Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Who was the greatest from tee to green in 2013?


WANTING to return among the elite in golf, Graeme McDowell mapped out a plan last autumn. He worked out how many ranking points he would need to get back into the top five in the world.
And he went about it the right way. It started with his win at the World Challenge a year ago. He won at Hilton Head on the U.S. PGA Tour. He won the World Match Play Championship and the French Open on the European Tour. He was third at the World Golf Championships in Doral and Shanghai.

Graeme McDowell, of Northern Ireland.

"I've got to say, I got pretty close to that target that I set myself," McDowell said.

Little did he know how much the target would be moving in an extraordinary year for golf.

McDowell ended last year at No. 15 in the world. Now he is all the way up to No. 12.

"I wasn't really factoring on how many great players around me were going to have incredible seasons," McDowell said. "So making an impact in that top 10 in the world has been very difficult to do this year because you just get so many guys playing incredibly well."

Call it bad timing for McDowell, and happy days for golf.

Tiger Woods celebrates after making the final putt for the victory during the final round of the Farmers Insurance Open on the South Course at Torrey Pines.

Rarely has the golf season - men and women - felt so rewarding for so many players. Perhaps that explains why Tiger Woods could win five times - more than any other player in the world - capture the U.S. money title and the Vardon Trophy for the lowest scoring average, and then listen to people discuss the definition of player of the year and whether he is worthy without having won a major.

Woods won the vote as the best player on the U.S. PGA Tour.

He is used to playing under a different set of standards, a victim of his own success. Anyone else with five trophies from the courses where he won - Torrey Pines, Doral, Bay Hill, TPC Sawgrass and Firestone - and there would be no debate.

But this wasn't just any other year.

Bubba Watson of the US presents Adam Scott of Australia a Green Jacket during the Green Jacket Ceremony at 77th Masters golf tournament at Augusta National.

Adam Scott became the first Australian to win the Masters, and along the way earned redemption from blowing the British Open nearly nine months earlier. He had the outright lead on the back nine at the British Open this year before faltering. A month later, he won The Barclays during the FedEx Cup playoffs, arguably one of the strongest fields of the year with the tour's top 125 players who are all on form.

When he finally went home to show off his green jacket, Scott won the Australian PGA Championship and the Australian Masters, and teamed with Jason Day to give Australia its first World Cup title in 24 years. He was poised to capture Australia's triple crown until Rory McIlroy beat him on the last hole in the Australian Open.

Phil Mickelson of the United States gestures as he holds the Claret Jug trophy after winning the British Open.

A better year than Woods? Probably not, though it depends how much weight is given a major.

Perhaps a better question: Did he have a better year than Phil Mickelson?

Lefty came within a cruel lip-out of shooting a 59 in the Phoenix Open, which he wound up winning. Showing off a short game like no other, his chip on the 18th hole at Castle Stuart gave him a victory in the Scottish Open. And his Sunday at Muirfield gets little debate over the best round of the year. Mickelson made four birdies on the last six holes for a 66 to capture the one major that not even he thought he could win.

Who won the most meaningful major this year? Mickelson or Scott? Best to save that argument for the bar.

Henrik Stenson of Sweden is sprayed with water by fellow Swedish golfers Jonas Blixt and Peter Hanson after winning the DP World Tour Championship and the Race To Dubai.

Not to be forgotten is Henrik Stenson, who in April wasn't even eligible for the Masters. He finished one shot behind in the Houston Open, which got him to Augusta National. But it was the summer when the Swede began to shine.

A tie for third in the Scottish Open. Runner-up at the British Open. Runner-up at Firestone (by seven shots to Woods), third at the U.S. PGA Championship. He won two FedEx Cup playoff events to win the $10 million FedEx Cup. And for good measure, he won the final event in Europe to become the first player to win the FedEx Cup and Race to Dubai in the same season.

Missing from the equation this year was the guy who started the year at No. 1 - McIlroy. He still had a good view.

