Calendar

Become a Fan

Blog Networks



Loaded Web - Global Blog & Business Directory
PGA

Woods Outlasts Harrington to Win For 70th Time

Tiger Woods is two for two…and four for four.

After a four stoke victory over Padraig Harrington on Sunday at The Bridgestone, Tiger Woods won the second tournament of his three consecutive week run. That run comes to a mighty crescendo next week when Woods goes for his first major of 2009 at the PGA Championship at Hazeltine.

But Woods also won something else on Sunday, something that may not be a big deal in the grand scheme of things, but is still something to mention: The Major Tune-up Grand Slam. Woods has come out on top in each of his four final pre-major starts. But so far, it hasn’t worked out so well. What good is winning at The Arnold Palmer, The Memorial, or The AT&T National, if you toss up a dud when it really counts?

Usually that logic would be perfectly sound. But I think that this win for Tiger means a lot. After his disaster at The British, Tiger’s game was in as much flux as the best player in the world’s can be. He was struggling off the tee and looked to be mechanically out of sinc. But thanks to a summit with swing guru Hank Haney, Woods has seemed to have weathered another rain storm in his career in brilliant fashion.

As predicted, Sunday at The Bridgestone was about the battle between Tiger Woods and Padraig Harrington. Two players with multiple majors in their trophy cases. Two players who have experienced struggles at times this year. In the case of Woods, the struggles were isolated to one week in Scotland. In the case of Harrington, the struggles have been almost constant.

After a season of missed cuts and unimaginable frustration, Padraig Harrington finally found himself in a position to win on Sunday. It was a position that must have felt a little strange and nostalgic for the Irishman who has failed to qualify for the weekend seven times this season.

It looked like Paddy didn’t have enough to keep pace with Tiger on the front nine. Harrington didn’t make any mistakes, but he didn’t make any birdies either. When Tiger Woods is breathing down your neck, you can’t keep making pars and expect to keep the Tiger in his cage. It was only a matter of time before Woods took the lead. It looked like curtains for Paddy. Nice try, see you next time.

But than something strange happen. On the precipice of yet another kill, Tiger Woods let up. Consecutive bogeys on 15 and 16 found the two stars of the day tied at the top with four holes to play. A tournament once thought to be over now had a ton of juice. It was conceivable that one birdie on the final four holes could win the weekend.

Harrington put an end to that two holes later. At 16, Paddy’s magic ran out with a triple bogey that was downright painful to watch. After a Woods birdie on the same hole, the tournament was over.

The most interesting subplot to the triple at 16 was revealed during Tiger Woods’ press conference. Woods said that the two were put on the clock in the later stages of the round. This means that the group were told that they were playing too slow and may be fined and/or penalized if they did not speed up. Woods mused that Harrington may have hit a shot or two that he wouldn’t have otherwise if the players were given free range to play at their own pace.

This is funny because the round did seem to be going a bit slower than normal, but nothing that raised my eye in terms of “unusual”. I don’t understand why the last group of the day would be given this sort of warning. Who exactly are they “holding up”? The CBS Evening news?….Please.

For tournament officials to mess with a fantastic Sunday of golf is both mind-boggling and discouraging. Who knows if this played a major part in Padraig’s collapse on 16. But it would be extremely plausible to think that rushing players late on Sunday would affect a player who has struggled all season. Considering that no one has been penalized for slow play in 20 years, the timing of the warning was extremely poor.

Tigers win was more than just one more for the trophy case. The win was his 70th ever. This moves him into third place all time behind Sam Sneed and Jack Nicklaus .

But like anything in golf, Tiger is not measured by how many times you win at Bridgestone, Congressional, or any other non-major course. It’s what you do in Majors.

The final test in that regard comes next week for Woods.

Next Week: The PGA Championship- Major #4! It’s the last chance for Tiger to get one in ‘09. After missing the cut at Major #3, this would be a great story. This will also be the first major this season that Tiger hasn’t taken a week off. How will that affect him? We know that the weekend off didn’t treat him well last time….Look for full converge here and on wcwpsports.com all this week

MMA

Scatter Brained Post UFC 101 Thoughts

- In the words of Chris Rock “Stephan Bonnar take off that silly ass hat.” You sir are terrible.

