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PGA

Tom, Tiger, and The Wind- British Open Day One Thoughts

I feel like a weather man. Maybe Al Roker or Mr. G. It seems like every time we have a major championship, I’m writing about the weather. But, unlike the U.S Open, today I write about how good weather can affect a golf championship.

What kind of effect can good weather have on a golf championship?, you may ask. The answer lies in the course.

One of the main features of links golf is that it is played in areas that are often rainy and windy. A major staple of the British Open has always been watching players struggle through some of the strangest conditions this side of winter. For goodness sakes, last year’s British featured sideways rain!

More than every other type of course, links courses are based on the assumption that the weather will be generally bad and unpredictable. The courses themselves aren’t necessarily all that challenging. The game often surrounds itself around navigating the course in sub-par conditions. Because the courses exist is places like Scotland, Ireland, and Britain, it is a safe bet that the weather will generally give way to challenging links golf.

But if you took that bet on day one of the British, you would have lost. The weather at Turnbury was quite calm. Watching the coverage on TNT, I saw little traces of rain or wind that would make any difference. This made a course that would be difficult in bad weather quite “assaultable”.

And assaulted it was. Although not leading at the end of the day,Tom Watson stole the show early. Watson used the calm course to his advantage a fired an unreal five-under, 65. The most impressive statistic from Watson’s day? No bogeys.

The 59 year old is known for his many triumphs at The British in the past, but was largely thought of as a ceremonial player who would finish light years below the cut line. Watson, himself, was supposed to help out on ABC’s weekend coverage. But don’t worry, ABC. He’ll still be helping you out. He may be your lead story. Yes, the prospect of Watson being in serious contention this weekend is an unlikely one. But stranger things have happened. One has to only look to last year when 53 year old Greg Norman found himself in the top three going into Sunday.

But here’s why I don’t think Watson is a serious contender come Saturday night- The weather yesterday allowed the course to become manageable. Their was no wind. No rain. No obstacle to overcome, besides the general trials of a professional golfer. I wouldn’t bet on the weather staying that way. I question whether Watson can compete in weather that is less than glorious. From what I understand, a glorious day is quite rare. I don’t think the equation of late round golf + Scottish weather + a few charging young guns on your tail would be one that Watson could solve successfully. I wouldn’t be surprised if we’re talking about Watson’s prospects differently after today’s round. He tees off at 8:06am.

Getting “Watson-blocked” in all of this is the actual leader, Miguel Angel Jimenez. Jimenez, also no spring chicken, shot a 6 under, 64 to grab sole possession of the lead. As was with Watson, Jimenez did not bogey a hole. His round was capped by a fantastic birdy putt at 18 to grab sole possession of the lead. The forty five year old had his most success in the early 2000’s. He had his best major finish ever when he tied for second at the 2000 U.S Open. A year later, he had his best ever British finish- tieing for third.

While I think he has a beater chance to stay in the tournament, I still question how much of the leaderboard was aided by the great condition. That being said, while tougher condition don’t help the leaders, it doesn’t do the chasers any favors either.

Other day one musings….

- Another poor day one showing for Tiger at a Major. He shot a +1, 71. It looked like he struggled off the tee for the majority of his round. One of the more disturbing things I noticed from Woods today was his general demeanor. Tiger is not known as a hot head, but he’s never exactly stoic on the course when he’s frustrated. If Tiger is not playing well, you will know it from his body language. This is nothing new.

But I thought his body language today was particularly poor. I noticed it more on the back nine. It wasn’t just yelling and pouting. It was letting the golf club go in the middle of his back swing in frustration. If seen Tiger mad, but never so much that he’d consistently go short on his mechanics.

I have a theory about why Tiger was so mad at himself, and it goes back to the weather. In his Tuesday press conference, Tiger talked so much about the challenges of a links course and the importance to taking advantage of it when you can…Today was a perfect day to pepper a course like Turnbury and Tiger couldn’t do it. Theren lies the frustration.

But this I know- round two is a make or break round for Tiger. He’s tied for 68th and cannot afford to wait for the weekend to make his move. By that time, it may be too late…even for Tiger.

The fact of the matter is that Woods may have wasted a huge opportunity on Thursday. If theres no charge, I wonder how this will affect the way his year is viewed. To be fair, its not a bad knock on the guy if you make it.

- Two major disappointments today…

-My pick, Hunter Mahan, is tied for 98th after a +2, 72. He never got comfortable after putting up bogey’s on his first two holes. He made only three birds all day (all on the back nine) and double bogeyed 15. He knows how to come from beind, but 8 shots may be a rough climb in a major.

- Anthony Kim was terrible. Part of it could have been the neck injury that he suffered early in his round. I know what those feel like and I can’t imagine playing golf with one. Kim dug his grave and buried himself with a gigantic 9 spot on the
2nd hole…9??

I don’t even shoot nine’s.

Uncategorized

Who Says Golfers Can’t Have Fun

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I came across this last night while searching for footage of Tiger Woods interviewing himself after his win on Sunday. Apparently, it’s from February- but I had never seen it. I thought it was pretty clever….

