Effective Practice
Cigars Direct
The Art of Scoring
Top Sport Events Schedule 2011
Auburn vs. Oregon
THE AUSTRALIAN OPEN (TENNIS): January 17th-30th
SUPER BOWL: February 6th
NCAA BASKETBALL MARCH MADNESS: March 15th-April 4th
THE MASTERS: April 7th-10th
THE FRENCH OPEN (TENNIS): May 23rd-June 5th
NBA FINALS: June
STANLEY CUP FINALS: June
THE U.S. OPEN (GOLF): June 16th-19th
WIMBLEDON: June 20th-July 3rd
THE BRITISH OPEN: July 14th-17th
THE PGA CHAMPIONSHIP: August 11th-14th
FED EX CUP PLAYOFFS: August 25th-September 25th
U.S. OPEN (TENNIS): August 29th-September 11th
WORLD SERIES: October
THE PRESIDENTS CUP: November 17th-20th
Molding The Future
2011 PGA Merchandise Show: The Disney World of Golf
This January marks the 18th official PGA Merchandise Show, a conglomerate of about a thousand golf retailers showcasing everything from new equipment to the hottest looks in fashion.There will be over 100,000 golf products in one place, educational seminars, Demo Day and short game competitions. What would a golf show be without a friendly challenge?
Over the next few weeks, Golf for Beginners will introduce you to exhibitors, products and special events which could very well turn O.C. Convention Center into its very own Golf Disney World!
Probably the most important place to start our journey are reasons why exhibitors wait to introduce their new offerings until the PGA Merchandise Show...aside from the obvious New Year, new product consideration.
Brian Whitcomb, former PGA of America President and owner of Lost Tracks Golf Club states,
"For me, the PGA Merchandise Show is all about the new and exciting products and services that are available."
John Lyberger, PGA Director of Golf at Congressional CC in Bethesda MD agreed with Mr. Whitcomb adding Networking and Education, to his list of priorities.
"Networking gives me the opportunity to reconnect with my peers.
From tournament prizes, favors or solutions, there are a plethora of items at the PGA Show. Apparel is an important part of the Show. The demo day really allows me and my team the chance to preview the latest equipment that the industry has to offer.
Learning each day is the key ingredient to one's success. With so many talented professionals in our business and industry...taking advantage of educational opportunities can be rewarding on many levels."
Who attends the PGA Merchandise Show? Any golf-related individual or business looking to build strategic alliances, introduce a new product or service, discover/set industry trends, learn about new technology and just about anything from travel to equipment in the world of golf.
One of the most fascinating events of the 2011 PGA Merchandise Show is sure to be the New Inventors Spotlight. Located right on the Show Floor, you will be able to see up-close, the newest golf-related inventions before they hit the market and watch as they are judged for inclusion into Inventor Digest Magazine. Isn't this like Disney World's EPCOT "Future World"?
The 2011 PGA Merchandise Show will take place January 26 (Demo Day) and 27-29th at the Orange County Convention Center in Orlando, Florida.
Thanks to social media, you can follow on twitter: @PGAGolfShows (or #PGAMR11) and/or friend on Facebook. Golf for Beginners will also be updating readers on the seminars, golf fashion and equipment as they are introduced...stay tuned!
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Tiger Woods wish list for 2011?
Tiger Woods stole 2010 golf headlines not through the "win" column and not through a commitment to being "the best a man can get". Instead, Woods became media fodder by being trounced on the golf course and through an infidelity which rocked the golf world.
Tiger lost his top PGA Tour standing, millions of dollars in endorsements as well as the respect that he used to easily command from fans and the media.
With 2011 just around the corner, many of us participate in the New Year ritual of compiling resolutions to improve upon our weaknesses and enhance our strengths. If Tiger Woods is embarking along the same journey, perhaps he is starting with these few declarations.
A new and improved golf swing. As Tiger Woods says in his blog, Sean Foley is helping to rebuild his golf swing but, "It just takes time to build. You just have to go piece by piece. Before, I couldn't even do it on the driving range and now I can. Now, after working with Sean Foley, I can do it on the golf course sporadically, then it becomes more consistent. Eventually, it becomes a full 18 holes and beyond that, a full tournament."
