Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Euros look to end 'bad spell'


Euros look to end 'bad spell'

When Paul Lawrie hoisted the Claret Jug in '99, it marked the beginning of the end for Europeans in majors.

Originally Published: July 14, 2004
By Bob Harig | Special to ESPN.com
TROON, Scotland -- Darkness was setting in, but the party was just beginning. Paul Lawriehad made up the biggest final-round deficit in major championship history, then won a playoff to capture the 1999 British Open at Carnoustie. He was the toast of Scotland.
And Europe has had nothing to celebrate since.
Not in the Open Championship, which begins Thursday at Royal Troon. Not in any major championship.
Where they're playing

This week:
133rd Open Championship
Site:
Troon, Scotand
Course:
Royal Troon (7,175 yards, par 71).
Television:
Thursday: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. ET (TNT)
Friday.: 7 a.m.-7 p.m. ET (TNT)
Saturday: 7-9 a.m. (TNT); 9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. (ABC)
Sunday: 6-8 a.m. (TNT); 8 a.m.-1:30 p.m. (ABC)
Defending champ:
Ben Curtis


This week:
B.C. Open
Site:
Endicott, N.Y.
Course:
En-Joie GC
(6,974 yards, par 72)
Purse:
$3 million (Winner: $540,000)
Television:
Thursday: 4-6 p.m. ET (USA)
Friday: 4-6 p.m. ET (USA)
Saturday: 3-6 p.m. ET (USA)
Sunday: 3-6 p.m. ET (USA)
Defending champ:
Craig Stadler

This week:
Giant Eagle LPGA Classic
Site:
Vienna, Ohio
Course:
Squaw Creek CC
(6,454 yards, par 72)
Purse:
$1 million (Winner: $150,000)
Television:
None
Defending champ:
Rachel Teske


This week:
Pete Dye West Virginia Classic
Site:
Bridgeport, W.Va.
Course:
Pete Dye Golf Club (7,248 yards, par 72)
Purse:
$600,000 (Winner: $108,500)
Television:
Thursday: 1:30-4 p.m. ET (TGC)
Friday: 1:30-4 p.m. ET (TGC)
Saturday: 5-7:30 p.m. ET (TGC)
Sunday: 5-7:30 p.m. ET (TGC)
Inaugural event
Not a single European has won a major title since Lawrie's triumph. Spain's Jose Maria Olazabal won that year's Masters. Otherwise, you have to go back to the 1996 Masters and Nick Faldo to find a European major winner.
Why?
"We're going through a bad spell," said Scotland'sColin Montgomerie, who was long considered the best bet among Europeans to win a major but had to qualify just to play this week. "People recover and times recover. I think it just so happens that the domination is for the rest of the world right now as opposed to Europe."
"To be honest, we haven't had many guys challenging over the past few years," Faldo said. "There's no real reason why the Europeans shouldn't be challenging. Everybody is talented, but it's the 15th club after that."
Faldo was referring to the mental game, and few had his capacity in that regard. The six-time major winner who captured three Open Championships also had contemporaries who won majors such asSandy LyleBernhard LangerSeve Ballesteros andIan Woosnam.
All of them played most of their golf on the PGA European Tour, which has often been cited as a reason for the malaise. Those players aren't competing against the world's elite week in and week out. Most of the top-ranked players compete on the PGA Tour. Even European tour stalwarts such as Ernie Els and Retief Goosen play full schedules in the United States.
"We had a domination back in the '80s and early '90s, but it seems to have dried up slightly and that will come back," said Montgomerie, who has only one top-10 in 14 Open Championships. "It's just a matter of when and how."
So, who are the contenders? Ireland's Padraig Harrington is the highest-ranked of the European players. Northern Ireland's Darren Clarke has had the most success against top-notch fields, winning two World Golf Championship events. Sergio Garcia, just 24, has contended in a couple of majors and has been expected to be a strong player for years to come. Then there's Paul Casey,Fredrik JacobsonIan PoulterBrian Davis andJustin Rose (who did not qualify for the Open.)
"It's not like we have six in the top 10 at major after major," said Faldo. "Which means if one is up there, he is having to handle an awful lot of pressure. 'Whoa, I'm representing the European Tour here.' If there were five in the top 10, it would be different -- you'd forget about it."
Casey, an Englishman who played college golf at Arizona State, thinks it will take time before Europeans are once again winning majors.
"It's frustrating that there is a bit of a lull just now," said Casey, who tied for sixth in the Masters. "The last European winner of a major was Paul Lawrie. It's sad, really."
Five Things To Watch

