Michael Joseph Jackson (August 29, 1958 – June 25, 2009), known as the
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Sunday, September 27, 2009

Barcode Golf clubs

A barcode (also bar code) is an optical machine-readable representation of data. Originally, bar codes represented data in the widths (lines) and the spacings of parallel lines, and may be referred to as linear or 1D (1 dimensional) barcodes or symbologies. They also come in patterns of squares, dots, hexagons and other geometric patterns within images termed 2D (2 dimensional) matrix codes or symbologies. Although 2D systems use symbols other than bars, they are generally referred to as barcodes as well.

The first use of barcodes was to label railroad cars, but they were not commercially successful until they were used to automate supermarket checkout systems, a task in which they have become almost universal. Their use has spread to many other roles as well, tasks that are generically referred to as Auto ID Data Capture (AIDC). Other systems are attempting to make inroads in the AIDC market, but the simplicity, universality and low cost of barcodes has limited the role of these other systems. It costs about US$0.005 to implement a barcode compared to passive RFID which still costs about US$0.07 to US$0.30 per tag.

Barcodes can be read by optical scanners called barcode readers, or scanned from an image by special software. In Japan most mobile phones have built-in scanning software for 2D codes, and similar software is becoming available on smartphone platforms.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

H. G. Wells

Herbert George Wells (21 September 186613 August 1946), was an English author, best known for his work in the science fiction genre. Wells and Jules Verne are each often referred to as "The Father of Science Fiction".

Wells was an outspoken socialist and a pacifist, and his later works became increasingly political and didactic. His middle period novels (1900-1920) were more realistic; they covered lower middle class life (The History of Mr Polly) and the 'New Woman' and the Suffragettes (Ann Veronica). He was a prolific writer in many genres, including contemporary novels, history, and social commentary.

H. G. Wells

Wells pictured sometime prior to 1916
Born Herbert George Wells
21 September 1866
Bromley, Kent, England
(1866-09-21)
Died 13 August 1946 (aged 79)
London, England
Occupation Novelist, Teacher, Historian, Journalist
Nationality British
Genres Science fiction
Notable work(s) The Time Machine, The First Men in the Moon, The War of the Worlds, The Invisible Man, The Island of Doctor Moreau, The Shape of Things to Come

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Alan Shipnuck's Mailbag: Hank Haney talks about Tiger Woods Read more: http://blogs.golf.com/presstent/2009/09/hank-haney-talks-about-tiger-woods.ht

Instead of fielding readers' questions this week, I thought I'd thought I'd turn the floor over to one dedicated reader of this column, Hank Haney. On Sunday night we had a lively 25-minute phone conversation. I was in the press room at the BMW Championship, and he was calling from Dallas.

I've always liked Hank. He's a sweet guy. Maybe too sweet, because being Tiger Woods's swing coach puts him in an impossible position in which criticism is inevitable. When Tiger wins, it's because of Tiger's talent; when Tiger loses, it's Hank's fault. In recent weeks I had been a small part of this chorus, and Hank expressed his displeasure in a series of spicy text messages. We hugged it out on Sunday night.

"I didn't get into this looking for any credit," Haney said. "But I don't understand where so much of the blame comes from. Some of what gets written is almost comical. But I'm a human, you're a human, some of these things do hurt. I guess the great thing about the position I'm in is that I only have to please one person."

He's clearly doing that. At the BMW, Tiger was effusive in his praise of Haney. After his spectacular 62 on Saturday, Woods addressed the state of his game: "I feel that my overall plane and my swing and my release and how I play now is just so much more efficient. Bad shots aren't what they used to be, and that's what we were trying to get to. Anybody can play when they're hot, but it's how poor are your mis-hits, can you control them, and more importantly, can you fix it?

"Overall I've gotten a better understanding of my swing over the years working with Hank. You hit a couple bad shots like I did at No. 1, how I over-hooked it there, and then immediately I fixed it, and then I hit a sweet little low fading 4-iron into the second hole. That's what you have to do all the time."

Says Haney, "It is always satisfying for me to see Tiger do well. To have him say he has a better understanding of his swing, better control of his ball, it makes me very proud of him as a student."

Haney took this opportunity to address a couple of familiar criticisms about Woods's game.

"Everyone likes to peck at Tiger about his driving," he said. "He's now sixth in total driving for the season. It's hard to get much better than that. And what no one ever points out is that his stats are skewed because he only plays the really hard golf courses with really penal setups. At Kapalua" -- which Woods skips -- "it's literally impossible to miss a fairway. There's a bunch of other easy setups he never plays. You take the guys who don't play all the majors and invitationals and maybe not all of the playoff events, and it's a totally different Tour in some ways, but Tiger's numbers are still way up there."

As for the putting woes that have plagued Woods off-and-on for much of this year, Haney expressed no concern, echoing Tiger's comments all week. Woods rolled his ball beautifully at the BMW, and on Sunday night he was asked what he did differently. "Absolutely nothing," he said, unable to suppress a smile.

Haney added: "People don't acknowledge this, but putting is one part of the game where luck is involved. It's not a completely smooth surface. Grass is not always predictable. If Tiger was putting on a pool table, I'd bet on him every time. But on a golf course, with all the variables, sometimes the putts go in, sometimes they don't. Nobody makes them all. Certainly he's made more than most. It would be foolish to change the mechanics of one of the greatest putters of all time."

In the wake of Woods's blowout victory, many talked about his having reclaimed the intimidating aura that was taken away by Y.E. Yang. After finishing in fourth place, a whopping 9 strokes back, Sean O'Hair told me on Sunday, "The guy is just a stud, simple as that. I was just hoping he wouldn't make a mockery of us, but I'm afraid he did."

Haney has a counterintuitive take. "There's a media obsession about these big victories, but I don't think they mean as much as people want to believe," he says. "It's not like Tiger can take any of the eight shots with him to the Tour Championship. Certainly Tiger doesn't talk much about it. He just wants to win; he doesn't care by how many. All [a big margin of victory] means is that a great player had a great week. He said himself that he plays the game differently now, he thinks about it differently."

Indeed, last week Tiger discussed his turn-of-the-century blowouts in vaguely disparaging terms. "I almost had to play aggressively because I didn't really have too many shots to work with," he said. "I didn't have the ability to change my trajectories like I do now, change the shapes and change the spins."

In other words, he was basically a home-run hitter, likely to go deep or strike out. Now he enjoys a much higher batting average but still has plenty of power to all fields.

After a 60-year-old man nearly stole the British Open, it has become trendy to bash today's players' inability to raise their games in the majors, part of a long-standing critique of Woods's colleagues. Haney doesn't see it that way.

"The competition is so good now," he says. "It's basically competition-by-committee, because there hasn't been a consistent challenger, but there's always someone playing really well who is chasing him. At Congressional, on a very good golf course, Tiger was in the top five that week in driving distance, driving accuracy, greens in regulation and putting. It's pretty hard to do all of those things that well in the same week. And he won by only one shot against a field that didn't have a lot of other big names. That was an eye-opener."

On Sunday night Woods declared 2009 to be one of the best years of his career even though he didn't win a major championship. Some of us may have forgotten, but Tiger is acutely aware that this time last year he was still hobbling around on a new knee and was months away from swinging a golf club. Woods seems most proud of his consistency -- throw out the screwy Match Play Championship, his first tourney after knee surgery, and he has finished worse than 11th only once this year. (He also won six times.) Sunday night I asked Haney about Woods's ability to play at such a consistently high level.