"You've got Tiger with five wins this year. Adam breaks through for his first major. Phil wins the major he thinks he's never going to win. Henrik comes back," McIlroy said. "Yeah, it's deep. You've got to play really well to win. ... Golf is in great shape."

2013 Vare Trophy winner Stacy Lewis.

On the U.S. LPGA Tour, the points-based player of the year came down to the next-to-last week, even though Inbee Park had won three straight majors among her six titles. Suzann Pettersen and Stacy Lewis won the other majors. Lewis won the Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average. Pettersen had a chance to win the money title until she faltered in the Titleholders.

That's what inspired tour commissioner Mike Whan to say, "Sports are at their absolute best ... when the best athletes in that sport are having the best years of their lives."

It's hard to say with certainty that Woods was at his absolute best, and not just because he didn't win a major. It used to be that when Woods was at his best, there was not enough wealth to go around. Now there is.

What a year.
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Hi5 Golf set the pace at halfway stage

Hi5 Golf Club are the overall leaders at the halfway stage of the 60th Bermuda Goodwill Pro-Am Tournament, leading Belfair Plantation by three strokes.

The Canadian club had a second straight round of 63 yesterday at Tucker’s Point after playing at nearby Mid Ocean course on Monday and their two-round total of 126 going into today’s rest day gives them breathing space.

Belfair dropped two strokes on the leaders after adding a round of 65 at Tucker’s Point to go with their 64 on Mid Ocean.

Hi5Golf and Belfair are competing in the senior team division where three more teams are in contention on 131. Overall there are five teams on 131 — Lakes Golf and Country Club, Kings Riding Golf Club, National Golf Club of Canada B, Donalda Country Club and Bellewood Golf Club.

Hi5 Golf, Belfair and Lakes are playing their third round at Port Royal tomorrow before finishing at Riddell’s Bay on Friday.

National B lead the junior division by three strokes over local team Port Royal and Riverside Golf Club, both with a two-round score of 134. Port Royal are tied for ninth overall with Riverside and Woodland Golf Club.

In the professional divisions, which is using the Stableford scoring system, Dennis Hendershott, of Hi5 Golf, and Chris Moody, from Riverside, share the junior division on 38 points. One point back is Port Royal’s Dwayne Pearman, while Thomas Doherty, from Woodland, has 36 points.

There is a three-way tie at the top of the senior professional division with Danny Mijovic, of Kings Riding, Scott Spence, of Lakes, and Ted Griffin, of Woodland, each on 34 points. Keir Smith from National is a point back on 33 and John Rushnell, of Oshawa Golf and Curling Club, is on 32 points.

Mid Ocean Ladies have the halfway lead in the women’s event with a two-day total of 143, which gives them a one-shot lead over Georgian Bay Golf Club and four strokes clear of Riddell’s Bay.

Leading the way in the individual race on 23 points are Meg Chapman, of Georgian Bay, Andree Lapierre, of London Hunt Club, and Jen Jaszek, from Hi5 Golf. Ann Carroll, of Lambton Golf and Country Club, and Peggy Stevens, from Mid Ocean Ladies, have 16 points.

Today is a rest day and a Ryder Cup-style tournament between golfers from the United States and Canada will be held at the Turtle Hill course before competition resumes tomorrow.

Good weather is in the forecast for the last two days of the tournament, meaning that the division leaders will have to play well tomorrow and Friday to hold off their pursuers.
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RAIN’S NOT SCOTT’S CUP OF TEA

The rains were a good omen for Scott Jamieson in last year’s Nelson Mandela Championship presented by ISPS Handa, but the defending champion wants a full 72-hole tournament at Mount Edgecombe Country Club this year.

Waterlogged fairways were the main culprit in causing a delay to the start of the €1-million tournament co-sanctioned by the Sunshine Tour and the European Tour – this after the 2012 edition was shortened to 36 holes at an almost submerged Royal Durban.

“Well at least we got to play the pro-am this year, but it seems like the rains are going to come again,” said Jamieson. “It was a good omen for me last year, so hopefully it will be the same this time around.

