Saturday, December 21, 2013

Royal Trophy: Asia stay two points clear after Saturday fourballs are shared 2-2

Asia lead Europe 5-3 in the Royal Trophy after Saturday's fourballs in China were shared 2-2.

It means the holders, who won Friday's foursomes 3-1, need three-and-a-half points from Sunday's eight singles matches at the Dragon Lake Golf Club in Guangzhou, China to retain the trophy.

Asia were given the ideal start by Thai duo Kiradech Aphibarnrat and Thongchai Jaidee, who defeated Scots Paul Lawrie and Stephen Gallacher 2&1 to extend the lead to three.

Jose Maria Olazabal's Europe were on course to reduce the gap when England's David Howell and Scotland's Marc Warren headed to the 17th tee two-up on Chinese pair Liang Wen-chong and Wu Ashun.

But the Asian pair pulled out two closing birdies to snatch an unlikely half point to keep YE Yang's men in control of the contest.

Europe's only win of the day came via Austria's Bernd Wiesberger and Dane Thorbjorn Olesen.

They scored a 2&1 victory over Japanese pair Ryo Ishikawa and Hiroyuki Fujita to reduce the gap to two points again.

Ishikawa and Fujita had beaten Wiesberger and Spain's Alvaro Quiros 3&2 in Friday's foursomes but looked out of sorts this time.

The bottom match appeared to be going Asia's way with South Korean duo Kim Hyung-sung and Kim Kyung-tae sitting two-up with two to play against Quiros and Belgian Nicolas Colsaerts.

Vital half point

But, after winning 17, Quiros hit a fantastic shot from the trees on 18 to around five feet and, after consulting captain Olazabal about the line, rolled home the birdie putt. "I knew how crucial that was," he said.

Olazabal famously inspired Europe's Ryder Cup comeback at Medinah last year and hopes for a repeat performance. On that occasion, his team were four behind going into Sunday.

He said: "Getting a half in that last match has kept our hopes alive. If we have a solid start in the singles and put pressure on the Asian team then we can still turn it around."

Yang, meanwhile, is confident that his team can hang on and win the trophy back-to-back for the first time.

He said: "I'm a little disappointed with losing that final half a point and I was pretty nervous watching the last two matches. I hope we still have the momentum and that we can finish off the job in the singles."
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Number Crunching 2013: Gerina Piller

Over the final two weeks of 2013, we will be breaking down players that rose and fell over the past 12 months.

Gerina Piller

Ranking/movement: +45 (No. 80 to No. 35)

Why the rise? Few players have walked off the 72nd hole having missed a 7-foot birdie putt to force a playoff and looked as happy as Piller.

“I’ve never led an LPGA event,” said Piller, who slept on a share of the 54-hole lead at the CME Group Titleholders Championship. “So to come out and grind like I did and give myself an opportunity to force a playoff, I’m pretty excited about that. I’m excited that I’m done for the year.”

And what a year it has been for the long-bombing Piller, who has doubled her earnings each season since 2011.

At the start of the year, Piller wanted to skip the first event in Australia because her ballstriking was so poor. She claims she couldn’t break 45 for nine holes back home in Texas. But Piller sought the help of Mike Wright, the instructor of good friend Angela Stanford, and rediscovered her confidence.

“Her game has always been good, but kind of raw,” said husband Martin Piller, a fellow pro golfer. “It seems like her game has gotten a little more polished every year.”

Wright said earlier this season that when the Pillers are hitting balls next to each other on the range, it’s hard to tell their shots apart judging by sound alone.

The Pillers liked Wright and Shady Oaks so much they recently bought a home in Fort Worth, five minutes from Stanford.

Piller, 28, called her captain’s pick for this year’s Solheim Cup team one of the best things that has ever happened to her. She had eight top-10 finishes this season and lowered her scoring average more than a full point. Biggest areas of improvement from last year were greens hit (14th), birdies (8th) and sand saves (18th).

Piller says: “Out here it’s easy to get in the mindset like ‘Do I belong or am I good enough to win?’, and when you compete on that kind of level (Solheim), I think that it shows a lot of what your potential is and how you handle things.”
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Pair the Pros: How each player stacks up against Dustin Johnson


Social media has become a huge part of the way fans interact with PGA TOUR players. For the first time ever, that interaction is moving inside the ropes at the Hyundai Tournament of Champions.

