Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Mark Calcavecchia shares lead after rainy first round at Senior British Open

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Mark Calcavecchia got off to a good start in his quest to become the fourth player to win both the British Open and the Senior British Open.
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By 
Steve Douglas
Associated Press

Series: Champions Tour
Mark Calcavecchia defied the afternoon rain to shoot a bogey-free 68 and take a three-way share of the first-round lead at the Senior British Open on Thursday.
Bidding to become the fourth player to win both the British Open and the senior version, the 51-year-old American fired two birdies either side of the turn before parring the final five holes in what proved a testing closing stretch for the 144-strong field.
Calcavecchia, winner of the British Open at Troon in 1989, was joined on 4 under by Ireland's Mark McNulty and Australia's Mike Harwood, who earlier benefitted from still and dry conditions on the parkland course at Walton Heath that hosted the 1981 Ryder Cup.
"The weather moved in when we were on No. 11 -- it wasn't horrible but it made it tougher for sure," said Calcavecchia, one of three players not to drop a shot in their first rounds. "Not making any bogeys was nice, so it was a good score, a good start."
South Africa's David Frost and unheralded Scot Albert MacKenzie were a shot behind, with defending champion Bernhard Langer of Germany one of seven players on 2 under.
Three-time winner and eight-time major champion Tom Watson shot a 75, which included a double bogey at No. 8 after finding the middle of the fairway off the tee, to lie seven shots off the pace.
"I wasted a lot of strokes on the greens today. I made two putts, that's about it," the American great said.
After Gary Player and Bob Charles, Watson is the other player to have done the British Open double.
"It's a bit early to talk about that," Calcavecchia said. "We'll give it all we got and see where we're standing on Sunday coming down the stretch. Hopefully I'm there with a chance."
Calcavecchia faded after a solid start at last week's British Open at Sandwich -- shooting a 79 after an opening-day 69 to miss the cut -- and has spent his days off firstly in Paris and then sightseeing in London, taking in Harrods department store and Wimbledon.
Appearing fresh, he birdied the par-5 No. 2 and picked up three more shots in six holes around the turn.
"I will do better here than I did on Friday last week," he said. "Especially hitting irons into the green, this is a lot more like what we are used to playing in the States."
Both McNulty and Harwood finished runner-up at British Opens in the early 1990s but made early moves to go one better in the senior tournament, firing 12 birdies between them before the showers and gray skies descended.
The Zimbabwean-born McNulty marred an otherwise flawless round with a bogey on the par-4 No. 18, while Harwood -- in the following group -- made seven birdies but dropped shots at Nos. 16 and 17.
McNulty, an eight-time winner on the Champions Tour who lost a three-man playoff to Loren Roberts in the 2009 tournament at Sunningdale, said his late bogey took the gloss off his round.
"I made a mental error," said McNulty, who drove into the thick heather on the left side of the fairway. "I'm annoyed with myself but I would've taken 68 on the first tee."
Harwood, runner-up to compatriot Ian Baker-Finch at Royal Birkdale in 1991, was leading on 6 under before successive bogeys halted his charge.
The 52-year-old Australian was otherwise at home on a course where he won the European Open in 1991, one of five European Tour victories before quitting the sport in 1995 following a run of bad results.
"I got some good vibes from this place. I have been thinking about coming back here for a while and I felt comfortable, although I was walking along the edge of the cliff on those last three holes," he said.
MacKenzie only qualified for the event on Monday but birdied the last to lift himself above some of the star names on the senior circuit who are chasing the $310,000 first prize.
"When I saw my name up there with some players I've got so much respect for, it was just wonderful. It's the greatest day of my golfing life by a landslide," said MacKenzie, who won a regional event at Walton Heath back in 1985.
One of those star names MacKenzie finds himself leading is Langer, a two-time Masters champion who is looking to become the first player to defend the Senior Open title since Christy O'Connor Jnr. in 2000.
The German great was 4 under after seven holes but acknowledged the "wheels fell off" when he bogeyed three out of four holes at the start of the back nine.
"I never made any putts from distance ... and I'm still battling with my swing, not totally trusting everything yet," said Langer, who is on the comeback trail after four months out following thumb surgery.
Three Americans -- Bob Tway, Mike Goodes and Lee Rinker -- were among those level with Langer.

