Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Russell Henley gets PGA Tour career off to record start with victory at Sony Open

Russell Henley at the Sony Open
Getty Images
Russell Henley finished at 24-under 256, breaking by four shots the Sony Open scoring record.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
HONOLULU -- Russell Henley felt like a rookie at the Sony Open. He sure didn't play like one.
He was so nervous Sunday afternoon that he couldn't feel his arms and legs, and everything around him seemed to be moving at warp speed.
Only when he finished his record-setting performance with one last birdie did he realize what happened. And even then, he didn't know what to say.
The first player in 10 years to win in his debut as a PGA Tour rookie.
The second-best score for a 72-hole tournament in PGA Tour history, and a record score at the Sony Open by four shots.
Finishing with five straight birdies -- only one of them inside 10 feet -- for a 29 on the back nine and a 7-under 63, the lowest finish by a Sony Open winner.
And yes, that tee time reserved for him at the Masters in April.
"I'm pretty speechless," Henley said. "I was trying not to think about Augusta out there because I just kept telling myself, `This is a long year, you're going to play this game a long time, and be patient, it doesn't have to happen now.' Everything I could to psyche myself out of thinking about winning. It worked."
The back nine was simply surreal.
Henley won by three shots over Tim Clark, who birdied seven of his last 11 holes and still made up only one shot on the rookie from Georgia.
"When you get up close and watch a guy play ... if that's how he putts all the time, whew! It's over," Clark said.
And it was.
Tied for the lead with fellow rookie Scott Langley to start the final round, Henley seized control with a birdie on the opening hole and then poured it on at the end.
Henley had a two-shot lead with seven holes to play when he calmly sank a 10-foot par putt on the 12th, and he began to pull away with a 45-foot birdie putt on the 14th.
When the rookie rolled in an 18-foot birdie putt on the 17th to stay three shots ahead, Clark started laughing. There wasn't anything else he could do.
"He just never seemed to put a foot wrong, and when he did, he made those par putts," Clark said. "That's when you know a guy is comfortable, when he's making those 8- to 10-footer for par. But I still got on the 15th hole and said, `Well, let's finish with four birdies and see what happens.' And sure enough, he birdied the last four, too. When a guy plays that well and beats you, you just have to be happy for them."
Henley finished at 24-under 256, breaking by four shots the Sony Open scoring record held by Brad Faxon in 2001 and John Huston in 1998. It was the second-lowest score for a 72-hole tournament in PGA Tour history, two shots behind Tommy Armour III in 2003 at the Texas Open.
And that wasn't the only mark Henley left on Waialae Country Club. He set tournament records for the low 36-hole score after his 63-63 start, he shared the 54-hole record with Langley and set another tournament record with the lowest final round by a champion.
Welcome to the big leagues, kid.
He became the first PGA Tour rookie to win his debut since Garrett Willis in the 2001 Tucson Open, which was held the same week as the winners-only event in Kapalua. And the way he putts, there's no telling where this will lead.
For starters, the 23-year-old from Macon, Ga., can add a local event to his schedule -- he's going to the Masters in April.
"I don't really know what happened, honestly," Henley said. "This is the most nervous I've ever been. That's the hardest thing I've ever done. It's been my goal to make it to the Masters my whole life. I'm kind of speechless right now."
He then acknowledged his parents and his girlfriend, watching from home. Henley spent his first week as a tour member on his own, and that's about how he looked on Sunday at Waialae. No one was particularly close to him.
Clark, finally feeling healthy after a mysterious elbow injury after his runner-up finish at the Sony Open in 2011, shot 63. Charles Howell III closed with a 66 to tie for third with Langley, who birdied his last two holes for a 70.
"I wish I would have played a little bit better today and made some more putts," said Langley, who missed three birdie putts of 5 feet on the front nine. "But Russell played so awesome. I don't even know if I could have caught him."
Henley only looked to be in big trouble when he hooked his tee shot well left on the 16th, flirting with out of bounds.
No problem. He hammered a pitching wedge from 160 yards over a large tree and a row of royal pines to 12 feet and turned trouble into a birdie.
On the strength of his Web.com season last year -- two wins and No. 3 on the money list -- the win allowed Henley to crack the top 50 in the world ranking.
That should be enough to get him into the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship for the top 64 in the world, with the qualifying date only a month away, and he should be set for the other WGC at Doral. The win qualifies him for Firestone in August, along with the PGA Championship.
Not bad for his PGA Tour debut.
Then again, the Georgia kid has been on a roll. In his past five tournaments dating to end of September -- four of those on the Web.com Tour -- Henley is 73-under par. His scoring average in those five events is 67.15.
Henley seized control immediately with an approach that barely cleared the bunker and settled 3 feet away for birdie. For Langley, it was a struggle from the start. He went over the green and into the rough with a lie that looked as if it might jump on him.
Instead, he decelerated and moved it only about 10 feet, chipped to 5 feet and watched the bogey putt swirl into the cup. At least that one went in.
Despite falling two behind after one hole, Langley had ample opportunity to make up ground, except that his stroke was quick and he missed short birdie chances.
When they made the turn, Henley had a two-shot lead.
Clark got in the game by running off three straight birdies around the turn to get within two shots.
No one else came particularly close. Howell, twice a runner-up at the Sony Open, made a 15-foot eagle putt on the ninth to get within one shot, but only as long as it took Henley to two-putt for birdie on the ninth and smash a drive on the 10th that set up a pitch-and-putt birdie.
Pat Perez and Matt Kuchar also put themselves in good position in case Henley was to fold. That never materialized, and never looked as if it even would -- not with that putting stroke. Henley had 33 one-putt greens for the tournament, seven of them over the final nine holes.
"I can't imagine what people at home watching this tournament saw," Clark said. "That's kind of what we were feeling out there."

Seung-yul Noh leads Deutsche Bank, Tiger Woods two back after best start in three years

Tiger Woods at the Deutsche Bank Championship
Getty Images
Tiger Woods ran off six straight birdies in the middle of his opening round Friday at TPC Boston.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
NORTON, Mass. -- Tiger Woods had his lowest opening round in three years Friday in the Deutsche Bank Championship. It still wasn't enough to be low man in Sean Foley's coaching stable.
Seung-yul Noh, a rising star from South Korea in his first season on the PGA Tour, ran off four straight birdies early in his round and closed with back-to-back birdies on the TPC Boston for a 9-under 62.
That gave him a one-shot lead over Chris Kirk, whose 23 putts included an eagle on the new 18th hole.
Woods wasn't too shabby. He stirred up a big gallery on a glorious summer day in New England with six straight birdies, which featured four putts of at least 12 feet and flop shot executed so perfectly that it cleared a steep bunker and landed in an area of the green no larger than a hula hoop. His lone bogey on the final hole gave him a 7-under 64, putting him in a three-way tie for third with Jeff Overton and Ryan Moore.
The average score was just under 70 on a perfect day for scoring, except for the deceptive wind that swirled through the trees.
Rory McIlroy struggled off the tee, though he judged one of the lies in the rough beautifully on the ninth hole, a 7-iron into tap-in range that led to a 65.
Noh stole the show, even if hardly anyone was paying attention or was not really sure who he was.
"Some people say Kevin Na, like, `Go Kevin,'" Noh said.
The 21-year-old from South Korea won his first Asian Tour title at age 17, and he chose to come over to America this year to ease his travel. He made it through Q-School in December, and on Friday turned in his strongest PGA Tour round to date.
"Everything good today," Noh said.
He went to work with Foley in May, mentioning the roster of clients as one of his reasons -- Woods, Hunter Mahan, Justin Rose.
"He's a good kid," Mahan said after a much-needed 68. "If Foley says, `Do this 1,000 times,' he'll go home and do it 1,000 times."
The start was more meaningful for Overton, whose game has practically disappeared since he played on the Ryder Cup team two years ago. He is No. 83 in the FedExCup standings, and only the top 70 advance next week to the third playoff event at Crooked Stick in Indiana -- his home state.
"I'm constantly getting a lot of great text messages and people say, `Hey, we're really excited to see you at Crooked Stick,' just the whole Hoosier nation," Overton said. "It's just going to be fun if I can get into the event."
He had his own birdie streak, only on the opposite end of the course from Woods. Overton made five straight birdies through the 16th hole, and then added one more birdie on the 18th hole for a 64 that put him atop the leaderboard with Woods from the morning session.
Woods played with Barclays winner Nick Watney and Brandt Snedeker, two players who are trying to make enough of an impression on Davis Love III to be selected as Ryder Cup captain's picks on Tuesday. Snedeker scrambled his way to a respectable 69. Watney, who has never finished higher than 33rd on the TPC Boston, never looked comfortable in his round of 72.
Dustin Johnson, another candidate to get one of the four Ryder Cup selections, opened with a 67.
Rickie Fowler overcame a rugged start to salvage a 71. Jim Furyk and Steve Stricker, likely to get two of the picks, each had a 69.
Getting off to a good start is nothing new for Woods. This was the 14th time in 18 tournaments this year that he was at par or better. Lately, it's been about the finishes. Even though Woods has won three times this year -- the most of anyone on the PGA Tour -- he has turned in some peculiar weekends. Twice he was tied for the lead at majors going into the final two rounds and stumbled. Last week at Bethpage Black, he had a 72-76 weekend to drop into the middle of the pack.
Woods doesn't seem bothered by all this. He attributed last week to extreme conditions on the greens at Bethpage Black in the third round, and a final round that simply got away from him on a three-hole stretch on the back nine.
