Wednesday, March 5, 2014

U.S. Women's Open Notebook: Rains soften Oakmont, good scores follow

lpga, usga, u.s. women's open, oakmnt, song-hee kim
Getty Images
The lowest round of the week was Brittany Lang's first-round 69, until Song-Hee Kim fired a 65 on Sunday.
0
By 
Associated Press 

Series:
Before the U.S. Women's Open began, this seemed like a safe prediction: No golfer will shoot a 65 at tough-to-crack Oakmont Country Club, one of the world's most difficult courses.
Somehow, it happened.
Song-Hee Kim, down 14 shots to leader Paula Creamer when the final round began, shot by far the lowest round of the tournament with a 6-under 65 on Sunday. Until then, the best round was Brittany Lang's 69 in the first round. Kim had seven birdies and a single bogey.
Na Yeon Choi was right behind her with a 66 that tied her for second with Suzann Pettersen.
There were 13 sub-par rounds Sunday as a course softened up by Friday's rain finally yielded some good scores. By comparison, there were only 10 such scores combined in the first three rounds, with only two in the second round.
Even with all those good scores, Creamer -- the winner by four shots -- was the only golfer to finish below par for the tournament at 3-under 281.
Blame the overall high scores on the hot, dry weather that preceded the tournament and baked Oakmont's already fast greens. Credit the good scores for the two inches of rain that fell Friday and pushed back most of the second round to Saturday.
"Everybody's more comfortable with the greens' speed," said Jiyai Shin, whose 3-under 68 tied her for fifth. "A couple of days ago was the huge rain, so after that rain the green's a little bit soft. So we can hit, (take) aggressive shots at every hole, so that makes for good scores."
Lang, who tied for fifth, didn't want to guess what the scores might have been if the dry weather and 90-degree heat had continued all weekend.
"If they don't get that rain, the scores would have been way higher, no question," she said. "No question."
NOT HER TIME: The youngest golfer to win the U.S. Women's Open was Inbee Park, who was 19 when she won two years ago.
Imagine someone four years younger doing it. Alexis Thompson did, even if reality didn't match her vision.
After her 1-under 70 on Saturday left her five shots off the lead, Thompson -- only 15, but playing in her fourth Women's Open -- nonchalantly suggested she thought she could win.
Any realistic chance of doing so vanished with her double bogey Sunday on No. 1, putting her seven shots out of the lead. However, the self-confidence and poise she displayed suggested there will be many more majors awaiting her.
Thompson, known as Lexi, tied for 10th after a final-round 73 left her at 6 over for the tournament.
She's already getting an early start on her career. Thompson recently turned pro, doing so a year earlier than Michelle Wie did. She plans to petition the LPGA to allow her to play full-time, even though the tour doesn't permit those younger than 18 from doing so.
"She hits it a long way," said playing partner Suzann Pettersen, who tied for second. "She's 15 and she's the best 15-year-old I've ever seen."
KERR-PLUNK: There was no repeat major win for Cristie Kerr, two weeks after her record-setting rout in which she won the LPGA Championship by 12 shots.
Kerr was close to the lead after starting 72-71, but a third-round 75 put her six shots out. Another 75 made certain she wouldn't contend.
Kerr tried to make a move Sunday with birdies on Nos. 2 and 3, but she followed that surge with four bogeys during the final six holes of her front nine.
"Umm, I played terrible," Kerr said. "I chunked the 3-wood, I topped the 3-wood. So something's going a little haywire in my swing. I'll work it out with my coach."
Asked which holes gave her the most problems, she said, "All of them. Even hitting good shots, I just ended up making mistakes."
Kerr won the 2007 Women's Open, the last time an American won the most prestigious tournament in women's golf before Creamer won.
"I think we can all finally stop answering, when are the Americans going to come up to the challenge?" Kerr said. "Because winning the last two majors is pretty impressive."
MAJOR TITLES: The major winners to date this year are Creamer, Kerr and Yani Tseng, the Taiwan native who won the Kraft Nabisco Championship.
Creamer won the U.S. Open after tying for 42nd in the LPGA Championship. Tseng tied for 10th in the U.S. Open and 19th in the LPGA Championship.
The final major of the year is the Women's British Open in Southport, England, from July 29-Aug. 1.

