Jack Nicklaus believes Tiger Woods will find it tougher to break his record of 18 major wins if the world number one does not play this year. Woods, who is taking an indefinite break from golf, has been in hiding since admitting last month he had cheated on his wife. “I
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Woods aims to win ‘hardest’ major
The PGA Championship, Hazeltine National Golf Club, Minnesota
Date: 13-16 Aug
Coverage: Live on Radio 5 live and scorecard updates and reports on the BBC website

Tigers Woods believes he will have to beat the strongest field in golf if he is to win his 15th major at this week’s USPGA Championship at Hazeltine.
The 33-year-old, who is bidding for his fourth USPGA title, has won his last two events on the PGA Tour.
But with almost all of the world’s top 100 set to feature at Hazeltine, the world number one said: "This is the deepest field we get.
"If you win this championship you have beaten the best field in all of golf."
Woods has won five tournaments since returning from an eight-month absence in February following reconstructive knee surgery.
But he has not won a major in 2009 and missed the cut at the Open.
"It’s been a great year either way, for me to come back and play as well as I’ve done," added Woods, who has not gone through a year without a major victory since 2004.
"The great thing about golf is that there’s always next week"
Padraig Harrington
"I don’t think any of us would have thought I could have won this many events this year.
"I’m very proud of not only winning the golf tournaments but how consistent I’ve played. The one bad event I’ve had was missing the cut at the Open."
Woods is in pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’s record of 18 major titles, while his victory last Sunday at the World Golf Championship took his tally to 70 PGA titles – 12 behind Sam Snead’s record.
"Those are numbers that are pretty mind-boggling," said Woods.
"To get up that high, those records don’t happen in the course of a few years. It’s an entire career."
Wood has been paired with defending champion Padraig Harrington and Rich Beem for the first two rounds of the tournament.
Beem won the USPGA when it was last held in Hazeltime in 2002, while Woods defeated Harrington by four shots to win last weekend’s World Golf Championship.
Harrington started the final round three shots ahead of playing partner Woods but the Irishman’s challenge ended with a triple bogey on the 16th, a hole that saw both men warned for slow play.
"The great thing about golf is there’s always next week," said Harrington as he looked forward to defending his title.
606: DEBATE"The USPGA really is a great major"
TIGERBESTATHLETE
"That’s the fantastic thing. I didn’t sleep great Sunday night. I was tired but I struggled to get to sleep and I woke up early still thinking about it.
"But the minute I hit the practice round here I’m thinking about the USPGA. It’s all about the USPGA."
Meanwhile, Woods has denied reports he has been fined by the PGA Tour for remarks he made about European Tour chief referee John Paramor, who issued the slow play warning on Sunday, saying he got "in the way of a great battle".
"I’ve heard from the Tour and there was no fine," Woods added. "That was an erroneous report."
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Woods clinches Buick Open victory
FINAL LEADERBOARD: (US unless stated)
-20 T Woods -17 J Senden (Aus), G Chalmers (Aus), R Thatcher -16 YE Lang (Kor), M Letzig Selected others: -13 J Leonard -11 J Furyk -11 G Owen (Eng)

Tiger Woods produced an unblemished round to win his third Buick Open title by three shots at Warwick Hills.
Starting the last round one shot clear, Woods birdied the fourth, seventh and 16th holes and parred the rest for a three-under 69 to end on 20 under.
Roland Thatcher notched eight birdies in a 64 to jump into a tie for second with Australians Greg Chalmers (68) and John Senden (70) on 17 under.
Michael Letzig, who began the day one shot behind Woods, fell away with a 73.
The victory was Woods’ 69th on the PGA Tour – only Sam Snead (82) and Jack Nicklaus (73) have won more – and it never looked in doubt after he birdied the fourth and seventh to turn in 34.
There was a brief moment of concern when the 33-year-old dumped his ball in the green-protecting lake on the 13th when he over-cooked an ambitious attempt to cut his ball round a tree.
However, it was a par five and the world number one flipped a wedge to within four feet to save his par.
Letzig, playing with Woods, birdied the 13th, but his challenge had already faded with a double bogey at the par-three eighth and he dropped a shot at the last to finish on 15 under par.
