Monday, September 9, 2013

Muirfield produces the worthiest of Open champs


Muirfield produces the worthiest of Open champs

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PGA.COM July 16, 2013 2:47 PM

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One lucky golfer will find a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow come Sunday at Muirfield.(Getty …


By Paul Newberry, Associated Press

GULLANE, Scotland -- From behind the 18th green, Paul Azinger stared out toward a golf course where he nearly won a major title, where so many greats of the game have carved their names on the claret jug.

Sure, it's a classic links layout -- right by the sea, filled with inexplicable humps in the fairways, terrifying bunkers stuck in the strangest of spots and knee-high grass ready to punish a wayward shot.

But Muirfield is different.

There are all those quirky elements that make it worthy of an Open Championship. There's just -- uhhh, how should we put this? -- not TOO many of them.

"It's not a luck-fest out there," Azinger said Monday, as the world's top golfers arrived en masse to prepare for the third major of the season. "If you make the ball do what you want it to do, you'll play well."

Maybe that's the reason the roster of winners looks more like a who's who of the sport.

Harry Vardon. Walter Hagen. Gary Player. Jack Nicklaus. Lee Trevino. Tom Watson. Nick Faldo. Ernie Els.

And let's not forget Harold Hilton, James Braid and Henry Cotton.

Of the 13 players to win the Open at this course east of Edinburgh, 11 are enshrined in the World Golf Hall of Game (and you can make a pretty strong case that another, Ted Ray, should be). Only Alf Perry looks a bit out of place on this elite list, and even he was a three-time member of Britain's Ryder Cup team in the 1930s.

Not a stiff in the bunch.

"That's not a fluke," Faldo said. "You have to have a good mind game. You have to know where you're going to land it, where the next bounce is and where the run is."

And, of course, have the ability to pull it off.

Faldo recalled his second victory at Muirfield in 1992, with Fanny Sunesson on the bag.

"That's what we worked out so well," he said, "where to land the ball 20 yards short of the green, which way it would kick, and obviously where it would stop. That's part of the calculations. But you've got to land the ball from A to B first. And that has to be a solid shot. If that's a mis-hit, the ball doesn't react close to what you intend. You look at all those guys, we all hit it pretty darn solid in our era."

At the other eight courses in the Open rotation, that's not always the case.

A crazy bounce here. An unexpected roll there. Suddenly, the door is open for an improbable winner, someone like Ben Curtis or Todd Hamilton.

Muirfield is more straightforward, with few blind shots, and the way it's laid out -- with two loops of nine holes running in opposite directions -- evens out the devilish breezes, assuming they don't suddenly change directions during the course of a round.


"It's not going to bad luck you to death," said Azinger, who made that assessment even though he bogeyed the final two holes of the 1987 Open and lost to Faldo by a single stroke. "It's a terrific course."

Given what has happened here before, this would seem the most appropriate spot for Tiger Woods, ranked No. 1 in the world, to end the longest major-less drought of his career -- more than five years and counting. If not him, how about second-ranked Rory McIlroy, just 24 but already a two-time major champion and less than a year removed from his runaway victory at the PGA Championship?

But Woods is coming back from an injured elbow, so no one is quite sure what kind of shape he'll be in when the shots start counting for real at Muirfield. Even when healthy, the aura of invincibility he once held over the rest of the field has slowly faded away since the last of his 14 major titles at the 2008 U.S. Open.

Woods insisted Tuesday that his elbow is fully healed. Even though he shot his worst round as a professional at Muirfield, an 81 in miserable conditions during the third round of the 2002 Open, he has great respect for the course.

"I mean, look at the list of past champions, the number of Hall of Famers that have won here," Woods said. "You can't just hit one way. You have to shape it both ways and really control the shots. ... You're playing almost in kind of a circle, in a sense, because you've got so many different angles and so many different winds. You have to be able to maneuver the ball both ways."

That doesn't bode well for McIlroy. His game is in disarray after he switched to new clubs and a new ball this season, in addition to dealing with off-the-course issues involving his management team.

"I'm very surprised that just 11 months (since that eight-shot win at Kiawah Island) he would've become an afterthought," Azinger said. "He is adrift."

Woods still draws the biggest crowds, and there's no denying his fellow competitors keep an eye out for him on the leaderboard. But, while he's resumed his dominating ways in regular PGA Tour events since changing his swing and battling through well-documented personal problems, he no longer looks unbeatable on the biggest stages.

"Tiger is in a different mode where he's winning regular tournaments, but he gets to the majors and something happens," Faldo said. "The self-belief you have to have, maybe there's a little dent in there. He hits the wrong shot at the wrong time, where before Tiger would hit the right shot at the right time."

Azinger said Woods' issues are more physical than mental at the moment, all because of a body that seems to be aging much quicker than his still relatively young age (37).

"You can't play good golf," Azinger said, "with a bad elbow."

There's nothing wrong with McIlroy physically, but he's suddenly playing second fiddle to players such as Adam Scott and Justin Rose, the winners of the year's first two majors.

When Scott captured the Masters in a playoff, McIlroy was never much of a factor on the way to finishing 25th. When Rose held on to win the U.S. Open, the young Irishman limped to the end in 41st.

From Azinger's perspective, McIlroy lost the baseline on his game when he changed up all that equipment. When something goes wrong, he's not sure what might be contributing to the problem -- the club or the ball. He's trying to figure it all out again, and that's not easy to do when you're in the midst of the season, even for a player with his enormous skills.

Faldo, meanwhile, urged McIlroy to eliminate some of the distractions that have cropped up since he surged to stardom.

"You have a window of opportunity," the three-time Open champion said. "That's my only words of wisdom to Rory. You have, say, a 20-year window as an athlete. Concentrate on golf, nothing else. Hopefully when you retire, in your 40s or 50s, you have another 40 years to enjoy it. So just concentrate on golf."

Even if Woods falters again and McIlroy continues to struggle, Muirfield will likely produce a worthy champion.

That's just the way it goes at this place.

©2013 by STATS LLC and Associated Press.

Graeme McDowell seeks cure for inconsistency at Muirfield


Graeme McDowell seeks cure for inconsistency at Muirfield

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PGA.COM July 16, 2013 2:48 PM

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"I haven't fed off my victories maybe the way I needed to the last few months," McDowell said, "(but) …


By Steve Douglas, Associated Press

GULLANE, Scotland -- If Graeme McDowell is hanging around Muirfield beyond Friday, the rest of the Open Championship field had better watch out.

The Northern Irishman has been consistently inconsistent since the Masters in April, missing five cuts and claiming three wins in his eight events. He's either back home from a tournament on a Saturday or raising aloft a trophy on a Sunday.

So, which way is he leaning for the Open?

"I think links-style golf is in my blood," McDowell said Tuesday, "and I always feel like I revert back well to it. I naturally and instinctively play well in the wind."

Given the long-range forecast, the wind may not be too much of a factor this week but the seventh-ranked McDowell clearly fancies his chances on Scotland's east coast.

He has just one top-10 finish in his nine Opens -- that coming last year when he played in the final pair on the Sunday at Lytham but shot 75 to tie for fifth -- but his recent wins at the French Open and the World Matchplay Championship in Bulgaria have come on what he described as "linksy" courses.

And then there was a victory at the RBC Heritage at Hilton Head, standing tall on a wind-swept Sunday before outlasting Webb Simpson in a playoff.

McDowell grew up playing links golf at Royal Portrush, the home course of 2011 Open champion Darren Clarke, and feels right at home every time the -- links-based -- world's oldest major comes around.


He labels Muirfield as a "tactician's golf course," something right up his alley.

"If I ever design a course, it will be a lot of different clubs off tees, and irons and woods, and something that kind of gets the brain working a little bit," he said. "This is certainly a game of chess this week."

Given all those missed cuts -- six in 13 events in 2013 -- no wonder McDowell described himself as "feeling fresh" and looking forward to a month-long stint that will take in two majors plus a WGC event in Akron.

He will marry his fiancee, Kristin, in the Bahamas in September and he'll hope to have another major locked away by then, to add to his U.S. Open win in 2010.

"I haven't fed off my victories maybe the way I needed to the last few months," McDowell said, "(but) I think my season has not felt as inconsistent as perhaps it's read. Those missed cuts, if you look at them, I missed by one at Augusta, missed by a couple at Players, missed by one at the Irish (Open), missed by a couple at Wentworth (in the PGA Championship), missed by a couple of hundred at the U.S. Open.

"It hasn't really been as bad as it's read. I felt fairly decent with my game most of the year."

And if you do see McDowell gazing into thin air during the opening two rounds at Muirfield, don't worry. He's probably just admiring the swings of the two men he's playing alongside.