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Golf-Day shares World Cup joy with grieving family

Golf-Day shares World Cup joy with grieving family

Reuters 
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE, Nov 24 (Reuters) - Jason Day plans a few celebratory drinks after winning the $8 million World Cup of Golf on home soil on Sunday before turning his efforts to raising awareness for the devastated Philippines where eight of his relatives were killed by Typhoon Haiyan.
The grieving 26-year-old competed with a heavy heart at Royal Melbourne but played some of the finest golf of his life to seal the individual trophy by two strokes and drive Australia to a runaway victory in the team component.
Day's triumph was watched by his Filipino-born mother Dening, whose own mother was lost in the typhoon, and the pair shared an emotional embrace by the 18th green after the final par-putt rolled in front of a roaring gallery.
Prior to the tournament, Day said he had hoped his team mate, world number two Adam Scott, would carry him through, but he ended up shouldering the load after the U.S. Masters champion opened with a four-over 75 including a nightmare quintuple bogey on the 12th.
Locked in a two-way battle with seasoned Dane Thomas Bjorn in the back nine, Day drained a seven-foot putt for a crucial par on the 16th to take a one-stroke lead and held on to celebrate an emotional victory.
"It feels great, I just really don't know what to think right now," the world number 18 told reporters after notching just his second PGA Tour win, three years after his maiden title at the Byron Nelson Championship.
"Today I learnt a lot about myself ... I am definitely going to embrace being a World Cup winner tonight and I won't go too crazy but I will definitely have a drink or two and, you know, right now I am just the happiest guy."
Day won $1.2 million for sealing individual honours at the biennial tournament, and will share another $600,000 with Scott for winning the team trophy.
"Right now we're in the process of doing something," Day said when asked about relief efforts in the Philippines.
"Definitely, we'll probably most likely set something up and definitely be giving some money or raising money and trying to raise awareness to what has really happened over there.
"The devastation and the tragedy that's gone on over in the Philippines is very difficult for us to see because we're living in such a great country.
"Once you know of someone or are related to someone who has gone through something like that it's very close to the heart."
Day and Scott's triumph in the team event was Australia's fifth but first since Peter Fowler and Wayne Grady won in 1989.
Australian golfing luminary Peter Thomson, a five-times British Open winner who clinched the 1954 and 1959 trophies with compatriot Kel Nagle, was at Royal Melbourne to congratulate Day personally.
"He said that he was going to see his friend Kel Nagle and he was going to tell his friend about what he saw today," Day said of the 84-year-old.
"I replied I'd love to have five British Opens, too. He said 'At least get three'. So I have to kind of fulfil my promise there one day." (Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)