Now, logical question, why the hell am I talking about Bonnar? Just watch him try to analyze the Penn/Florian fight.  “Penn stole round one, I had round two and three scored for Kenny.” What?  Were you watching the same fight?  Maybe Mark Coleman rattled your skull a little too much.  The only offense Kenny mounted all fight were continual unsuccessful take-down attempts.

- I’m going to pistol whip the next person who says “the fix is in”

I get it.  Silva dropped Forrest with a silly jab, as he was backing away none the less.  Many want to cry “fix” but lets not forget how many times Silva dropped Griffin in that fight.  Oh, while were at it rumor has it Griffin broke his jaw and potentially busted his ear drum.  So if you want to bash Griffin for the way he exited the cage here’s what I want you to do…go break your jaw and ear drum and see if you:

A) Feel like talking to Joe Rogan

B) Going to a hospital

Just sayin….

- Penn and Silva are on a totally different level.  I think this doesn’t need explaining.

- Stock Watch

UP

Ricardo Almeida

Kendall Grove (he needs to move up to 205)

George Sotiropoulos (way up)

Matt Riddle (way up)

Tamdan McCrory (even in a split loss, Sherdog has him winning, ton of potential)

Johnny Hendricks

DOWN

Josh Neer

Kurt Pelligrino (most blah win I’ve ever seen)

Amir Sadollah (I know premature stoppage, it’s a shame he would have lost anyway.  The soon to be forgotten TUF winner)

Aaron Riley (I like you Aaron but you have to finish Shane Nelson)

Shane Nelson

Kenny Florian (You can’t call me a bandwagon jumper I’ve always hated on K-Flo.  He earned this title shot but he’s not one of the top level lightweight fighters.  Sanchez, Maynard, Edgar, Sherk (again), Griffin would all beat Florian.  He won’t work his way up the ladder again.  Hello 145!)

PGA

The Resurgence of Padraig Harrington

So it’s finally working for Padraig Harrington.

Fully entrenched in one of the most (if not the most) frustrating season of his entire career, Padraig Harrington finds himself with a three shot lead over Tiger Woods in the Bridgestone Invitational.

Harrington, the subject of a complete swing overhaul, has looked like a different person this season. The same guy who won back-to-back major championships last year has missed seven cuts this season. His best finish came at the Arnold Palmer Invitational when he tied for 11th. His best finish in a major came at The Masters when he tied for 26th. In defending his British Open title, he allowed over 100 players to finish ahead of him. And don’t even mention Bethpage Black. Padraig was slammin’ the old Irish trunk after the second round.

Who is this guy?!?!?

But like your parents always told you as a kid, never underestimate the power of hard work. It would have been understandable for Paddy to abanden the swing change and go back to what won him the last two majors of ‘08. But golfers are nothing if not tinkerers. Harrington knew that eventully the persistance would pay off.

It looks like the change is begining to show dividends.

After shooting a 64 on Thursday and a 69 on Friday, Paddy split the difference with a 64 yesterday. He had two hicups during the third round and recovered nicely from both of them. After a boggey on 4, Harrington parred the next seven holes. The par streak halted with birdies on 12 and 13. After a boggey on 16, he birdied 17 and parred 18 to get to -10 for the tornament.

Now its time to watch something we haven’t been able to see for quite a while. Padraig Harrington with a lead. Not only that, but Padraig Harrington with a multiple shot lead.

And as if trying to hold a lead for the first time all year wasn’t enough for Harrington, Tiger Woods is making a charge up the leaderboard like only Tiger can. Woods had six birdies and one bogey yesterday to move to -7 on the week. He looked to be playing as well as he had all season on the back nine, hitting beutiful approach shots and birdieing 3 of the final four holes and four of the final six.

With Tiger lurking, I don’t see anyone else getting back in this tournament. Jerry Kelly sits five shots back and ten players (including all three ‘09 major champions and blog favorite Kenny Perry) at six shots back.

Today is about one matchup. It’s Harrington vs Woods. Can Paddy hold off those doubts that have plauged him all year and the best player in the world? The three shot lead helps, but its no secuity blanket. If their is one man who can shed a three shot deficit without batting an eye it’s Tiger.

