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…
Posts Tagged ‘Tiger Woods’
Michael Phelps won ESPY Awards
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Michael Phelps won a leading five ESPY Awards, including male athlete of the year, ending the five-year reign of Tiger Woods, who earned his record 22nd trophy Wednesday night.
The 14-time Olympic gold medalist also collected trophies for record-breaking performance, championship performance, and male Olympian while sharing the best moment award as [...]
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.
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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.
Woods misses cut as Watson shines
The 138th Open, Turnberry
Date: 16-19 July
Coverage: Live TV coverage on BBC Two, Online and the Red Button, live on Radio 5 Live and text commentary online on all four days
By Mark Orlovac
BBC Sport at Turnberry

Veteran Tom Watson produced a stunning fightback to claim a share of the halfway lead on a difficult day for scoring at the 138th Open at Turnberry.
The five-time Open winner struggled early on but two birdies in his closing three holes put him on five under.
Together with unheralded American Steve Marino they are one ahead of Mark Calcavecchia, while England’s Ross Fisher is in the group on three under.
World number one Tiger Woods shot a 74 to miss his first Open cut.
The 33-year-old joins the likes of 2003 Open winner Ben Curtis and Colin Montgomerie in bowing out of the tournament before the weekend.
It is only the sixth time that Woods has failed to make the halfway mark in his professional career and only the second time in a major.
After a sunny and benign opening day, the players had to contend with windy and wet weather on day two – with only a few managing to shoot under par.
"I’m still emotional after that… it’s as if the spirits are on my side"
Open co-leader Tom Watson
Watson went into the second round just one shot behind overnight leader Miguel Angel Jimenez but a horrid front nine seemed to end the prospect of a fairytale Open challenge.
After a birdie at the first, the 59-year-old then went on a run of five bogeys in six holes as the conditions wreaked havoc.
But Watson, who won the second of his five Open titles in the famous ‘Duel in the Sun’ championship at Turnberry in 1977, stopped the rot with birdies at nine and 11.
The best was yet to come, however, as superb 60ft putts at the 16th and the 18th gave him a share of the lead.
ROB HODGETTS’ BLOG
"I’m still emotional after that," admitted Watson, who won the last of his eight majors in 1983. "It’s as if the spirits are on my side and I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t think I’d win it.
"The front nine is the toughest part of the golf course but I told myself that if I played smart coming home I would make some birdies.
"On the front nine the only thing I was trying to do was play one shot at a time and trying to get the birdie that would stem the tide. I did that at nine."
Marino, playing in his maiden Open, was a late call-up to the championship field and only played his first round of links golf this week.
But he defied the inclement conditions to post a stunning 68, the second lowest score of the day, which included four birdies and an eagle.
606: DEBATE"Would a near-60-year-old winning at Open be a sad indictment of the state of golf today"
Digbert
The 29-year-old produced some of the shots of the round as well, chipping in with a sand wedge from 116 yards at the third and holing from the bunker at the par-three sixth.
"I’ve really enjoyed myself here, I’m having a blast," said Marino. "I love the challenge that this course presents. You have to stay patient and stay positive.
"I’m looking forward to playing golf here the next few days."
Calcavecchia, 49, who won the Open at Troon in 1989, carded four birdies in his 69 and admitted he was happy just to make the cut.
"I’m usually choking so bad coming down the last few holes on Friday because I want to play the weekend," said the American.
Fisher, who finished fifth at this year’s US Open, leads the British challenge thanks to a 68 that included a run of three birdies in the closing four holes.
But the 28-year-old reiterated his intention to quit the tournament if his expectant wife Jo started to go into labour.
"I’d love to be here for all four days but obviously my wife comes first," said Fisher. "If she were to go into labour later on this evening or tomorrow I’ve got no choice.
"I want to be there. It’s going to be a great experience and one that I don’t want to miss."</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.
Superb Jimenez holds lead at Open
The 138th Open, Turnberry
Date: 16-19 July
Coverage: Live TV coverage on BBC Two, Online and the Red Button, live on Radio 5 Live and text commentary online on all four days
By Mark Orlovac
BBC Sport at Turnberry