Not only will it take a new golf swing for Woods to be successful but also a renewed mental toughness which Tiger has shown in the past.
Win a tournament in 2011. Breaking the ice and being in the winner's circle again will change the entire world of Tiger Woods. Fans love a winner and are very forgiving when their idols make dramatic comebacks! In the case of Tiger Woods, even a single win will give TW the confidence he needs to move forward and turn 2010 into a distant memory.
Break Jack Nicklaus' record. Although Woods would need a grand slam in 2011 in order to break Jack Nicklaus' major wins record, Tiger Woods is only a breath away from leading the all-time list of PGA Tour wins.
Career wins on PGA Tour: 73 - Nicklaus, 71 for Tiger Woods
Major Tournaments won: 18 - Nicklaus, 14 for Tiger Woods
Tiger Woods won the 2008 U.S. Open hobbling around the course on injured knee: it stands to reason that his mental game is only bruised, not beaten.
New endorsement deals. Tiger Woods' recent loss of his Gillette endorsement brings the total number of advertisers who nixed the golfer to four for 2010. Although IMG Worldwide made light of the loss by saying that "Gillette is ending their 'Champions' campaign. That is the reason for not continuing," it still is a blow to the Woods camp.
On the flip side, don't feel too bad for Woods. According to CNBC sports business reporter Darren Rovell, if all deals remain the same, Tiger Woods' earnings should stand at about $55 to $60 million!
Renewed respect for a fallen hero?: Once revered by millions of fans for his quiet, ethical demeanor, Tiger Woods' fall from grace was the single most publicized golf event of 2010. With a televised apology and numerous connections with fans over the course of the past few months through Twitter and blogging, Tiger is desperately trying to show fans that he really is a good guy who made mistakes.
Forgive? Forget? How about golf news stories that don't involve Tiger Woods' personal life? Would interest in golf wane without all the fodder?
To be on top of the PGA Tour standings and perhaps PGA Tour golfer of the year once again. Becoming top golfer in the world would probably help to achieve all of the above wishes for Tiger Woods. He would regain the respect of fans, the media and the bevy of other golfers on tour who believe that Woods is now beat-able.
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Hole 21: Hole 15 - Son Muntaner, Spain
Son Muntaner, Spain, Hole 15
Par:
Par 5
Length:
White: 525 meters / 574 yards
Yellow: 517 meters / 565 yards
Blue: 453 meters / 495 yards
Red: 437 meters / 478 yards
Handicap:
Hcp 2
Designer:
Kurt Rossknecht
Description:
Son Muntaner is probably the best course at the Arabella Sheraton Golf Resort in Majorca, a 54-hole golf resort close to Palma de Majorca. Son Muntaner opened in 2001 and is designed by the German golf course designer Kurt Rossknecht. Hole 15 is the longest and probably most difficult hole of the course. It is a dogleg right uphill par 5 with a blind tee shot and very narrow fairways. The large green is elevated and very well protected with bunkers. The green is very challenging to putt. Bogey is a great score for the average golfer on this very difficult par 5!
Map:
Picture:
(all data as of December 2010)
Book 1: The 500 World's Greatest Golf Holes by George Peper
George Peper, the editors of Golf Magazine and their panel of experts come up in this book with the top 500 golf holes in the world. It is an outstanding book for everyone who is interest in golf course architecture and golf holes. Every list and ranking is very subjective, but the analytic approach taken in this book make a great source. After a short introduction the editors narrowed it down to the top 500 holes in the world, starting with the top 18, followed by the top 100 and top 500.
- Single best holes by number
- Most scenic holes
- Most difficult holes
- Most strategic holes
- Most heroic holes
- Most penal holes
- Longest holes
- Best short par 4s
- Best mountain holes
- Best ocean holes
- Best water holes (non-ocean)
- Best holes with bunkers
- Hardest-to-putt holes
- Best greensites
- Best holes in America
- Best holes in Europe
- Best holes in Australasia and Japan
- Best links holes
- Best holes designed since 1970
- Best holes designed by Donald Ross
- Best holes designed by Alister Mackenzie
- Best holes designed by A.W. Tillinghast
- Best holes designed by Robert Trent Jones, Sr.
- Holes most nearly impossible to get on
- Best holes you can play
- Holes that have produced great moments
Back9 Network tees up new golf entertainment channel
The Back9 Network, being touted as the world's first multimedia lifestyle and entertainment golf television network, has signed Kevin O'Brien to it's roster of industry professionals.
Mr. O'Brien, a well-known television executive, has successfully led many stations to prominence including WTTG in Washington DC and KTVU in San Francisco.
"Kevin's background running some of the most successful television stations and broadcast groups in the country will serve us well in implementing our launch strategy," says Back9 Network Co-Chairman, President and Founder Jamie Bosworth. "He's a perfect complement to our already strong, core golf industry team."
The Back9 Team is made up of fourteen industry professionals (like a matched set of golf clubs) including Dennis Allen who heads up Global Business Development (and speaks fluent Japanese), Reid Gorman who is a former President of MacGregor Golf Company, Kathleen Hessert, a nationally renowned reputation management consultant and former award-winning TV anchor and Bosworth, a former senior executive for Callaway Golf and Top-Flite. Read more about the Back9 Network Leadership Team here.
The Back9 Network plans to provide simultaneous distribution of it's golf and lifestyle programming over the internet and through mobile devices.
Non-traditional broadcasting on Back9 Network, according to O'Brien, is meant to attract and engage viewers as well as "encourage social media interactions to give a voice to our audience."
Golf fans can now chat with @Back9Network on Twitter (#B9N) and can sign up for the Back9 Facebook launch.
"Golf is a lifestyle, a social and business opportunity, a personal yet shared experience and that's exactly how we intend to cover it. We'll be all the things traditional golf media is not," affirmed O'Brien.
I personally am looking forward to the shows on Back9 Network as a breath of fresh air and a innovative slant on the entertainment of golf.
Gifts for golfers that sometimes money can't buy
That’s probably as true in golf as it is in any other aspect of life. I’m certainly not suggesting that three ghosts need to visit Tiger Woods this week to help him straighten out his life, but than again, I can’t imagine that would hurt, either.
So, in a world where some of golf’s biggest names and tournament need something other than a sweater and a dozen balls for Christmas, here are a few intangibles I’d like to put under a few people’s trees this weekend.
Tiger Woods: A normal life. I mean, as normal as a life as he can possible have. Something a little more normal than the last 10 years, or the last 12 months, for that matter.
Phil Mickelson: Health. Health for him, health for his wife, health for his mother. everything else Mickelson wants or needs should come if he and his wife are healthy.
Mike Whan: The commissioner of the LPGA needs, well, just about all the good fortune he can get. Or maybe just a major championship win from Michelle Wie.
Michelle Wie: A major championship win.
The Kraft Nabisco Championship: A win by Michelle Wie. And some smart, aggressive company to come in and take over from Kraft, which never really seemed to embrace the idea of sponsoring a women’s golf tournament.
The Bob Hope Classic: Speaking of sponsorship, the Hope needs a five-year deal with some company that recognizes the hospitality potential of the event and its pro-am. Also, a little looser grip on his history and tradition, something that might help insure the future of PGA Tour golf in the desert.
Rickie Fowler: His first tour win, finally. And a slightly less electric shade of orange to wear on Sundays.
Dustin Johnson: A personal rules officials to help him recognize a bunker when he’s in one. And a personal on-course marshal to help him get all those people out of the bunker only he is supposed to be in.
Lorena Ochoa: A little time to herself. And then a return to the LPGA.
Jiyai Shin: Some recognition in this country that she is smart, personable and happens to be the No. 1 ranking player in women’s golf.
Anthony Kim: The La Quinta High School graduate needs a healthy thumb, a little earlier curfew and a major championship win.
Nicole Castrale: The former Palm Desert High School star is coming off a fourth shoulder surgery. A fast start to secure he exemption on the LPGA would be a perfect gift.
-Larry Bohannan
Where oh where has Trevor Immelman gone?
It's not that he doesn't have time to scroll through the pages until he finds his name at No. 269. Immelman has lost the better part of two years with a left wrist injury, and these are the consequences. He accepts that.
He just has trouble recognizing that guy so far down the list.
Of all the major champions from the last five seasons, all but Immelman remain in the top 60 in the world.
"Really, in the last 18 months, that hasn't been me playing," he said. "I don't mean that in an arrogant sense. I know what I'm capable of when I'm feeling good and feeling strong. I'm going to give myself a full season, and then see how that pans out."
For the first time in two years, Immelman wakes up without feeling a pounding sensation in his left wrist. He has been working diligently on the practice range at Lake Nona for a new season. It feels like a new beginning, complete with an equipment deal soon to be announced.
"I'm excited," he said. "Everything is right on track. I'm looking forward to a full season again. It's been a few years."
The last time Immelman felt this good about his health was in 2008, and it featured a masterful performance.
The 30-year-old South African was so dominant at Augusta National that he built a six-shot lead on the back nine and went on to win the Masters by three shots over Tiger Woods. One of the lasting images was Immelman striking a muscleman pose on the 18th green.
Such strength has not come easily since then.
Immelman already has dealt with a few health scares even before slipping on the green jacket. He lost 25 pounds from a stomach parasite in 2007. Later that year, doctors had to slice open his back to remove a tumor from inside his rib cage, and only after the operation did they learn it was benign.
The most recent scar doesn't look like that big of a deal. Immelman rolled up a winter coat on a cold day in Orlando, then brushed back some hair to show a tiny scar from his wrist surgery last December.
So small, yet so much trouble.
He first noticed a twinge in his left wrist toward the end of 2008, and it got so bad the following year he had to withdraw from the U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship. He thought the rest would help, but the few times he tried to play, he didn't finish higher than 50th if he made the cut.
"The final straw was in Las Vegas last year," he said. "I played a Tuesday practice round, and I was in so much pain that I went back to the hotel and said to (wife) Carminita, 'I don't think I can muscle through this."
He withdrew from the tournament, flew to New York and had surgery a short time later. Immelman was in a cast for three weeks, and it was three months before he had enough strength to even grip a putter.
It was an exercise in patience in so many other ways.
Immelman is the opposite of another Masters champion -- Phil Mickelson -- in that he does everything left-handed except playing golf and playing the guitar. He had to learn simply chores like brushing his teeth with his right hand.
Swing coach David Leadbetter says the strength in his wrist is about 95 percent, and the desire is as strong as ever.
"I think he's in a good place," Leadbetter said. "I fully expect him to really get it back. It wasn't a shock he won Augusta because he's been a very, very good player for a long time. Since that time, people say, 'Geez, what happened to him? He dropped off the face of the earth.' Not quite. Certain injuries can derail a player.
"The good thing is he's young enough, and experienced enough, that he's looking at a new dawn, so to speak."
Immelman plans to start his new season at the Bob Hope Classic. The only change might be travel, for while he is loyal to the European Tour, the new minimum requirement of 13 tournaments might be tough on him because of his status. Having fallen so far in the ranking, Immelman is not in the World Golf Championships that count toward both tours.
About the only good that came out of his injury was time at home.
His wife recently gave birth to a daughter, and Immelman has had a blast with his 4-year-old son, Jacob. The boy loves sports and loves to fish. Immelman chuckles as he tells stories of Jacob dressing up in his astronaut suit to go to the grocery store and wearing his Dallas Cowboys uniform to church.
"He kept his helmet on the whole time," Immelman said.
Now, Immelman can only wonder if he did as much damage to his confidence as to his wrist.
His doctors told him that while it was safe to play this year after surgery, he might not trust himself until later in the year, and that proved correct. Immelman doesn't believe he can find confidence hitting balls on the range or fine-tuning his swing with Leadbetter.
"Confidence only grows when you shoot 65, when you hit 18 greens in regulation, when you get your name on the leaderboard," he said. "It's never fun not playing how you know you can play. You see that in aging athletes. The game peels off strictly because of age, but they know how great they are and it's tough."
"The relief for me is I'm only 30," he added. "I truly believe my best golf is still ahead of me."
Golfers not responsible for all bad shots
The errant shot came while three friends were playing at Dix Hills Golf Course on Long Island in 2002. The man who lost part of his vision, Azad Anand, was no longer able to work as a neuroradiologist. He sued Annop Kapoor, the golfer whose shot hit him, claiming that Kapoor should have warned him by yelling fore.
But on Tuesday, the New York State Court of Appeals ruled that Kapoor was not responsible for yelling fore because Anand was not in the intended path of the ball, so Kapoor was not responsible for paying damages.
The court, which sided with several lower courts, ruled that Anand assumed the risk that he could be hit by an errant ball when he decided to play golf. And Kapoor was responsible for yelling fore only to golfers in the ball’s intended path.
“What this now means,” said Carl Tobias, a professor of law at the University of Richmond, “is that when you play golf in New York, you are only liable for hitting someone” if that person is in front of you.
Anand said he never heard anyone yell fore. On the first hole, Kapoor’s second shot landed in the rough about 20 yards from Anand’s ball, which was sitting in the fairway. Kapoor did not wait for Anand to find his ball and hit his third shot, which struck Anand, who was not in the intended direction of the ball, according to the court ruling.
The decision was the latest in a series of similar rulings about who is liable when a golfer is struck on a course. In 2007, the California State Court of Appeals made a similar ruling, saying golfers were not responsible for many injuries sustained by fellow golfers on the course.
New York and California are two of the leading states in tort law, and both states ruling the same way “will almost certainly have larger implications for the rest of the country,” Tobias said.
Fore has been used by golfers since the 18th century to warn others of an errant shot. Although historians are divided on its origins, many believe it originated in the 1700s, when, before artillery was fired, it was customary to shout, “Beware before.”
Dalton B. Floyd, a lawyer in Surfside Beach, S.C., who specializes in golf-related litigation, said courts had traditionally found that golfers are not liable for hitting those golfers not in their intended path.
“There is an inherent risk in golf that not everybody is going to hit a straight shot,” he said. “It’s different, however, if you are driving the ball and you normally hit 200 yards and there is a person 150 yards out and you hit them and don’t yell fore. In that case you have to warn them and if you don’t you are liable.”
Most issues arise, Floyd said, when a golfer hits someone on a green when the golfer thought the green was farther away than it actually was.
“Where we have the most controversy is with the suing of the clubs,” he said. “A guy hits a 3- iron and thought he was 210 yards out but the marker on the course was wrong and someone on the green is hit.”
Shanks fore the golf warning New York!
May the "FORE's" be with you!
The golf term "FORE" is understood throughout every language as a warning, a way to let golfers around you know that your shot may be heading their way. Most of the time all is forgiven as we have all hit errant shots during a round of golf.
In New York (and California according to the New York Times), the term "FORE" now has less of an impact. Many news outlets have picked up on the ruling made yesterday that there is a risk whenever playing a dangerous sport such as golf. DANGEROUS? The sport could be as golf balls travel at high speed and, when taking a swing, a 7-iron can do a lot of damage if you're standing too close! Golf is only dangerous if and when other golfers don't rely on proper etiquette during a round.
Here are a few tips to make golf more safe:
Always keep an eye on your playing partners: if a golf club is out of their bag, assume a shot is being taken.
Duck and cover your head if you hear the word "FORE!".
Golf-related litigator Dalton Floyd mentioned that courts have traditionally found that golfers are not responsible for hitting players who are not in their intended path.
What about little old ladies who intentionally approach the forward tees before all playing partners have had a chance to tee-off...it is up to the other players to yell "FORE"?
Remember that golf is a game of patience.
2010 Recap
1. Lee Westwood
2. Tiger Woods
3. Martin Kaymer
4. Phil Mickelson
5. Jim Furyk
6. Steve Stricker
7. Graeme McDowell
8. Paul Casey
9. Luke Donald
10. Rory McIlroy
Major winners:
Masters: Phil Mickelson
U.S. Open: Graeme McDowell
British: Louis Oosthuizen
PGA: Martin Kaymer
Fed Ex Cup Champion:
Jim Furyk
PGA Player of the Year:
Jim Furyk
PGA Money Title:
Matt Kuchar $4,881,227.00
Vardon Trophy:
Matt Kuchar
European Tour Player of the Year:
Tie: Martin Kaymer, Graeme McDowell
Ryder Cup winner:
Europe
Want To Play Golf With Tiger Woods?
So, all you need to do is go to the website and register there. You must have a valid handicap to register (max 28 for men and 30 for ladies).
Last minute golf accessories and golf gifts for Christmas
Here are a few notable golf gifts ranging from kitchy to cool!
1. Axis1 Eagle golf putter:
The Axis1 Eagle golf putter was created by Industrial Designer Luis Pedraza to be perfectly balanced so that it resists being pulled open when twisted in your hands.
A lighter grip and perfect balance = less stress and fewer off-line putts.
With a long list of accolades including BusinessWeek's Design Excellence Award and 2009 PGA Show winner "Best in Show", the Axis1 Eagle golf putter will make your significant other want to get out and practice putting on the green, even in the cold of a New York winter...brrr.
Still available for Christmas by heading over to either TGW.com, Edwin Watts Golf or to the Axis1Golf.com website.
Listen to this great interview with Luis Pedraza and Phil Long about the Axis1 putter on the Golf Club Radio Show with Danielle Tucker.
2. Golf jewelry for the lady with almost everything:
From beginner golfers to those players with more than a few years under their belt, there still is the outside chance of unwittingly omitting a stroke or two after a snowman hits your scorecard.
Combining beauty with functionality, the golf score counter, a bracelet from GlamorousGolfer.com, is handcrafted with love (and crystals) by individuals with mental and physical difficulties. You will not only look great but feel good helping others at this time of year!
3. Adidas Golf aG Strike stand bag:
Adidas has created one of the most lightweight and durable golf stand bags on the market with its new aG Strike. Colorful and stylish for both men and women, this golf bag will not disappoint! There are plenty of pockets, insulated water bottle area and the new FAS-TEK system which allows a golfer to attach everything from GPS to cell phone right onto the bag.
The Adidas aG Strike stand bag will not break your budget and will give your golfer the biggest golf gift under the Christmas tree!
4. Kodak Playsport Camera:
I originally wrote about this tiny Kodak PLAYSPORT Camera not only because its really cute, lightweight and waterproof but also because it can help a golfer to analyze the golf swing at close range. Yes, there are hundreds of cameras on the market to choose from but the little Kodak is created with the golfer in mind. Playback on an HDTV or upload your golf swing onto Youtube.com for the whole world to watch and rate!
5. For those with unlimited funds, how about the Porsche of Luxury golf carts? Costing about $50K, the Garia Soleil de Minuit will make an impression on the golfer who has everything but wants more!
Don't know what to get and don't have much money to spend? A gift card can be impersonal but on the flip side, the golfer can buy anything they want.
If presents are more fun for your family during the holiday season, why not put together a package of golf balls, golf gloves (remembering to check for the correct golf hand), golf ball markers (with swarovski crystals for the ladies?) and divot repair tool from G-Clip?
Need more ideas? Just ask golfforbeginners@aol.com
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Westwood is Confused
Lee Westwood, the #1 player in the world, recently made comments that could show why English golfers such as himself, Paul Casey, and Ian Poulter haven't won jack for Major championships, although they seem to run their mouths more than anyone.
Westwood, in an interview with The Sun, was asked if he would rather remain #1 in 2011, or win a Major championship.
"Well, I've been world # 1 now and I've never won a Major so, obviously, I would like to win one. But I wouldn't swap world No 1 for a Major, no way."
Umm, what? Do you think Tom Brady would say he's glad the Patriots had the best record in the regular season but lost the Super Bowl. Or Kobe Bryant saying he's happy the Lakers had the best record but lost the Championship. Or Roger Federer saying he'd rather stay #1 than win Majors.
No, that's because they would never say that. No great athlete would ever say that.
I think everyone knows what Tiger, Nicklaus, or any other great golfer would say.
It doesn't matter that much anyway because Tiger will be taking back the ranking soon enough.
AP crowns Tiger Woods soap opera sport story of the year
Tiger Woods is No. 1 on this list.
Yes 2010 was a tough year for Tiger Woods, who went without a win for the first time in his career, lost his No. 1 professional golf ranking, and saw his marriage crumble following allegations of infidelity (made in 2009).
But does Woods deserve a spot atop this list in a year when the New Orleans Saints won their first Super Bowl, thousands of fans converged on Africa for a historic and vuvuzela-fueled World Cup, and Lebron James captivated a nation for 5 minutes with his free agency frenzy?
Not everyone agreed with the AP choice.
"The Tiger Woods story was really more of a 2009 story, right?" asked Andrew Sharp on the sports site sbnation.com. "It spilled well into 2010, but the real story in all of it was the Thanksgiving car crash in 2009, and the phenomenal reporting in the weeks that followed. None of which was done by sports reporters, because, um, well, good question. In any case, US Weekly owes Tiger money (which will go straight to Elin)."
"The fallout from Woods' admission of serial infidelity edged [out] a very different sort of story: The New Orleans Saints winning their first Super Bowl championship, giving an emotional boost to their hurricane-ravaged city." said bloggers from The San Francisco Chronicle's SFGate.com site. "It doesn't take too much of a national perspective to see why those two stories might have trumped the Giants in news value if not pure sports exhilaration."
Others, however, said that the AP's selection was on the money. "When Woods squandered a four-shot lead in his last tournament of the year, it marked the first time in 29 occasions he had lost a lead of more than two strokes in the final round and the first time since 1995 ... he went through a year without a win," noted Phillip Hersh in his stories of the year list for The Chicago Tribune. "Also gone: his wife (divorce), his No. 1 ranking, a reported $22 million in endorsement income ... and a reported $110 million in the divorce settlement."
McDowell voted player of the year by US golf writers
The U.S. Open champion has been voted player of the year by the Golf Writers Association of America.
McDowell received 87 votes to beat Jim Furyk (61) and Martin Kaymer (51). The Northern Irishman won three times this year and captured the decisive match in the Ryder Cup for Europe against the United States.
McDowell also won the Golf Writers Trophy from the British-based Association of Golf Writers. He shared European Tour player of the year with Kaymer.
Yani Tseng won female player of the year from the GWAA, topping Cristie Kerr and Ai Miyazato. Bernhard Langer was the overwhelming choice as the senior player of the year.
They will be honored April 6 in Augusta, Ga.
Teen golfer prodigy breaks a Tiger Woods record; has pro career in sights
Such a feat has been accomplished by Smithtown transplant by way of Queens, Jim Liu.
This past July, Liu, then 14 years old, became the youngest Junior Amateur Champion in the history of the U.S. Junior Amateur Championship when he fired the equivalent of a 64 in the first of the two-round championship round in Ada, Michigan. He surpassed Tiger Woods' record to win the U.S. Amateurs.
Because of his accomplishments, Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy honored Liu with a proclamation in late November.
"It was a great honor to meet Mr. Levy and to receive a proclamation from him and Suffolk County," Liu said.
"Jim's accomplishments are refreshing," Levy said. "The hours that go into perfecting a craft are countless. It's obvious he has put in an extraordinary amount of work and it is that work ethic that I find so refreshing from such a young man."
Winning both the championship this summer, being named in the same sentence as Woods, his childhood idol, Liu admitted was a great honor for him.
"I've always been influenced by Tiger Woods," Liu said. "He was a big hero of mine growing up and I've always looked up to him for how great of an athlete he was and how great he was in golf."
Jim and his family moved from Queens to Smithtown when he was five-and-a-half years old, and began playing golf when he was six years old. He admitted that he and his family had no idea how to play the game at first.
"We thought it'd be funny to live in a town and not know how to play golf," he said. "So we went to a driving range and a local clinic to try to get a feel of what it's about and I actually loved the game at the clinic."
Liu credited his parents for keeping him discipline and for helping him stay dedicated to his craft.
Jim's father, Yiming Liu, strongly believed his son has a gift, and is enjoying what Jim loves to do.
"I always remind him to make sure that he has fun," he said. "And I always support him, that's the key."
Jim spends about three-to-four hours daily working on his golfing game.
"If you really love the game, you just have to embrace it and work hard at it," he said. It'll all pay off in the future — you never have to think about practicing that much. It's more about enjoying the game while you're practicing."
Liu's accolades on course accolades are matched his accolades achieved in the classroom as the gold prodigy is maintaining A's in all of his classes. Currently, colleges are recruiting the student-athlete.
"I definitely see myself going to college," he said. "I'm not sure yet where I'm going, I'm just starting the recruiting process but that's something I'm looking forward. Hopefully after college golf, I'll go pro and maybe I can fulfill my dream to be the best that I can."
List 4: "18 Most Famous Golf Holes" by Links Magazine
Link
The 18 holes in alphabetic order:
Augusta National Golf Club - Hole 13
Ballybunion Golf Club (Old) - Hole 11
Baltusrol Golf Club (Lower) - Hole 17
Casa de Campo (Teeth of the Dog) - Hole 7
Cypress Point Club - Hole 16
Doral Golf Resort (Blue) - Hole 18
Harbour Town Golf Links - Hole 18
Mauna Kea Golf Course - Hole 3
Merion Golf Club (East) - Hole 18
Old Course at St. Andrews - Hole 17
Pebble Beach Golf Links - Hole 7
Riviera Country Club - Hole 10
Royal County Down Golf Club - Hole 9
Royal Troon Golf Club (Old) - Hole 8
TPC Sawgrass (Players Stadium) - Hole 17
TPC Scottsdale (Stadium) - Hole 16
Turnberry (Ailsa) - Hole 9
Whistling Straits (Straits) - Hole 17
Elin Nordegren migrates with kids for Christmas
The Swedish former model, who divorced the philandering golfer this year, went out for a stroll in the snow with the couple's children, Sam and Charlie, and some unidentified friends.
It was recently reported that Woods had the children for Thanksgiving and Elin would have them for the Christmas holiday, and take them to her native Sweden.
Kirby, Wong named Canada's top amateurs
Wong, 20, was runner-up at the Canadian men's amateur, tied for fourth in individual play at the world amateur, and advanced to the round of 32 at the U.S. amateur. He competed at the 2010 RBC Canadian Open at St. George's Golf and Country Club but missed the cut by four shots.
Rounding out the top five on the men's Order of Merit were: Mitchell Evanecz of Red Deer, Alta., Albin Choi of Toronto, Nick Taylor of Abbotsford, B.C., and Cam Burke of New Hamburg, Ont.
Kirby, 19, a sophomore at the University of Alabama, was a semifinalist at the U.S. women's amateur, a quarterfinalist at the British ladies amateur and finished ninth at the Copa de las Americas.
Rounding out the top five in the women's national rankings were: Sara-Maude Juneau of Fossambault, Que., Christine Wong of Richmond, B.C., Jessica Wallace of Langley, B.C., and Nicole Vandermade of Brantford, Ont.
Choi and Rebecca Lee-Bentham of Richmond Hill, Ont., were named Canada's top junior golfers for 2010.
2011 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship Holes 13-18 with Rory McIlroy, Martin, Mazo and more!
Abu Dhabi Golf Course |
A: Lengthen the course, toughen up the bunkering and bring in one of most innovative sponsors in golf.
A great event is just about to get better. The Abu Dhabi Golf Championship and the Abu Dhabi Golf Club have produced some great championships and some great champions: Martin Kaymer and Paul Casey, who seem to have taken out a time-share on the trophy, would feature on anyone’s list of Europe’s elite golfers.
In part three of this series, Tim Maitland asked a group of European Tour golfers including Roger Morgan, Gregory Bourdy and Rory McIlroy how best to navigate holes 13-18 of the Abu Dhabi Golf Course.
Abu Dhabi Golf Course |
Hole 13 Par 4 414 yards 378 metres
Matteo Manassero (Italy)
Abu Dhabi Golf Club - 18th Hole |
Thanks again to Tim Maitland for his interview of European Tour Golfers for the 2011 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship!
photo credits: Getty Images/Tim Maitland
How to negotiate holes 1-12 of the Abu Dhabi Golf Club can be seen on the Golf for Beginners blog:
2011 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship Holes 1-6
2011 Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship Holes 7-12
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