“It’s a lovely course and I love the back nine – there are some great holes. The fairways are soggy and the forecast says they will battle to dry up, but the greens are incredibly firm for how much rain the course has taken. Hopefully we can play the full length,” he added.

The 30-year-old Scot from Glasgow took his debut European Tour win at Royal Durban, and that signalled the start of a purple patch. “Winning last year was a catalyst to my best year yet,” he said. “I went from winning here to getting a spot in the Volvo Champions at Durban Country Club, where I came close to winning.

“My good finish there led on to getting into certain tournaments based on my position in the Race to Dubai. I played my first World Golf Championships event and also got to play in the Volvo World Match Play. It really opened up my eyes to how important winning is. It would be great to finish in the top 10 every week, but winning really opens up doors.”

And the win also brings different pressures to players. “It’s difficult, because you don’t want to put pressure on yourself,” he said. “I certainly felt after winning last year that I had made a step up in my career progression, but winning is something you can’t control. It takes care of itself if you put yourself in position enough times. I don’t want to put pressure on every week, but the goal is still to win.”

He’s had a quiet start to his 2014 campaign with missed cuts in the South African Open Championship and the Alfred Dunhill Championship, but he’s hopeful of turning that trend around. “I’ve had a good record in South Africa. Hopefully this will be my week again. And I’ll probably come back down to South Africa for the Joburg Open and the Tshwane Open,” he said.

But now he’s waiting for fairways at Mount Edgecombe to dry out.
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TGC stars show off culinary skills

Bangkok, December 11: Four of the favourites to win the Thailand Golf Championship, which begins at Amata Spring Country Club tomorrow, exchanged their golf clubs for cooking utensils to take part in a culinary lesson at the St. Regis Bangkok. Bubba Watson, Charl Schwartzel and Hunter Mahan were joined by Thailand’s number one Thongchai Jaidee as they immersed themselves in local culture and learned to create two of the country’s most famous dishes.

The four players were shown the secrets behind making good Som Tum, or Green Papaya Salad, and Pad Thai, the stir-fried noodles dish commonly served as a street food and at casual local eateries all over Thailand by Chef Dong, Executive Sous Chef at The St. Regis Bangkok, who guided the players through the procedure with step-by-step instructions.

World number 31 Hunter Mahan, who is a self-confessed cooking fan and pursues this interest often at home, was excited to be offered the opportunity to learn from a top chef:

“I enjoyed today very much. It is a real honour to cooking with a great chef at the St. Regis. I love cooking and I love Thai food so it was a great experience. (This was all new to me because it was) different greens mixing with different flavours but it is all good and I enjoyed doing it.”

Following the cooking lesson, Mr Sarath Ratanavadi, Executive Director of the Thailand Golf Championship, was invited, along with Chef Deng and St. Regis Bangkok General Manager Krister Svensson to have a taste of the efforts by the star players and select a winner. In a friendly but competitive contest, 2012 Masters Champion was declared top chef of the day, a win that he was clearly not expecting:

“I am surprised to have won that! I have never cooked in my life, this was the first time. Maybe I am better at cooking than I am at golf, who knows! I am not very good in the kitchen and my wife lets me stay out of there.”

Three-time Asian Tour Order of Merit winner Thongchai has eaten many times the two dishes that were on the agenda today and expressed his enjoyment of the class. He also disclosed that he regularly cooks at home and tries to make different Thai dishes:

“I enjoyed it today. Pad Thai is very famous in Thailand, everyone knows Pad Thai but the taste can be very different depending on what you put in it. But it was great to have a cooking lesson here today. I sometimes go home and try to cook, but maybe not so much Pad Thai. I will try and make green curry, or red curry, something like that. ”

The players will now have one last chance to practice at the famous Amata Spring Country Club in Chonburi through the Thailand Golf Championship Pro-Am competition today, where they will be grouped with keen amateur players to play, and offer advice during, a round at the course.