Through Dec. 30, fans can vote for who they want to see paired with defending champion Dustin Johnson for Round 1 of the Hyundai Tournament of Champions. The candidates are Adam Scott, Matt Kuchar and Brandt Snedeker, each of whom won twice on the PGA TOUR in 2013.

“Hopefully this is just the start of getting fans really engaged,” said Steve Shannon, vice president of marketing for Hyundai Motors America. “This is the way people communicate these days and it’s perfectly in line with the way people are using social media.”

To cast a vote, fans can simply send a tweet containing thehashtag #VoteScott, #VoteKuchar or #VoteSneds. Votes are aggregated and counted in the PGA TOUR’s Social Hub. 

“We know that people have an appetite for golf content 365 days a year,” Shannon said. “Plus, with the smaller field made up of nothing but champions, this is just another way to add to the uniqueness of this event.”

The candidates

Adam Scott
PGA TOUR wins: 10
2013 Driving Distance: 297.8 yards
Career Scoring Average: 70.05
Scoring Average when paired with Dustin Johnson (18 rounds): 70.17
Dustin Johnson’s scoring average when paired with Scott: 70.50

Brandt Snedeker
PGA TOUR wins: 6
2013 driving distance: 281.3
Career scoring average: 70.12
Scoring average when paired with Dustin Johnson (7 rounds): 70.57
Dustin Johnson’s scoring average when paired with Snedeker: 69.86

Matt Kuchar
PGA TOUR wins: 6
2013 driving distance: 284.9
Career scoring average: 70.52
Scoring average when paired with Dustin Johnson (12 rounds): 70.50
Dustin Johnson’s scoring average when paired with Kuchar: 70.91
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Lydia Ko is NZ's premier sportswoman in 2013

OPINION: If the criteria were performance and performance only, woman of the year would be Valerie Adams - and it's on those grounds that Adams should receive upcoming Halberg honours way ahead of Ko.

The reason Lydia Ko gets this particular nod is for intangible, philosophical reasons: What she did off the golf course this year, the impact it will have on her long-term future and what it means for a younger generation of New Zealanders.

With the eyes of the sporting world upon her, Ko has executed the most difficult stage of her career with absolute aplomb and, incredibly, without any professional management.

Not bad for a 16-year-old schoolgirl.

Finally answering the recurring question of when she would turn professional with a polished and whimsical video shot with All Blacks friend Israel Dagg, the non-traditional announcement went viral and dawned a watershed moment in the relationship between sport, media and the public.

Under severe global scrutiny, Ko has continued to endear herself to the public, both domestically and internationally, and in the eyes of non-golfers has single-handedly raised the profile of an entire Kiwi sport that's had nine years in the doldrums - and still a long way from the high of Michael Campbell withstanding a charge from Tiger Woods to win the 2005 US Open.

With modesty and composure well beyond her teenage years, this year for Ko was all about teeing up what promises to be a spectacular career. And she's done it brilliantly. Neither has she been instantly lured into signing big-money endorsements, as would be so easy to do, but rather she's taken things slowly and steadily. Her handling of a supremely difficult situation has been flawless.

Helping her cause, Ko has already recorded her first professional win, a matter of days after turning pro; defended her Canadian Open title and finished runner-up in a major championship.

While Ko's achievements are impressive, they're nowhere near Adams' shot put feats of 2013.

New Zealand's Olympics queen not only claimed her pinnacle event of the year (something Ko had five shots at in 2013) but she became the first woman to win four straight world titles in her field.

Unbeaten through the entire season, Adams swept the Diamond League circuit yet again and her tally now stands at 42 consecutive wins.

And, this year, she did it all through two injuries which required surgery in the off-season.

Also worthy of mention are swimmer Lauren Boyle, who in another stellar year not only became the first Kiwi swimmer to win a medal at a world long-course championship in 19 years but claimed three bronze medals.