1.
Has Tiger Woods ever received so little fanfare heading into a major championship? The 2000 British Open winner has gone eight majors without a victory, and has contended in just two of them.
2.
Ernie Els has seen two great chances to win majors slip away this year. Can he get his fourth major and his second Open Championship?
3.
Phil Mickelson has never contended at a British Open, but his preparation, like at the other majors, has been better than ever.
4.
U.S. Open champion Retief Goosen is flying under the radar again, but he won his first start after the Open and has four British Open top-10s, including '97 at Royal Troon.
5.
At what point does Vijay Singh start to get some heat for not winning majors? He won his second at the 2000 Masters but has struggled to get it done in recent attempts.

THE COURSE: ROYAL TROON
Royal Troon is among the most revered courses in the British Open rotation. The 7,175-yard, par-71 layout that runs alongside the Firth of Clyde has a very basic configuration. The first nine holes (aside from the par-3 eighth, which comes back) run in the same direction, away from the clubhouse, and are downwind. You better do your scoring on those holes. The second nine holes turn around and are played into the prevailing wind. That is where a player must hold on.
"The back nine is just a battle," said Justin Leonard, who won the '97 Open at Troon. "You're just trying to hold the round together, more or less."
For whatever reason, Troon has been good to Americans, who have won the last five Opens played here: Arnold Palmer (1962), Tom Weiskopf (1973), Tom Watson (1982), Mark Calcavecchia (1989) and Leonard (1997). This will be the eighth time that Troon has hosted the Open.
QUICK TAKE
Ben Curtis
Curtis
He won the tournament fair and square, and you must give Ben Curtis his due. But it still remains difficult to view Curtis in any other way than a fluke. Especially when you consider his record before and since last year's British Open.
Curtis barely qualified for the championship at Royal St. George's, then hung around the lead until a birdie binge gave him the advantage that he nearly squandered on the back nine. It wasn't until Thomas Bjorn butchered the par-3 16th that the door opened. And by then, Curtis had completed his round.
And there are more than a few who believe the quirky nature of the course contributed to such an obscure winner.
"This week the best player is going to win,'' Darren Clarke said. "It's a stern test, and chances are it will come from the guys at the top of the world rankings."
Clarke made sure to say that he wasn't bashing Curtis. But you get the idea.
Since the victory, Curtis has just one top-10 finish -- at this year's Memorial. But one thing is certain: they can't take his name off the Claret Jug.
MAILBAG: ASK BOB HARIG
Bob HarigGot a question about the PGA Tour? Ask ESPN.com golf writer Bob Harig, who will answer a few of your inquiries in each installment of This Week in Golf.
            Your Name: 
  Your E-Mail address: 
            Your city: 
Your comment:
Q. A little disappointed in your article about Tiger. I really agree that Phil's game has taken a turn for the better, but to try to put him on an equal stage as Tiger is, well, reaching to say the least. You had done so well in not following the trend of trying to make a rivalry out of two individuals who are STILL miles apart. Tiger has always said he judges himself by the majors. And granted, although he has not played well in a major in a couple of years, he still has eight. EIGHT!!! And the guy is what? 28? Come on, Bob. Phil has one major and is just now starting to really understand what he has to do to win majors. So at the very least, Tiger and Phil's major championship comparison is two years apart -- if we assume Tiger will not win one in the next two years, and Phil wins them all. Even the other big three (Ernie, Vijay and Retief) would have to go on a "major" tear to equal Tiger's total, and again that's assuming Tiger will not come out of his "major" funk and rip off two or three in that same stretch. Appreciate your articles, but you are off-base trying to stoke a rivalry between two players that are still seven majors apart.
John F. Hicks, Jr.
Atlanta

A. The story in question centered around the fact that, now, Phil is acting more like Tiger used to, while Tiger seems to be acting like Phil used to. It has nothing to do with the fact that Woods has seven more majors. At the moment, Mickelson has come to the conclusion that he once approached the game in the wrong manner. He changed his game. Woods, meanwhile, has acted as if there is nothing wrong with his game, when obviously his results show otherwise.
Q. While it may be true that Tiger is acting more like the old Phil, the fact is Tiger doesn't three-putt from six feet on the 17th hole, tied for the lead of the US Open. Just won't ever happen.
Karl
Norman, Okla.
A. Perhaps not. But he did bogey two of the last four holes at last year's British Open to lose by two strokes.
Q. I think all this talk about Michelle Wie is absurd. She has not even proven herself on the LPGA Tour, yet the media, and Wie herself, is talking about playing in more men's tournaments and even trying to qualify for the men's US Open. In fact, two weeks ago at the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links Championship she got beat by another teenager, proving that not only is she not ready for the LPGA, but that she is not even the best teenager playing right now. Why don't we wait for her to actually be competitive in a women's event and maybe even win something before we start making her out to be the best women golfer ever and leave this total nonsense behind us about her trying to compete on the men's tour? What do you think?
Todd Hartranft
Houston
A. If Michelle Wie is going to compete in men's events, it should be in the future, not now. No doubt, she needs to win more against her peers. But her loss at the U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links should not be considered a blow. She made it to the finals of a match play event where anything can happen. She won the tournament last year. As for her inability to compete on the women's tour, facts say otherwise. She finished fourth at the Kraft Nabisco and tied for 13th at the U.S. Women's Open. There are dozens of established LPGA Tour players who would love to have those results. And this is at age 14.

Monty win would be sentimental


Monty win would be sentimental

Candidly honest about his personal and professional life, Colin Montgomerie enters the British Open a sentimental favorite.

Updated: July 14, 2004, 1:20 PM ET
By Tim Rosaforte | Golf Digest
TROON, Scotland -- The two men were leaving the clubhouse at Royal Troon on Wednesday night, rain spitting in their face. "Scotland in July," one man commented. "Cold and Rain." The other man said, "Aye." Collars up they walked toward the R&A tent, where Colin Montgomerie was still receiving handshakes for the speech he just delivered. It was late, but Monty was in no hurry to leave.
One of the traditions at the Open Championship is the Association of Golf Writers (AGW) Dinner. It brings together a Who's Who of golf - Prince Andrew, Tim Finchem, Sir Michael Bonallack, Sergio Garcia, defending champion Ben Curtis, Ryder Cup captain Hal Sutton and PGA Championship host Herb Kohler
Colin Montgomerie
As Monty says, "You can take the boy out of Troon, but you can't take Troon out of the boy."
were on the guest list -- but it is more of a men's smoker, attended by women, where souls are bared, the humor is sharp and, in Montgomerie's case, self-deprecating. Monty was called upon to deliver a speech as a "guest speaker," when in fact he was the hometown boy. He began by saying, "You can take the boy out of Troon, but you can't take Troon out of the boy," and for the next 15 minutes he had the tent enthralled.
It was on the very spot that he learned the game. Born the son of Troon's secretary, Monty carved out a legendary career as a larger-than-life character who came along just as Europe's Big Five of Seve BallesterosNick FaldoBernhard LangerSandy Lyleand Ian Woosnam were heading to their twilights. He was more than just a seven-time winner of the European Tour's Order of Merit. He was the tragic loser of two major championship playoffs, Scotland's only begotten champion and an all-world quote machine. Good or bad, right or wrong, Monty has always been tremendous copy. Now, as he approaches twilight, majorless, a bachelor again, back at Troon, it's hard not to get sentimental about his chances.
"Honest," was the review given by caddie Dave Musgrove, a four-time major winner. Monty made references to his slump, his divorce, his ex-wife's solicitor, his loss of weight and his relationship with the tabloids. "When I play well they refer to me as British," he said. "When I play poorly, I'm Scottish."
Dropping to 71st in the world, he earned one of the last spots for this championship in a qualifier at Sunningdale, advancing in a playoff. He broke a two-year losing streak in March by winning the Caltex Singapore Masters and is reduced to shameless lobbying to make his eighth Ryder Cup team. The captain is former Ryder Cup partner Bernhard Langer. He wants Langer to know how hungry he is to be at Oakland Hills in September. "I'd only require one seat on the plane," he said.
After trying to patch-up his marriage, Monty is resigned to Eimear's decision to end their relationship. It has made him realize you don't heat baked beans in the microwave without removing them from the tin. Hearing of their break up, former Open champion Sandy Lyle commented that his wife served him a week before the 1988 Masters. To expect Montgomerie to win the Open Championship, at age 41, at Troon, would be idyllic. Nobody knows the course better. "You better be three-under at the turn," he warns. His best finish in an Open occurred down the Ayrshire Coast at Turnberry in 1994. That T-8 was his only top-10 in 14 British Opens. His best chance was at the midway point at Royal Lytham in 2001. Going into the weekend well positioned after rounds of 65 and 70, he came home in 73-72 to tie for 12th. Last year at Royal St. George's he withdrew.
The R&A was feeling cheeky with the pairings and put Monty together with Thomas Björn. Twice in the last six months they have twice raised swords in competition, at the Volvo Masters last August at Valderrama and again at the Johnnie Walker Classic in Bangkok in late January. Björn, who opened the door of opportunity at last year's Open for Ben Curtis, has been Monty's Ryder Cup teammate long enough to understand the man.
"With my temper and Colin's temper it just comes out," said Björn of their confrontations. "A lot of people would have dealt with it differently but we've spoken about it and everything is as it was before. It's not a question of saying, 'sorry.' It's a question of saying what we felt happened out there and we are going to play a lot of golf together. We've got to make sure it doesn't happen again. I have no bad thoughts about the person. I really don't."
You really can't. It's just the Troon in the boy. It's just Monty.
Tim Rosaforte is a senior writer for Golf World magazine

13-under 131 at Amateur PubLinx a record


13-under 131 at Amateur PubLinx a record

Updated: July 14, 2004, 1:04 AM ET
Associated Press
MAPLE GROVE, Minn. -- Danny Green of Jackson, Tenn., shot a 68 Tuesday to set a 36-hole stroke-play record of 13-under 131 and win medalist honors in the U.S. Amateur Public Links tournament.
Green, the 1999 U.S. Mid-Amateur champion and runner-up at the Public Links in 2001, had a tournament record of 9-under 63 Monday. His two-round total was a shot better than the record shared by three Public Links players as well as four others in USGA competition.
Ryan Moore of Puyallup, Wash., the 2002 champion and 2004 NCAA individual champ, finished medal play one stroke back after a 67 Tuesday.
Eleven players met in playoff for the final eight places in the 64-player match-play field. They were tied at 148.
The first round of match play begins Wednesday, with the 36-hole championship match between the top two players set for Saturday.

Copyright 2004 by The Associated Press

Giant Eagle LPGA Classic past champions


Giant Eagle LPGA Classic past champions

Updated: July 13, 2004, 5:31 PM ET
The tournament began in 1990 as the Phar-Mor, becoming the Youngstown-Warren LPGA Classic in 1993 and the Giant Eagle LPGA Classic in 1997 (x-won in playoff; y-weather-shortened).
Past champions
YearWinnerScoreCourse
2003Rachel Teske204 (12-under)Squaw Creek CC
2002Hi Hyun Kim202 (14-under)Squaw Creek CC
2001Dorothy Delasin203 (13-under)Squaw Creek CC
2000Dorothy Delasin205 (11-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1999Jackie Gallagher-Smith199 (17-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1998Se Ri Pak201 (15-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1997Tammie Green203 (13-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1996Michelle McGann200 (16-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1995Michelle McGann205 (11-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1994Tammie Green206 (10-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1993Nancy Lopez203 (13-under)Avalon Lakes GC
1992Betsy King209 (7-under)Squaw Creek CC
1991Deb Richard207 (9-under)Squaw Creek CC
1990Beth Daniel207 (9-under)Squaw Creek CC

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