Senden enjoyed a run of three successive birdies midway through his back nine but he will be cursing three dropped shots in the first 11 holes.
Victory for Woods will go some way towards making up for the disappointment of missing the cut – only the second time he has done so at a major – at the Open two weeks ago.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Don McNay: Bait and Switch Business Relationships
All of this, all of this, all of this looks so easy. But all of this, all of this, all of this ain’t so…
A veteran’s tale
By Rob Hodgetts
BBC Sport at Turnberry
Sport can be cruel and we could bemoan it for robbing us of fairytales.
But as Tennyson said, "Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all".
Tom Watson’s quest for a sixth Open title at the age of 59 held the world of golf in raptures at Turnberry.
A ninth major title 26 years after his last would have been one of the most remarkable sports stories of our generation, if not ever.
The veteran’s tale was embellished with further poignancy because of his dramatic victory against Jack Nicklaus in the Duel in the Sun over the same Turnberry course in 1977.
606: DEBATEspellbindingDannyboy
The romance built over four intoxicating days in Ayrshire.
But thousands of hearts around the world were broken when he finally capitulated in a play-off to Stewart Cink.
Having won five Opens and three Senior British Opens, including the 2003 tournament at Turnberry, the adoring British crowd had roared on Watson from the moment he carded an opening 65.
Instead of making way for the young guns after enjoying his moment in the limelight as the usual script demands of men his age, Watson refused to retreat.
Back in a share of the lead after day two, the whispers started. "He couldn’t, could he" Still in front after day three, Watson became the favourite to add the final chapter to a remarkable story.
The pen was primed, too, but the final stroke let him down as he hit a poor putt on the 18th for the title.
For many, the dream faded there and then. And it died completely when Watson blew up over the final two extra holes. He suddenly looked a man his age, and A Duel in the Evening Sun it was not.
"It’s a great disappointment. It tears at your gut," said Watson.
"But I take from this week just a lot of warmth, a lot of spirituality, in the sense that there was something out there. It helped me along."
The focus on Watson is to take nothing away from Cink, who holed out from 15ft on the 18th to set Watson a target and then held his nerve to make his own dream come true and claim a first major title.
"I had mixed feelings out there because I watched him with admiration all week," said Cink.
The Open Championship can always be relied on to provide compelling stories and drama of the highest order.
Last year, Tiger Woods was absent with injury but he wasn’t missed as Greg Norman and Padraig Harrington took centre stage.
At Turnberry, Watson and Ross Fisher, praying that his wife could delay the birth of their first child, were the threads of the last two days which lacked nothing in excitement and intrigue despite Woods having this time missed the cut.
The world number one may be on his way to being the greatest golfer ever, but the Open is bigger.
Running in parallel with the will-she, won’t-she of Mrs Fisher’s impending delivery was the seemingly perennial question of when was a Briton going to win the Open again.
Fisher and Lee Westwood were best placed in the second-last group to become the first Briton since Paul Lawrie in 1999 and the first Englishman to win the Open since Nick Faldo in 1992.
As the final day unfolded and Fisher fell away, 21-year-old Chris Wood almost beat them to it, finishing tied third with Westwood while countryman Luke Donald also ended in the top five.
Earlier in the week, we wondered if Harrington could make it three Open titles in a row.

The struggling champion did at least make the cut, but his reign had to end sometime, and with the pressure lifted he may be able to resurrect his game to the heights of last year. The Lyle v Monty spat also provided a spiky sidebar.
But it was Watson’s tale. There’s unlikely to be a sequel – Watson is set to play his last Open at St Andrews next year before he becomes too old – but then who would have thought 32 years ago he would have a putt to win a second Open Championship at Turnberry
As the massed media filed sombrely into Watson’s news conference, the old competitor, who has tasted many victories and defeats over the years, joked: "This ain’t a funeral, you know."
Deeply disappointed but philosophical, he was asked to provide his own headline.
"The old fogey almost did it," he chuckled. "It would have been a hell of a story." </p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Tom Watson deserves his hip hooray
• Spaniard takes first-round lead at Turnberry on six under
• Five-times champion shoots 65 at 59 after operation
Miguel Angel Jiménez’s rolling putt across Turnberry’s 18th green in the evening gave the Spaniard the first-round lead but it could not deny the old warrior Tom Watson another day in the sun.