"I've played enough golf with Tiger Woods to know what to expect on Thursday and Friday. He's always a great guy to play with, very complimentary. He's the best player in the world and maybe the best player ever," McDowell said.

"Louis Oosthuizen (is) one of my very good friends," he added. "I tweeted early in the week that Tiger and Louis' golf swings are probably two of my favorite swings in the world. So that's never bad to play beside two guys with the rhythm and golf swings like they have."

©2013 by STATS LLC and Associated Press.

Combustible Siem doesn't snap so often these days


Combustible Siem doesn't snap so often these days

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Tony Jimenez July 16, 2013 4:33 PM

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Germany's Marcel Siem hits to the 13th green during the second round of the 2013 U.S. Open golf championship …


By Tony Jimenez

GULLANE, Scotland (Reuters) - Marcel Siem once snapped his driver in two in a typical fit of pique but the German is not such a combustible character these days and his maturing behavior is getting its reward with improving results.

The 33-year-old, who won the 2006 World Cup for his country in partnership with former world number oneBernhard Langer, has won two European Tour events in the last 12 months and is confident of doing well at this week's British Open.

"Since the birth of my daughter 2-1/2 years ago I take golf much more seriously," the pony-tailed Siem told Reuters in an interview. "I used to throw away so many good results because of my emotions.

"I think positive emotions are good to show. The spectators like it, they give me high-fives, and in the U.S. they really like me because of that.

"On the other side I'm doing a lot better with the negative emotions. I'm trying not to let them grow too much and accept I'm not a robot and that I'm allowed to make bad golf shots and get bad bounces and not let them ruin my whole round."

Siem is up to 60th in the world rankings after winning the 2012 French Open and this year's Trophee Hassan in Morocco.

That represents something of a career turnaround for a player who once had a group of children in tears due to his on-course antics.

"It was at one of my home tournaments in Cologne about eight years ago," said Siem. "It was my last hole and I was about to miss the cut and broke my driver over my knee.

"There were a lot of kids watching and they started to cry. I thought to myself, 'That's the last time I do that'. I went up to the kids, gave them a hug and said sorry.

"I suddenly realized how much impact our behavior has on kids. I will never behave badly like that in front of them again.

"That was the worst incident and I nearly had tears in my eyes because I saw the little ones crying. After that I said I'd try to be an idol from now on and that was a turning point for me, big time."

Siem, who will be making only his third appearance at the British Open this week, takes his golf much more seriously these days.

LIGHT SWITCH


"I love the game," he explained. "I'm 33 now, I'm not the youngest out here and I'm not the oldest but I've still got a lot to learn from golf and life in general.

"I've been working a lot harder since my daughter was born. It was like someone turned the light switch on in my life and I thought, 'Right I have to look after my wife and my kid now'.

"I never used to think about money, I never had a house, I lived in apartments, but since my wife became pregnant I decided to take life more seriously," said Siem who is a golf ambassador for Mercedes-Benz, an official patron of the British Open.

"I go to the gym in the morning, work hard in the afternoon, work again in the gym in the evening and I think that makes me a better golfer."

Langer is the complete antitheses of his compatriot - calm, sanguine and methodical - and although Siem said he could not describe the 55-year-old as his best friend, it is clear the veteran is an inspiration.

"We've not had a lot of contact since the World Cup but then last year I phoned him when I was in Florida and he was in Boca Raton, literally five minutes away," said Siem.

"We both had a week off and I started practicing with him. He is so calm and from his whole attitude I learned a lot from him about golf.

"The way he talks, it's so different to others, and it's worth a lot to me, golf-wise and human being-wise," said Siem.

"I went to church with him as well. I hadn't been for a long time and it was a pretty cool experience. He's great, he has so much knowledge and I try to see him as much as I can."

Siem still wears his heart on his sleeve on the course but is keen to point out he is a different man when he is not at work.

"I get so many comments on my Facebook page from people who say that from my reactions it looks like my ball has gone out of bounds or in the water but it's literally two meters from the flag," said the German.

"The reason is that when I don't hit the ball in the center of the club it feels odd, it doesn't feel right and I'll go 'arrrggghhhh'. It's the perfectionist in me.

"I'm a feel player and when something's wrong with my feel I show it. I know it's wrong and it's not good for my golf but I'm getting a lot better now.

"I've had two top-10 finishes in my last three tournaments and I'm feeling really good going into the Open."

(Editing by Ken Ferris)

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