himself at one end of it. A couple of us went over to watch the swing of a man who has won more majors and senior majors combined than anyone else and it wasn’t long before thirty or forty people had gathered and the grand old man was conducting a fully-fledged but impromptu clinic. I’ll never forget. He answered every question thrown at him, all the while demonstrating the difference between the swing of Arnold Palmer, Lee Trevino and Jack Nicklaus and produced some really funny quips like this gem: “At tournaments these days, the top guns all arrive in their own jets. Then come the smaller propeller driven planes. Those belong to their caddies!” Thanks for the memory, Gary!

The Up and Down in 2009 Golf

7) For three or four years I was convinced I was seeing the tragic ruin of a brilliant new talent as Michelle Wie kept making a fool of herself playing against the men of the PGA Tour. It made her pretty rich very quickly, but it destroyed her confidence so badly, she, eventually, was unable to make the cut in any level of men’s or women’s golf. She went to ground as a Stanford University student for a while and when she re-emerged she was able to give me some of the year’s best memories with her performance at this year’s Solheim Cup matches. Here, instead of being looked upon as the spoiled and pampered brat of women’s golf, she actually found herself embraced by her peers and caught up in their team spirit. She went on to win three and halved one of her four Cup matches and was hailed as the star of the American triumph over Europe. From being a pariah, willowy Wie had suddenly become the great patriot - ‘with a wicked sense of humour’, according to her now supportive team-mates - and it will all prove to be, I fervently hope, a gigantic cross-roads moment that will change the course of her life.

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Woods pay for $12 billion for his scandal

Woods pay for billion for his scandal

According to a study by economic professors at the University of California-Davis, Tiger Woods’ sex scandal has cost the shareholders of companies endorsing the golfer up to billion (£7.2 billion). The study, conducted by Victor Stango and Christopher Knittel, examined the market value of Woods’ main sponsors in the days following  the golfer’s late night car crash in November, and the subsequent revelations of extra-marital affairs.

The study focused on eight of Woods’ major sponsors - Accenture, AT&T, Tiger Woods PGA Tour Golf videogame franchise (Electronic Arts), Gillette, Nike, Gatorade, TLC Laser Eye Centers, and Golf Digest - taking into account normal stock market fluctuations and the returns of each sponsor’s closest competitor. 

Of the sponsors, it was the sports-related companies that fared the worst, with Tiger Woods PGA Tour Golf, Gatorade, and Nike all suffering a 4.3 percent loss, or around billion (£3.7 billion).

 ”Our analysis makes clear that while having a celebrity of Tiger Woods’ stature as an endorser has undeniable upside, the downside risk is substantial, too,” Stango said in a statement released with the study. 

Woods - the world’s first sporting billionaire - was estimated to earn between million (£41.5 million) and 0 million (£63 million) in endorsements each year before the scandal hit, but Gillette - one of his biggest sponsors - has since announced they are scaling back their use of Woods in its advertising campaigns while Accenture has dropped the golfer altogether. 

More than a dozen women have been linked with Woods since the car crash, and the golfer has taken an “indefinite” break from the sport to focus on his family, though it has been said that wife Elin Woods has already launched divorce proceedings.

 

Top 10 golf books for 2009 (1)

Who says…….?

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PGATOUR.COM’s Win McMurry updates action from the first round of the 2009 RBC Canadian Open, the Senior Open Championship and Nationwide Tour Cox Classic, and previews what to watch for on day two. For complete coverage, visit PGATOUR.COM.
Video Rating: 0 / 5

AT&T Ends Relationship With Woods

AT&T Ends Relationship With Woods

NEW YORK — AT&T Inc. said Thursday it would no longer sponsor Tiger Woods, joining Accenture in dropping support for the world’s top golfer, who’s taking a break from the sport to focus on his marriage after his admitted infidelity.

The phone company hasn’t used Woods’ image extensively in advertising, but its logo appeared on his golf bag. That deal had been billed as a “multiyear” agreement when it was signed early in 2009. Woods has also been the host of the AT&T National PGA Tour event since it started in 2007. The phone company said it would continue to sponsor the event, which will be held in Newtown Square, Pa., in July.

AT&T, which is based in Dallas, did not comment on its reasons for dropping Woods, or how much his contracts were worth. Woods has taken an indefinite leave from playing.

Woods’ agent, Mark Steinberg, had no comment on AT&T’s decision.

Consulting firm Accenture dropped the athlete two weeks ago, saying he was “no longer the right representative” of the company’s values.