Day shares World Cup joy with grieving family

Day shares World Cup joy with grieving family

Reuters 
Day plays a tee shot on the 12th hole during the final round of the World Cup of Golf in Melbourne
.
View gallery
Australia's Jason Day plays a tee shot on the 12th hole during the final round of the World Cup of Golf …
By Ian Ransom
MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Jason Day plans a few celebratory drinks after winning the $8 million World Cup of Golf on home soil on Sunday before turning his efforts to raising awareness for the devastated Philippines where eight of his relatives were killed by Typhoon Haiyan.
The grieving 26-year-old competed with a heavy heart at Royal Melbourne but played some of the finest golf of his life to seal the individual trophy by two strokes and drive Australia to a runaway victory in the team component.
Day's triumph was watched by his Filipino-born mother Dening, whose own mother was lost in the typhoon, and the pair shared an emotional embrace by the 18th green after the final par-putt rolled in front of a roaring gallery.
Prior to the tournament, Day said he had hoped his team mate, world number two Adam Scott, would carry him through, but he ended up shouldering the load after the U.S. Masters champion opened with a four-over 75 including a nightmare quintuple bogey on the 12th.
Locked in a two-way battle with seasoned Dane Thomas Bjorn in the back nine, Day drained a seven-foot putt for a crucial par on the 16th to take a one-stroke lead and held on to celebrate an emotional victory.
"It feels great, I just really don't know what to think right now," the world number 18 told reporters after notching just his second PGA Tour win, three years after his maiden title at the Byron Nelson Championship.
"Today I learnt a lot about myself ... I am definitely going to embrace being a World Cup winner tonight and I won't go too crazy but I will definitely have a drink or two and, you know, right now I am just the happiest guy."
Day won $1.2 million for sealing individual honors at the biennial tournament, and will share another $600,000 with Scott for winning the team trophy.
"Right now we're in the process of doing something," Day said when asked about relief efforts in the Philippines.
"Definitely, we'll probably most likely set something up and definitely be giving some money or raising money and trying to raise awareness to what has really happened over there.
"The devastation and the tragedy that's gone on over in the Philippines is very difficult for us to see because we're living in such a great country.
"Once you know of someone or are related to someone who has gone through something like that it's very close to the heart."
Day and Scott's triumph in the team event was Australia's fifth but first since Peter Fowler and Wayne Grady won in 1989.
Australian golfing luminary Peter Thomson, a five-times British Open winner who clinched the 1954 and 1959 trophies with compatriot Kel Nagle, was at Royal Melbourne to congratulate Day personally.
"He said that he was going to see his friend Kel Nagle and he was going to tell his friend about what he saw today," Day said of the 84-year-old.
"I replied I'd love to have five British Opens, too. He said 'At least get three'. So I have to kind of fulfill my promise there one day."
(Editing by Amlan Chakraborty)

Golf-European Tour South African Open scores

Golf-European Tour South African Open scores

Reuters 
Nov 24 (Infostrada Sports) - Scores from the European Tour South African Open at the par-72 course on Sunday in Ekurhuleni
269 Morten Madsen (Denmark) 67 66 69 67
271 Jbe Kruger (South Africa) 65 70 71 65
Hennie Otto (South Africa) 72 66 65 68
272 Marco Crespi (Italy) 65 67 70 70
Charl Schwartzel (South Africa) 67 65 69 71
273 Alejandro Canizares (Spain) 69 67 69 68
274 Trevor Fisher (South Africa) 70 67 73 64
Johan Carlsson (Sweden) 69 70 68 67
275 Warren Abery (South Africa) 68 71 68 68
276 Garth Mulroy (South Africa) 70 67 70 69
Christiaan Basson (South Africa) 66 68 71 71
277 Jean Hugo (South Africa) 71 67 70 69
Martin Du Toit (South Africa) 70 70 68 69
Peter Karmis (South Africa) 69 72 67 69
Andy Sullivan (Britain) 71 68 68 70
Jaco Van Zyl (South Africa) 71 70 66 70
278 Daan Huizing (Netherlands) 68 69 73 68
Thomas Levet (France) 69 70 70 69
Peter Whiteford (Britain) 71 68 70 69
Merrick Bremner (South Africa) 73 69 67 69
Thomas Aiken (South Africa) 70 67 71 70
279 Michael Hollick (South Africa) 75 67 68 69
James Morrison (Britain) 69 66 74 70
Tom Lewis (Britain) 68 68 72 71
Ross Fisher (Britain) 71 69 68 71
Jorge Campillo (Spain) 72 70 66 71
Ulrich Van den Berg (South Africa) 70 66 71 72
Retief Goosen (South Africa) 66 71 70 72
281 Jared Harvey (South Africa) 71 69 70 71
Anthony Wall (Britain) 70 70 70 71
Seve Benson (Britain) 72 70 68 71
PH McIntyre (South Africa) 73 68 69 71
Kim Si-Hwan (South Korea) 72 70 66 73
282 Oliver Bekker (South Africa) 70 69 70 73
Alastair Forsyth (Britain) 72 66 71 73
Matthew Nixon (Britain) 64 72 72 74
283 Vaughn Groenewald (South Africa) 70 70 74 69
Chris Doak (Britain) 71 68 74 70
Darren Fichardt (South Africa) 77 65 69 72
Andrea Pavan (Italy) 67 70 68 78
284 Danie Van Tonder (South Africa) 68 70 75 71
Attie Schwartzel (South Africa) 67 71 73 73
Heinrich Bruiners (South Africa) 69 72 70 73
Keenan Davidse (South Africa) 70 72 68 74
Magnus Carlsson (Sweden) 72 68 66 78
285 Allan Versfeld (South Africa) 71 68 74 72
Neil Schietekat (South Africa) 69 68 74 74
Alexander Levy (France) 69 72 69 75
Adam Gee (Britain) 73 69 67 76
286 Kristoffer Broberg (Sweden) 73 67 75 71
Bennie Van der Merwe (South Africa) 69 70 75 72
287 Charl Coetzee (South Africa) 70 71 75 71
Justin Walters (South Africa) 72 70 71 74
James Heath (Britain) 75 66 71 75
Edoardo Molinari (Italy) 72 69 70 76
Simon Dyson (Britain) 68 74 68 77
James Kamte (South Africa) 69 67 70 81
288 Jamie McLeary (Britain) 74 68 75 71
289 Doug McGuigan (South Africa) 71 70 78 70
David Drysdale (Britain) 71 71 75 72
Simon Thornton (Ireland) 71 72 75 72
Louis Taylor (South Africa) 71 70 70 78
Steve Surry (Britain) 68 73 70 78
290 Chris Swanepoel (South Africa) 70 71 78 71
JJ Senekal (South Africa) 71 70 70 79
292 Lucas Bjerregaard (Denmark) 73 69 76 74