And if there is one player in ‘09 who lacks confidence- It’s Harrington.

NCAAF

College Football ‘09: Virginia Tech Hokies

For the next few weeks our very own Jordan Lauterbach will be previewing the upcoming 2009 College Football season. Each day, he will be posting a new preview so be sure to check in everyday.

Last Season: 10-4, 5-3, beat Cincinnati in the Orange Bowl

Preseason Coaches Poll Rank: #7

Virginia Tech is quickly becoming the class of the A.C.C. Winners of two of the last four conference championship games, Fran Beamer and his Hokie crew look primed for another championship run. The dominance is even more impressive when you consider that the conference has been stronger than ever since the expansion of the league.

Here’s a stat for you: VT is just one of three schools with 10 or more wins in each of the last five seasons. The others? Texas and USC. Entering his 23rd season, Frank Beamer has emerged as one of the top coaches in the nation.

The Hokies should add to there A.C.C dominance this year with another strong season. Returning is quarterback Tyrod Taylor. Taylor is an athletic player who finally has the job to himself after a so-called quarterback controversy with Sean Glennon. Taylor threw for just over 1,000 yards and 2 touchdowns. He also threw seven picks.

Where the quarterback’s value really rests is his legs. While he was inconsistent throwing the ball last year, Taylor made defenses fear him when forced to make plays with his legs. He ran for 738 yards and seven touchdowns last season. This came a year after finding the end zone with his legs six times in his freshman season.

To become more of a complete player this season, Taylor needs to drastically improve his passing skills. On top of the awful touchdown to interception ratio, he only completed 57% of his passes. This will be an issue against the defenses that figure out how to contain Taylor in the pocket, thus forcing him to throw.

The quarterback can’t blame his offensive line either. The line was strong last season and should be good again this year. The line returns tackles Ed Wang and Blake DeChristopher. While second team All-American Sergio Render missed spring practice, he should be good to go come September.

The Hokies have an impressive three-some of running backs. Darren Evans headlines the group. Evans racked up over 1,000 yards and 11 touchdowns last season. He is joined by Josh Oglesby and Ryan Williams. Both these players are more than capable complements to Evans. With the stout offense line and the mobility of Tyrod Taylor, the Hokies will give teams who struggle to stop the run fits. In fact, I can’t see how teams without good run defenders find themselves in games with Virginia Tech. To put a number on that statement, Virginia Tech averaged 175 yards on the ground per game last year.

The defense that allowed a shade over 16 points per game will be strong again. Jason Worilds is the returning sack leader, bringing the quarterback down 8 times in 13 games last season. Worilds is coming off shoulder surgery that caused him to miss spring practice. If he stays healthy, he will anchor the defensive line. The combo of Worilds, Cordarrow Thompson, and Nekos Brown, and Demetrius Taylor fill out the rest of an experienced defensive line.

The biggest issue in the secondary will be replacing Victor Harris. However, the return of Stephan Virgil certainly lessons this blow. Virgil leads all returnees with six interceptions last season.

While the biggest issue this season will be the passing game, I think the ability to run the football will mask this problem. The defense should be more than good enough to bring another A.C.C title to Blacksburg, and quite easily at that.

3 Games To Watch

September 5th- Alabama- While I don’t think ‘Bama is nearly as good as the coaches do (ranking them 5 in the pre-season poll), there is no doubt that this battle between two 2008 BCS bowl teams will be a huge week one match up. Virginia Tech will make an huge statement out of the gate. This will be one of the few games that VT can prove themselves on a national scale. Too bad it comes in week one.

October 17th- @ Georgia Tech- If any team competes with the Hokies in the A.C.C Coastal division, it will be Georgia Tech. The running game will have to shine in this one because Georgia Tech boasts one of the best secondaries in the country. With the problems VaTech could have throwing the football, it will imperative to run the football well.

October 29th- North Carolina- Besides Georgia Tech, North Carolina is the highest ranked team on the schedule (#20 in the coaches preseason poll),. This game could be the last real test of the season for the Hokies before the A.C.C Championship Game.

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes