Showing posts with label Golf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golf. Show all posts

TaylorMade-adidas Golf Tour Professional Kenny Perry Uses R9 460 Driver to Victory at Travelers Championship

Kenny Perry

TaylorMade-adidas Golf Tour Staff professional Kenny Perry fired a nearly effortless, bogey-free final-round 63 to clinch victory at the Travelers Championship. It was his second win on the PGA Tour this year, his fifth in the past 13 months and his first since switching to the new R9 460 driver.

It was the 14th career PGA Tour win for the 48-year old Perry, whose goal is to reach 20. His Traveler's win was a record-setter for the event at 22-under par that started with an opening-round 61 and finished with a final round 63 to stave off fellow TMaG staffer and R9™ 460 user Paul Goydos.

This is as good a win as I've ever had," Perry said. "On Sunday, my golf was unbelievable. To shoot 22-under par, to break the all-time record of all the great champions that are on this trophy, it's unbelievable."

With his R9 460, Kenny ranked 12th in driving distance with an average of 293.1 yards and T20th in driving accuracy at 80.4% of fairways hit. He also ranked T3rd in greens in regulation. *

The victory was his fifth on the PGA Tour in a little more than a year; the most of any player in that time span. It elevated Kenny to No. 1 on the PGA Tour money list, No. 1 on the Fedex points list, No. 3 on the Presidents Cup points list and No. 3 on the Ryder Cup points list.

Perry was one of 38 players who played an R9 driver, 14 of whom used the just-introduced R9 460.

In Perry's winning bag*:

Driver: R9 460 9.5°
Fairways: Burner 3-wood, Prototype Raylor® 17.5°
Irons: r7 4 – PW
Wedges: rac 54° and 64°
Footwear: adidas Golf
Apparel: adidas Golf

* PGATour.com
** Darrell Survey model count at Travelers Championship



Harrington takes 2-shot lead at Firestone

AKRON, Ohio (AP) — Padraig Harrington never allowed himself to get down during the worst of times, whether he was missing five straight cuts or finishing toward the bottom of the leaderboard.

He didn't act much differently Thursday after his best round of the year.

Harrington finally saw some results after eight months of tinkering with his swing, making a pivotal par save early that sent him on his way to a 6-under 64 and a two-shot lead in the Bridgestone Invitational.

A boost of confidence? Not really.

"Has no relevance in the overall scheme of things," Harrington said. "It's just one round of golf. That's all it is. It doesn't change the last six months. It won't change the next six months. I wouldn't put too much significance into it, because what if I went out there and shot 76? Would I let it affect tomorrow? I think I would not put much emphasis on the fact that I shot 64. I'm comfortable with it."

What pleased him were the two late birdies - a 25-foot putt on the seventh hole, and one from about the same range just short of the green at No. 8 - that made a good round even better.

It also put him atop the leaderboard for the first time all year, two shots clear of Scott Verplank, Tim Clark and Prayad Marksaeng of Thailand. The group at 67 included Steve Stricker and former Masters champion Zach Johnson.

Verplank played with Harrington, and he was well aware of the stories that documented Harrington's incessant swing changes.

"I know he's struggled a little bit, and he's probably gotten a little too much criticism for working on his game," Verplank said. "But you know what? He's the only one that knows what he needs to do. If today is any indication, then he's doing something right."

Tiger Woods did enough right to open with a 68, the 11th straight time he has broken par in the opening round at Firestone. The world's No. 1 player is going for his seventh victory on this tree-lined course, and he was only four shots behind.

A week ago in the Buick Open, he was tied for 95th after a 1-under 71 in the first round and wound up winning by three shots.

"We were 1-under par, and I think I was in 15th or 17th spot - a little different than last week at 1-under par," Woods said. "You don't have to go super low here, just kind of plod your way along, make a few birdies here and there. And if you get on a little stretch like I did - make two in a row - all of a sudden you're in eighth place. That's what this golf course allows you to do."

Phil Mickelson opened with an even-par 70, along with defending champion Vijay Singh.

Lefty played for the first time since the U.S. Open and had a double bogey on his second hole. He settled into his game on the back nine, however, picking up three birdies to salvage a decent start.

For all his birdies, it was a par that got Harrington going.

He watched a marginal shot take a wicked bounce to the left of the 13th green, his fourth hole of the round, leaving him a tough chip with not much green between him and the flag. He hit it to 5 feet and made the putt.

Those were the pars he wasn't saving all year, and it seemed to free him up for the rest of the day. He surged into a share of the lead with a 12-foot birdie on No. 1 and a two-putt birdie on the par-5 second, then picked up bonus birdies from about 25 feet on the seventh and eighth holes, the latter from just short of the green.

Not since his 66-66 weekend at Oakland Hills last year at the PGA has he made the most out of a round, and those last two birdies certainly brightened his mood.

"I walked off the golf course feeling like I got a couple more shots," Harrington said. "And I feel good about the fact that I got one or two more. If I shot 66, I would have said, 'Well, that's about right.' Sixty-four is a little bonus."

In such tame conditions, 40 players were at par or better.

Woods has never opened with worse than a 68 since he first came to Firestone in 1997, and while he wasn't particularly crisp, he came through with birdies on the 12th and 13th holes to alleviate any stress in his start.

"I hit it good on the front nine in stretches," Woods said. "Starting out, I hit a couple of bad shots there and in the middle part of the round I got it back. A little scratchy coming in, so it was kind of in spurts today."

British Open champion Stewart Cink, playing 18 holes for the first time since his playoff win over Tom Watson at Turnberry, bogeyed two of his last three holes for a 69. His only disappointment? He wasn't introduced as the British Open champion.

Mickelson has been more focused on his family. His wife and mother are battling breast cancer, although they are progressing enough that he could return to golf. Two holes into his round, he missed on a flop shot and a 3-foot putt and took double bogey, and Lefty went out in 38. He turned it around, however, and hopes he's not far off.

"I think when you get in competition, I wasn't trusting myself as much," Mickelson said. "The pins start to get tucked, and you can't miss it in certain spots, and I start kind of steering it a little bit. The last eight holes, I made a few better swings."


Woods takes command at Congressional

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Woods takes command at Congressional


BETHESDA, Md. (AP)—Tiger Woods finished signing for the lowest 36-hole score ever at Congressional Country Club and was met by a couple of AT&T National officials wanting to know his plans for the afternoon.

“I’m done,” Woods said, indicating that he would not be going to the practice range.

The question is whether the 75 other players remaining at Congressional feel the same way.

Woods took a share of the lead with a 3-iron into the par-5 16th green for a two-putt birdie, kept his momentum by playing his five worst holes in 1 under, then finished off a 4-under 66 to build a one-shot lead going into the weekend.

He was at 10-under 130, breaking by one shot the 36-hole score set last year by Tom Pernice Jr. and Jeff Overton. And while he had only a one-shot lead over Rod Pampling (64) halfway through his tournament, history is on his side.

Woods has a 31-6 record on the PGA Tour when he has at least a share of the 36-hole lead, winning the last 11 times dating to the Byron Nelson Championship more than five years ago.

Rata Penuh

Pampling has been around Woods enough not to lose sleep over this. The scrappy Australian has played numerous practice rounds at dawn in the majors with Woods, so nothing surprises him.

“He can be playing great and then you really don’t have a lot of chance of beating him,” Pampling said. “And then he’s just playing so-so and he’s still right there with a chance to win coming down the last nine holes. He’s just amazing how consistent he is.”

On the other end of the spectrum was Anthony Kim.

He couldn’t get to the range fast enough.

Kim opened this tournament with a course-record 62, and with a couple of birdies early in the second round Friday afternoon, he caught Woods atop the leaderboard at 10 under.

But it wasn’t long before Kim started missing fairways, missing greens, missing putts. He slowly fell back, needing a hard-earned birdie on the 16th and a 5-footer for par on his final hole to salvage a 70 that put him alone in third.

“I hate the way I hit the ball today,” he said. “Obviously, I didn’t drive it the way I wanted to and like I did yesterday. So it was a rough day, but I’m glad I got through it, and now I have to go work on it and see what I can figure out.”

Jim Furyk had a 67 and was alone in fourth, while U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover ran off four straight birdies on his way to a 66 that helped him get back into the hunt at 5-under 135.

Woods couldn’t figure out his swing for a short spell in the second round.

That’s when he was at his best.

After tying for the lead with that two-putt birdie at the 16th, this is a snapshot of his next five holes, when he could have easily slipped back into the pack chasing Kim.

He twice hit into the rough and was unable to reach the green. Another tee shot rode the wind into a fairway bunker. He pulled his tee shot on the par-3 second hole on the side of a mound, the wrong side of the pin to miss. And from the middle of the fairway, he came down too steep and sailed his shot to the right, into a hollow of rough.

Woods played those holes in 1-under par.

He steadied himself with pars until hitting a soft sand wedge that skipped to a stop about 2 feet from the hole at No. 8 for one last birdie, and was off to the start he wanted as the “greedy host.”

Jim Furyk tees off on the fourth hole during the second round of the AT&T National golf tournament at Congressional Country Club, Friday, July 3, 2009, in Bethesda, Md.
Jim Furyk tees off on the four…
AP - Jul 3, 6:38 pm EDT

“That’s why the guy is at such a high level,” Glover said after playing two days with Woods. “When things are going bad, he can rely on his short game. He just doesn’t waste any shots. If he’s losing shots, it’s because of a bad break or a bad lie.”

Despite the five birdies, Woods recognized that five-hole stretch as the key to his round.

“That’s how you keep yourself in a golf tournament,” Woods said. “I made a couple of big putts—17, 18, good up-and-down on 2—and it kept me going. I played well early, and it’s all about keeping your momentum.”

He can only hope the momentum carries into the weekend, where Woods will have a chance to win for the third time this year and move atop the FedEx Cup standings for the first time this season.

This is his final tuneup before the British Open, and Woods won his previous two tournaments before majors, at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Memorial, hosted by Jack Nicklaus.

It would be a peculiar hat trick if he were to win all three PGA Tour events where the host is a player—in this case, himself.

Tee it up with Yahoo! Sports Fantasy Golf '09

Tiger moves into the lead at Congressional

BETHESDA, Md. (AP) — Tiger Woods finished signing for the lowest 36-hole score ever at Congressional Country Club and was met by a couple of AT&T National officials wanting to know his plans for the afternoon.

``I'm done,'' Woods said, indicating that he would not be going to the practice range.

The question is whether the 75 other players remaining at Congressional feel the same way.

Woods took a share of the lead with a 3-iron into the par-5 16th green for a two-putt birdie, kept his momentum by playing his five worst holes in 1 under, then finished off a 4-under 66 to build a one-shot lead going into the weekend.

He was at 10-under 130, breaking by one shot the 36-hole score set last year by Tom Pernice Jr. and Jeff Overton. And while he had only a one-shot lead over Rod Pampling (64) halfway through his tournament, history is on his side.

Woods has a 31-6 record on the PGA Tour when he has at least a share of the 36-hole lead, winning the last 11 times dating to the Byron Nelson Championship more than five years ago.

Pampling has been around Woods enough not to lose sleep over this. The scrappy Australian has played numerous practice rounds at dawn in the majors with Woods, so nothing surprises him.

``He can be playing great and then you really don't have a lot of chance of beating him,'' Pampling said. ``And then he's just playing so-so and he's still right there with a chance to win coming down the last nine holes. He's just amazing how consistent he is.''

On the other end of the spectrum was Anthony Kim.

He couldn't get to the range fast enough.

Kim opened this tournament with a course-record 62, and with a couple of birdies early in the second round Friday afternoon, he caught Woods atop the leaderboard at 10 under.

But it wasn't long before Kim started missing fairways, missing greens, missing putts. He slowly fell back, needing a hard-earned birdie on the 16th and a 5-footer for par on his final hole to salvage a 70 that put him alone in third.

``I hate the way I hit the ball today,'' he said. ``Obviously, I didn't drive it the way I wanted to and like I did yesterday. So it was a rough day, but I'm glad I got through it, and now I have to go work on it and see what I can figure out.''

Jim Furyk had a 67 and was alone in fourth, while U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover ran off four straight birdies on his way to a 66 that helped him get back into the hunt at 5-under 135.

Woods couldn't figure out his swing for a short spell in the second round.

That's when he was at his best.

After tying for the lead with that two-putt birdie at the 16th, this is a snapshot of his next five holes, when he could have easily slipped back into the pack chasing Kim.

He twice hit into the rough and was unable to reach the green. Another tee shot rode the wind into a fairway bunker. He pulled his tee shot on the par-3 second hole on the side of a mound, the wrong side of the pin to miss. And from the middle of the fairway, he came down too steep and sailed his shot to the right, into a hollow of rough.

Woods played those holes in 1-under par.

He steadied himself with pars until hitting a soft sand wedge that skipped to a stop about 2 feet from the hole at No. 8 for one last birdie, and was off to the start he wanted as the ``greedy host.''

``That's why the guy is at such a high level,'' Glover said after playing two days with Woods. ``When things are going bad, he can rely on his short game. He just doesn't waste any shots. If he's losing shots, it's because of a bad break or a bad lie.''

Despite the five birdies, Woods recognized that five-hole stretch as the key to his round.

``That's how you keep yourself in a golf tournament,'' Woods said. ``I made a couple of big putts - 17, 18, good up-and-down on 2 - and it kept me going. I played well early, and it's all about keeping your momentum.''

He can only hope the momentum carries into the weekend, where Woods will have a chance to win for the third time this year and move atop the FedEx Cup standings for the first time this season.

This is his final tuneup before the British Open, and Woods won his previous two tournaments before majors, at the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the Memorial, hosted by Jack Nicklaus.

It would be a peculiar hat trick if he were to win all three PGA Tour events where the host is a player - in this case, himself.


Best golf courses for women

Bogey, mulligan and slice included

Golf isn't just for men anymore; 25 percent of all golfers across the country are women. And now, more than ever, golf course managers are catering to both sexes. In honor of summer golf season, we’ve outlined our favorite female-friendly courses from coast to coast.

Woman Golfer

Reynolds Plantation -- Greensboro, Georgia

This historical community has six courses, all perfectly landscaped and bordered by stunning views of nearby Lake Oconee. One of the most popular is the Great Waters Course. Open for nearly two decades, it has played host to a number of professional events including the 2008 PGA Professional Championship. Another one of our faves is the Plantation Course, designed by two former PGAers.
For more information, visit: www.reynoldsplantation.com

Golden Bear Golf Club at Indigo Run -- Hilton Head Island, South Carolina

This much-buzzed-about course is punishing but not without fun. Jack Nicklaus designed the award-winning course himself. What’s more, because the course is built to favor strategy and skill over power, women can keep up with (and even kick the butts of) the men they play with.
For more information, visit: www.clubcorp.com

Kierland Golf Club -- Scottsdale, Arizona

When you have a husband-and-wife set of golf pros on staff (Mike LaBauve, a class A member of the PGA, and Sandy LaBauve, an award-winning Class A member of both the PGA and LPGA), clearly you mean business in making golf male and female friendly. The nine-hole course is great for beginner golfers, and it’s challenging enough for pros who are looking to boost their games.
For more information, visit: www.kierlandgolf.com

Torrey Pines Golf Course -- San Diego, California

Set to host the 2009 Samsung LPGA World Championship, this sprawling two-course club is bound by lush, jaw-dropping landscapes (with mountains to the north and the ocean to the west). And it’s quite common to catch even the most avid golfer stopping to spot some of California's nearby wildlife. We love the recently revamped South Course, with its 7,607 yards and rolling hills (which are challenging but fun).
For more information, visit: www.torreypinesgolfcourse.com

World Woods Golf Club -- Brooksville, Florida

Packed with courses, from two world-class championship ranges -- Pine Barrens and Rolling Oaks -- to a nine-hole short course (perfect for practicing), World Woods frequently has been rated a favorite by female golfers for its lush landscape and smooth-golfing terrain. It’s also a great place to buff up your skills.