"It tells me he's put in an incredible amount of work," says Haney. "He's a tough guy, it was a tough rehab. He had a bad six-hole stretch at the British Open and everyone pounced on him, but if you stop and look at his game as a whole he's improved throughout the year and he's still improving. For all the talk about Jack and the records, Tiger's goal has always been very simple: to get better. And he is."

Woods eases to victory, FedEx top spot and sixth 2009 win

Tiger Woods coasted to an eight shot victory at the BMW Championship on Sunday, to capture his sixth title of the season.

Woods, who began the day with a seven shot cushion over American Brandt Snedeker and Australian Marc Leishman, closed with a three-under 68 to win for a fifth time at Cog Hill.

It was Woods 71st PGA Tour title leaving him just two short of tying Jack Nicklaus for second on the all-time list.

"If you would have asked me at the beginning of the year, you guys probably wouldn't have predicted I would have had the year like I have," Woods told reporters.

"To have the opportunity to win just about every tournament I have been in...to come off knee surgery and have this type of year and be this consistent is something I'm very proud of.

"Absolutely this is one of my best years, no doubt about that."

There was no hint of drama during the sun-kissed final round, as Woods' challengers were unable to mount a charge against a workmanlike performance by the world number one.

American Jim Furyk, who held off Woods to win at Cog Hill in 2005, returned a bogey free five-under 66 to finish second alongside PGA Tour rookie Leishman (69) at 11-under 273.

Sean O'Hair (66) was alone in fourth, one shot further back at 10-under followed by fellow American Zach Johnson (68) at eight-under. Ireland's Padraig Harrington (73) and Spain'sSergio Garcia (71) finished in a tie for sixth on six-under 278.

"My whole goal at the end of the day was to shoot under par," said Woods.

"I knew if I shot under par today it would force the guys to have to shoot what I did yesterday to force it into extra-holes."

Woods, who shot a course record 62 on Saturday, mixed a bogey at the fifth with birdies at the seventh and ninth to reach the turn at one-under and his seven-shot lead intact.

He then played error free on the back nine with an eagle on the par-five 15th receiving roaring approval from the gallery.

"It was kind of a tournament for second place," said Furyk. "I was just trying to grind it out."

The victory moved Woods into top spot in the FedEx Cup standings going into the season-ending Tour Championships in Atlanta in two weeks, where he will play for a $10 million bonus.

Snedeker missed a chance to join the 30-man field in Atlanta after carding a triple bogey on the final hole.

The American needed only to two putt from 15-feet to secure a spot at the Tour Championship but he twice missed tap ins to finish with a seven, which dropped him to 33rd in the FedEx standings.

Australia's John Senden finished in the 30th and final spot.

James Kingston takes title in a playoff

South African James Kingston ended a recent run of poor form decisively by defeating Denmark's Anders Hansen in a sudden-death playoff for the Mercedes-Benz Masters title on Sunday.

Both players had finished on 13-under-par 275, a stroke ahead of the field. A late bogey for a three-under 69 took Kingston to extra holes after Hansen had set the target with a 67.

A par on the first playoff hole earned Kingston the $457,000 first prize for his second European Tour title.

Late developer Kingston, 43, ended a run of four successive missed cuts but showed some of the fragility that had seen him fall at the final hurdle several times in his nine-year European career.

Ahead by two strokes with two holes to go at Gut Larchenhof, a three-putt bogey by Kingston on the 17th, where Hansen had birdied just beforehand, meant the pair shooting it out.

When they played the 18th for a second time in the day, Hansen flew his second shot into the back greenside bunker and failed to get up and down from six feet.

Kingston's solid two putts, the second from four feet for par, ended the contest.

The success added to Kingston's victory in last season's South African Open which came after four European Tour second places.

Until that win Kingston, although finding great success on his home Sunshine Tour and in Asia, had struggled to make his European Tour breakthrough.

"The last few weeks have been so frustrating and it's great to prove myself away from South Africa," Kingston told reporters. "This was a bit harder, especially as this was such a strong field."

He added: "I hit the ball unbelievably from to tee-to-green, which has always been my strength but my putting was not so good right up to the end and if I want to win more I have to work on it."

Kingston now moves into Europe's elite top 60 players who will contend the $10 million Dubai World Championship finale, climbing from 116th to 46th.

He named 52-year-old Bernhard Langer, who finished nine shots behind him, and British Open runner-up Tom Watson as his inspiration in finding the winning touch at 43.

"You look at people like Bernhard and Tom Watson at 59 for your example," said Kingston. "If you stay fit like them you can still be competitive."

Overnight leader Peter Hanson of Sweden (71) lost the chance of being involved in the playoff when he missed a four-foot putt to bogey the 17th. Hanson finished tied third with first round leader Soren Hansen of Denmark (70) and Briton Simon Dyson (70).

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Jiyai Shin wins in playoff

Jiyai Shin emerged victorious from a three-way sudden-death play-off to win the P&G Beauty NW Arkansas Championship.

The South Korean shot a superb seven-under-par 64 in her final round to take her into a shoot-out with Angela Stanford and Sun Young You.

And Shin held her nerve to beat her two rivals on the second hole to clinch her third LPGA Tour victory this year.

She had been seven strokes adrift on Sunday morning but played impressively all day to end level with Stanford and Sun on nine-under-par 204 before a brilliant 12-foot birdie on the 15th in the play-off.

The trio birdied the first play-off hole, the 18th, and Stanford missed a difficult birdie putt before Shin stroked home the clincher.

FedEx Cup Playoffs - The Final 30

With the first three events in the 2009 PGA Tour Playoffs for the FedEx Cup completed, the final 30 players have been determined and will advance to The Tour Championship presented by Coca-Cola, which will decide the winner of the FedEx Cup.

Here's a quick look at the Final 30 players in the field at East Lake in two weeks.

Rank - Player - Barclays - Deutsche Bank - BWM - Reset points

1 TIGER WOODS T2 T11 Win 2,500
He's right where everyone expected him to be. Now can he win the FedExCup for the second time?

2 STEVE STRICKER T2 Win T53 2,250
Mr. September had a letdown at Cog Hill but he'll be ready for Atlanta.

3 JIM FURYK T15 T8 T2 2,000
He's broken par in eight of his last 12 rounds at East Lake, and he's in pretty good form right now.

4 ZACH JOHNSON T28 T19 5 1,800
He's fallen two spots since the Playoffs began but a win still gives him the FedExCup.

5 HEATH SLOCUM Win MC T38 1,600
He started No. 124 but surprising win at Liberty National put him in the catbird seat.

6 PADRAIG HARRINGTON T2 T4 T6 1,400
The Irishman turned his season around as he rode 5 top-10s into a shot at the $10 million.

7 SEAN O'HAIR MC T8 4 1,200
He should head to Atlanta with momentum after closing with a 5-under 66 at Cog Hill.

8 SCOTT VERPLANK T9 T2 T38 1,000
He got hot at the right time with five top-10s in his last nine starts.

9 KENNY PERRY T52 T48 T45 800
He hasn't had a top-10 since he won for the second time in '09. He'll need a third win for a shot at the Cup.

10 JASON DUFNER MC T2 T30 600
A berth in Atlanta is icing on the cake in a career year for Dufner.

11 DUSTIN JOHNSON T15 T4 T30 480
The big-hitter, who has already won twice on TOUR, will be making his first appearance at East Lake.