Castro keeps his lead at Nationwide Wichita Open after another strong round

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By 
PGA.com 

Series:
Even though he had just polished off a second-round 63 that followed a 7-under 64 in the first round, Roberto Castro was quick to point out that “It’s always hard to back up a low number with another low number.”
You wouldn’t know that by watching Castro on Friday. The Georgia Tech graduate, who earned a spot in the Preferred Health Systems Wichita Open this week after having a top-25 finish at last week’s Cox Classic, played his second consecutive bogey-free round at Crestview Country Club and enters Saturday’s third round with a two-shot lead over Steven Bowditch and Scott Gutschewski. Dan Buchner and first-round leader Matt Davidson are tied for fourth.
In limited Nationwide Tour action this season, Castro seems to play better each week. He tied for 54th in April at the Fresh Express Classic at TPC Stonebrae in California’s Bay Area and tied for 19th last week in Omaha after getting into that tournament as a Monday qualifier. In between, he’s been toiling on the eGolf Professional Tour, where he won the Savannah Quarters Classic in Georgia in February. Castro is third on the eGolf Tour money list, with a little more than $64,000 in earnings.
In three seasons on that Tour, Castro has won four tournaments, while also squeezing in Nationwide Tour events when he qualified. In 2009, Castro played in five Nationwide Tour events, with a tie for sixth at the Chattanooga Classic his best-career performance, again after he Monday-qualified.
“The nice, cool thing about the Nationwide Tour is Mondaying into tournaments,” said Castro, making up words as he went. “But it’s not easy to do.”
After the 64 Thursday at the par-71 Crestview Country Club, Castro hoped to get off to another quick start in the second round. Yet four consecutive pars to start his round Friday seemed to derail that plan -- even though he had birdie putts on each hole. Castro jumpstarted his round on his fifth hole of the day, the par-5 14th.
“I hit an 8-iron to about 10 feet, but I had a weird lie against the collar,” he said about the hole he eventually birdied. “That 10-footer for birdie helped a lot and seemed to take the lid off and got me rolling.”
Castro made a 5-footer for birdie on the next hole and made birdie on his seventh hole (the 16th) and another on his ninth. Suddenly he was 3 under for the day and 10 under for the tournament. Four birdies on his final nine made for a nice bookend to the four birdies on his first nine holes.
Davidson likes his position heading into the weekend. “I look at this round separately than [Thursday’s],” he said of his 4-under 67. “I didn’t drive the ball as well and didn’t have as many chances. It’s still early, and we’re only halfway there. There’s a long way to go.”
Castro’s success this week shouldn’t be surprising. The native of Alpharetta, Ga., had a celebrated amateur career at Georgia Tech. He won the 2007 Byron Nelson Award that honors that honors the top senior college golfer, earned All-American honors and was a two-time U.S. Palmer Cup member. He also has good bloodlines. Although his father doesn’t play golf, both his uncles -- Percy and Alex Lidback -- played collegiately at LSU, and his aunt, Jenny Lidback, was a 15-year LPGA Tour veteran who won the 1989 du Maurier Ltd. Classic, at the time an LPGA major.
As he takes his lead into the third round, Castro knows what he’s up against.
“All you have to do is look at the scores,” Castro said. “You have to be really good to play out here.”
Second-Round Notes: Steven Bowditch has enjoyed seven consecutive under-par Nationwide Tour rounds. He shot a final-round 68 at the Nationwide Children’s Hospital Invitational two weeks ago, shot rounds of 63-67-70-70 last week at the Cox Classic and opened with rounds of 64-65 in Wichita. … After 19 bogey-free rounds Thursday, there were 15 players without bogeys in the second round. They came from Ryan Armour, Roberto Castro, Gavin Coles, Todd Fischer, Scott Gutschewski, Justin Hicks, Jesse Hutchins, Colt Knost, Luke List, Rob Oppenheim, Garrett Osborn, Jin Park, David Robinson, Kyle Thompson and Tjaart van der Walt. Of that group, Castro, Gutschewski and van der Walt are the only ones without bogeys this week.
The cut came at 5 under, which ties the tournament record for the highest cut score in the event’s 21-year history. Sixty-nine players will play on the weekend. Five-under was also the cut number in 2007. … Five players shot 63 Friday. That marked a first in Wichita Open history when that many players had rounds of 63. The players were Roberto Castro, Luke List, Jin Park, Brian Smock and Nathan Tyler. … Brian Smock tied the tournament’s nine-hole record when he recorded the eighth 29 in tournament history Friday. He had five birdies and an eagle on Crestview Country Club’s back nine on his way to a 63.
There were three hole-out eagles on par-4 holes at Crestview CC Friday after Oskar Bergman’s eagle on No. 7 in the first round. Brendan Gielow made his eagle at the 428-yard No. 10, Chris Kamin had eagle on the short, 339-yard 11th hole and Leif Olson matched Bergman by doing it at the 456-yard seventh.

Martin Piller comes from behind to win Cox Classic for his second victory of 2010

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By 
PGA.com 

Series:
Martin Piller capped off a glorious weekend with a 7-under 64 Sunday to come from behind and win the Nationwide Tour’s 15th annual Cox Classic by two strokes over veteran Dicky Pride.
Piller made the 36-hole cut by one stroke but then charged into contention with a 62 on Saturday and roared past the field on Sunday to earn his second win of the season and lock up a spot on the PGA Tour in 2011.
Piller finished at 23-under 261 and turned back a host of challengers to collect the $130,500 first place check.
“I was very determined, I was very focused and I was very aggressive,” said Piller. “I didn’t want to be back here next year, in a good kind of way.”
The victory moved the second-year pro out of Texas A&M from No. 10 to No. 3 on the money list with $318,621 and solidified a trip to the PGA Tour next season, making sure he won’t be back to Nebraska, unless it’s to visit his father’s and brother’s college haunts 60 miles down the road in Lincoln.
Piller becomes the Nationwide Tour’s second two-time winner this year, adding the Omaha title to the one he earned at the Stadion Athens Classic in Georgia.
“Today was a lot different than Athens, where par was good,” said Piller. “I knew today that par was not going to be good and I knew that I was going to have to go out and make something happen. I didn’t have a number in mind. The only number I had in mind was one.”
Piller started the final round in a nine-way tie for third, one shot back of co-leaders Kevin Chappell (tied for fifth) and James Hahn (tied for third). Facing a course that gives up birdies like after-dinner mints at a steakhouse, Piller went flaghunting and slowly moved to the top of a packed leaderboard.
Three consecutive birdies at 6, 7 and 8 got him to 19 under par, one back of the lead, as he approached the 315-yard ninth hole, the easiest par 4 on the Nationwide Tour the past four years.
“I smashed that tee shot and I had the easiest putt in the world,” he said, his ball settling six feet from the pin on a hole that featured $1 beers for 45 minutes for every eagle made. “I wanted to make that one for the fans. That really pumped me up.”
Piller canned the putt to jump into the lead and played to the crowd, letting them know it was party time.
“It was game on,” he said. “I was shaking after that.”
Piller added another birdie at the reachable par-5 10th to get to 22 under and stamp himself as the man to beat. He didn’t know where the field was on a hot afternoon, preferring to stay focused on golf and not numbers.
“I didn’t want to let myself off the hook and I didn’t want to look at a board,” he said. “I told myself to keep swinging hard, keep being aggressive. I didn’t look at a board until after I hit my second shot at 18 and saw I was two up.”
Piller was up because the rest of the leaders weren’t keeping pace. Pride put the heat on with birdies at 13 and 15, but a bogey at 16 derailed his chances and left him in solo second.
“That’s the best I’ve played in a long time,” said Pride, who credited a recent session on his short game with his coach for his improved play. “I really worked on getting my chipping down. There’s always room for improvement. I’ve just got to keep it simple.”
Australian Alistair Presnell piled up six birdies in seven holes to reach 21 under par through 15 holes, but he stumbled with a bogey-birdie-bogey finish to wind up at 20 under and tied for third with rookie James Hahn, a co-leader after 54 holes. Hahn birdied his last two holes but was done in by three bogeys and a double on the final day.
Kevin Chappell, who shared the lead with Hahn at 17 under after three rounds, couldn’t get the putts to drop, settling for a 2-under 69 and a tie for fifth with Bob May, whose 19-under total was the lowest of his career.
Fourth-Round Notes: Martin Piller becomes the Nationwide Tour’s second two-time winner in 2010. Tommy Gainey has also won twice. … Dicky Pride finished at 21 under par this week, lower than he has ever been in his pro career. Pride was making his 460th career start this week and he had never before reached double-double digits (20 under par or better) for a 72-hole event. His previous best on the Nationwide Tour (95th career start) was an 18-under effort at the 2005 Henrico County Open (tied for third). His best on the PGA Tour (365 total starts) is a 17-under effort at the 1994 Federal Express St. Jude Classic, which he won.
Bob May also matched Pride in reaching a number he’d never reached before. May wound up at 19 under, lower than he’s been in 273 career starts. May finished 18 under at the 2006 B.C. Open (second) on the PGA Tour (168 career starts). His best sub-par score on the Nationwide Tour (105th career start) was 16 under at the 2008 Preferred Health Systems Wichita Open (tied for seventh). … Justin Smith tied an all-time Nationwide Tour record by finishing his day with six straight birdies. Smith polished off a back-nine 29 by stuffing his 6-iron on the par-4 18th hole to within two feet and canning the putt for a 63. Smith joins four others who have finished a round with six in a row and he becomes only the second ever to finish a tournament with six straight:
The 315-yard ninth hole played to a scoring average of 3.452 this week, the lowest average score in the tournament’s 15-year history. The hole, which has ranked as the easiest par 4 on Tour each of the past four years, is currently in line to make it five in a row. The hole yielded 16 eagles during the week and 232 birdies, breaking the mark of 222 birdies in 2008. … William McGirt fired a 6-under 65 to reach 13 under par. McGirt ranks No. 8 on the Tour in Final Round Scoring Average (68.43). He has made 8 cuts in 12 starts and has been under-par in seven of the eight final rounds and posted an even-par 70 in the other. He posted a 7-under 64 in the last round at last week’s Nationwide Children’s Hospital Invitational.
Martin Piller ran off a birdie-birdie-birdie-eagle-birdie streak today starting at No. 6. His 6-under streak matches the best birdie-eagle streak in tournament history and he joins six others in that category. Scott Sterling in 2007 was the last to accomplish the feat. His streak is also the second-best on the Nationwide Tour this year – Keegan Bradley enjoyed a 7-under stretch at the Ford Wayne Gretzky Classic. … Jamie Lovemark, who came into the week No. 1 on the money list, rallied for a tie for 19th thanks to a final round 65. Lovemark opened the tournament with a 1-over-72 that put him tied for 121st. He posted a 64 in the second round to make the cut on the number (tied for 52nd). A third-round 68 moved him to a tie for 38th. Lovemark earned enough money to retain the No. 1 ranking for the second straight week.