Olympic champion kayaker Lisa Carrington also played an important part of female Kiwi athletes on the world stage in 2013, winning world titles in her favoured K1 200m and also branching out to be K1 500m world champion.
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For Rory, 2013 didn't go as planned

Former world No. 1 Rory McIlroy struggled through an up-and-down (OK, mostly down) year in 2013, save for a late-season resurgence that saw him hold off Masters champion Adam Scott to win the Australian Open.

So how did it go south so fast? And what will his victory do for him in the coming year?
Our scribes dive into those topics and more in the latest edition of Four-Ball.

1. When did you know Rory's season was going downhill fast?
Michael Collins, ESPN.com senior golf analyst: Rory's year went into crisis mode at the Honda Classic when he just walked off the course (because his tooth hurt so badly). He looked like a guy who was at the end of his rope when it came to golf. You cannot be the best at your job if you hate going to work.

Farrell Evans, ESPN.com senior golf writer: In March, when McIlroy withdrew halfway through his second round at the Honda Classic. Initially he blamed a nagging toothache for his abrupt departure during what was tough scoring day for him, but he later admitted the pressure was taking a toll on his psyche. It was very easy to see from that episode that he was not headed for a great season.

Bob Harig, ESPN.com senior golf writer: When he walked off the course at the Honda Classic following just nine holes of the second round. He had missed the cut in Abu Dhabi, was bounced from the first round of the WGC-Match Play and now was quitting in just his third tournament of the year, giving a flimsy excuse in the process. All of it looked bad and was an ominous sign for the year ahead.

Kevin Maguire, ESPN.com senior golf editor: Once questions arose about his "wisdom tooth" pain during the Honda Classic that saw him walk off the course in the middle of the second round, it was safe to say things went from bad to worse. For all the talk of equipment issues, management changes and more, that Friday in Florida was a harbinger of things to come for the Northern Irishman.

2. Bigger issue with Rory's game in 2013, his clubs or his confidence?
Collins: The biggest issue with Rory's game (and I've been saying it from the beginning) was the golf ball. When the ball doesn't do what you expect or feel, then everything starts breaking down, starting with confidence. He got a new golf ball and won less than a month later.

Evans: His lack of confidence in the equipment overhaul was a contributing factor to his mediocre play for most of 2013. But the pressure to live up to his billing as the No. 1 player in the world and the greatest challenger to Tiger Woods were probably the most significant factors to his struggles during the year.

Harig: His confidence. Now perhaps his change in clubs had an indirect effect, but the club change has always seemed overblown. McIlroy had plenty of time to adjust, plenty of time to work with the new clubs as the year wore on. It was more about a flaw in his swing that he had trouble correcting. That kept him from scoring, which in turn led to his issues.

Maguire: Confidence. McIlroy's game mirrors that of Phil Mickelson much more than that of Woods with the Northern Irishman's see-saw performances on the course. When a golfer rises and sinks like that on a week-to-week basis, if things go south they can do so quickly. On the flip side, once McIlroy turns that corner, two or three wins in a month isn't out of the question, either.

3. How much will his off-the-course issues affect him in 2014?
Collins: None. You think Rory comes off the course and has to pore over lawsuit paperwork? Me either. The reason he pays attorneys and has a manager is so he can just play golf and sign the checks.

Evans: McIlroy is now very experienced with the distractions that come with his stature in the game. No matter what comes his way in the future, he will be better prepared to focus on his on-course responsibilities. He doesn't have a choice. His career depends on him handling distractions with care.

Harig: Well, it can't help. Who knows exactly how much money is at stake, but this is ugly, shocking stuff. McIlroy's agent, Horizon Sports, negotiated the big-money Nike deal and Rory signed an extension with the company just weeks before he was trying to get out of the contract. It has to be a troubling issue that will be on his mind as it waits to be resolved.

Maguire: We saw the toll it took on McIlroy in 2013 and I suspect it will impact him considerably in 2014. His experience dealing with these off-the-course issues in 2013 will help mitigate the damage on his game, but to say he has a clear mind would be a bit of hyperbole. Now, if everything gets settled with sponsors and management companies long before the October court date in Ireland, that could help rejuvenate McIlroy for sure.

4. What confidence, if any, does he take from his play at the end of 2013?
Collins: Be prepared for Rory to have a season similar to 2012. It could be a year with three to five wins (maybe even a major), at least 10 top-10s and a chance to win the Tour Championship/FedEx Cup. That's the confidence the win at the end of the year has given him.