12 NICK WATNEY T6 T46 T30 460
He narrowly missed a Presidents Cup berth. A win at East Lake could be a huge bonus.

13 GEOFF OGILVY MC 7 T55 440
With the end of the season in sight, he acknowledges his enthusiasm has been revived.

14 PHIL MICKELSON T52 T27 T30 420
His mere presence at East Lake means things are going well at home. A win would cap a difficult year.

15 RETIEF GOOSEN T70 T8 T23 400
The South African has never finished out of the top 10 at East Lake and won in 2004.

16 MARC LEISHMAN CUT T15 T2 380
The rookie will make his debut at East Lake with confidence after his best finish on Tour.

17 BRIAN GAY T12 T54 T55 360
A two-time winner in 2009, he's making his TOUR Championship debut.

18 KEVIN NA T24 T11 T8 340
Can he cap a career year with his first PGA TOUR win?

19 DAVID TOMS T31 T36 T23 320
With seven top-10s, including three seconds this year, the only thing missing is a win.

20 LUCAS GLOVER MC T36 66 310
The week off will be good for the U.S. Open champ, who has played the last six weeks.

21 Y.E. YANG T20 67 65 300
Life is good for the Korean who debuts at East Lake and The Presidents Cup in a three-week pan.

22 ERNIE ELS T2 MC T38 290
He's finished in the top 10 six times in 13 appearances at East Lake and lost in a playoff in 2001.

23 HUNTER MAHAN T20 T36 T38 280
Now that he's on the Presidents Cup team, a good finish would be a confidence boost.

24 ANGEL CABRERA MC T4 T45 270
Hard to believe this two-time major champion has never played at East Lake.

25 STEVE MARINO T15 T27 T18 260
He had a chance to win the first Playoffs event, but a 77 cost him. Maybe East Lake will be kinder.

26 STEWART CINK T28 MC T23 250
The British Open champ lives in Atlanta but had to play well on Sunday at Cog Hill to make it home.

27 MIKE WEIR T31 T23 T20 240
He's a former champion at East Lake who tied for sixth last year.

28 LUKE DONALD T31 T54 T10 230
The Englishman played his way into the top 30 in front of his former college (Northwestern) fans.

29 JERRY KELLY T52 T11 T49 220
The winner in New Orleans, Kelly has played well at East Lake (4th in 2002; 3rd in 2004).

30 JOHN SENDEN T64 T11 T20 210
Will be making his first appearance in TOUR Championship; has five top-10s this year.

Tiger Woods says 2009 is one of his best years

Tiger Woods celebrated his sixth title of the season at the BMW Championship on Sunday and described the year as one of his most successful despite failing to win a major.

"Absolutely, it's one of my best years," said Woods, after romping to an eight-stroke victory at Cog Hill Golf and Country Club. "There's no doubt about that.

"I haven't won as many times as I did in 2000, didn't win any majors this year.

"But I've never had a year where I've been this consistent, either, this many high finishes and the number of events I've played.

"To have an opportunity just about every time I tee it up to win the championship on the back nine, that's something that I can't tell you how proud I am."

Woods has traditionally judged his success by the major championships he is able to win but this year, after recovering from reconstructive knee surgery, the 33-year-old American is using a different measure.

"There were so many uncertainties at the beginning of the season," said Woods. "I didn't know how the leg was going to respond.

"I can't remember the last time I had a leg that was stable, that didn't hurt when I played.

"There were so many different things that I didn't know and I hadn't played competitively since the (U.S.) Open (in 2008).

"A lot of guys had played well and I hadn't played at all.

"So there was a lot of uncertainty.

"To come back and be... this consistent feels pretty good."

Woods returned to the PGA Tour in March at the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship finishing tied for 17th. In his following 15 starts he has finished out of the top 10 only twice.

In six events since failing to make the cut at the British Open in August, he has won three tournaments and finished second twice.

He has won nearly $10 million and heads to Atlanta for the season-ending Tour Championship, and a possible $10 million bonus, in two weeks leading the FedEx Cup standings.

"It (The Tour Championship) is very important because it's the top 30 hottest players of the year playing the season-ending event. This is the hottest field you'll probably have all year.

"If you would have asked me at the beginning of the year, any of you guys probably wouldn't have predicted I would have had the year like I have.

"To have the opportunity to win just about every tournament I have been in... to come off knee surgery and have this type of year and be this consistent is something I'm very proud of."

Lee Westwood withdraws from Seve Trophy

Lee Westwood has pulled out of Paul McGinley’s Britain & Ireland team for this month’s Seve Trophy against Thomas Bjorn’s Continental Europe.

“Paul was obviously disappointed but understood why,” Westwood told reporters at the Mercedes Masters on Wednesday.

“It’s a sensible week to take off. The winnings don’t count towards the money-list (Race to Dubai) and I could play 36 holes in a day. I need my weeks off now at 36 (years old).”

Westwood, the 2000 European number one, is targeting a second order of merit. He is fourth in the Race to Dubai. Continental Europe will be without Germany’s Martin Kaymer, the leader of the money-list, who is still recuperating from the broken toes he suffered in a karting accident last month. The Seve Trophy takes place from Sept. 24-27 at the Saint-Nom-la-Breteche course in Paris.

Arnold Palmer still going strong at 80

Tiger Woods passed Arnold Palmer on the PGA Tour’s career victory list last year, and some found it surprising how the King chose to congratulate him.

“We’ve had a couple of text messages back and forth,” Palmer said.

If it’s hard to imagine Palmer punching his thumbs on a cell phone to send a text, another sign of the times comes on Thursday when Palmer celebrates his 80th birthday.

And how to mark the big occasion? By playing golf, of course.

Palmer was in Orlando, Fla., for some weekend festivities. He threw out the first pitch Tuesday night at a Pittsburgh Pirates game. Then he retreated to his home in western Pennsylvania for golf and dinner Wednesday at Laurel Valley. His office said he would play golf with friends Thursday at Latrobe Country Club.

That’s where Palmer learned to play golf. After all these years, it remains his greatest passion.

“I think of him as the greatest amateur-professional who ever lived,” longtime friend Dow Finsterwald said in this month’s issue of Golf Digest. “By that I mean he never stopped playing the game for the love of it, like an amateur. Sure, he liked making a nice living. But he loved to play. Still does.”

Jack Nicklaus, a close friend and rival, met up with him at the Masters this year and the conversation turned to golf. Nicklaus asked how he was playing and Palmer told him, “Horrible.”

“‘How much are you playing?’ He said, ‘Every day,”’ Nicklaus said. “But that’s him. That’s what he does.”

Padraig Harrington recalled watching a Champions Tour event a decade ago, when Palmer came off the course excited as ever.

“He is buzzing,” Harrington said. “You’ve never seen a man with so much excitement and enthusiasm, because he found the secret to the game. I just love the fact he’s played the game at least 50 years competitively, and he’s still convinced that there’s a secret. I just love his enthusiasm.”

Nicklaus believes Palmer’s record, including seven majors, only tells part of the story.

Palmer won the Masters four times, but his swashbuckling style and the arrival of television proved to be the perfect marriage to make golf appealing to the masses. His only U.S. Open victory defined his hard-charging style. Americans rarely traveled to the British Open until Palmer made the trip in 1960 and made golf’s oldest championship relevant again.

He never won the PGA Championship, although it was Palmer who created the modern Grand Slam.

“I think he brought a lot more to the game than his game,” Nicklaus said. “What I mean by that is, there’s no question about his record and his ability to play the game. He was very, very good at that. But he obviously brought a lot more. He brought the hitch of his pants, the flair that he brought to the game, the fans that he brought into the game.

“He brought more than just his golf game.”

And he keeps right on going. Palmer is the only living player with a PGA Tour event named after him—the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill—and he was among those who made a strong pitch for golf to become part of the Olympics.

He remains current to players not even born when he won his last PGA Tour event in 1973, including Woods.

While talking about Palmer’s impending 80th birthday, Woods recalled nearly losing his college eligibility because of the kindness of the King. The Champions Tour was in northern California one year, and Woods was in Stanford when Palmer invited him to dinner.

“The tab comes, and I’m not going to say, ‘Hey, Arnold, it’s on me.’ He picks up the tab like it’s no big deal,” Woods said. “And (I) come to find out, my coach had to report me because that was a violation. I had to send him a check.”

Phil Mickelson patterns much of his game and his personality after Palmer. No other star signs more autographs and makes more eye contact than Mickelson, and it pleases Palmer especially that Mickelson’s signature is legible.

Mickelson qualified for his first Masters in 1991 as a U.S. Amateur champion, and he quickly arranged a practice round with Palmer.

“We walked off the 18th tee about 100 yards, and he kind of grabs my arm and pulls me over and stops, and says, ‘Right here. Right here,”’ Mickelson said. Palmer then told him of the 1961 Masters, when someone in the gallery congratulated him for a sure victory. He hit into a bunker, made double bogey and lost.

“He was still fuming about it 30 years later,” Mickelson said.

PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem was on his way to Laurel Valley on Wednesday and said only that the tour would have a “little presentation” for him. What to get one of the most popular figures in golf for his 80th birthday?

Harrington wouldn’t know where to begin. He remains in awe of the time he was at an Italian restaurant last year in Miami having an appetizer when he heard someone approach the bar and order an Arnold Palmer.

“Now that’s getting to another level,” Harrington said. “Think about it. You don’t go up there and order a Tiger Woods at the bar. You can go up there and order an Arnold Palmer in this country and the barman—he was a young man— knew what the drink was. That’s in a league of your own.”

Tim Finchem predicts prize funds will remain steady

PGA Tour commissioner Tim Finchem said Wednesday any increases in prize money will be flat over the next decade, and that he didn’t seriously consider reducing purses during the economic downturn.

“Our objective is to do the things that we need to do to continue to grow as we come out of a downturn,” Finchem said. “And it’s not our intention to go backward to get ready to go forward. Our intention is slow growth during this period, and then come back and grow more.”

Most tournaments have incremental increases built into their contracts, some as little as $100,000. At least two tournaments were allowed to keep their prize money the same from 2008 because of special circumstances. The AT&T National, for example, had to pay a higher site fee this year to stay at Congressional with the U.S. Open coming to Bethesda, Md., in two years.

Seth Waugh, the CEO of Deutsche Bank Americas, said last week that he urged Finchem to keep prize money the same because it sent the wrong message in a tough economy.

“The idea that we would sort of just generally roll back really doesn’t accomplish anything,” Finchem said. “It just sets us back on a basis from which to move forward, and we don’t feel the need to do that.”

Finchem did not agree with the idea that raising purses, even slightly, could be perceived the wrong way. He noted that players do not get a salary, rather they have to compete for prize money each week.

And he didn’t see how a $100,000 reduction would change anything.

“It results in having to change all of our contracts to get it done, and it puts us in a position that’s not positive from a negotiating standpoint,” he said.

He also said the contract extensions with four title sponsors this year include incremental increases in later years.

Even so, Finchem said prize money won’t be growing at the same rate as the previous dozen years in the Tiger Woods era. Total prize money in 1996—Woods’ last year as an amateur—was nearly $70 million. The first television contract renewal after Woods joined the PGA Tour resulted in total prize money of about $135 million in 1999, and it has gone up steadily to nearly $280 million last year.

“Overall, I’d say over the next five or 10 years, you won’t see the kind of increases we had the last 10 years, even in an up economy,” Finchem said. “They’ll be more modest. But that’s our intention, to continue to grow.”

Meanwhile, the Sports Business Journal reported that the tour’s financial reserves lost more than 25 percent of their value in 2008 because of the slide in the stock market.

“Operating reserves are invested, and investments are off,” Finchem said. “They’re not off that much, but they’re off the last couple of years. Now, they’ve come back some this year, but we’re still trying to grow the reserve, and when the dollars that are invested are getting hit, you have to grow more. So we’ve had that impact. We’ve just had to work harder. We’ve had to find new sources of revenue and we’ve had to cut costs, and thus far, we’ve been able to do that.”

Surprise captains picks for Presidents Cup

Ryo Ishikawa is known in Japan as the “Shy Prince,” a 17-year-old sensation who has won four times on the Japan Golf Tour in the last calendar year. He was hardly bashful during a meeting this summer of prospective Presidents Cup players.

“He was engaged, he walked around the entire room, introduced himself to everybody, made sure everybody understood that he wanted to be on the team,” International captain Greg Norman said.

Norman was so impressed that he added Ishikawa to his team as a captain’s pick for the Presidents Cup on Tuesday, making the Japanese teen the youngest player ever in these matches.

The Presidents Cup will be played Oct. 8-11 at Harding Park in San Francisco.

The big surprise was Norman’s second pick—Adam Scott—who has endured the worst season of his career.

Scott, No. 3 in the world a year ago in July, has plunged to No. 53 and barely qualified for the FedEx Cup playoffs. He was eliminated in the first round, and conceded he probably would be left off the team. Scott even planned surgery for a cyst behind his knee.

“At the end of the day, he’s got the playing skills … what he can bring to the locker room, the support he gives to other players, the connection and the experience that he’s had playing on the Presidents Cup team,” Norman said. “He was really a logical choice.”

Norman picked Scott, a fellow Australian and protege, over players that included Rory Sabbatini, who won the Byron Nelson Championship in May and fell out of the top 10 in the standings in the final week, bumped by Y.E. Yang and his PGA Championship victory.

U.S. captain Fred Couple’s picks were no surprise at all—U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover and Hunter Mahan.

Couples had told golfchannel.com during the PGA Championship that he was taking Mahan. Couples said he told Glover after the PGA Championship that he was on the team.

Glover and Mahan were captain’s picks for the Presidents Cup two years ago.

“I told Hunter, ‘You’re my guy. If something happens, we’ve got issues,”’ Couples said.

He almost had issues.

Couples took Mahan, a superb ball-striker whose only PGA Tour victory came two years ago, over Brian Gay and Dustin Johnson. Both players have won twice in the last calendar year.

“The hardest thing I’ve had … Dustin Johnson and Brian Gay,” Couples said. “Brian Gay has won twice. He’s taking it pretty hard, which he should. I was overlooked one time, but I got picked a few times. For Hunter Mahan and Lucas, I think it’s a no-brainer, I really do.”

The Americans have won the Presidents Cup outright the last two times and hold a 5-1-1 edge in the matches that began in 1994. Their only loss came in 1998 in Australia.

The Presidents Cup completes a big year for Ishikawa, who at 15 became the youngest player to win a tournament on a sanctioned tour. He made his U.S. debut at Riviera in the Northern Trust Open, received invitations to the Masters and PGA Championship, and played the first two rounds with Tiger Woods and Lee Westwood in the British Open.

He opened with a 68 at Turnberry before much fanfare (beating Woods by three shots) before missing the cut with a 78.

“He played well that week,” Norman said. “He played with Tiger. He stood up to Tiger. So that tells me he can deal with a pressure situation. He is not afraid of the big moment. The other thing which came into my mind is he travels with an entourage of about 50 media people, so he’s used to that type of atmosphere, that buzz going on all the time, and it doesn’t bother him.”

Ishikawa said in a statement—it was 2:30 a.m. Wednesday in Japan when the announcement was made—that he was honored.

“There are so many great players on both teams, and I’m humbled by my selection to be with them,” Ishikawa said. “Although I’ll be a bit nervous surrounded by a such a great captain and so many great players in the world, I will do my best during the week and hopefully contribute to the victory over the American team.”

Ishikawa is the first Japanese player in the Presidents Cup since Shigeki Maruyama in 2000.

The rest of the International team consists of Geoff Ogilvy, Vijay Singh, Camilo Villegas, Retief Goosen, Ernie Els, Angel Cabrera, Mike Weir, Robert Allenby, Yang and Tim Clark.

The other Americans are Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Steve Stricker, Jim Furyk, Kenny Perry, Zach Johnson, Stewart Cink, Sean O’Hair, Anthony Kim and Justin Leonard.

Monday, September 7, 2009

Alex Noren masters the mountains

Alex Noren masters the mountains

Swede Alex Noren grabbed his maiden European Tour title in Switzerland on Sunday - and there is no doubt what shot he will remember most.

In the first qualifying event for next year's Ryder Cup, the 27-year-old holed a difficult bunker shot for an eagle three at the long 15th as he took the Omega European Masters.

It helped Noren to a two-stroke victory over Welshman Bradley Dredge, the 2006 winner, in front of a crowd which included second man on the moon Buzz Aldrin.

A first prize of just over £292,000 - and the same number of cup points - was achieved with a closing round of 66 and 20-under-par total of 264.

It more than doubled his earnings for a season interrupted by wrist and then knee injuries.

Noren entered the week only 88th on the European money list and 130th in the world but has long been viewed as 'one to watch' - and now Europe's captain Colin Montgomerie will see whether he can build on this.

A week ago, the Scot revealed he had written down his "dream team" and admitted some uncapped players were on the list. Noren's name was almost certainly not among them, though.

Dredge, desperate to make a debut on home soil next year, will have reminded Montgomerie of what he can do as well - after crashing to 256th in the world from 46th.

"It was a fun battle, and Alex produced a great shot on the 15th - so congratulations to him," said Dredge, after a 65 that included a 63-yard pitch-in for eagle on the long ninth as he drew level from four behind.

Noren said: "I was so happy when that bunker shot went in. I've never felt this good about my game, and to win was just brilliant."

As for being the first leader in the Ryder Cup race, he added: "Now I will just have to stay there!"

England's Ross McGowan, also round in 65, was third - and Spaniard Miguel Angel Jimenez fourth - while the low score of the day was a 64 from 20-year-old Rory McIlroy, last year's play-off loser.

With an eagle and eight birdies, he had climbed from 34th to third standing on the final tee but was put off by a photographer and by bogeying finished in a tie for seventh.

McIlroy had to win to go top of the European money list but still has a great chance to finish the season number one - with Martin Kaymer and Paul Casey, the two players ahead of him, both currently out injured.

Lee Westwood, fourth on the table, closed with a 66 for 23rd place - along with 16-year-old Italian amateur Matteo Manassero, youngest-ever British amateur champion and 13th at The Open in July.

Westwood now has the chance to improve his chances of the Order of Merit crown, however. He moves on to Cologne, while McIlroy has chosen to go to Korea for an event there.

Noren, two ahead when he resumed, went four clear when he began with two birdies - while South African Charl Schwartzel, second overnight, three-putted both greens for bogeys.

The gap was the same after seven, but Noren bogeyed the short eighth and then Dredge began his charge.

When Dredge bogeyed the 12th and Noren the 13th, however, McGowan came into the picture. But he failed to birdie the two par-fives on the back nine.

Pettersen breaks title drought by five shots

Pettersen breaks title drought by five shots

Suzann Pettersen had not visited the winner's circle since winning five times during the 2007 season.

That changed Sunday when she closed with a one-under 70 to finish at 15-under- par 269 for a five-stroke victory at the Canadian Women's Open.

Pettersen missed the 72-hole scoring record by a single stroke.

"This feels absolutely great. I've been playing very good since 2007," said Pettersen, who earned $412,500 for the win. "I gave myself a lot of chances to win tournaments, and like I've been saying, if you put yourself in position often enough, you'll figure out how to close the deal."

Angela Stanford (70), Karrie Webb (69), Morgan Pressel (66), Ai Miyazato (67) and Momoko Ueda (65) shared second place at 10-under-par 274.

Pettersen, a playoff loser to M.J. Hur last week, had a comfortable five- stroke lead entering the final round, but tripped to a bogey on the second hole. She came right back with a birdie on No. 3 to get back to 14-under.

After a pair of pars, Pettersen birdied the sixth from seven feet out, but gave that stroke back with a bogey on the par-three eighth. That trimmed her lead to three strokes, but that is as low as it would drop.

"It felt like I was scrambling around. I only hit 13 greens," Pettersen stated. "I chipped in once, missed some short putts. Obviously some nerves were showing."

Around the turn, Pettersen caught fire with three straight birdies from the 10th. That moved her to minus-17, where she led by six.

Pettersen, who had coughed up her last two 54-hole leads, stumbled to bogeys on 13 and 14, but was still five strokes clear of the field. Pettersen steadied herself and parred the final four holes to seal the win.

"It feels really good to win this one after last week's loss in the playoff," Pettersen admitted. "But you never feel safe. I had a five-, six-shot lead on the back nine, but you're playing against such good players. Like an eagle, or a chip-in, everything is possible. So you've just got to make sure you can stay on top of what you do."

Webb was the one who got closest to Pettersen. She poured in three birdies in a four-hole stretch from the second. That jumped her to minus-11 and she was three back after Pettersen's bogey on the eighth.

The Australian slipped back to minus-10 with a bogey on the 13th. She recovered that stroke with a birdie on the 16th, but bogeyed 17 to fall into a share of second place.

Stanford had an eagle, two birdies, a bogey and a double-bogey in her round of 70. Miyazato posted five birdies and single bogey to end in a share of second.

Pressel carded six birdies and a bogey in her 66, while Ueda poured in seven birdies and a bogey to shoot 65.

In-Kyung Kim closed with a two-under 69 to take seventh place at nine-under- par 275. Anna Nordqvist (67) and Vicky Hurst (67) ended one stroke further back at minus-eight.

Stricker, Kelly and Goosen by one from Harrington

Stricker, Kelly and Goosen by one from Harrington

Steve Stricker has a fan in fellow Wisconsin native Jerry Kelly.

"Any time I get to watch Steve's putting stroke for a round it makes me a better player," Kelly said after playing 18 holes with his longtime friend.

Stricker collected seven birdies, chipping in for one, and closed with an eagle at the 18th hole Sunday to shoot a six-under 65 and re-gain a share of the lead after three rounds of the Deutsche Bank Championship.

Retief Goosen carded a three-under 68 and Sean O'Hair closed with a birdie for a one-under 70 to join Stricker in the lead as the tournament headed for a Labor Day finish.

The three co-leaders were at 13-under 200.

Padraig Harrington shot a 67 to lead a three-way tie at 12-under 201 that included Kevin Na (66) and Scott Verplank (68).

Kelly (67) and Kevin Sutherland (69) were another stroke further back at 11- under 202.

Tiger Woods, after rallying to make the cut on Saturday, hit his first tee shot into the trees on Sunday and failed again to mount a charge as he remained frustrated by poor putting.

Woods feigned celebration when he made his first birdie of the third round at the par-four 15th, throwing his arms in the air after holing a six-footer. But he hit his next shot into the hazard at the short par-three 16th, only saving bogey after spinning his do-over from the drop zone to tap-in range.

The No. 1 player in the world needed an approach to a couple feet at the 18th for a closing birdie just to post 72. He was nine shots off the lead and out of contention at four-under 209.

Woods would lose his spot at the top of the playoff standings if Stricker wins on Monday.

Stricker, No. 2 in the standings for the FedEx Cup, combined with Kelly to make 13 birdies and an eagle on a breezy day at the TPC Boston. Kelly had a share of the lead around the turn, having an easier time on the suddenly-firm greens, but the momentum changed on the back nine.

Beginning with a chip-in birdie from in front of the 10th green, Stricker made a run to the top of the leaderboard that ended with his eagle at the par-five 18th, where he knocked his 236-yard second shot to five feet.

Seven total birdies and that closing eagle helped erase the few mistakes Stricker made in the third round, and the six-time tour winner was glad to have Kelly along for the ride.

"We fed off one another, and I just had a little bit stronger finish than he did. But he played great," said Stricker, who has won twice this season. "It was tough conditions out there with the wind, not really being able to get a handle on the direction at all today, especially on that back side. We were coming up short, going long. It was difficult, and the greens firmed up again today and made things a little bit more difficult trying to get them close to the holes."

As the first player to show up for a practice round on Monday, Goosen had no trouble adjusting to the new conditions. He made four birdies and a bogey, pulling even with Stricker on a 13-foot birdie putt at the 16th, and moved within 18 holes of getting his second win of the season.

Goosen, a seven-time tour winner and No. 17 in the playoff standings, missed a chance to take sole possession of the lead when he hit into a bunker and made par at the reachable 18th.

"I'm happy with the way I played today," said Goosen, who won the Transitions Championship earlier this season. "I hit the ball fairly solid off the tee, was never really in any trouble, and very happy with the round.

"It was a bit of a disappointing finish on the last hole, but nice to be up there, and looking forward to tomorrow."

O'Hair, who is 16th in the playoff standings, struggled with club selection and fell behind with two early bogeys after sharing the second-round lead with Jim Furyk. The 27-year-old rebounded admirably, however, by mixing four birdies and a bogey the rest of the way.

He finished with two birdies in his last three holes, closing with a six-foot birdie putt at the 18th to join Stricker and Goosen in the lead. O'Hair won his third tour title against a good field at this season's Quail Hollow Championship.

"It was an up-and-down day today," he said. "Started off not the way I wanted to, but ... hung in there and made a couple birdies late and turned a potentially bad round into an okay round. So it was nice to end off the round like that."

Following Monday's final round, the field will be cut from 100 players to 70 for the third playoff event, next week's BMW Championship.

Jeff Sluman defends at Pebble Beach

Jeff Sluman defends at Pebble Beach

Jeff Sluman carded a hole-in-one and fired a four-under 68 on Sunday to win the Wal-Mart First Tee Open for the second year in a row.

Sluman, who cruised to a five-shot win at Pebble Beach last year, was the only player in the final three groups to break par during a breezy final round on the California coast.

He ended at 10-under 206 for a two-shot win over Gene Jones (70).

"It was very difficult out there with the wind, and the greens were like concrete. But I just tried to play solid golf," said the 51-year-old Sluman, who posted the low round of the day to capture his third Champions Tour win.

The last six players out on the course -- Sluman, Mark McNulty, Tom Lehman, Bob Gilder, Loren Roberts and Mark O'Meara -- combined to shoot 14-over par on Sunday.

Among them, only Sluman managed better than a 73, making his first trip to the winner's circle since last year's First Tee Open that much easier.

"I thought I was going to be pretty close (to the lead) and all of a sudden I looked up at the leaderboard and saw I was two or three up," said Sluman, who collected $315,000 for the victory. "That's how difficult it was."

Lehman (73) and O'Meara (75) tied for third place at seven-under 209, three shots back. O'Meara, the two-time major champion who won at Pebble Beach five times while playing on the PGA Tour, is still seeking his first Champions Tour victory.

Roberts, the second-round leader, shot a six-over 78 and shared fifth place with David Eger (69) and Olin Browne (71) at six-under 210.

Sluman took a measured approach to his final round, even after the excitement of his hole-in-one at No. 5, which helped him go five-under on the front nine.

"I'm just trying to execute one shot at a time," he said in an on-course TV interview during the round.

Not long after uttering those words, Sluman poured in a birdie putt at the 14th hole to take a two-shot lead over O'Meara and re-gain the stroke he lost with a bogey at the 11th.

Playing two groups behind, O'Meara made Sluman's trip a little easier when he bogeyed the 13th hole to fall three shots back and into a second-place tie with Jones. O'Meara then bogeyed the 14th and 15th holes as well to fall out of contention.

Sluman made bogey from the rough at the par-four 16th and slipped to 10-under for a two-shot lead over Jones.

But Jones parred his last four holes, reaching the clubhouse at eight-under to put Sluman in control of his own destiny. No other player on the course was closer than four shots to Sluman's lead at the time.

Carrying his comfortable advantage to the par-five 18th, Sluman hit a three- wood off the tee, laid up perfectly and then knocked his approach to about 15 feet. He lagged his putt to tap-in range for a closing par, then waited for the win to become official.

Sluman's steady closing par only looked casual -- it was windy and challenging at Pebble Beach on Sunday, and there wasn't a hole that could be taken lightly.

"It was just very difficult," Jones said afterward.

But Sluman, who has played countless rounds on the storied course in his long career, had a simple game plan for the final 18 holes.

"Fairways and greens," he said, and smiled.

Tony Johnstone is Senior Master at Woburn

Tony Johnstone is Senior Master at Woburn

Tony Johnstone's remarkable recovery from multiple sclerosis continued on Sunday as he edged out Peter Senior by one shot to win the Travis Perkins Senior Masters at Woburn.

Johnstone was told he would never play golf again due to the disease, but revolutionary new treatment has enabled him to make a competitive comeback.

He won in Jersey last year and was too strong for Senior on Sunday, his final-round 66 seeing him get the better of the Australian, who could only manage a 71.

A seventh birdie of the day on the 17th gave Johnstone the lead and a hole later he tapped in a par putt for a winning 10-under-par total of 206.

It was a first victory over the Duke's Course for the Zimbabwean after a number of near misses over the years, notably in the 1992 British Masters to Christy O'Connor Jnr when he lost a play-off.

"I have always had this feeling inside me that one day I would win a tournament round here," said Johnstone.

"I have lost a play-off and had a couple of seconds and thirds. From the first time I ever played this course it has been one of my four favourites anywhere in the world and to win around here is just wonderful.

"Pete played really well, but his putter went cold which is unusual for him as he uses that broomhandle like a wand normally. And unfortunately mine was seriously hot today. I just putted the eyes out of it. It is a lovely feeling to be doing that again. It's a great feeling."

The victory was also perfectly timed for Johnstone who hosts the MS Society Pro-Am at Sunningdale tomorrow to raise funds for the cause. �It is ideal timing with the Pro-Am tomorrow. Everything has just come together this week and it is wonderful."

Final Scores:

206 T Johnstone (Zim) 69 71 66
207 P Senior (Aus) 69 67 71
211 J Rivero (Esp) 72 70 69
213 C Williams (RSA) 75 67 71
214 S Torrance (Sco) 71 74 69
215 B Longmuir (Sco) 70 76 69 D Merriman (Aus) 72 69 74 M Clayton (Aus) 72 71 72 D Hospital (Esp) 70 73 72
216 M PiƱero (Esp) 73 72 71 J Bruner (USA) 74 72 70 N Job (Eng) 78 70 68
217 C Rocca (Ita) 69 75 73
218 G Brand (Eng) 72 71 75 B Cameron (Eng) 75 73 70
219 L Carbonetti (Arg) 74 71 74 B Smit (RSA) 73 74 72 M Farry (Fra) 74 75 70 G Encina (Chi) 70 73 76 A Franco (Par) 71 71 77
220 B Boyd (USA) 78 70 72 H Carbonetti (Arg) 75 73 72 S Ginn (Aus) 73 74 73 D O'Sullivan (Irl) 74 74 72 J Heggarty (NIr) 72 72 76
221 E Rodriguez (Esp) 73 71 77 S Bennett (Eng) 75 76 70 A Murray (Eng) 71 76 74 M Harwood (Aus) 70 77 74
222 M Cunning (USA) 76 74 72 T Gale (Aus) 77 74 71 G Ralph (Eng) 76 72 74 D Good (Aus) 72 79 71 R Drummond (Sco) 74 74 74
223 A Fernandez (Chi) 72 73 78 P Oakley (USA) 77 72 74 P Mitchell (Eng) 76 73 74 J Quiros (Esp) 73 76 74 J Rhodes (Eng) 75 72 76 I Woosnam (Wal) 75 69 79 D Smyth (Irl) 76 75 72 G Brand Jnr (Sco) 75 69 79
224 S Owen (Nzl) 77 72 75 T Allen (Eng) 80 74 70 M Williams (Zim) 76 76 72 D Durnian (Eng) 77 73 74 E Darcy (Irl) 74 78 72
225 D Russell (Eng) 74 77 74 D Johnson (USA) 76 73 76 J Hoskison (Eng) 75 76 74
226 P Barber (Eng) 76 73 77 B Lincoln (RSA) 76 70 80 A Garrido (Esp) 72 76 78
227 J Chillas (Sco) 78 76 73 A Barrera (Arg) 79 75 73 P Allan (Eng) 77 75 75
228 R Chapman (Eng) 77 76 75 M Miller (Sco) 72 82 74 D Cambridge (Jam) 78 76 74 J Hawkes (RSA) 80 73 75
229 J Bland (RSA) 82 74 73
230 T Giedeon (Ger) 83 78 69 G Towne (USA) 76 76 78 K Spurgeon (Eng) 82 76 72
231 E Polland (NIr) 83 76 72
233 N Ratcliffe (Aus) 82 72 79
235 M Bembridge (Eng) 82 78 75
237 I Mosey (Eng) 81 79 77
239 T Charnley (Eng) 78 78 83 M Poxon (Eng) 79 82 78
241 V Garcia (Esp) 82 79 80 J Hall (Eng) 80 83 78
Disqualified: C Mason (Eng) 75 77 DQ
.

Tiger Woods happy with form, except for putting

Tiger Woods happy with form, except for putting

Tiger Woods created a slight stir Thursday morning on the TPC Boston when a Nike representative approached him on the first tee carrying two putters.

One was the Scotty Cameron model that Woods has used in 72 worldwide victories and 13 majors over the last 11 years. That’s the putter he was using when he missed one crucial putt after another on the back nine at Hazeltine to lose the PGA Championship, the same one in his hands when he missed a 7-foot birdie putt on the final hole last week at The Barclays.

The other putter that Rick Nichols brought him was a Nike model. Woods studied it with a meticulous eye, leaning the putter on its toe as he looked down the shaft.

Is the world’s No. 1 player so frustrated that he is willing to finally change putters? Is he fed up with missed putts that cost him a chance to win the last two tournaments?

Not quite.

Woods was only checking the alignment of the grip on his backup putter. He prefers it to be 1 degree to the right, which slightly closes the blade on impact. This grip was too square, and the glue had already dried before Woods could twist it where he wanted it.

He has several backup putters, which hardly anyone ever mentions.

“That’s because I haven’t needed it,” Woods said.

Woods is nowhere near panic mode with his putting. Even though he didn’t win his last two tournaments, he still has 12 top 10s in his 15 starts on the PGA Tour. Besides, Woods felt more at home during his pro-am round at the Deutsche Bank Championship on a course where he has won and finished second twice.

The greens at TPC Boston do not have poa annua, the strain of grass found at Hazeltine, which gets bumpy in the afternoon. The subtle breaks do not confound him like the ones at Liberty National a week ago.

“They’re rolling perfect,” Woods said. “They’re rolling great. I was telling Stevie (Williams), ‘Every time we come here, we think the greens are undulating.’ Not after last week.”

Woods is coming off a performance memorable for all the wrong reasons.

He made a late charge into contention at The Barclays, finishing with a 6-iron to 7 feet for birdie on the last hole that ultimately would have put him in a playoff. His putt never touched the hole.

It was rare to see Woods fail to deliver a key putt on such a stage, which is one reason there is so much attention on this putting. He is averaging 28.58 putts per round on the PGA Tour, an improvement over the last four years.

Steve Stricker, among the best in golf with a putter, played the first two days with Woods at The Barclays and didn’t see anything out of the ordinary except for the obvious.

“I don’t think he made as many putts as he normally does,” Stricker said. “The stroke looked fine. I didn’t see anything funky there, not that I was really looking at his stroke. I guess we’re just shocked when he doesn’t make one because he’s made so many over his career.”

Woods attributed so many missed chances at Liberty National on putts that often broke multiple times before reaching the hole. He worked some on his short game during his three days at home, no more than usual.

“I really putted well on the weekend, I just didn’t make a lot of putts,” he said. “When you’re lipping out a lot of putts, you’re not putting poorly. Those greens were a tough read for a bunch of people.”

Woods has a hard time finding much fault with anything this year, except for not winning a major. His five victories are twice as much as anyone else, and he still holds the No. 1 stop in the FedEx Cup standings going into the second week of the playoffs.

The big surprise is Heath Slocum, who was planning a trip to Switzerland this week for the Omega Masters on the European Tour until he won last week at Liberty National. That moved him from second-to-last place at No. 124 to No. 3, right behind Woods and Stricker.

Players have been debating whether Slocum earned too many points, and they tried to balance his rocket rise with the notion that he did beat a field at The Barclays that included the top 124 players on the PGA Tour.

The top 100 qualified for the Deutsche Bank (minus Paul Casey, who is injured), and that number will be pared to the top 70 players in points going to the third round next week at the BMW Championship outside Chicago.

Woods is virtually a lock to at least contest for the $10 million prize that comes with the FedEx Cup, especially the way he has played over the last two months—two victories, two runner-up finishes.

“This last stretch, I think I’ve hit the ball pretty good,” Woods said. “I’ve putted well in stretches. Some people have alluded to other things, but that’s not too bad for my last four events. The overall year has been very consistent.”

He missed the FedEx Cup playoffs last year recovering from knee surgery. The last time he played the Deutsche Bank was in 2007, when he tied for second, four shots behind Phil Mickelson. Woods took nine more putts than Mickelson that day.

FedEx Cup playoffs continue in Boston

FedEx Cup playoffs continue in Boston

Bob Estes was on his way to the first tee for a practice round at the TPC Boston on Wednesday when he stopped to look at the FedEx Cup standings.