Gillette, a unit of the Procter & Gamble Co., also has said it won’t air ads for its razors that include Woods or include him in public appearances.

Swiss watch maker Tag Heuer, a unit of luxury goods empire LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, also said that it would “downscale” its use of golfer Tiger Woods’ image in its advertising campaigns for the foreseeable future.

Electronic Arts Inc., which puts out the “Tiger Woods PGA Tour” series of golf video games, has not said what its plans are for the franchise. The company did not immediately return requests for comment Thursday.

 

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Robert Allenby plays with injure

Robert Allenby plays with injure

Let me say who is hero?I will recommend Robert Allenby who ignored a twisted ankle to take a share of the lead after the opening round of the Sony Open in Honolulu.

The Australian fell off a curb in the Hawaiian city on Monday but his injury did not prove detrimental to his first day on the PGA Tour this year in blustery conditions at the Waialae Country Club.

Allenby shot a five-under-par 65 to take a share of a six-way lead in the first full-field tournament of the season with Americans Zach Johnson, Davis Love III, John Merrick, Ryan Palmer and PGA Tour Qualifying School winner Troy Merritt.

The sextet enjoy a one-shot lead over a 10-man group at four under including world number three Steve Stricker and Tom Lehman of the United States, Sweden’s Carl Pettersson and Argentina’s Angel Cabrera, the reigning Masters champion.(hi golfers,there are golf clubs for sale )

“I’ll take that,” the Australian said of his opening-round score. “I didn’t know what to expect today.

“I twisted my ankle on Monday and didn’t know whether I was going to play, tried it out yesterday and sort of scraped it around the golf course.

“I kind of did the same things today really. It’s all a bit abbreviated, the old swing, but the short game’s good and that’s what counts. You need that when you’re not 100%.”

Starting his round at the 10th hole, Allenby was four under as he made the turn, only to bogey his 10th hole, the par-four first.

That left only 45 golfers in the 144-man field under par yet within five shots of the lead heading into the second round.

J Donald was four over following a 74 with Sweden’s Jesper Parnevik another shot in arrears alongside US Open champion Lucas Glover.

happy day!

Sony Open review

Sony Open review

American professional golfer, Davis Milton Love III made a early lead at the Sony Open like Thursday. Love hasn’t competing for nearly two months, the last month he even couldn’t feel grass under his feet. But on Thursday, his good performance let us feel like he had never been away from the game.

Love played bogey-free in more wind than he was expecting at Waialae, making birdie on his last hole for a 5-under 65 that put him into a four-way tie for the lead among early starters with defending champion Zach Johnson, Ryan Palmer and PGA Tour rookie Troy Merritt. Love said, “It’s a nice way to start the year”. The relative calm on Oahu during practice rounds gave way to swaying of palm trees at sunrise along the shores of Waikiki, providing tough conditions for the morning.

Johnson, playing in the same group with Love, made seven birdies over his final 11 holes to join him atop the leaderboard.

The biggest surprise was Merritt, the wire-to-wire winner of Q-school last month who had never played in a PGA Tour event. Merritt felt the butterflies on the first tee, then played like a veteran. Merritt said, “Things went way better than I thought”

Johnson had no idea that he inspired another player to get off to a calm start. Palmer was looking for something to read earlier in the week when he came across an article about Johnson that dealt with taking golf one day at a time. He didn’t look at leaderboards or worry about the weekend until he signed for his 65. Palmer said, “Best start in my seven-year career”. Johnson followed his own advice. Asked if this was the start of an encore from a year ago, he quickly replied, “No.”"I’m trying to forget about those results from last year, but I’m trying to remember the positive vibes … some of the feelings that I had with my shots,” Johnson said. “But if I dwell in the past too much, I usually start backing up in the wrong direction”.

Fowler opened with a three-putt double bogey from 8 feet and wound up with a 75. Masters champion Angel Cabrera hit wedge into the par-5 ninth, with a strong breeze at his back, and finished with a birdie to join the group at 68 that included Pat Perez. Love again needs another big start to the year to get into the Masters. He played so much last year that he felt like he was spinning his wheels, and the end came after he withdrew at Disney after one round.

With cold weather in Sea Island along the Georgia coast, and his vacation to the slopes, he couldn’t wait to get on grass. After checking into the hotel at Waialae on Saturday night, he rushed out to the 11th green in twilight and began putting.

Of all the practicing he did in his garage, it was his putting that left him curious. Love, however, decided to give each putt one read and hit it like it was a pro-am round, and he was pleasantly surprised to see so many of them go in.

