Entries Tagged as 'decade'

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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Someone Glad someone Sad in golf decade

Someone Glad someone Sad in golf decade

Biggest shocker: No contest here. It was Tiger Woods falling from grace in stunning, messy, nasty tabloid-like fashion. It all began with a National Enquirer story that accused Tiger of flying a New York city hostess to Australia for a tryst. Then there was the suspicious early morning one-car accident just outside Tiger’s Orlando home. Then we were then plunged into a weeks-long salacious scandal. Woods has dropped out of sight after announcing he was taking an “indefinite leave” from golf ( Tiger with His Women ). His wife, Elin, has bought a mansion on an island in Sweden, and People Magazine is reporting that she will leave her husband. Accenture cut ties with Woods, and other sponsors seem to be questioning their relationship with him. Meanwhile, the PGA Tour and its players are left to wonder what impact his indefinite absence will have on their future.

 

Most amazing shot: Tiger’s chip-in at the 16th in the ‘05 Masters, when his ball rolled past the cup, changed directions and rolled back the other way, barely toppling in at the end.
Biggest one-hit wonder: Stanford alum Hilary Lunke, who beat Angela Stanford and Kelly Robbins in a playoff at the 2003 U.S. Women’s Open. It was not only Lunke’s only win and her only top-35 finish in a women’s major, it was her only top-10 finish in any LPGA event, ever.

 

Loudest tear-inducing ovation: When Ireland’s Darren Clarke walked to the first tee for Friday morning’s 2006 Ryder Cup matches at the K Club in his home country, just weeks after his wife passed away from cancer, the roar was like nothing ever heard before in golf — not the Masters, not the 16th hole in Phoenix, not the New Yorkers at the Bethpage People’s Open.
Best gender barrier-breaking event: Lorena Ochoa, the top player in women’s golf, won the 2007 Women’s British Open at St. Andrews, the first women’s event held at the Old Course, which is the home of the male-only R&A. It was Ochoa’s first major championship, making her the first player since Tony Lema in 1964 to win that first career major at the Old Course. “Being at St. Andrews to make history — there’s no more to say,” a happy Ochoa said.

 

Most famous footwear: Annika Sorenstam won the 2002 Nabisco Championship wearing Dorothy-like ruby red slippers. Sorenstam said she almost changed shoes at the turn the first day because every time she looked down to putt, “they were distracting.”

 

Biggest upset: Y.E. Yang, a 37-year-old Korean and your 2009 Honda Classic champion, played in the PGA Championship’s final-round pairing with Tiger Woods, who had a two-shot edge and had never lost a major championship that he led after 54 holes. Until now. Yang stared down Woods, hit the hybrid shot of his life to the 72nd green, won the PGA by three strokes and acquired lifetime superstar status as the first Asian-born golfer to win a major.

 

Most overrated player: Michelle Wie ( showed signs of progress on the LPGA tour this year, with her first win and stellar play in the Solheim Cup, but has any golfer gotten million to turn pro and done less? She’s still only 20, however, and seems poised to become one of the LPGA’s top players.

 

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