“First time I’ve seen my name atop a leaderboard in a long time,” Estes said.

That was the good news.

Not so good was that this chart only showed the 10 players—from No. 65 to No. 75—on the bubble at the Deutsche Bank Championship, the second round of the playoffs when the paring of players starts to get serious.

Only 70 of the 100 players who made it to the TPC Boston will advance next week to Cog Hill outside Chicago.

Estes is at No. 65 for the second straight week. He can’t afford to drop much lower.

A year ago, one tournament into the PGA Tour Playoffs revealed some flaws. The points system was supposed to create volatility, yet it wound up rewarding mediocrity. Anyone who simply made the cut could count on moving up the charts. A missed cut was crippling.

The example of all that was wrong last year was Padraig Harrington. He won two majors and ultimately was voted PGA Tour player of the year, but he missed the cut in the first two playoff events and didn’t even qualify for the Tour Championship.

Harrington hasn’t won any tournaments this year after spending most of the season searching for a swing key. Only in the last month did he start to concentrate on scoring, and the results have been promising. He had a chance to win at Firestone, finishing in a tie for second. He had a chance at the PGA Championship, where he tied for 10th.

In the playoff opener last week at The Barclays, Harrington tied for second.

He started the playoffs at No. 66 and now is all the way up to No. 14, keeping him in contention for the $10 million prize.

“It is interesting that my FedEx Cup this year has improved so much with one event,” Harrington said. “Whereas maybe last year the system didn’t work for me, this year it seems to be working for me.”

It’s working for Tiger Woods. He won five times during the regular season to earn the No. 1 seed, tied for second last week after missing a 7-foot putt that would have put him in a playoff, and remains the top seed.

And it’s really working for Heath Slocum, the surprise winner of The Barclays after making a 20-foot par putt on the 18th hole. Slocum narrowly qualified for the opening event, and now finds himself at No. 3. That’s the reward of winning a playoff event.

“It was a good week. It was a great week,” Slocum said. “And really, I’m just looking forward to the position that it’s put me in, maybe to have a chance coming down the stretch of the playoffs to maybe have another impact.”

Ultimately, it’s all about performance.

Webb Simpson was No. 85 in the standings, two spots ahead of Nick O’Hern going into the opener. Simpson finished eighth at The Barclays and moved up to No. 41, leaving him in good position to advance to Chicago. O’Hern missed the cut and fell to No. 98, meaning he will have to play well if he wants to keep playing.

“I got my text message saying I moved up to 41st, and at first I thought they made a mistake,” Simpson said. “I didn’t realize I was going to jump 40-something spots. But I love the format. It keeps everybody on their toes, and whoever plays best in the playoffs is going to win. I think this year’s system is great compared to last year.”

What one week of the playoffs has revealed is the importance of the regular season. Unlike last year, the standings are not reset until the Tour Championship, so someone like Woods could have three bad weeks and still be in the top 10 going to East Lake. That’s the reward for winning five times and dominating the tour.

Consider three levels of performance:

— Slocum was at No. 124 after a poor season and had to play his best golf in the opening round or go home. Just his luck, he won the tournament. Jeff Maggert was at No. 123 and missed the cut, so he was eliminated.

— Brett Quigley had a good season and was No. 45 before he missed the cut at The Barclays. He could afford one bad week, however, and now Quigley is No. 59 going into the Deutsche Bank Championship. If he misses the cut at TPC Boston, he likely will be out.

— Lucas Glover had a great season, winning the U.S. Open and finishing fifth at the PGA Championship. He also missed the cut at The Barclays, but having started at No. 5, he slipped only two spots. Glover is allowed another bad week at TPC Boston and still will be in Chicago, with a decent chance of going to the Tour Championship.

At some point, everyone will have to play well.

“There’s a lot of buzz in the locker room and player dining, people talking about so-and-so moved up a lot,” Simpson said. “I was on the bubble and I got moved out. So I think it’s exactly what—for a playoff situation—fans want, and us as players want.”

Padraig Harrington & Ernie Els skipping Match Play

Padraig Harrington & Ernie Els skipping Match Play

Ireland’s world number nine Padraig Harrington will skip next month’s World Match Play Championship and play the $5 million Singapore Open instead, organisers said on Thursday.

The three-times major winner would almost certainly have qualified for the Match Play but has chosen to return to the Singapore Open, which takes place in the same week and is co-sanctioned by the European Tour this year.

South African Ernie Els has already decided not to defend the Match Play title he won at the last version of the event in 2007 and honour his commitment to play at Sentosa.

Els and Harrington, who finished joint-second a shot behind India’s Jeev Milkha Singh in Singapore last year, will be joined by South Korea’s K.J Choi at the Oct. 29 to Nov 1 event, the jewel in the Asian Tour’s crown.

OneAsia Tour happy with progress

OneAsia Tour happy with progress

OneAsia’s second event tees off in South Korea next week and despite the obstacles faced of launching a new venture in the middle of an economic crisis, golf’s newest tour is delighted with its early progress.

Formed by founding members the PGA of Australia, China Golf Association, Korea Golf Tour and the Korea Golf Association, the series has a five-tournament schedule in 2009 which it hopes to increase to around 20 within two years.

“Our talks and our vision was about trying to create something that ultimately would allow the best players in the Asia-Pacific to stay in the region,” PGA Tour of Australia commissioner Ben Sellenger told Reuters.

“So that our best players from Sydney, Delhi or Seoul don’t get to a certain stage in their career and feel the need to move on to another tour.

“Realistically, this region deserves to have an elite golf tour that stand alongside the U.S. PGA and European tours… an alternative. Everyone knows it has room for one. Sure, some areas are really immature but they are coming along leaps and bounds.”

The concept of an Asia-Pacific tour powerful enough to compete against the heavyweights of the United States and Europe took its first steps to becoming a reality in April when the series held its opening event with the China Open in Beijing.

The tournament was shrouded by a fair share of controversy with the Asian Tour demanding its own players boycott an event it had previously hosted, but OneAsia remains positive it can recover from this setback and continue to expand its schedule.

Sellenger contends that OneAsia does not compromise any existing tours and should be seen as an addition to them, involving the bodies from individual countries in the region to work towards a unified goal of an elite tour.

“We may only have a few events now but three of the events are the national opens (China, Korea and Australia) of three of the biggest economies in the region,” he added.

“A stepping stone to really ramping things up next year to 10 to 15 tournaments with over $1 million prize money each.”

All very good in theory, but is it a good time to be entering a market suffering the effects of an economic downturn that has led to the loss of a number of events on the LPGA Tour while carmakers Buick and Volvo have also cut back on sponsorship?

“In terms of the timing of all this, it is difficult and I suppose one of the plusses is that it’s not easy for anyone,” Sellenger admitted.

“The other people seeking investment and those that would be seen as being in the same marketplace are struggling as well.

“What we hope to be creating is a new offering. Something different and all encompassing across the whole region. That has specific markets to attract top and local level investment.

“It doesn’t change the financial crisis at the moment but it positions us well in terms of what we are going out with and speaking to sponsors about… trying to broaden their reach and offer more than they would get from other investments.

“However, we are finalising arrangements right now that will see us safely through until 2013.”

Feted as future stars, Rory McIlroy, Danny Lee and Ryo Ishikawa will all be teeing off at the Korea Open and the ability to attract this level of competitor and prospect of gaining more world ranking points for events will also help OneAsia’s cause.