Evans: The pressure starts anew at the Masters in April. The good play at the end of the year helped to salvage a tough year, but in McIlroy's elite world, the majors are the surest litmus test of confidence.

Harig: Lots. The victory over Scott at the Australian Open was a solid indication that things have turned around. It came after top-6 finishes in China and Dubai and perhaps most impressive was that he went head-to-head for the final 36 holes with Scott, who was attempting to win the Aussie Triple Crown. McIrloy intends to play more early in the season, and I'm betting he comes out much more focused and ready to play in 2014.

Maguire: Boatloads. The victory, of course, will make a huge difference, but more important was his consistent play the last couple of months of the year. If McIlroy can keep his game together like that, and build on it heading into 2014, we could be talking major opportunities for him next year.
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Momentum, '14 major venues have Woods optimistic

Coming off a season in which he won five times and returned to the top of the world rankings,Tiger Woods explained in a blog post Thursday that he already has his eyes set on 2014.

"I'm really looking forward to next year," Woods wrote in a column posted on his website. "I played well at the end of this year, so it's nice to have some momentum heading into 2014."

After finishing second to Zach Johnson at the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge earlier this month, Woods confirmed that he plans to spend some time away from the golf course in the coming weeks before making his 2014 debut at the Farmers Insurance Open in January.

"I'm going to put my clubs away for a while to spend more time with my kids and support my girlfriend Lindsey Vonn as she tries to prepare for the Sochi Olympics," he wrote.

Now nearly six years since his last major title, Woods explained that he is eager to tackle a 2014 slate of major venues upon which he has had considerable success.

"I've won at three of the four venues - Augusta National, Valhalla Golf Club and Royal Liverpool - and on Pinehurst No. 2, I'm trending the right way," noted Woods, who finished third at the 1999 U.S. Open at Pinehurst and second six years later. "But I still need to practice, work, grind and prepare, and have my game come together those four times a year, and I hope that will happen."

Woods ended his note with a shout out to his alma mater, Stanford, whose football team will play Michigan State in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1.

"What Coach (David) Shaw has done with that program ... it's top-notch," he added. "Unfortunately, I won't be able to attend the Rose Bowl, but I already have a place picked out to watch it."
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Newsmaker of the Year No. 5: Anchored stroke

It’s an issue that gained traction in 2011 and one that won’t be fully resolved until 2016.

Among golf’s governing bodies, though, 2013 will be remembered as the year in which a stand was taken against the anchored stroke.

The success of players with anchored putters, be they hinged at the belly or chin level, didn’t skip a beat in 2013. Although Keegan Bradley failed to lift a trophy this past year, he was regularly in the mix, notching eight top-10 finishes in 27 PGA Tour starts. Likewise, former U.S. Open champ Webb Simpson was a leaderboard fixture before anchoring his way to a win in Las Vegas in October to begin his 2013-14 season in style.

But if Bradley was the poster boy for anchoring in 2011, when he won twice, including the PGA Championship, and Simpson shared that honor along with fellow major winner Ernie Els in 2012, the distinction was inherited by Adam Scott in 2013. Scott wielded his chest-high putter to roll in a dramatic birdie on the 72nd hole of the Masters, then won a sudden-death playoff for the first of his four worldwide wins this year.

By the time Scott lifted his lengthy putter in triumph at Augusta National, though, an anchoring ban was already being debated. The USGA and R&A proposed Rule 14-1b in November 2012, and it wasn't long before golf’s governing bodies appeared to turn against each other.

In a televised interview in February, PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem said the proposed ban “was not in the best interest of golf or the PGA Tour.” PGA of America president Ted Bishop followed suit, terming the proposal “one of the most divisive issues that modern-day golf has ever seen.” "Bifurcation" - different sets of rules for pros and amateurs - became a hot topic.

But seemingly as quickly as the two factions split apart, a settlement was reached.

Five weeks after Scott holed the final putt at the Masters, the USGA made Rule 14-1b official. Six weeks after that, the PGA Tour and PGA of America agreed to recognize the rule change when it goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2016, a move that effectively started the official countdown to the end of anchoring.

With the rule change in place, affected players must adapt.

Some, including Bradley and Simpson, continue to use an anchored stroke, while others are utilizing the three-year window to get a head start on a new putting style. Bill Haas, who won the 2011 FedEx Cup with a belly putter, used a standard-sized flat stick en route to winning the AT&T National in June. Teen phenom Guan Tianlang made a similar switch, dabbling with conventional putters just months after becoming the youngest player to make the cut at a major when he played the weekend at the Masters, anchoring his putter into his non-existent belly all the while.

Still others appear poised to fight for a right to anchor.

Tim Clark is the most outspoken critic of the ban, having used a long putter for his entire professional career because of a genetic wrist condition. Carl Pettersson, a longtime anchorer who like Clark played his college golf at North Carolina State, also has been a vocal opponent of the rule change.

The duo headline a small group of players who have retained a lawyer and may take legal action against the PGA Tour over Rule 14-1b.

While the USGA has often told golfers what equipment they can (and cannot) play, the ban is a notable step into the realm of how they are allowed to play. The rule change, the opposing professionals claim, threatens their ability to effectively earn a living as independent contractors.

The second aspect that rankles the anchoring contingent is the timing of the ban. When it officially goes into effect in two years, nearly 25 years will have passed since Rocco Mediate became the first player to win a PGA Tour event with a long putter. More than 15 years will have come and gone since Paul Azinger won the 2000 Sony Open using a belly putter.

While players like Clark and Pettersson may soon have their day in court with the PGA Tour, Rule 14-1b stretches far beyond the professional game. Some amateurs will soon have to choose between playing by the Rules of Golf and utilizing a stroke that isd popular among those with physical limitations or those who struggle on the greens. Equipment manufacturers will have to adjust to changes in demand.

With many questions still unresolved, one thing remains clear: 2013 may be remembered as the year that anchoring was put on extinction alert, but the debate will continue far into the future.
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Punch Shot: Behind the scenes in 2013

The 2013 season provided golf fans with many controversies and storylines, but some stories are always left untold. GolfChannel.com writers take you behind the scenes providing us with their best tales from the road this past season.

By RANDALL MELL

Hearts swell around the 18th green late on Sundays in major championships. No heart swells there quite like a parent’s with a competition ending.

I’ll remember the elation hovering in the wings in majors this past year. I’ll remember it in the hearts and faces of the parents of all three major championship winners in the women’s game.

I’ll remember Dale and Carol Lewis watching their daughter, Stacy, overcome five bogeys in the final round to win the Ricoh Women’s British Open with a birdie-birdie finish at St. Andrews, the birthplace of golf. There are few sights as heartwarming as watching parents marvel over their child. We saw it there in Dale’s eyes and heard it quivering in his voice, emotion springing up from all the memories of his daughter’s battle with scoliosis.

“Today was like her whole life,” Dale said under the shadow of the Royal & Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews clubhouse. “She is never down. She always has a chance.”

That same sense of parental wonder was in the eyes of Sung Kim as she watched her daughter,Inbee Park, hoisting the U.S. Women’s Open trophy at Sebonack in her historic third consecutive major championship triumph. Sung Kim shared a story that surprised us there, a story about how on the eve of the final round her restless daughter confided to her that she was worried about letting down her family and her country with so much at stake. Inbee struggled to sleep in the house the family was renting with the weight of history pressing down.

“Don’t worry,” Sung Kim said she told Inbee. “If you win, it’s OK. If you lose, it’s OK. We are just so happy either way.”

With that, Inbee found the sleep she needed.

I’ll also remember the pride in Mona Pettersen’s eyes as she watched her daughter, Suzann, draped in their native Norwegian flag, hoisting the Evian Championship trophy. Mona saw a life’s thread running through the moment.

“She’s always been so determined,” Mona said. “When she gets her mind on something, there’s no stopping her.”

Parents have their blind spots with their children, but nobody sees through to the core quite like they do. I'll remember that from the 2013 majors.

By REX HOGGARD

After 186 tries the scoreboard, and a beaming smile, said it was Ken Duke’s turn.

The veteran had toiled at nearly every level of professional golf with varying degrees of success, but a PGA Tour title had eluded him at every step.

Having finished runner-up three times on Tour he knew how quickly fortunes can change on a championship Sunday, but after a closing nine of 32 for a final-round 66 at last season’s Travelers Championship there was a hint of anticipation etched into his face as he entered the scoring trailer.

At 12 under, there was only one player, Chris Stroud, who could catch him, and his only spoiler had missed the green at the last hole and needed to chip in to force overtime.

Before Stroud’s downhill birdie chip reached the cup, Duke was already out of the scoring trailer. “You’ve got to be kidding me,” he smiled as he made his way to the first playoff hole in a mixture of appreciation and anticipation.

Duke outlasted Stroud in the playoff, making birdie at the second extra hole, to claim that elusive Big League victory and immediately endear himself to the media masses.

Journalists are taught to root for the story, not the player. With Duke, however, it was hard to separate the two.

By JASON SOBEL

Two of my lasting memories from covering the game in 2013 include the (almost) first shot of the year and the (almost) last shot of the year – and both involve Matt Kuchar.

As you probably recall, the season-opening Hyundai Tournament of Champions was delayed for a few days due to heavy winds around the Plantation Course. At one point, officials attempted to begin the event with a two-tee start, so I trekked up to the 10th teebox, where it’s usually breeziest. Prior to the first shot of the year ever being struck, I watched Kuchar place his ball on a tee, only to have it blow off before he ever swung at it.

It was a tweetable moment if there ever was one, considering I was one of about seven people in attendance when it happened. So I took out my phone and began thumbing a tweet, but within seconds was reprimanded by a marshal. This came despite the sticker on my credential allowing a phone, despite anyone being allowed to tweet from the course and despite the season not even having begun yet. A scolding about tweeting before the first shot was ever hit? That’s gotta be a record that will never be broken.

Eleven months later, I stood just off the 18th green at the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge as Zach Johnson improbably rinsed his second shot, then holed out with a wedge for par to force a playoff with Tiger Woods. Amidst the chaos that ensued, I ran into Kuchar, who had played in the group in front of them, as he was leaving the scoring area.

The usual irrepressible Kuchar smile was even bigger than normal – not because he was rooting for Johnson or against Woods, but because he had just witnessed the same thing that everyone else around the 18th green had seen. “Wow,” he said to me. “What a par!” It was a cool reminder that despite the impeccable golf swings and the multitudes of zeroes in the bank account, the world’s best players are still fans of the game and love seeing the improbable take place. Just like the rest of us. 

By WILL GRAY

There are several memorable moments that stick out for me from my travels in 2013, but the scene that created the widest array of storylines came at the U.S. Open sectional qualifier in Columbus, Ohio.

With spots in the season’s second major on the line, well-recognized professionals lined up toe-to-toe with otherwise anonymous amateurs. Rory Sabbatini stood on the putting green at The Lakes Country Club in the early morning hours, one of many PGA Tour pros to go with shorts for the day’s 36-hole journey. He practiced next to Justin Thomas, at that point still an amateur, whose plane had landed just hours earlier after he helped lead the University of Alabama to a national championship. His father was with him on the putting green, coffee in hand, still wearing the smile from the day before.

Scott Gardiner drew much of the morning buzz that day by showing up to the course without his clubs, which were lost in transit. The subsequent scramble led to the Aussie playing with a mixed set of sticks from the staff collection and using balls emblazoned with “SNAP,” since the assistant in the shop that had a few eggs to spare tends to move his shot from right to left. Remarkably, he used the rag-tag assortment to shoot an opening 65 without hitting so much as a single ball on the range.

As morning became afternoon, future Presidents Cupper Brendon de Jonge could be seen sitting alone in a corner of the course’s outdoor patio. He was eating a to-go burger from the grill before being shuttled to Brookside Golf & Country Club for the day’s second round, appearing very much like a club member grabbing a quick bite before resuming his $5 Nassau match.

As the sun began to fade, an 11-for-7 playoff included veteran Steve Flesch, whose teenage son, Griffin, served admirably as caddie, despite the fact that it seemed at times the weight of the golf bag might be enough to send him sideways.

Such are the sights of a sectional qualifier – easily one of the more memorable days I spent on the course in 2013.
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