 

 

PGA

That Tiger Sure is Greedy

The Trend continues.

For a third consecutive time, Tiger Woods rolled to victory in his tune up for a major championship. This week, it was his own tourney- The AT&T National at Congressional.

Woods shot a three under, 67 to capture his third win of the season. What made this victory just as impressive as his comeback win at The Memorial was the fact that a playoff with Hunter Mahan was just one slip up away. Mahan, who entered the clubhouse long before Tiger did, shot a course record-tying eight under 62 and climbed to within one shot of the greedy host. Mahan was showed anxiously hitting balls at the course range, waiting and wishing for a playoff hole or two. He quickly learned that waiting around for Tiger Woods to make a mistake on the Sunday back nine is often an endless proposition .

It was a fine way to close the tournament. In many ways, it was the only way to close this tournament. The head of the Tiger Woods Foundation was on the radio on Friday afternoon talking about what had gone into preparing for this weekend. He told us that in April, he handed Woods a general outline for the weekend. The laundry list of obligations for Tiger was a vast one. Certainly more then any regular pro is used to on a tournament weekend. But the very last line of the itinerary made Tiger a little less trepidation about the whole ordeal. It read “hand the trophy to yourself.” While it was certainly a humorous way to look at the end to a daunting weekend, it proved symbolic. After all, despite his hosting duties, he was still a competitor in the field. The speeches and galas and pro-am on Wednesday was nice. But Woods didn’t come to smile, shake hands, and slap some golf balls around. Woods came to win. Unlike his victory at The Memorial, you never got the sense that he wouldn’t.

Sunday left no doubt. After a bogey on the par four 11th (the same hole that Tiger doubled up on Saturday), Woods was nothing but consistent. Six pars and a birdie later, this weeks host was handing the trophy to himself. Now Tiger must turn his attention to Turnbury, the site of the British Open. While Tiger is one tour win away from the “major tuneup grand slam”, he is 0-2 in Major tournaments this year. In both The Masters and the U.S Open, he entered the final day within striking distance, but was not really a factor by the final few holes. You can guarantee that Tiger takes no solace in his three pre-major wins if he fails to get one of the big titles. The “major tuneup grand slam” is fun for golf geeks like me to write about, but no one really remembers any individual non-major tournament triumphs as “great”. Tiger thrives on being great.

As for the feature “non Tiger story” of the weekend, Anthony Kim, he faded a little to finish third. Kim was a bit off all day. He shot a one over, 71. At one point during the final round, it seemed like Kim hit more people than fairways. More than once, the 24-year old launched his tee shot into the gallery. He recovered nicely on some holes, considering the placement, but playing golf’s version of dodge ball with the paying public seldom results in PGA Tour wins. However, Kim’s week should not go unnoticed. A year after winning at Congressional, Kim spent much of the weeked with at least a share of the lead. As I’ve written all weekend, golf experts tend to think he’s the next big thing. This weekend did nothing to disprove that theory. Hey fellow golf geeks!- Want a ridiculously early favorite for the 2011 U.S Open at Congressional?….how about Anthony Kim?

Next up on Tour: The John Deere Classic in Silvis, Illinois- Because of Phil Mickleson at The St. Jude, I don’t think we got the full “weekend before a major” experience in June. The field isn’t the greatest, but some big names still are making the trip. Defending champion Kenny Perry returns from his week off to try and continue his outstanding season and take back the FedEx cup lead (Woods took control with his win this weekend)……. U.S Open champion Lucas Glover looks to prove he will never take a week off……. David Duval is back. He hasn’t played since his back-from-the-dead performance at the U.S Open. Was that just a fluke, or as I wrote after the Open, has Duval awoken from a Rip Van Winkle-like nap….Steve Stricker also plays for the first time since Bethpage and looks to add to his six top ten finishes…

PGA

A Log Jam at The Top of the AT&T National

Anthony Kim answered the bell on Saturday afternoon. After an even par round on Friday, I wondered yesterday if Kim would be able to hang at the top. Would he be able to put a few faulter holes behind him and play like he did on Friday, when he set a course record at a future U.S Open site? At first, It didn’t look like it.

Kim boggeyed his first hole of day. The fall was on. But to his credit, Kim did not let a poor start bother him. He boggeyed only one other hole on Saturday (the par 5, ninth) and now sits atop the leaderboard. Kim made big putt after big putt to save par and make the occational birdie. He ended the day tied for first at ten under par. The round was more about saving par and staying afloat then moving up on the board. And that was all right. Kim didn’t have to win the tournement on Saturday, or make much of a move up the leader list. His round on Thursday took care of that. I have more confidence in Kim’s ability to stay on top and have a real chance to win the tournement after the third round.

Joining Kim on top is the host of this weeks event, Tiger Woods’. Woods’ round was a lot more frustrating then Kim’s. After an eagle at the ninth, Tiger looked to have the tourney well in hand. At one point, he had a three shot lead and was pulling anyway. As anyone in golf will tell you, their are few things more dangerous than Tiger Woods with a multiple shot lead. Then, Tiger did a very un-Tiger thing. He let multiple players back into the tournement. Much to the chigrin of Woods, he was became a good host after double boggeying the eleventh. He recovered nicely after the hiccup, birdieing the sixteenth and making par on the rest. However, it still was odd. Tiger botched a pottential chance to end the tornement on Saturday. You don’t see that very often.

