Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Haas and Rose share second-day lead at Arnold Palmer, Woods four back

Bill Haas at the Arnold Palmer Invitational
Getty Images
Bill Haas, the co-leader at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, didn't have a par putt longer than 4 feet in his bogey-free round of 66 on Friday.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
ORLANDO, Fla. -- Bill Haas wanted to atone for the way he finished his opening round. He did that and more Friday and was tied for the lead in the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
That sure wasn't the case for Tiger Woods.
One shot out of the lead with three holes to play, Woods closed with three sloppy bogeys to fall four shots behind going into the weekend. That makes the chore a little more difficult in his bid to defend his title at Bay Hill and return to No. 1 in the world.
"The good news is we've got 36 holes to go," Woods said. "We've got a long way to go. And certainly four shots can be made up."
Haas not only kept bogeys off his card, his longest putt for par was no more than 4 feet in a clean round of 6-under 66. He was tied with Justin Rose, who was poised to take the outright lead until he was fooled by the speed of the greens after late afternoon showers and finished with a three-putt bogey for a 70.
They were at 9-under 135, one shot ahead of John Huh, who had a 69.
The finishing holes have proved pivotal in the opening two rounds. Haas was challenging for the lead on Thursday when he flew his tee shot into the back bunker on the par-3 17th and had to two-putt from 40 feet for bogey. Then, he three-putted from 8 feet on the 18th hole for bogey to ruin his day.
"So to leave, basically giving two away, my goal today was try to get those two back and go from there," Haas said. "That was kind of my mindset today, and then I was able to keep it going."
Rose went eagle-birdie on the 16th and 17th holes that sent him on his way to an opening 65, and he regained the lead Friday with a 4-iron just off the fringe for a simple birdie on the 16th. But after a burst of rain, he thought the green might be slower than it was on his 25-foot birdie try. He ran it 5 feet by the hole, and missed it coming back.
"But that was the only thing that hampered the day, really," Rose said. "All in all, exciting day and I'm in a good position."
Woods hit the ball better in the second round and had to settle for a higher score, all because of his finish.
He had about 210 yards from a fairway bunker on the par-5 16th and caught it heavy, slamming the sand with the back of his club even before the ball took one hop and tumbled into the creek short of the green. He pitched up to 25 feet and took bogey. Then, he turned over his tee shot on the 17th and wound up in the rough well behind the green, and his chip went all the way through the green.
Woods followed that with a tee shot into the right rough that forced him to play short of the water, and he hit a poor chip to about 30 feet. He missed that for a 70.
"I've made my share of mistakes on the last few holes the last couple of days, and I need to clean that up," said Woods, who made bogeys on the 17th and 18th holes on Thursday in the middle of his round.
That closing stretch wasn't the only thing that held him back. Woods missed a birdie putt inside 3 feet on the par-3 second hole. He missed a 6-foot birdie putt on the par-4 fourth hole and he tried to jam in a 3-foot birdie putt on the 12th that caught the lip and stayed out.
"He's normally a fast finisher, and you can expect him to probably finish fast on the weekend," Rose said. "He did a lot of hard work today. He actually played really well. I thought he was probably a couple of shots away from shooting 64 today at times. I'm sure he was very disappointed because he actually played some great golf today."
Sixteen players were separated by five shots going into the weekend, and the question was how much fire the downpour at the conclusion of Friday would take out of Bay Hill.
Ken Duke (68), J.J. Henry (67) and Jim Walker (69) were at 6-under 138. Woods was right behind, along with Mark Wilson and Vijay Singh, who each shot 68. Rickie Fowler had a 67 and joined the large group at 4-under 140.
Rose wasn't just fooled by the speed of the green on the 18th hole. He also had a spectator get in his head over a 15-foot birdie attempt on the 13th. The putt narrowly missed and Rose spun around and pointed his finger at the noisy spectator. It wasn't about heckling, rather advice.
"I was reading the putt thinking ... `Might go a little bit right-to-left of the hole. Fairly straight overall.' And as I'm lining it up, someone is like, `It goes right. It goes right. It goes right.' So I'm like, `OK, thanks, buddy,'" Rose said. "It's just one of those annoying moments where you're having to then battle someone who planted a seed. And I hit a great putt that's in the middle with 4 feet to go and it goes left of the hole."
He smiled when he finished the story. After all, he was still tied for the lead.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Player says he kissed Mandela's feet when they met