Golf-Dane Madsen gets first European Tour win in South Africa

Golf-Dane Madsen gets first European Tour win in South Africa

Reuters 
Nov 24 (Reuters) - Denmark's Morten Orum Madsen claimed his first European Tour victory with a two-shot win at the South African Open Championship on the outskirts of Johannesburg on Sunday.
Madsen had looked an unlikely winner earlier in the day but home favourites Hennie Otto and Charl Schwartzel both squandered three-shot leads to gift him the title.
He carded a bogey-free five-under-par 67 in his fourth round for a total of 269, two shots ahead of South Africans Jbe Kruger and Otto.
With his father watching from the gallery, the 25-year-old Madsen beat his previous best finish of second at the Madeira Open in May.
"It's been an amazing day, it hasn't sunk in. Coming down here I didn't expect to win," Madsen said at the trophy presentation.
"Schwartzel looked like he was just going to go off... I was just trying to hang on and see if I could stay within two or three shots. Unfortunately for him he struggled on a couple of holes and got some bad breaks. Luckily for me I was there to capitalise."
Overnight leader Schwartzel, searching for his first win in his home championship, carded a disappointing final-round 71, which included a triple bogey on the sixth hole and a double on the 10th, to finish in tied fourth with Italian Marco Crespi.
Otto, who led by three shots going into the final four holes, dropped a shot on the 15th and double-bogeyed the next hole to allow Madsen to take over at the top of the leaderboard. (Reporting by Nick Said in Cape Town; Editing by Clare Fallon)

Luke Donald defends title at Dunlop Phoenix

Luke Donald defends title at Dunlop Phoenix

AP - Sports
Luke Donald defends title at Dunlop Phoenix
.
View gallery
Britain's Luke Donald poses with his trophy for photographers after winning the Dunlop Phoenix golf tournament …
MIYAZAKI, Japan (AP) -- Luke Donald shot a 5-under 66 on Sunday to defend his title at the Dunlop Phoenix and earn his first victory of the year.
Heading into the final round with a two-stroke lead, Donald had seven birdies and two bogeys at the par-71 Phoenix Country Club to finish at 14-under 270 on the Japan Tour.
Kim Hyung-sung of South Korea finished second at 8 under after a final-round 70. Shingo Katayama shot a 65 to finish third, one stroke behind Kim.
Spain's Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano and Japan's Shunsuke Sonoda tied for fourth.