The third edition of the Thailand Golf Championship, one of Asia’s most prominent and premier professional golf tournaments, will take place from December 12-15 and features a stellar, world-class international line-up that includes three Major Champions and seven of the world’s top 40. In addition to the four players who enjoyed the cooking lesson today, other notable stars in the stellar line-up include, man-of-the-moment, Sweden’s Henrick Stenson who recently made history when he became the first man to win the Race to Dubai and the FedEx Cup, 2013 US Open Champion Justin Rose, former world number two Sergio Garcia, American star Rickie Fowler, Japanese sensation Ryo Ishikawa and local hope Kiradech Aphibarnrat.

With a total prize fund of US$1 million, the prestigious Championship also has an aim to promote Thailand as an international sports destination and regional event hub. In 2013, the tournament will be broadcasted live to 200 countries and 800 million homes worldwide.

Ends.

About the Thailand Golf Championship

The primary organizers of the event are Gulf Sports Management, the Asian Tour and IMG. They have been well supported by both government and private organizations such as Siam Commercial Bank, Gulf JP, Toyota, Tourism Authority of Thailand, PTT Public Company Limited, PTT Global Chemical Public Company Limited, PTT Exploration and Production Public Company Limited, Airports of Thailand Public Company Limited, Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand, Thaioil, IRPC, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Omega, Nooter / Eriksen, Samithivej Hospital, Starwood, CNN, SuperSports, Heineken, Ricoh, Graham Beck Wines, EST Cola, Panasonic, Srixon, Central Pattana, Bangkok Post and Amata Spring Country Club.

Thailand Golf Championship tickets are available at Thaiticketmajor at Baht 300 each for Round 1 and 2 (December 12 and 13). The price for Round 3 (December 14) is Baht 400, and for the final day on December 15 the price is Baht 500. A 4-day package ticket is only Baht 800. Children below the age of 16 and senior citizens 60-years-old and over can enjoy Thailand Golf Championship for free. Special offers for SCB Credit Card, PTT Blue Card, SPG Member Card and Samitivej Patient and Staff Card holders are available till December 11, 2013. Please call 02-262-3456.

About the Asian Tour

In 2013, the Asian Tour will celebrate a momentous milestone with its 10th season. As the official sanctioning body for professional golf in Asia, the Asian Tour leads the development of golf across the region, enhancing the careers of its members while maintaining a commitment to the integrity of the game. The Asian Tour, through its membership of the International Federation of PGA Tours, is the only recognised pan-Asian professional golf tour in Asia. This unique feature positions the Asian Tour at the pinnacle of professional golf in Asia; providing its events with Official World Ranking status. Tour Partners include Abacus (Official Apparel Partner), Inetol Headwear (Official Headwear Supplier), Saxo Capital Markets (Official Statistics Partner), Singha Beer (Official Beer), Srixon (Official Ball), Subway (Official Quick Service Restaurant), Starwood Hotels and Resorts (Official Hotels and Resorts) and Rolex (Official Timekeeper). The Asian Tour has offices in Kuala Lumpur and Singapore.
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Story of golf in '13: Sharing the wealth

THOUSAND OAKS, CALIF. — Wanting to return among the elite in golf, Graeme McDowell mapped out a plan last fall. He figured out how many ranking points he would need to get back into the top five in the world.

And he went about it the right way. It started with his win at the World Challenge a year ago. He won at Hilton Head on the PGA Tour. He won the World Match Play Championship and the French Open on the European Tour. He was third at World Golf Championships in Doral and Shanghai.

“I’ve got to say, I got pretty close to that target that I set myself,” McDowell said.

Little did he know how much the target would be moving in an extraordinary year for golf.

McDowell ended last year at No. 15 in the world. Now he is all the way up to No. 12.

“I wasn’t really factoring on how many great players around me were going to have incredible seasons,” McDowell said. “So making an impact in that top 10 in the world has been very difficult to do this year because you just get so many guys playing incredibly well.”

Call it bad timing for McDowell, and happy days for golf.

Rarely has the golf season — men and women — felt so rewarding for so many players. Perhaps that explains why Tiger Woods could win five times — more than any other player in the world — capture the PGA Tour money title and the Vardon Trophy for the lowest scoring average, and then listen to people discuss the definition of player of the year and whether he is worthy without having won a major.

Woods won the vote as the best player on the PGA Tour.

He is used to playing under a different set of standards, a victim of his own success. Anyone else with five trophies from the courses where he won — Torrey Pines, Doral, Bay Hill, TPC Sawgrass and Firestone — and there wouldn’t be a debate.

But this wasn’t just any other year.

Adam Scott became the first Australian to win the Masters, and along the way earned redemption from blowing the British Open nearly nine months earlier. He had the outright lead on the back nine at the British Open this year before faltering. A month later, he won The Barclays during the FedEx Cup playoffs, arguably one of the strongest fields of the year with the tour’s top 125 players who are all on form.

When he finally went home to show off his green jacket, Scott won the Australian PGA Championship and the Australian Masters, and then teamed with Jason Day to give Australia its first World Cup title in 24 years. He was poised to capture Australia’s Triple Crown until Rory McIlroy beat him on the last hole in the Australian Open.

A better year than Woods? Probably not, though it depends how much weight is given a major.

Perhaps a better question: Did he have a better year than Phil Mickelson?

Lefty came within a cruel lip-out of shooting a 59 in the Phoenix Open, which he wound up winning. Showing off a short game like no other, his chip on the 18th hole at Castle Stuart gave him a victory in the Scottish Open. And his Sunday at Muirfield gets little debate over the best round of the year. Mickelson made four birdies on the last six holes for a 66 to capture the one major that not even he thought he could win.

Who won the most meaningful major this year? Mickelson or Scott? Best to save that argument for the bar.

Not to be forgotten is Henrik Stenson, who in April wasn’t even eligible for the Masters. He finished one shot behind in the Shell Houston Open, which got him to Augusta National. But it was the summer when the Swede began to shine.

A tie for third in the Scottish Open. Runner-up at the British Open. Runner-up at Firestone (by seven shots to Woods), third at the PGA Championship. He won two FedEx Cup playoff events to win the $10 million FedEx Cup. And for good measure, he won the final event in Europe to become the first player to win the FedEx Cup and Race to Dubai in the same season.

Missing from the equation this year was the guy who started the year at No. 1 — McIlroy. He still had a good view.

“You’ve got Tiger with five wins this year. Adam breaks through for his first major. Phil wins the major he thinks he’s never going to win. Henrik comes back,” McIlroy said. “Yeah, it’s deep. You’ve got to play really well to win. … But I think golf is in great shape.”

On the LPGA Tour, the points-based player of the year came down to the next to last week, even though Inbee Park had won three straight majors among her six titles. Suzann Pettersen and Stacy Lewis won the other majors. Lewis won the Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average. Pettersen had a chance to win the money title until she faltered in the Titleholders.

That’s what inspired LPGA Commissioner Mike Whan to say, “Sports are at their absolute best … when the best athletes in that sport are having the best years of their lives.”

It’s hard to say with certainty that Woods was at his absolute best, and not just because he didn’t win a major. It used to be that when Woods was at his best, there was not enough wealth to go around. Now there is.

What a year.
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Tiger: If I can't win, why tee it up?

Tiger Woods insists he will pack it in when he feels he is no longer able to win tournaments, even if that means he won't get close to Arnold Palmer's record of consecutive Masters appearances.

The world number one has already played at Augusta National for the past 19 years and, at the age of 37, he could still feature in quite a number of tournaments if he stays injury free.

The legendary Palmer holds the record of 50 - set in 2004 - consecutive Masters appearances, but don't expect his American compatriot to be challenging it.

Woods says he won't hesitate to call it a day once he can no longer challenge for victories.

"Let me put it to you this way. I'm not going to beat Arnold's record. I'm not playing that long, that's for sure," he is quoted as saying by The Associated Press.

He added: "For me, I always want to win. So if I can't win, why tee it up? That's just my own personal belief. And I know what it takes to prepare to win and what it takes to go out there and get the job done, and there's going to become a point in time where I just can't do it anymore.

"We all as athletes face that moment. I'm a ways from that moment in my sport, but when that day happens, I'll make a decision and that's it."
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Aiken targets career best

Thomas Aiken said that a victory at this week's Nelson Mandela Championship in Durban would be the highlight of his career.

The start of the second staging of the European Tour event has been moved forward a day to Wednesday to ensure the final round does not clash with the funeral of former South African president Nelson Mandela.

Aiken, who hails from Johannesburg, said that Mandela was an source of real inspiration for him and said that it would be something special to have his name feature on a trophy that honours the legendary statesman.

"It's a very emotional week," he told reporters.

"He has touched everyone's heart in some way or the other and how fortunate are we as professionals to be playing a tournament named after him in the week that he passed on?

"I've played in a few Nelson Mandela Invitational events and never got to meet Madiba. Now I'm playing in the Nelson Mandela Championship and it's a great honour to be participating in an event that hopes to continue his legacy of assisting children."

"I'm a South African and Mandela is very dear to me as he was someone we all could look up to.

"How nice it would be if we could do a little of what he did and knit everyone together - like we are now all in sorrow - and make this country a better place to live in."

Aiken's sentiments were shared by fellow South African Branden Grace who is one of the favourites to lift the trophy.

Grace has not had it all his way this year after winning no less than five tournaments in 2012 and hopes that he would be inspired by Madiba.

"It's kind of bittersweet to be playing in the Nelson Mandela Championship just a week after Madiba's death," said the 25-year-old.

"It's nice to be able to go and support something like that and the great cause that it supports. It's not a happy time in South Africa, so it's nice to be able to be in a position where I can go and support the tournament."
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Rose: It's only sinking in now

Justin Rose has admitted that he is only getting to grips with being a major champion now, ahead of this weekend's Thailand Golf Championship.

The world number four become the first Englishman to win the US Open in 43 years when he lifted the US Open trophy at Merion, and is confident of capping a great 2013 during his maiden performance at the Amata Spring Country Club this week.

Although the 33-year-old admitted that his achievement is still sinking in, he added that he is eager to win more of golf's coveted titles.

"Wining a major, it's still sinking in," Rose admitted to Sky Sports.

"It's an amazing feeling and a lot of relief. A lot of great players haven't won a major and to get that monkey off my back is fantastic.

"It takes off a lot of pressure. As a kid growing up, I always dreamed of winning a major and it's nice to have that. At this point of my career, it's not time to reminisce; I am motivated to win more.

"To also do it on Father's Day, it was an amazing feeling to share with my late father.

"I've seen my good friends Rory and GMac hugging their fathers (after winning the US Open) and I thought I would never feel that. I was surprised how good it felt, I could feel my late dad was with me that day."
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McIlroy: Media intrusion annoying

Rory McIlroy received much unwanted attention from the media this year, and he admits that he let it get to him.

In September, McIlroy parted with Horizon Sports, his management company. His friend Graeme McDowell was not pleased with the decision and in the fallout McIlroy missed McDowell's wedding. The media was only too happy to report the split.

"I let it get to me a couple of times this year and it's sort of a tough - not a tough position to be in, that's not the right word - but it was a challenge for sure," said the Northern Irishman.

The following month, it was incorrectly reported that McIlroy had broken up with his girlfriend and former number one ranked tennis player, Caroline Wozniacki.

McIlroy said: "I don't care what people say about my golf, it's all the other stuff. When they start digging into your personal life, start digging into that, then that's where it starts to annoy you.

"Whether it is Caroline, whether it is management companies, it shouldn't really be as a consequence as to how I play my golf. That gets at me more than anything else."

The 24-year-old was world number one just 12 months ago and pulled off a record eight shot win at the 2012 PGA Championships, beating legendary Jack Nicklaus' record.

This year, the young talent didn't win until the Australian Open just two weeks ago. The 2014 season begins in January at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship and will no doubt be an important season for the current world number six.
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