Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Jimenez keen to book Ryder s


Miguel Angel Jimenez's joy at seeing Martin Kaymer win the USPGA title on Sunday was not only because he likes the young German.
Kaymer's play-off victory in Wisconsin also had the spin-off effect of lifting Jimenez from ninth to eighth in the Ryder Cup race - even though he had missed the cut.

Pavin impressed by Johnson


American Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin has praised the way Dustin Johnson handled the two-shot penalty which cost him a chance of a first major title.
And Pavin believes Johnson could be all the stronger for it when it comes to his Ryder Cup debut at Celtic Manor in October.

Kaymer delight at USPGA



Europe will parade two of this season's four major winners when they try to win back the Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor in October.
Rory McIlroy is naturally disappointed that one of them is not him after what happened at The Open last month and then the USPGA Championship this weekend.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

LIVE LEADERBOARD - US PGA Championship


LIVE LEADERBOARD

US PGA Championship - Round 2 Play Suspended

Top 10
PlayerScoreHole
Matt Kuchar-818
Nick Watney-718
Simon Khan-518
Bryce Molder-518
Jason Dufner-518
Noh Seung- Yul-518
Dustin Johnson-518
Rory McIlroy-518
Zach Johnson-518
Chad Campbell-418
Selected Others
PlayerScoreHole
Jim Furyk-39
Bubba Watson-39
Ernie Els-218
Phil Mickelson-218
Tiger Woods-16
Steve StrickerPar18
Padraig HarringtonPar6
Hunter Mahan+ 118
Justin Rose+ 418
Sean O'Hair+ 618

Clarke keeps the lid on his temper


Darren Clarke kept the lid on his temper remarkably well after tumbling off the US PGA leaderboard in dramatic fashion at Whistling Straits today.
Among the 78 players unable to finish last night, Clarke was forced to wait another 160 minutes after more fog swept in over the Wisconsin course where he led the field with an opening 65 six years ago.

Friday, August 13, 2010


LIVE LEADERBOARD

US PGA Championship - Round 1 resumed after a 2h40m delay due to fog

Top 10
PlayerScoreHole
Matt Kuchar-518
Bubba Watson-418
Francesco Molinari-418
Noh Seung- Yul-418
Ernie Els-418
Zach Johnson-417
Jason Day-318
Ryan Moore-318
Charles Howell III-318

Woods back on track


Tiger Woods was not about to go singing from the rooftops about a round which left him tied for 24th after day one of the final major of the year.
But the world number one still recognised that a one-under-par 71 when the USPGA Championship began at Whistling Straits was far better than what had come before and what many people thought might follow.

Clarke one back at Whistling Straits


Darren Clarke knows Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie needs no further headaches at the moment - but he might be about to give him one.
While Montgomerie battles off-the-course private life issues for the second time this year, one of his vice-captains will resume the USPGA Championship on Friday only one off the lead at Whistling Straits.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

USPGA R1 tee-times



Tee-off times in the first round of the USPGA Championship, Whistling Straits, Kohler, Wisconsin, United States of America.


No doubts for Monty over Tiger


Corey Pavin is refusing to say whether Tiger Woods will be in his Ryder Cup side - but opposite number Colin Montgomerie has no doubt what he would do.
"That's a very difficult, dangerous and undiplomatic question - but of course I'd pick him, yes," said Montgomerie when the two men held a joint press conference before the start of the USPGA Championship in Wisconsin.

Monty accepts Ryder Cup situation


European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie has been forced to accept that a number of players will not be answering his call to play in the final qualifying event.
In June Montgomerie was convinced that anybody still trying to make his side would attend the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles in two weeks' time.

Patience key for McIlroy


Rory McIlroy had no trouble naming the quality he thinks could be the key to becoming the third youngest winner of the US PGA title this week.
As torrential rain interrupted practice at Whistling Straits on the eve of the final major of the year the 21-year-old Northern Irishman stressed the importance of patience.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Pavin - Tiger not a certain pick



American Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin has denied that he was certain to use one of his four wild cards on Tiger Woods if the world number one needed it.
After being reported as saying that "of course I'm going to" Pavin used his Twitter page to claim he had been misquoted.