"It wasn't like I was hitting a lot of awful shots," he said. "I just needed a couple putts to go my way, and it didn't happen. I should be right around par, and it turns into an over-par round. Today was about the same as I have been playing pretty much all summer, just go out there and playing pretty consistent. It was just a nice, solid round."
There was a stretch when it all looked so easy.
Woods hit a full swing, flop shot behind the 12th green to a few feet away to save par, the only time he was seriously in trouble. He hit a high cut with a 5-iron to a tough pin on the par-3 11th for birdie from 15 feet, and he holed an 18-foot birdie putt on the 13th.
The streak began with a 6-iron to the middle of the 18th green for a two-putt birdie. He rolled in birdie putts from the 12-foot to 18-foot range on the next three holes, and while he nearly holed out with a wedge on No. 5, his best work came at the 293-yard fourth hole.
Woods can reach the green with a 3-wood, but he felt the wind gust into his face, and opted for a driver, playing for a baby cut to take off some distance and get it into the front bunker for a relatively easy up-and-down. Instead, it came a yard short of the sand, and he had to play a high flop to a tiny section of the green that ran away from him.
"I had to play an all-out shot to try to keep it on the green," he said. "I went for it, and it came off."
His bid for a seventh straight birdie -- the last time he had a streak that long was the third round at the 2005 Masters that carried into Sunday morning -- was a 12-footer up the hill on the sixth hole. He took a step toward the hole as the ball was a foot away, sure it was going to drop, and stopped in his tracks as the ball turned slightly to the left. He spun around and removed his cap in disbelief.
As many as he was making, perhaps it was a shock to see one miss.
"Unfortunately, it just wiggled about a half-ball left, where I thought it was going to wiggle about a half-ball right," he said.
The round ended on a sour note, with a 7-iron as the wind briefly died. The ball went into the collar of the green, sitting down just enough that he tried to swing hard enough to generate speed and spin the ball. It didn't work out, and the chip ran 12 feet by. He missed for his only bogey, and tossed his putter at the bag in disgust. Anyone who had not seen the previous 17 holes might have thought it was another tough day at the office.
Instead, it was his lowest score since a 64 in the opening round of the 2009 AT&T National at Congressional.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

2014 WGC-Accenture Match Play results: Rickie Fowler's big week finishes with another win

2014 WGC-Accenture Match Play results: Rickie Fowler's big week finishes with another win

Casey Sapio-USA TODAY Sports
Rickie Fowler caps a successful week by winning his consolation match with Ernie Els, the longshot No. 14 seed securing third place from a field of almost all the top players in the world.
Rickie Fowler didn't win the WGC Accenture Match Play Championship this week, but the fact that he played six matches was a win in an of itself and was the biggest surprise of the tournament.
Fowler had missed three straight cuts coming into this week, hobbling as a No. 14 seed to a first round slaughter at the hands of Ian Poulter, considered by most to be the best match play golfer in the world. But Fowler started on Wednesday by knocking Poulter out in the first round, the biggest upset of the first 32 matches that day. He then backed that up by beating the hottest player in the world this season, Jimmy Walker, who was just the fourth player in the last 25 years to get three wins in his first eight events. Walker is almost certainly headed for Ryder Cup spot and should have a stranglehold on the top of the FedExCup Standings for at least the first half of the year, but Fowler got hot again for the second straight huge upset.
His third round match against Sergio Garcia was marred by the Spaniard's bizarre decision to concede a 17-foot putt, offering a good-good resolution with his own ball just six feet away. Fowler gladly took the halve from that disadvantageous position, and then came back from a 3-down deficit to win it on the 18th green. Fowler staged another comeback on Saturday against Jim Furyk in his elite 8 match, winning the 17th hole to pull even and then taking the 18th to play his way into Sunday.

