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PGA

If There’s One I Love…

It’s more golf! and in 2016, 2020 we’ll have it.

From Yahoo!

After more than a century on the sidelines, golf will return to the Olympics at the Summer Games in Rio de Janeiro. Rugby, last played in 1924, is coming back as well.

Both were reinstated for the 2016 and 2020 games after a vote Friday by the International Olympic Committee….Golf will stage a 72-hole stroke-play tournament for men and women, with 60 players in each field

I’ll be interested to see what this feel likes. Will it have the Major Championship feel or the Ryder Cup feel. My guess is the later.

Either way, it’ll be better than the John Deere or the Wyndham Championship.

PGA

Tiger Hunt

If there was ever an opening to catch Tiger Woods Friday at the PGA Championship, it came in the first couple of holes. Woods started the second round at Hazeltine by doing something that he had not done at any point in round one.

Exceeding par.

But the first hole was more of an aberration than a rule as Woods took further command of a major that, going into Saturday, he seems destined to win. After following up the mistake on the first with four pars, he birdied six and seven to erase the mistake on one. Two more bogeys and three more birds left Tiger at 2 under par for the day and seven under par for the tournament. He sits four shots up on five players who are tied for second.

I’d like to sit here and write that the tournament still has multiple contenders and the battle on the weekend will be one we’ll be talking about for years to come. Only problem is, I don’t think that’s true. The idea of Tiger being on a mission at Hazeltine looks to be coming true. A four deficit against a player this good playing this well may be too much to ask from anyone of the five “contenders” left log-jammed behind Tiger.

Padraig Harrington did not have nearly the round yesterday that he needed to in order to keep up with Woods. Harrington shot a +1, 73 to drop into the second place tie. After a slip up on the third hole, Harrington looked to be chugging along with five pars and a birdie in the next six hole. Than he stepped into the tee box at 11 and his shot at keeping pace with Woods slipped away.

Three consecutive bogeys followed by another one at 18 made the final nine a very frustrating one. I still think he has as good a chance as anyone to compete, but will need to put together two phenomenal rounds. Again, whether or not he’ll be able to do that depends on whether or not you believe that Padraig has finally fixed his game.

Vijay Singh, who’s sixth place finish at the Crowne Plaza marked his best week of the year, will get the honor of playing with Tiger later today. Singh shot a second round 72 to finish at even par in round two. It was certainly not a great round, but coupled with his day one 69, it’ll do. Singh had three birdies and three bogeys.

Today’s round will say a lot about Singh. His ability to play well with Tiger threatening to break the week wide open should be a difficult task. But besides Harrington, Singh is the most apt to handle that kind of atmosphere.

The best day of anyone chasing Tiger belonged to Ross Fischer. The Englishman shot a -4, 68 to charge up the leaderboard. Fischer was impressive all day, notching six birdies and only two bogeys. What was scary about Fischer’s round was that it should have been even better. If not for bogeys on the last two holes, Fischer was looking at sole possession of the Tiger chasing position at a number that would have been a lot less daunting than four shots back.

If you want to go for the hot hand in tomorrow’s Tiger hunt, go with Fischer. No one else played as well as him yesterday. You know you played well when -4 doesn’t do the round justice.

U.S Open champ Lucas Glover and Brendan Jones had identical -2 scores to add themselves to the second place brigade. Glover had the same amount of birdies as he did in round one, but cut his bogey count by one to march up the board.

Jones had a very steady round. It was defined by a eagle on the par four fourteenth. Never heard of Jones? I don’t blame you. He is an Australian who plays mostly oversees. The PGA is only his second tournament of the season. His first one came in February when he finished 33rd in the WGC-Accenture match play championship.

Not exactly a house hold name. I wouldn’t expect him to stay in it.

It may not matter for any of these players today. If Tiger keeps playing like he is, I don’t think any of these five can put together a round to catch him. That would have to be one incredible round. But if anyone can do it, it will be Paddy Harrington. Despite the one over round yesterday, you can see that his game has turned a corner. His round was not spectacular, but he still managed to knock in a few incredible shots. After one such shot, Woods remarked to him that he would “pay money” to see him make it again.

However, while us observing may think we see the “writing on the wall”, those five all got up this morning thinking that they can win. All of them may not completely believe it, but they all have hope.

And when your play major championship golf against a player like Tiger, that’s what it’s about.

The thrill of the chase.

PGA

Tiger Woods To Be Fined For Comments (Reportedly)

From The AP:

Tiger Woods will be fined by the PGA Tour for his public criticism of a rules official after winning the Bridgestone Invitational, a tour official said Monday.

The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the tour does not publicize fines.

Woods was bothered after his four-shot victory Sunday because he and Padraig Harrington were put on the clock at the par-5 16th. He said that caused Harrington to rush three difficult shots, leading to triple bogey.

European Tour chief referee John Paramor told Woods and Harrington they were being timed.

Woods said he told Harrington after it was over, “I’m sorry that John got in the way of a great battle.

This is absolutely ridiculous. What is the PGA Tour trying to prove by fining Tiger Woods? That Tiger isn’t “bigger” than the tour? Too late. He is.

I’ve always had a problem with leagues fining owners, coaches and players for honesty. It strikes me as unnecessary and totalitarian. Does the perception of the general public change because of something Tiger Woods said? I don’t think it does.

I wonder if the PGA is more upset that Tiger criticized the decision to put his group on the clock or that he revealed the fact that they were put on the clock. That revelation makes the tour look worse than the criticism does. Anyone who knows anything about the sport can see the problem with putting the last group of the day on Sunday on the clock, especially if the group has the only two players in contention. It makes the tour look bad. It cheapens the golf.