Mickelson reveals painful illness


World number two Phil Mickelson revealed on Tuesday that he is suffering from psoriatic arthritis.
It is an inflammatory joint disease which can cause stiffness, pain and lack of movement, but Mickelson said: "Everything is fine now."

Tiger - I will accept wild card


Tiger Woods now says he will play in the Ryder Cup if American captain Corey Pavin offers him a wild card.
Just two days after finishing next-to-last and with a career-worst 18 over par total at the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in Akron, the world number one presented a totally different picture at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

Garcia taking a two-month break


Sergio Garcia has announced that he will take a two-month break from competitive golf after this week's US PGA Championship.
The 30-year-old Spaniard, who has not won a tour title in nearly two years, will miss the FedEx Cup playoffs on the PGA Tour and the final Ryder Cup qualifying event on the European Tour as a result.

Garcia plummits to 50th


Sergio Garcia is in free fall on the World Rankings list - and on almost every other table that means anything.
The beleaguered Spanish star is down to 50th in the world and is in an even more precarious Ryder Cup position than Tiger Woods.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Goosen takes the lead over Mickelson at Bridgestone


Phil Mickelson is closing in on No. 1.
The first step is to make up a one-shot deficit against Retief Goosen, the 36-hole leader Friday at the Bridgestone Invitational. Looking more inevitable is Mickelson finally supplanting Tiger Woods atop the world ranking.
Goosen turned bogey into birdie by chipping in from 25 yards off the green at No. 4, sending him on his way to a 4-under 66 that gave him a one-shot lead over Mickelson and Justin Leonard (66) going into the weekend at Firestone.
Even as Goosen led another assault on par in soft conditions, Woods continued to look as ordinary as ever. The seven-time champion at Firestone hit only three fairways and stumbled to a 2-over 72 - the first time he has ever had consecutive rounds over par at this tournament - that put him 13 shots out of the lead, and five players removed from last place.
Woods had no intention of speaking to reporters, instead walking to his car and driving away.
He has been No. 1 in the world since the week before the 2005 U.S. Open, but would lose his top ranking if Mickelson were to finish in fourth place alone and Woods - who is tied for 72nd - finishes out of the top 44.
"Obviously, it would be cool," Mickelson said. "It would be something I would love to do, being regarded as No. 1 according to the ranking. And I know that I've got a great opportunity this week. I know that I'm playing well, and this is my best opportunity."
But he still has 36 holes in front of him on a course that has rewarded good shots with low scores.
Despite a bogey on the final hole, Goosen was at 7-under 133 as he tries to win his first World Golf Championship. It doesn't figure to be easy, not so much because of Firestone, rather the number of players chasing him.
Sixteen players were separated by four shots going into the weekend.
That includes Bubba Watson (71) in the group at 5-under 135, Adam Scott (70), Lucas Glover (66) and Paul Casey (68) at 136, and Rory McIlroy (69) and Dustin Johnson (65) in the group at 137.
"Every part of your game needs to be good here, driving especially," Goosen said. "You need to hit it on the fairway, otherwise you're struggling."
As Woods and Mickelson showed, that depends.
Woods, who started on the back nine, didn't hit a fairway until the 17th hole, and it got so bad on the 14th hole that his drive landed in a bunker on the 13th hole. He still scrambled for par and was even on the front nine, but too many errant shots caught up with him.
Mickelson wasn't much better - he hit only six fairways - but he made the most of his chances.
"I didn't play great today. I was a little off," Mickelson said. "I hit some bad shots, and I was able to salvage a lot of pars today."
But he had a three-hole stretch of not making any pars, which is what makes Lefty so entertaining. His tee shot on the 14th went into the same bunker on the wrong hole that Woods visited earlier, only Mickelson tried to take it over the trees and clipped some branches. When he finally got around the green, he missed a 5-footer and took double bogey.
Mickelson followed with a 4-iron into 20 feet for birdie, and a 12-foot birdie on the 16th.
Even his last two pars were not typical. He drove it so far right on the 17th that before leaving the tee, Mickelson reached into his bag for a glove and signed his name with a frown and the words, "Sorry." He figured he had hit a fan, and he was right.
"The hazards of following me," Mickelson told him.
He got up and down for par with a deft chip over the bunker, then saved par on the 18th with a long bunker shot by the green that caught the top of the hill perfectly and rolled to within tap-in range.
Mickelson won at Firestone in 1996 when it was the old World Series of Golf, and he had an excellent chance in 2008 when Woods had the year off with knee surgery.
Woods has never finished worse than fourth at Firestone, which is certain to change.
He was hitting smother-hooks on the range and took that to the golf course, where only his short game kept the score from getting out of hand. Even so, Woods will be finished with his third round Saturday some two hours before the leaders tee off.
That means the world's No. 1 player - for the next two days, anyway - will go to the PGA Championship needing to play his best of the year to make the Ryder Cup team. And he might not last very long in the four-tournament playoff system on the PGA Tour after that.
At least he'll be back on Saturday.
That won't be the case for Lee Westwood, the world's No. 3 player who was paired with Woods for two days. Westwood has been battling soreness in his left ankle for the last month, and it finally reached a point where he withdrew Friday from the Bridgestone Invitational, and from the PGA Championship next week.

Westwood withdraws from PGA

Just as he was closing in on No. 1 in the world and possibly his first major, Lee Westwood of England withdrew Friday from the PGA Championship with an injury that even puts the Ryder Cup in doubt.
Westwood, a runner-up at the Masters and the British Open this year, suffered a calf injury at the French Open the first week in July. It has caused problems with swelling in his right ankle, and it reached a breaking point Friday.
"I will be out for as long as it takes to get better," Westwood said in a statement. "I am just hoping that it will be in time for me to play in the Ryder Cup."
Westwood, No. 3 in the world, had a chance to go to No. 1 in the ranking with a victory this week at the Bridgestone Invitational. He had his ankle taped for the second round and sputtered around to a 76.
Asked after his round what he could do besides tape his ankle, Westwood replied, "Sit on my back side for six weeks, like they keep telling me. It's the only way to improve it."
He withdrew from the Bridgestone Invitational later in the afternoon, appearing to take that advice.
"There's no strength in it," he said. "I don't have confidence in it, and then on the way down I'm finding it hard to hold my weight on it and then push off."
He will be replaced in the PGA Championship by Kevin Sutherland.
Westwood won the European Tour money title last year for the second time in his career, and the best player without a major has been closing in on one. He came within one putt of making the 2008 U.S. Open playoff at Torrey Pines, and the 2009 British Open playoff at Turnberry last year. He tied for third in the PGA Championship a year ago at Hazeltine.
His only victory this year came on the PGA Tour at the St. Jude Classic, a week before the U.S. Open. Westwood suffered the injury two weeks before the British Open, but still managed to finish second.
He has not played since then, and is not sure when he will play again.
"I'd like to be able to play my best and work my hardest, which I can't do," Westwood said after his round. "I can't even hit balls, you know? It's evident that I'm rusty since the Open because I haven't been able to practice. It's just a vicious circle, really."
His day wasn't quite over after the 76. After signing his card, his name was pulled for a random drug test.
"Be back in about three hours," he said to reporters, rolling his eyes. Now, it will be much longer than that.
Westwood already has locked up a spot on the European team for the Ryder Cup, leading the standings in money and world ranking points. The Ryder Cup will be Oct. 1-3 in Wales.

Woods can't find the fairway at Firestone


Things got so bad for Tiger Woods off the tee in Friday's second round of the Bridgestone Invitational that he had to supply his own soundtrack.
"Get in the hole!" he sneered under his breath at an errant iron shot into the par-3 seventh hole, repeating the cliched phrase so often yelled by the loudest of his fans.
Woods followed up his worst round ever at Firestone Country Club, a 4-over 74 on Thursday, by matching his second-worst round, a 72. When he left the course, the seven-time winner of the Bridgestone stood 13 shots off the lead - but just two shots out of last place in the 81-player field.
In his 261 PGA Tour starts, he has played the first 36 holes worse in only four tournaments.
It wasn't just bad scores, however. The biggest problem is that Woods has almost no idea where his ball is going off the tee.
He hit only three of 14 fairways in the second round. A closer look shows he hit seven tee shots into the right rough - sometimes far, far to the right - and three other times he pounded the ball into the high grass on the left.
In other words, he was all over the course, visiting spots that the game's best seldom see.
He bolted after his round, walking away from reporters after signing his scorecard and then hustling to his waiting luxury SUV. But on Wednesday, he was asked about his driving.
"Of late I've been driving the ball so much better," he said.
He did not back that up on the course. His play speaks volumes about where he is just a week before the final major of the year, the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits.
Woods came into the Bridgestone ranked ninth in the U.S. Ryder standings, with the top eight assured of spots on the team. He repeatedly said during a pretournament interview that he intended to play his way on, instead of forcing American captain Corey Pavin to select him with one of his discretionary picks.
But Woods is not showing that his game is in shape with just 10 days remaining until those eight automatic qualifiers for the U.S. side are finalized.
Woods hit his first drive of the day (on the 10th hole) far to the right and ended up bogeying. On the next tee, he slashed the ball far to the left, scattering the gallery, but ended up making a par.
After walking off the second tee, he turned back to playing partner Lee Westwood, who was also spraying the ball off the tee, and said, "So how are we doing so far?" Both laughed.
Woods didn't hit a drive into the fairway until his eighth hole, about the same time a fan yelled, "Welcome back, Tiger, to your home away from home." On the next hole, he drove directly behind a large fir tree. He whacked a 3 iron off the low-hanging branches, the ball going across the fairway and hitting another tree there. He then chipped 12 feet past the hole and missed the par putt.
It was like that all day long, with Woods finding trouble repeatedly.
Woods, ranked No. 1 in the world for the past 269 weeks, was paired the first two days with Westwood, who is No. 3. Both of them hacked up the course in the second round, with Westwood shooting a 76 to stand at 147, a shot behind Woods.
"Neither of us played very well, did we?" said Westwood, who is battling an injured right calf that caused him to withdraw from the remainder of the Bridgestone and next week's PGA. "We're all human. We all have bad days."
The two did talk to each other or their caddies from time to time. There was an occasional smile.
"What can you do? Cry?" Westwood said with a laugh. "You try and pass the time as fast as possible."

Friday, August 6, 2010

TaylorMade Rossa Ghost Putter


That's where the white head comes in. Ghost's "golf-ball white" color complements the white color of the ball, and also stands out easily and beautifully against green grass so you don't have to strain to see the topline. That takes the strain off your eyes and promotes a calm and confident state of mind, according to an expert in the field of color perception, who they consulted during the development of Ghost.

The three black lines on the crown lend further alignment support. The two outer lines are spaced as far apart as the width of a golf ball. Position the ball between those lines when you address your putt -- you'll be amazed at how easy it is to tell where the face is aiming.
  • The elevated crown merges seamlessly with the top of the putterface, making the topline extremely easy to see.
  • The circular hole at the rear of the putterhead works in union with the three black lines on the crown and the golf ball to create a vivid secondary alignment aid that gives you complete assurance that your aim is true.
  • Rossa's renowned AGSI®+ (Anti-skid Groove System Insert) promotes forwardspin for a smooth roll, while its Titallium construction delivers soft and satisfying feel at impact.

Suggested retailR1,599.99