Player says he kissed Mandela's feet when they met

AP - Sports
SUN CITY, South Africa (AP) -- The first time he met Nelson Mandela, Gary Player got on his knees and kissed the former political prisoner's feet.
Remembering his ''very tearful'' first encounter with Mandela, the nine-time major winner paused Friday to compose himself and hold back more tears.
Mandela, the beloved former South African president and Nobel laureate, died Thursday at 95.
Renowned as a fierce competitor on the golf course, Player was invited to meet Mandela at his office in Johannesburg after the anti-apartheid leader's release after 27 years in prison.
But he didn't expect to do what he did, Player said.
''I knelt down and I kissed his feet and I said, 'I have never kissed anybody's feet in my life,' and I said, 'I have so much admiration for you.' I said to him, 'It is remarkable, how can you not have revenge?'''
Mandela's reply, according to Player, was: ''You have got to start a new life and forgive and go ahead.''
Player, speaking at the Nedbank Golf Challenge at Sun City, said Mandela's ability to inspire with compassion left him amazed then - and still does.
''It was very tearful for me, because when you think of a man that has gone to jail for all those years for doing the right thing, not the wrong thing, it is hard to comprehend that a man can come out and be like that,'' Player said. ''He was an exceptional man.''
From that first meeting, Player and Mandela would cross paths regularly as the golfer, one of South Africa's greatest sportsmen, worked with the president on charity projects.
Once, Player remembered with a big smile, Mandela landed at a charity tournament in a helicopter to lend support.
''I had to meet him when the helicopter arrived and open the door. Now I had been around him all these years raising money for young black children and I opened the door, and he says 'Good morning Gary, do you remember me?''' Player recalled, imitating Mandela's unique rasping voice. ''Just wonderful.''
Although Player wasn't sure if he ever saw Mandela swing a golf club, he knew that the anti-apartheid leader ''realized the value of sport'' and even followed Player's career overseas while he was imprisoned by South Africa's former racist regime.
''He said to me, 'When I was in jail, I used to watch you playing.' He was very complimentary,'' Player said.

Garcia takes lead at somber Sun City

Garcia takes lead at somber Sun City

AP - Sports
Garcia takes lead at somber Sun City
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SUN CITY, South Africa (AP) -- With the skies over Sun City fittingly gray, Gary Player cried on a tee box and Ernie Els shared some of his memories of Nelson Mandela.
''It is going to be a tough day for the whole country,'' Els said.
A somber mood hung over South Africa's first major sporting event since Mandela's death as Sergio Garcia, wearing a black ribbon like the rest of the 30-man field, shot a 6-under 66 to lead after the weather-delayed first round of the Nedbank Golf Challenge on Friday.
In the early morning, golfers stood, some with caps removed, for a moment's silence before the first round restarted after being halted because of lightning on Thursday. Flags dropped to half-staff around the Gary Player Country Club.
A hooter sounded to start the brief moment of reflection on the life of the beloved anti-apartheid leader, who died late Thursday at 95.
Els, one of South Africa's first sporting heroes under Mandela's presidency, walked out of the players' lounge a little after 6:30 a.m. to talk of the times he spent with the former president. Els said that since about 1996 and well into his old age, Mandela used to call the golfer every time he won a tournament.
''They were special times and the little time we had together was very special. He was just the most amazing person I have ever met,'' Els said.
He also recalled Mandela partially ignoring him on a long-haul flight because the statesman instead wanted to talk to and play with Els' young daughter.
''We were sitting up front and then Mr. Mandela came onto the plane last,'' Els said. ''He was sitting in the front seat and he saw me and my daughter sitting next to me and all of a sudden he didn't really want to see me anymore, he wanted to talk to my daughter. He got Samantha to go up there and she sat on his lap and he spoke to her like she was his grandchild.''
Player, a South African golfer whose career so often clashed with the country's years of apartheid, said he and three friends had prayed and then cried together before playing.
''But it's also a day of celebration because he'd want us to celebrate,'' Player said. ''And we've got to celebrate for what he actually gave this country.''

Golf-Dominant Donaldson not put off by freak penalty

Golf-Dominant Donaldson not put off by freak penalty

Reuters 
SUN CITY, South Africa, Dec 6 (Reuters) - A freak penalty stroke did little to deter Welshman Jamie Donaldson as he posted a second-round 66 at the Nedbank Golf Challenge on Friday to top the leaderboard with an 11-under-par total of 133.
A storming outward 31, including five birdies, gave Donaldson a three-stroke halfway lead at the Gary Player Country Club on a sombre day following the death of former South Africa president Nelson Mandela.
Friday's early start was preceded by a minute's silence in honour of the 95-year-old statesman as the elite 30-man field resumed their weather-interrupted first rounds from Thursday.
Sergio Garcia finished as first-round leader after a blistering morning start as he posted a 66 but Donaldson was already out on the course again, picking up three birdies in his first four holes.
On the par-five 10th, he carded a bogey six after picking up an unusual penalty.
"It was mad, I just pushed my tee shot a little bit into the green-side trap and tried to move it about 100 yards down the fairway but it clipped the lip and as the ball sort of came back I hit it again with my shaft, over my shoulder, back into the bunker," the Welshman told reporters.
The referee's ruling was a one-shot penalty but Donaldson recovered to sink two more birdies to finish six-under for the round.
His 66 was only bettered by American Ryan Moore, who made seven birdies in a second-round 65 that took him eight-under and into joint second place with Sweden's Henrik Stenson.
Birdies on the last hole of the day for both defending champion Martin Kaymer of Germany and Dane Thomas Bjorn took them to seven under par. (Reporting by Mark Gleeson; Editing by Ed Osmond)