“It was a perfect day for golf and I played almost perfect golf,” said the languorous Spaniard afterwards. As for the man he edged into second place, he shrugged and said: “He was a legend before, he was a legend today and he will be a legend tomorrow.” Jiménez, not for the first time in his life, hit the back of the cup with one of his homemade aphorisms.
This truly was a day that belonged to the ageless American and to those who never cease to wonder at the game’s limitless capacity to surprise. Eight months removed from hip replacement surgery and 32 years from his Open victory here, Watson’s 65 was six shots more than his age and one shot less than every other player in the field bar Jiménez, American Ben Curtis and Kenichi Kuboya of Japan.
“There was some spirituality out there today,” the 59-year-old said after signing his scorecard. There was a fair bit of incredulity too, not least because the five‑time Open champion arrived at Turnberry this week carrying little hope, only his clubs and a bagful of memories. He won on the Ailsa course in 1977, of course, in the famous “Duel in the Sun” against Jack Nicklaus. It would be too much to ask that the codger could repeat the trick but he can dream.
“I do have some real zip and 65 is the way to start it,” he said when asked if he could picture himself in what would be the most stirring Open finale since, well, 1977. “Will I be able to handle the pressure? I don’t know. Maybe the light switch will go and I will play without too much pressure, or maybe the pressure will be too much to handle. But I have been there before.”
He has indeed, as have a few other players who were lurking in close proximity as the day drew towards its close. Curtis, who won the 2003 Open at Sandwich, joined his garlanded compatriot in the clubhouse on five under par, while three other former champions, Mark O’Meara (1998), Mark Calcavecchia (1989) and John Daly (1995) also made their star-spangled presence felt on a first-round leaderboard that was marginally more crowded than the noticeably diminished galleries.
As for the European players, there was much flattering and more than a little deceiving. Lee Westwood birdied his opening three holes, hit his tee shot on the par-three 4th to three feet but missed the putt and then played the next 14 holes in one over to finish with a 68.
Paul Casey was another who sprinted out of the blocks, playing the front nine in 31 shots, only to stagger up the final fairway, two over par for the back nine. Still the world No3 had every right to be pleased with his day and his two-under-par 68. He will begin today’s second round knowing he is in close contention with the leaders. Rory McIlroy was another who finished the day under par and in touching distance of Jiménez.
Alas, the same could not be said of Ian Poulter, who turned up in typically garish outfit – Union Jack waistcoat, tartan trousers – only to produce some untypically poor golf. The Englishman returned to his Ayrshire billet having signed for a birdie-less 75 and having learned a harsh lesson about the perils of drawing attention to oneself.
Speaking of such dangerous sports, Sandy Lyle took 75 swings at his ball on the course and one more at Colin Montgomerie in the presence of the assembled microphones, prolonging the feud without end for at least another day when he described his fellow Scot as a “drama Queen”.
There is undoubtedly a bit of truth in that but at this stage in the proceedings it is difficult to understand what is motivating Lyle. Maybe, in the old boxing phrase, he is simply trying to drum up box office, in which case he might have a point.
Despite the best efforts of the R&A to suggest otherwise, it is evident that the economic downturn has affected the Open, with attendances figures up on those in 1994 – when the championship was last played here – but clearly down on last year’s turn-out at Birkdale.
Fortunately for those of the paying public who did turn up there is no global recession when it comes to accurate driving, terrific iron play and outrageous putts holed, especially not on days such as this, when the breeze was never more than a whisper. “She was defenceless today” was Watson’s description of the course and by and large he was right.
The numbers certainly supported this view. As dusk fell, 51 players were under par, with another 21 on level par. Yet it would be a foolish man who would imagine that the calm conditions and low scoring will continue through until Sunday. The Ailsa course is no Carnoustie but nor is it Royal Liverpool, as Tiger Woods will attest.
The world No1 played his most conservative brand of golf yesterday, as he did in winning at Hoylake three years ago, but still came undone as he shot a one-over-par 71. That left him as the last-placed finisher in a three-ball featuring Westwood and the Japanese teenager Ryo Ishikawa – a surprise, no doubt, but not the biggest surprise of the day. That particular distinction belonged to Tom Watson.