The feel good story of the tournement is obviously that of Michael Allen. The 50 year old Allen has played in 336 events in his PGA career and won none of them. He’s the kind of guy who hangs on until he’s fifty and then goes to the senior tour, hoping to rake in what never came on the regular tour. Looked like a good plan, too. Allen won the Senior PGA championship. A great story. Never wins a PGA event and then captures a Senior tour Major. But don’t speak too soon on Allens’ PGA record quite yet. After a fantastic 65 on Saturday, Allen sits one shot off the lead at -9. However, I wouldn’t expect this to continue. Generally, you go 0-336 for a reason. Look for Allen to fade early on Sunday and end up fifth or sixth. Still a solid finish for this unlikly factor.

I would look for Sunday to be a two and a half man race. I like Anthony Kim to play well and stay in it until the end with Tiger….Maybe a playoff?? (I hope). Don’t sleep of Jim Furyk either. Furyk is two back at -8. He shot a 69 on Saturday, his worst round of the tornement. I like Furyk to be one shot off the lead at one point, but fade in the back nine. It will be hard to jump over four players and win. Jumping over Allen and Cameron Beckman is more then do-able. I don’t know about Kim and Tiger.

PGA

The Host is a Greedy One

All week during pre-tournament preparation, Tiger Woods talked about his desire to be a “greedy host”. Yes, he is the man who’s name is on the tournament. Yes, he has had a much busier week then other players. And yes, after all that- Tiger leads his own tourney headed into the weekend.

Coming into yesterday tied for second place, Tiger shot up the leaderboard after a four under, 66 yesterday. Ironically, the round was two shots worse then Thursdays’, but I think Tiger will take the dividends. He sits a shot up on Rod Pampling and two shots up on defending champion Anthony Kim.

Kim, who set the course on fire on Thursday, shot a mediocre even par 70. Thanks to his record smashing day on Thursday, Kim still sits in good position to win the tournament. I would say great, but I never think looking up at the best player on the planet ever puts someone in great position for anything.

If your looking for a good non-Tiger story line for Saturday, I think Kim is where you go. Here’s a guy who hasn’t won in exactly a year and is looking to get back on the right track. Their is no doubt that Kim has all the potential in the world. One TV commentator on Thursday came short of guaranteeing that he would win “multiple majors” before he hits the Champions tour. This may be true, but whether Kim realizes that potential is yet to be seen. One thing going for him is youth. At 24 years old, he is well aware the the typical golfer does not hit his prime until his early thirties. Since one of Kim’s main weaknesses is his apparent love for nightlife and parties, the theory that his slump is purely a case of being young and immature does carry a lot of weight.

Today’s round will be a huge one for Kim. Does he forget his definitively average round from yesterday and play Congressional like he’s shown he can play Congressional? Or does the demons of the slump rise up and bite Kim, sending him back on the leader board? I think he can stay in this tournament. He was a shot off on almost every hole yesterday. The holes he bogeyed, he pared yesterday. The holes he pared, he birdied yesterday. Their wasn’t that big double bogey blow up hole for Kim that might suggest a meltdown. A few more birdies and one less bogey and we’re looking at Kim in serious contention on Sunday morning.

Other notables- Jim Furyk shot a -3, 67 on Friday to sit in fourth at seven under. U.S Open champ Lucas Glover is tied for eighth at 5 under. This is the third consecutive tournament for Glover. It’s a bit odd for a major champion not to take a week off, but Glover seams to be handling it well.

Trunk Slammers (missed the cut): Robert Allenby, who was in contention at the St. Jude, missed his fourth cut of the year after two straight rounds of 72. WCWP fav John Merrick is going home despite playing at even par on Friday. His six over 76 on Thursday sunk him. K. J Choi was one of similar fate. His 69 was good for a respectable -1 on Friday, but it could not erase a disastrous +7 Thursday….

PGA

Anthony Kim Sets Course Record and Leads AT&T National

Anthony Kim really likes Congressional. No, he really likes it. If recent history is any indication, Congressional is the only course that Kim looks competent at. Of course, that last statement is inherently unfair- but no less the truth.

After struggling through what has been an absolutely disastrous year for Kim, the 24year old returned to the site of his last victory yesterday with a bang. Kim birdied the last eight holes of his first round and set a course record with an 8-under 62.

You would generally think that setting a course record would put you well in the lead. Especially because Thursday is useully a day where players are still working out the kinks of the course, all while trying to put themselves in a position to make the cut on Friday. Not the case this week. Kim holds only a two shot lead over Tiger Woods, D.A Points, and Bryce Molder.

Other notable “top 10ers” include Jim Furyk, who is tied for sixth after at four under 66, and Boo Weekly. Weekly is tied for ninth after a three under 67.

K.J Choi (+7), WCWP fav John Merrick (+6), and last weekends near hero Paul Goydos(+3)are all in danger of missing the cut.

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