Love was optimistic, but he was anxious about competing. He said, “Once I got it going, once I got under par … I’ve been out here a long time. You don’t forget.”

Davis and Owens in contention

This trailer details the many EA SPORTS GamerNet features that will be available in Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 09 for Playstation 3, including Instant Challenges and daily winners. Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 09 will be releasing on August 26th for Xbox 360, Playstation 2, Playstation 3, PSP and Wii and is rated E for Everyone. EA SPORTS GamerNet features will only be available on the Xbox 360 and Playstation 3 versions of the game. To see this video in higher quality, or to download it, go to www.revver.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Tough to Break Tiger’s record

Tough to Break Tiger’s record

Tiger Woods has been in hiding since admitting the issue that he had been unfaithful to his wife. He is four majors behind the record set by Jack Nicklaus going into a year in which three majors will be held on Woods’ favorite courses. Jack Nicklaus believes Tiger Woods will find it tougher to break his record of 18 major wins if he sits out this year.

There has been all kinds of speculation as to his whereabouts, but nobody seems to be sure about where he is holed up.

 

 

“If Tiger is going to pass my record I think this is a big year in that regard. If he doesn’t play this year obviously the chore will get tougher.” Nicklaus said Friday

 

“I don’t know what he is going to do or play, only he can answer that,” said ‘The Golden Bear’ in a teleconference yesterday.

 

The 2010 US PGA Championship will be held at Whistling Straits for only the second time, the first winner being the big Fijian Vijay Singh, who won there in 2004.

 

Nicklaus, who will be 70 on January 21, does not expect the golfing world to collapse without Woods, who turned 34 on New Year’s eve.

 

He said: “There was golf after Bobby Jones, and after Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, the game has always survived us and the game will continue to go forward.

 

Woods has not been seen in public in nearly two months. Along with speculation on when he will return is how he will play with more scrutiny of his personal life than he has ever faced.
Without alluding to Woods, Nicklaus offered some insight into the emotional state required to win majors.

 

“Tiger always has been a big influence on the game,” Nicklaus said. “But the game had Bobby Jones, the game had Walter Hagen, Arnold Palmer, Gary Player, Tom Watson, Lee Trevino, Nicklaus. The game always survived that. The game will continue to go forward. Tiger is a big influence, probably the largest one we ever had. And certainly, we hope he comes back and plays.”It’s not all about one person,” he said. “The game is a big game.”

 

Yes, let’s remember it, the tour is not all about one person, this game is a big game.

 

PGA Tour—Where to Go without Tiger Woods

Questions about Tiger Woods in New Season

PGATOUR.COM’s Win McMurry reports on Tiger Woods’ return to the PGA TOUR at the 2009 World Golf Championships - Accenture Match Play Championship.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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Closely Follow the Sony Open

Closely Follow the Sony Open

American professional golfer, Davis Milton Love III made a early lead at the Sony Open like Thursday. Love hasn’t competing for nearly two months, the last month he even couldn’t feel grass under his feet. But on Thursday, his good performance let us feel like he had never been away from the game.

 

Love played bogey-free in more wind than he was expecting at Waialae, making birdie on his last hole for a 5-under 65 that put him into a four-way tie for the lead among early starters with defending champion Zach Johnson, Ryan Palmer and PGA Tour rookie Troy Merritt. Love said, “It’s a nice way to start the year”. The relative calm on Oahu during practice rounds gave way to swaying of palm trees at sunrise along the shores of Waikiki, providing tough conditions for the morning.

 

Johnson, playing in the same group with Love, made seven birdies over his final 11 holes to join him atop the leaderboard.

 

The biggest surprise was Merritt, the wire-to-wire winner of Q-school last month who had never played in a PGA Tour event. Merritt felt the butterflies on the first tee, then played like a veteran. Merritt said, “Things went way better than I thought”

 

Johnson had no idea that he inspired another player to get off to a calm start. Palmer was looking for something to read earlier in the week when he came across an article about Johnson that dealt with taking golf one day at a time. He didn’t look at leaderboards or worry about the weekend until he signed for his 65. Palmer said, “Best start in my seven-year career”. Johnson followed his own advice. Asked if this was the start of an encore from a year ago, he quickly replied, “No.”"I’m trying to forget about those results from last year, but I’m trying to remember the positive vibes … some of the feelings that I had with my shots,” Johnson said. “But if I dwell in the past too much, I usually start backing up in the wrong direction”.

 

Fowler opened with a three-putt double bogey from 8 feet and wound up with a 75. Masters champion Angel Cabrera hit wedge into the par-5 ninth, with a strong breeze at his back, and finished with a birdie to join the group at 68 that included Pat Perez. Love again needs another big start to the year to get into the Masters. He played so much last year that he felt like he was spinning his wheels, and the end came after he withdrew at Disney after one round.

 

With cold weather in Sea Island along the Georgia coast, and his vacation to the slopes, he couldn’t wait to get on grass. After checking into the hotel at Waialae on Saturday night, he rushed out to the 11th green in twilight and began putting.

 

Of all the practicing he did in his garage, it was his putting that left him curious. Love, however, decided to give each putt one read and hit it like it was a pro-am round, and he was pleasantly surprised to see so many of them go in.

 

Love was optimistic, but he was anxious about competing. He said, “Once I got it going, once I got under par … I’ve been out here a long time. You don’t forget.”

 

Davis and Owens in contention

KeepCasual.com’s video review for Tiger Woods 10 for the Nintendo Wii. For news, release dates, reviews, etc on all things casual game related, please visit www.keepcasual.com.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

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What You Shoule Learn From-Golden Bear’s Persistence

What You Shoule Learn From-Golden Bear’s Persistence

The well-known golf Golden Bear, Jack Nicklaus will celebrate his 70th birthday this week, but the man regarded by many as golf’s greatest player will not have his feet up for too long.

 

 He first picked up a club at the age of ten and was soon winning age events all over the state. Today, Nicklaus is one of the most respected and best loved figures in the game, but it has been a long journey, one that has stretched over half a century. Despite his age, the 18 times majors champion remains actively involved in golf course design and will be straight back to work immediately after his three-day fishing trip.

 

 

The business is how Nicklaus, who won six U.S Masters titles, four U.S. Opens, three British Opens and five PGA Championships, has kept his competitive juices flowing in the years since he began to fade from the top level of the game in the mid-eighties.

 

“When you lose (your) ability to play the game, you lose your vehicle to compete. Competition is my big deal. Competition is what I love,” he said in a teleconference ahead of his birthday on Thursday.

 

“My expectations of my game were very high most of my life. And as my swing speed with ping g10 irons went down, as my ball-striking ability went down, as my ability to dominate a golf course went down, that vehicle left me. So I had to find other vehicles.

 

“I’m a very fortunate guy in that golf course design is something that kept me in the game of golf. I had my competition with a piece of land and the ground I was working with.”

 

Many in the game would have preferred Nicklaus, who recorded 73 wins on the PGA Tour, to have competed more regularly on the over-50 Champions Tour and in other big events.

 

But it was hard for the ‘Golden Bear’ to play at a lower level than in his prime and Nicklaus Designs, the company he runs with his four sons and his son-in-law, filled the gap. Maybe you would say that many swingers are swinging their cheap golf clubs better than Jack Nicklaus, or maybe you would say he is not the best. But I will tell you that no individual has been able to develop and combine and sustain all of the complex physical skills and the immense mental and emotional resources the game demands at its highest level as well as Jack Nicklaus has for as long as he has.

 

I like his persistence and admire his courage, how about you?

 

Jack Nicklaus Festoon Golf Summit

 

 

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Daly-I’ll Not Quit Golf

Daly-I’ll Not Quit Golf

John Daly, who was known primarily for his “zero to hero” victory in the 1991 PGA Championship, insisted he was not quitting golf, 24 hours after claiming he was “done” with the game. Not only Daly, some other good golfers are don’t want to retire golf as well. They will not let their golf clubs free. 

The two-time major winner, without a PGA Tour card and playing on sponsors’ exemptions, missed the cut at the Farmers Insurance Open in San Diego on Friday night. He then told a Golf Channel camera crew filming a reality TV show about him: “I can’t compete. I can’t play like I use too. I can’t keep taking spots from guys out here playing this bad. It’s not worth it. 

But Daly today moved to clarify his position via a series of messages on his Twitter account, PGA-JohnDaly. 

“I’m not retired and never said I was retiring,” Daly wrote.

“I’m going to honour the commitments to the tournaments that have given me sponsors’ exemptions and will continue to try and get them this year.

“The interview yesterday caught me after a tough two days and much frustration. I have talked to all of my sponsors and they just want me to continue to play.” 

Daly, 43 years old this year, also denied the comments were a publicity stunt for the reality show, adding: “Not my style.”

 

A nine-year-old boy’s love

Kung Fu helps your golf game

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PGA TOUR player Sergio Garcia gives us an inside look at what he carries in his golf bag. To learn more about Sergio, visit PGATOUR.COM.