U.S. Women's Open Notebook: Two rounds and gone for disappointed Michelle Wie

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Michelle Wie missed the cut, and described her week as a "complete fail."
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By 
Asociated Press 

Series:
It wouldn't have been difficult envisioning Michelle Wie, Eun-Hee Ji and Se Ri Pak being grouped together near the top of the U.S. Women's Open leaderboard not that long ago.
Like, maybe last year.
Instead, none of the three top golfers was within a Pennsylvania Turnpike toll lane's length of the lead as the second round concluded Saturday and the third round began. That turnpike, by the way, cuts directly through the middle of Oakmont Country Club.
Wie needed 69 putts to get through her two rounds of 82-76-158, putting her 16-over during her worst performance in the event. She didn't come close to reaching the cut line of 10-over 152.
She might have been headed to a higher score in 2007, but withdrew early in the second round while she was 17 over par.
Wie led the U.S. Women's Open after three rounds at age 15 in 2005 and tied for third a year later, but hasn't made the cut since then.
She withdrew in '07, missed the cut in '08 and failed to qualify last year. Wie also hasn't placed in the Top 10 in a major since 2006, after doing so in seven of the first 11 majors she played.
Asked to assess her latest U.S. Women's Open, she said: "Complete fail." She hasn't had many grades like that at Stanford, where she has two years remaining.
Pak, the 1998 winner, also missed the cut after going 77-78-155. Ji, last year's winner at Saucon Valley in eastern Pennsylvania, extended her season-long struggles with a remade swing by barely making the cut at 152.
Obviously, some golfers couldn't regain their games after play was suspended by rain on Friday.
M.J. Hur, one shot off the lead at 1-under 70 following the first round, ballooned to a 10-over 81. Inbee Park, the youngest winner in tournament history at age 19 in 2008, also had a 70 in the first round only to fall out of contention with a second-round 78.
Five amateurs made the cut.
A PIRATE, SHE'S NOT: A blatant ploy to attract spectator support, or merely a merchandising tactic?
Sophie Gustafson wore a Pittsburgh Pirates logo on her cap and shirt as she concluded the second round Saturday, but she probably doesn't know much about Andrew McCutchen or Evan Meek. She's also never seen a Pirates game at PNC Park.
Gustafson is from Sweden, but that didn't prevent Major League Baseball from signing her to an endorsement contract. This weekend, she's a Pirates fan.
"I'm sponsored by Major League (Baseball), so I wear different teams in different cities," she said.
She's had the most success while wearing Giants gear.
NOT PLAYING LIKE A KID: Alexis Thompson, who recently turned pro at age 15, easily made the cut with rounds of 73 and 74, earning her a third-round pairing with Ai Miyazato and Jiyai Shin -- the two most recent world-ranked No. 1s until Cristie Kerr moved to the top.
Thompson, who likes being called Lexi, didn't have to go far to find a caddie. Father Scott Thompson is toting her bag.
QUICK CONVERSION: The USGA hastily shifted tee and pin locations for the third round after beginning the day with them where they were when play was halted Friday. Those locations must stay the same for all golfers in a round, even if that round is played over multiple days.
Some golfers barely left the course from early Saturday morning until early evening. Allison Fouch, for example, played a full 18-hole round Saturday morning after being in the last group to start, then was in the first group to tee off for the third round.
Her time between rounds: only a half-hour, barely enough time to swig a drink and eat a snack. It felt like her days at Michigan State playing tournaments.
"At least I didn't have to get warmed up again," Fouch said.
She wasn't fatigued by playing nearly 11 hours of golf almost without pause on one of America's most demanding courses, but by her third-round 80 that dropped her from 6 over par to 15 over. She had a 3-over 74 during her morning round.
"I just hit one bad shot after another," Fouch said. "I just couldn't get it going and compounded my errors. I three-putted and made a lot of mental mistakes. ... It beat me up. There were girls out here playing well and I didn't play well."
HEY, YOU AGAIN? Paula Creamer and Cristie Kerr were paired together in the third round for the second U.S. Women's Open in two years.
Last year, Kerr had a 1-over 72 en route to finishing tied for third, while Creamer played herself out of contention with a 79. She came back with a final round 69, but finished tied for sixth.