Dominant Donaldson not put off by freak penalty

Dominant Donaldson not put off by freak penalty

Reuters 
Garcia of Spain hits from the second tee during the third round of the BMW Championship golf tournament at the Conway Farms Golf Club in Lake Forest
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Sergio Garcia of Spain hits from the second tee during the third round of the BMW Championship golf tournament …
SUN CITY, South Africa (Reuters) - A freak penalty stroke did little to deter Welshman Jamie Donaldson as he posted a second-round 66 at the Nedbank Golf Challenge on Friday to top the leaderboard with an 11-under-par total of 133.
A storming outward 31, including five birdies, gave Donaldson a three-stroke halfway lead at the Gary Player Country Club on a somber day following the death of former South Africa president Nelson Mandela.
Friday's early start was preceded by a minute's silence in honor of the 95-year-old statesman as the elite 30-man field resumed their weather-interrupted first rounds from Thursday.
Sergio Garcia finished as first-round leader after a blistering morning start as he posted a 66 but Donaldson was already out on the course again, picking up three birdies in his first four holes.
On the par-five 10th, he carded a bogey six after picking up an unusual penalty.
"It was mad, I just pushed my tee shot a little bit into the green-side trap and tried to move it about 100 yards down the fairway but it clipped the lip and as the ball sort of came back I hit it again with my shaft, over my shoulder, back into the bunker," the Welshman told reporters.
The referee's ruling was a one-shot penalty but Donaldson recovered to sink two more birdies to finish six-under for the round.
His 66 was only bettered by American Ryan Moore, who made seven birdies in a second-round 65 that took him eight-under and into joint second place with Sweden's Henrik Stenson.
Birdies on the last hole of the day for both defending champion Martin Kaymer of Germany and Dane Thomas Bjorn took them to seven under par.
(Reporting by Mark Gleeson; Editing by Ed Osmond)

Lewis leads by two in Dubai Ladies Masters

Lewis leads by two in Dubai Ladies Masters

AFP 
Stacy Lewis watches her drive on the 3rd hole during the final round of the CME Group Titleholders at Tiburon Golf club on November 24, 2013 in Naples, Florida
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Stacy Lewis watches her drive on the 3rd hole during the final round of the CME Group Titleholders at Tiburon Golf club on November 24, 2013 in Naples, Florida (AFP Photo/Sam Greenwood)
Dubai (AFP) - Stacy Lewis did not have the best of days on the golf course Friday, but still managed to double her lead to two shots on the top of the 500,000 euros Dubai Ladies Masters leaderboard.
After a glorious 65 in Thursday’s second round of the season-ending championship of the Ladies European Tour, the American world number three could only manage a two-under par 70 Friday, but a measured birdie on the par-5 closing hole of the Majlis course helped her lead by two shots over fellow LPGA Tour player Pornanong Phatlum of Thailand.
Phatlum shot a three-under par 69, which included a couple of birdie putts from outside 25 feet, to finish at nine-under par 207.
Spain’s Carlota Ciganda, winner of the Ladies European Tour Order of Merit last year, made two bogeys on her back nine to finish with a 73, which tied her for the third place at six-under par 210 alongside Italy’s Diane Luna (69) and Scotland’s Vikki Laing (69).
Defending champion Feng Shanshan of China moved into the top-10 with a one-under par 71 round, but her title defence was surely over as she fell nine shots behind the leader at two-under par 214.
In the race for the Rookie of the Year honours, 17-year-old Charley Hull shot a one-over par 73 to enjoy a two-shot advantage over compatriot Holly Clyburn (70), who improved to tied 21 st place at 217.
Lewis, the highest ranked player in the tournament, said: “It was one of those rounds that could have gone either way. But I am glad in the end it took me in the right direction.
“I did not hit the ball as well as yesterday. I hit 16 greens in regulation, but did not hit it close enough. Most of them were around 20 feet and I did not make those putts. That really was the main difference.
Phatlum, winner of the Ladies Indian Open twice and champion once on the LPGA Tour, said she did not want to think of any result right now.
“I enjoyed the round today. Played it shot-by-shot and scored a 69. Tomorrow, I am excited to play with Lewis, who is the world number three and playing great golf.
"But I am only going to say that I will try my best and not put too much pressure on myself,” said the young Thai, who has now improved to number 47 in the world.
There was a hole-in-one in the tournament, and South African Connie Chen walked away with a shining new Mercedes E400 Convertible after holing out her 6-iron tee shot on the 160-yard par-3 15th hole.