It was a shocking development for Fowler, who, over the last 12 months or so, has hit a bit of a low point in his young career. He's a high profile player with lots of fans and endorsement deals, but he's got just one win so far and hasn't contended over the past year. It got particularly ugly at the start of this season, but Fowler has been working through swing changes with guru Butch Harmon.
Perhaps some of those alterations with "Butchy" took shape this week? He ran into the indomitable Jason Day in the semis, and he never led with the Aussie No. 2 seed winning on the 16th green, 3-up. But Fowler was undeterred, and came back in the consolation match to knock off Ernie Els, another player not expected to make much noise this week. Fowler beat Els on the 19th hole, and even though it was a third place match, it clearly meant something to him as he looked relieved and ecstatic to take his second game of the day. It would be great for golf if a young marketable star like Fowler started to make a run at these big time events and this week could be the turning of a corner for Rickie.

Heres what a Masters invitation looks like

Heres what a Masters invitation looks like

PGA.com 
The final match of the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship signals the end of the West Coast Swing. Next up is the cross-country trek to the Florida Swing -- which marks the unofficial beginning of the run-up to the Masters. And make no mistake, the season's first major is already on an awful lot of minds, even now, seven weeks away. Every player knows when he qualifies for Augusta National. But never does the Masters feel more real than when your official invitation arrives in the mail. Just the other day, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano of Spain tweeted out a photo of his invitation, with this caption: "Opening your mail box and finding this #priceless" I'm posting this in case you've never seen an actual Masters invitation. My favorite part is down in the lower left-hand corner, where it says RSVP. What would it take to RSVP no? Yeah, I can't think of anything, either. Here's Gonzo's tweet:
--- Gonzalo Fdez-Castao (@gfcgolf) February 21, 2014

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Jaye Marie Green wins LPGA Tour Q-school

Jaye Marie Green wins LPGA Tour Q-school

AP - Sports
2012 U.S. Women's Open - Round One
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Jaye Marie Green completed a runaway victory in the LPGA Tour qualifying tournament Sunday, finishing with a record 29-under 331 total for a 10-stroke margin.
The 19-year-old Green, from Boca Raton, closed with a 4-under 68 on LPGA International's Jones Course. She broke the event 90-hole mark of 18-under 342 set by Stacy Lewis in 2008.
''This is going to be a week that I'll always remember,'' Green said. ''I was the most nervous on that last green when I didn't have to be, but I really was. But when that putt fell I was just speechless and I think I was just seeing stars really. It was a cool feeling. I just felt really relieved.''
The top 20 earned Category 12 status, the next 26 players received membership in Category 17, and the other 22 players who made the 72-hole cut got Symetra Tour status.
South Korea's Mi Rim Lee was second after a 69. Tiffany Joh finished third at 15 under after a 71.
Amy Anderson, the 21-year-old former North Dakota State star who won a record 20 college titles, was fourth at 14 under after a 69.
''This is not what I expected at all,'' Anderson said. ''The week or so leading up I was actually struggling with my game quite a bit. So I was thinking I would sneak in by the skin of my teeth. To come out here and just play well all week was really exciting and took the stress out of it.''
Green bogeyed the par-3 third hole, ending a 59-hole run without a bogey. She rebounded with birdies on Nos. 5 and 6 to make the turn at 1 under. She birdied Nos. 10 and 11, dropped a stroke on the par-3 14th and closed with birdies on the final two holes.
''It's been a dream come true really,'' Green said. ''Since I was a little girl it's what I've always wanted to do. Having my dad beside me, couldn't have been a better feeling really. Having all my family here is just awesome. I'm so overwhelmed right now, I don't how to react.''
Green, who lost to Lydia Ko in the final of the 2012 U.S. Women's Amateur, played on the Symetra Tour this year. She had three top-10 finishes and finished the season 29th on the money list.
''It really is the stepping stone to getting into the LPGA Tour,'' Green said. ''Just the things that I've learned, like the key elements that you need to be out there was a huge help. For that to happen so fast, like me being here today after my first season, I wasn't expecting it to come that fast.''