Spaniard Miguel Angel Jimenez sunk a 65ft birdie putt at the last to take a one-shot lead after the first round of the 138th Open at Turnberry.
The 45-year-old carded six birdies in a superb 64 to lead five-time champion Tom Watson and 2003 winner Ben Curtis.
Lee Westwood, Paul Casey, Anthony Wall, Graeme McDowell and David Howell lead the British challenge on two under.
Padraig Harrington, chasing a hat-trick of Open titles, is one under, with world number one Tiger Woods one over.
England’s Ian Poulter, tipped by many as one of the home favourites, had a day he would rather forget as he carded a five over 75.
"The sea looked like a pond, so nice, so calm. You can’t ask for a better day"
Miguel Angel Jimenez
Paul Broadhurst got the Open under way in benign conditions at 0630 BST and that is how it stayed for the rest of the day – contrasting starkly with the dreadful weather that accompanied last year’s opening round at Royal Birkdale.
The day was set up for low scoring and it was Jimenez who took advantage, striking from the edge of the green at the last in the early evening.
"I feel very well," said Jimenez, who missed the cut last year. "Since I woke up this morning, the sea looked like a pond, so nice, so calm. You can’t ask for a better day to play.
"I was very good from tee to green and with the putter. That’s what you need to make a score."
Jimenez’s monster putt denied the 59-year-old Watson from becoming the oldest player to lead the Open after the opening round.
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Watson showed the kind of links knowledge that guided him to his second Open title at Turnberry back in 1977 as he moved to the top of the leaderboard, rekindling memories of his ‘Duel In The Sun’ victory 32 years ago.
"Obviously the golf course played with no wind, and it was an easy test," said the eight-time major winner, who carded his best Open round since 1994.
"I feel inspired playing here. A lot of it has to do with being here at Turnberry, just a culmination of a lot of things that have gone on already. Again I feel that I’m playing well enough to win the golf tournament."
More to follow.</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
Cheating is not an issue, insists R&A
• Game can ‘hold head high’ despite Montgomerie row
• Scot says it is obvious Lyle is upset at Ryder Cup snub
Peter Dawson, the chief executive of the Royal and Ancient, has been forced to issue a staunch defence of golf’s integrity on the eve of the biggest event in the game’s calendar. Sandy Lyle’s “cheating” accusation towards Colin Montgomerie this week has not only created an intriguing subplot to the Open Championship but has reopened the debate over whether dubious on-course practices are common among professional players.
“Without ever wanting to be complacent about that, I think the game of golf can hold its head up generally very high in terms of sense of fair play, respect for fellow competitors and adherence to the rules,” Dawson said. “I see no signs of that great tradition in this game declining and I’m delighted to say so.”
The English professional Gary Evans, who criticised Montgomerie at the time of the Indonesian Open scandal in 2005, reiterated this week that “there is a feeling among players that some high-profile performers appear to get away with murder”. Dawson, however, sought to keep out of the spat between Lyle and Montgomerie, the European Ryder Cup captain.
“It’s not really our business,” he said. “All I would say is it’s a great shame when professional players like that get into those sorts of arguments. I very much hope it will be sorted out as soon as possible.”
The European Tour yesterday took a firmer view, with its chief executive, George O’Grady, condemning “wholly inappropriate and ill-timed” comments by Lyle towards his fellow Scot. Privately O’Grady has alluded to a “crime of passion” by the two-time major winner on account of his being overlooked for the Ryder Cup captaincy.
Montgomerie welcomed O’Grady’s comments but remains agitated by the affair. “I’ve come here to play golf and been hit with this. Just because he [Lyle] is disappointed not to be made captain, please don’t take it out on me,” he said, adding: “It has to affect whatever friendship we had, doesn’t it?”
Montgomerie effectively confirmed he would not choose Lyle as a vice-captain for the Ryder Cup – “I think you know the answer to that one” – and said he was grateful for the text messages of support he has received. “They have come from Ryder Cup golfers past and present and from other players around the world. I am not going to mention names because it will only bring a shower of microphones down on their heads. But I know who you are and have been touched by your words.”
Dawson revealed he will undergo a drugs test today as the Open introduces anti-doping measures. “I want to see the process first-hand,” he said. “We are using the European Tour procedure and policy which involves a selection of players. This is another week on tour, essentially, there is no special policy for the Open Championship.”
Dawson insisted testing will remain as part of the Open, regardless of whether golf succeeds in its bid to become an Olympic sport. “There can be no case in my view for stopping testing,” he said.
Paul Broadhurst will hit the first tee shot of the championship, at 6.30am today. Padraig Harrington’s bid for a third consecutive Claret Jug gets under way at 2.20pm in the company of Jim Furyk and Geoff Ogilvy, and Montgomerie will open his latest attempt to end his major drought an hour earlier. The biggest crowds are set to follow the world No1, Tiger Woods, Worksop’s Lee Westwood, and the Japanese teenager Ryo Ishikawa from 9.09am.
Woods and Westwood paired at Open
The 138th Open, Turnberry
Date: 16-19 July
Coverage: Live TV coverage on BBC Two, Online and the Red Button, live on Radio 5 Live and text commentary online on all four days

World number one Tiger Woods will begin his Open Championship challenge alongside England’s Lee Westwood when play gets under way on Thursday.
The American, in search of his fourth Open title and 15th major in all, tees off at 0909 BST with Westwood and highly rated Japan star Ryo Ishikawa.
Padraig Harrington, bidding to win a third Open running, tees off at 1420.
The Irishman will be partnered by former US Open winners Jim Furyk of America and Australian Geoff Ogilvy.
US Masters champion Angel Cabrera of Argentina has been grouped with British world number three Paul Casey and Japan’s Ryuji Imada, teeing off at 1409.
606: DEBATE"I think Retief Goosen and Rory McLroy will make good showings at Turnberry"
clevermelonface
And other notable threesomes include 2002 champion Ernie Els, US Open winner Lucas Glover and Germany’s in-form Martin Kaymer, while young guns Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland and American Anthony Kim will play in the company of double US Open champion Retief Goosen of South Africa.
Britain’s Paul Broadhurst, a six-times winner on the European Tour, is scheduled to hit the first shot of the championship at 0630.
Turnberry, on the south-west coast of Scotland, is hosting the British Open for the fourth time – but with the last time being 1994, it will be the first time Woods has played a championship there.
The American completed only his second practice round on the course on Monday, admitting afterwards: "It’s a lot more difficult than people are letting on."</p
This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.