Referee John Paramore did get in the way. He did ruin a great match. He is at fault. Who knows if Padraig Harrington’s collapse had anything to do with the clock. But it certainly would make a lot of sense if it did. The fact that Tiger Woods, of all players, would mention it gives you an indication that it was a big distraction.

Fine Tiger all you want, PGA, but it doesn’t change the fact that you looked like morons for trying to mess with a great Sunday.

It doesn’t change the fact that Tiger was right.

Update (3pm)- Tiger Woods says that he was not fined by the PGA Tour…

If thats true, I wonder where the original report came from…seems a bit odd to me…..

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.

PGA

Watson Comes Within Inches of History (Cink Wins)

History was made on Sunday at Turnberry. But it was the wrong kind. An American walked on to British soil on Sunday and mounted a fantastic comeback. But it was the wrong American.

Stewart Cink finally shed the “so-close, but yet so far demons” and won his first Major Championship, but unfortunately for Cink, it doesn’t really matter all that much. Sure, if your last name is spelled C-I-N-K it matters. If you are a buddy or pal of good ol’ Stu from Huntsville, Alabama, it matters. But to the rest of us, all that matters about Stewart Cink is that he’s not Tom Watson.

He’s not the guy we climbed out of bed at 9:15am to see tee off. He’s not the guy we were crouching for at 18 when he needed one more putt to etch his name into golf lore. It could have been anyone, I guess. Lee Westward, Matthew Goggin, Ross Fischer, or wunderkind Chris Wood. It would have been the same feeling. The same disappointment.

If he were any other guy, the story would be how Watson choked it away. We would be yelling and screaming about how he just couldn’t handle the pressure. We would be asking, “How could a pro miss a par putt for the win like that”. The words yips and “throwing up” would be typed on key-boards across America.

But we know that’s not the way it should be remembered and it won’t be. Cink could go on to win 20 more majors and still, no one would remember when he got his first. But it wouldn’t take long to revive the memory. All someone would have to say was “Watson” and the scenes would be coming rushing back.

I know I’ll never forget where I was when Tom Watson stood over a par putt to win the British at age 59. As for Cinks putt? I probably will forget about it by mid-week. Through no fault of his own, Stewart Cink sunk the most anti-climactic putt to win a major that we’ll see for a long while. The balloon had been popped. Cink’s was the only one still floating.

And that’s the unfortunate nature of Golf. Any other week, Cink’s story would be fantastic. At 16, he looked like a dead man. Cink had just bogeyed the second hole in his last three. A few holes behind him, destiny was doing just enough to remain dressed as Tom Watson. It looked like another close call.

He parred 17.

Ok, better now. But his caddy’s back still reads Cink. Not enough W’s in that name.

He birdied 18.

Hey, look at this. Stewart Cink is kind of back in it. But then again, charging to beat destiny is a lot different than charging for destiny.

Typically, destiny doesn’t miss to many par putts.

Then, like a flash, destiny went home. Watson remembered he was 59 years old and missed a putt he would have made with the club handle between his teeth in any of the first three rounds and then sprayed the ball all over Scotland in the playoff. A playoff is perhaps the worst place to suddenly loose your accuracy off the tee. And just like that a week of outstanding golf turned into a sleeper of a playoff.

A non-biased observer may have been able to see this coming. Heck, as disappointed as I was, I wasn’t all that surprised when Watson missed his par-putt at 18. He had been struggling with the putting stroke all day. A confident Watson who couldn’t miss one during the first three rounds became a hesitant Watson who couldn’t make one on Sunday. He was plus 2 for the day and made only three birdies all day. He wasn’t exactly robbed of the tournament. When you miss almost every birdie opportunity, theft becomes almost impossible. Two less missed opportunities and Watson is walking up 18 with a 3 shot lead and tears in his eyes (and yours). Don’t believe me? Go DVR the ESPN Classic replay this week (it has to happen right?, I mean what do they have to show this week…Classic USFL?).

As I’ve written, people love (me included) to talk about a good choke. Heck, I’m still referencing Kenny Perry and Chad Campbell at the Masters from time to time. But in rare events, chokes are almost universally ignored. This one will be.

I think I know why, too. Golfers are typically figures that look like untouchable demi-gods on the tee. They hit it longer and straighter on there absolute worst day then you do on your absolute best. They read greens like its “Hop On Pop” or “The Cat in the Hat”. They have wives that are gorgeous and children that look a lot more well-behaved then yours are. They are easier to connect with then a “regular athlete”, but the connection is still quite fuzzy.

I don’t think that was the case with Watson. I think every golfer saw a little bit of themselves in good old Tom this weekend. He was gracious, unassuming, and warm. He had as many wrinkles on his face as yours and looked like he could be playing with you at the club on Saturday mornings. He didn’t have bulging muscles or toned triceps. He wasn’t a pro athlete with a club and a tee. He was you. and you were him. When Tom missed that putt at 18, you knew exactly how he felt. He was obviously tired during the playoff and so were you. 22 holes is a lot for a guy pushing 60.

And just like you were last weekend, Watson was beaten by the young guy who just joined your club.

Nice guy, you think afterwards. He’s got a lot to learn.

Note: I’ll be on vacation until Monday, July 27th. Enjoy the RBC Canadian Open next week. I’ll be back for the Buick….Only four weeks until Major #4.

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….

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