Monday, August 26, 2013

A Lesson Learned: The half-swing shot

It was a great way to start the FedEx Cup playoffs - seeing three of the major championship winners and Tiger Woods all in contention for the win on the final day of The Barclays.
Phil Mickelson's Sunday charge was impressive, and I really thought Justin Rose would pull it out but in the end, it was Masters champion Adam Scott - who finished an hour and a half ahead of the rest of the field, that posted a score good enough to win.
But what I (and no doubt many others) found most intriguing was the performance of world No. 1 Tiger Woods. I think most golfers can identify with how difficult it is to play golf with back pain - but to have spasms so strong that you are dropped to your knees; that's really a feat to finish the round.
Obviously, Tiger went to a 'half swing' method for the next few shots until he felt his back was strong enough for a couple of closing drives. And that's this week's "A Lesson Learned" - how to hit the half-swing shot. It's important, not just for painful backs, but anytime you need to finesse your shot rather than power through it.
There are three important things to remember when taking a half-swing.
1.) Your arms need to be loose. Your arms still need to swing fast (takes pressure off the back) so keep the tension out of them.
2.) Make sure your arms, chest and belt buckle are in synch. As opposed to a power swing, where the lower body leads the way in creating torque, your loose armed swing should work together in a synchronised, coordinated fashion.
3.) Though your backswing and follow through are abbreviated, you should still end the swing with your belt buckle facing the target.
I encourage you to practice this shot on the range before taking it to the course. And as always, anytime you need help with your game, go seeyour local PGA Professional.
John Crumbley is the Director of Golf for Cornerstone Golf PropertiesCrumbley teaches out of Mystery Valley Golf Club in Lithonia, GA. You can follow him on Twitter at@JohnCrumbleyPGA

A big win for Scott, and a long way to go

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) -- Two snapshots from Liberty National could illustrate the fortunes and future at the top of the world golf ranking.
One was of Tiger Woods dropping to his hands and knees with back pain after hitting a shot so far left that it landed in a pond on the other side of an adjacent fairway. The other was of Masters champion Adam Scott swinging his driver, a beautiful blend of balance, rhythm and power.
Scott went on to win The Barclays, partly because of his bogey-free 66 Sunday, mostly because the other contenders fell apart down the stretch. No apologies were necessary. Woods has won plenty of tournaments that way.
''I feel like I've been given a bit of a gift,'' Scott said. ''But I'll take it.''
Woods finished one shot behind, unable to atone for three bad swings that led to bogeys on the back nine.
The big picture was Monday morning.
Scott moved up to a career-best No. 2 in the world, but he's really no closer to Woods than he ever has been.
Even if the Australian were to win the next three FedEx Cup playoff events - about as easy as winning four straight majors - he still wouldn't replace Woods at No. 1. That's how big the gap is between Woods and the rest of golf.
Woods hasn't won a major in five years, but he's still winning against strong fields. And even though nagging injuries seem to be piling up, he's winning more than anyone else.
That's what Scott will have to learn to do if he wants to be the best in the world.
This is only the second time Scott has had a multiple-win season on the PGA Tour. The other was in 2004, when he won The Players Championship and the Booz Allen Classic at Congressional. Around the world, he has won at least once in each of the last 13 seasons, but never more than two wins in any season.
Scott now has 21 wins worldwide, leaving him 70 behind Woods.
Woods is never a fair comparison for anyone. Scott said as much seven years ago when asked what it was like to grow up dreaming about being the best in the world and being stuck in the same generation as a guy like Woods.
''The hardest thing now is for young kids to realize this Tiger benchmark is out of most everyone's league,'' he said at the end of the 2006 season, when Woods had won six straight PGA Tour events.
He jokingly said that day he would have to wait until Woods went through another swing change. That time has come and gone.
Scott at least entered the conversation for PGA Tour player of the year with his win at The Barclays, though that depends on the next month. Winning another FedEx Cup playoff event would give him three victories, including a major. Is that enough to trump five wins and no majors?
Then again, it was Scott who last week didn't hesitate when asked who has had the best year in golf so far.
''Five wins? Tiger's had the best year,'' he said. ''If you think winning a major is what you base success on, then if you haven't (won), you haven't had a great year. But winning ... I've always based it around winning events, and I don't think one major makes up for five tournaments.''
To see Scott swing a club is to ask why he's not winning more often. Scott prides himself on consistency, but since his playoff win at Augusta National, he had only one serious look at winning this year until The Barclays. That was at the British Open, where he had the lead on the back nine at Muirfield until making four straight bogeys as Phil Mickelson finished off one of the great final rounds in a major to win the claret jug.
Vijay Singh hit his stride in 2004 and won nine times. Rory McIlroy took over at No. 1 last year when he won five times.
That's where Scott needs to be. Perhaps this is a start.
''To have multiple wins on the PGA Tour is a pretty good accomplishment, I think,'' Scott said. ''There aren't too many guys doing it regularly, and I'm not, either. But I'd like to. I'm trying to jump off that springboard and win more regularly, and I think I'm going about it the right way.''
One thing Scott and Woods have in common is their schedule. Neither plays a lot of tournament golf. Scott has 41 events on his world ranking ledger over the last two years while Woods has 39. That's by design. Scott is playing less and getting more out of it. The weeks at his home in the Bahamas are spent on quality practice.
It's working. He's the Masters champion. He's No. 2 in the world. He is playing the best golf of his career.
''It's interesting,'' Scott said. ''I felt like earlier in my career, I gave myself a lot more chances to win tournaments because I played a lot more. The last couple of years, my focus shifted a bit and I changed my schedule and played a lot less tournaments. So I think I've got less opportunity to win. I've focused on the bigger tournaments, which are not easy to win - not that any others are.
''Kind of developed my game into being more consistent, performing in the big ones,'' he said. ''And now I'm trying to adapt that to be a winner on a more frequent basis.''
Only when that happens - if it happens - will the No. 1 ranking come into view.

Tiger Woods withdraws from Begay's charity event

VERONA, N.Y. (AP) -- Tiger Woods has pulled out of a charity event for good friend Notah Begay because of his ailing back.
The Notah Begay III Foundation Challenge said Tuesday night that Gary Woodland will replace Woods in the field Wednesday at Turning Stone Resort.
Woods said he felt stiffness in his back last week at The Barclaysfrom a soft bed in his hotel. He said he suffered a back spasm during a seven-hole stretch at the end of the final round, and he dropped to his knees after one shot. Woods finished one shot behind winner Adam Scott.
Woods has not said if he would play in the Deutsche Bank Championship, the second FedEx Cup playoff event that starts Friday on the TPC Boston. The tournament benefits the Tiger Woods Foundation. Woods had to miss another event that supports his foundation, the AT&T National, two months ago because of an elbow injury.
''While we're disappointed Tiger is unable to play in this year's event, the important thing for Tiger is to make sure he's 100 percent healthy and not risk further injuring himself,'' Begay said.
Woods said he has spoken to Begay, his teammate at Stanford, and expressed his regrets at having to pull out.

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Gonzalez, Fleetwood share lead at Gleneagles

Gonzalez, Fleetwood share lead at Gleneagles

CBSSports.com wire reports
GLENEAGLES, Scotland -- Argentina's Ricardo Gonzalez and England's Tommy Fleetwood shared the lead at 16-under after the third round of the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles.
The 352nd-ranked Gonzalez had four birdies and finished with a 2-under 70 on Saturday. Fleetwood started birdie-eagle but also bogeyed the last for a 67.
Sweden's Fredrik Andersson-Hed also began birdie-eagle and finished with a 66 to trail by a stroke. Scotland's Stephen Gallacher shot a 64 for the best round of the day to tie for fourth with Austria's Bernd Wiesberger (72).
The 43-year-old Gonzalez has led from the outset on the 2014 Ryder Cup course. He's seeking to end a four-year European Tour title drought.
"After hitting the ball well the first two days from fairway to flag, my game wasn't that good today," Gonzalez said. "But I am happy to still shoot 2-under par on that course, and I am now thinking that 21-under par might be a winning score."
The 22-year-old Fleetwood is competing in just his second full season on the tour. The 277th-ranked golfer finished a career-best sixth at the 2012 South African Open.
"Overall, it felt good out there today and I hit the ball nicely. But when I did hit it bad, I managed to get myself out of trouble," Fleetwood said. "It's been a long time since I led a golf tournament going into the last round, and it couldn't be any better."
Gallacher won the Dubai Desert Classic and is looking to become the fifth player to win two European Tour events this year.
However, the 38-year-old Scot admits he's lucky to be in the field after injuring his back last weekend while washing his car.
"The greens are fantastic and it's a course where I have had a few low scores," Gallacher said.
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

Hedwall takes lead in Canadian Women's Open

Hedwall takes lead in Canadian Women's Open

CBSSports.com wire reports
EDMONTON, Alberta -- Solheim Cup star Caroline Hedwall shot a 6-under 64 on Saturday in the Canadian Women's Open to take a one-stroke lead over European teammate Suzann Pettersen and defending champion Lydia Ko.
Hedwall, winless on the LPGA Tour, was a record 5-0 last week in Colorado in Europe's blowout victory over the United States. The 24-year-old Swede had a 10-under 200 total at Royal Mayfair.
"I was a little tired on Monday, Tuesday and also Wednesday," Hedwall said. "But when the tournament starts I think last week just gave me a lot of energy and self-confidence, so I can't feel anything."
Pettersen shot a 65. She won the 2009 tournament at Priddis Greens in Calgary.
"I just feel like from a general standpoint usually coming off of Solheim where your mindset is such an aggressive mode that you usually feed off pretty well the following week because you kind of keep wanting to make putts," Pettersen said. "You're kind of in that kind of frame of mind. This is why we work at it, this is why we train. I'm totally fine. I'm not tired at all."
The 16-year-old Ko had a 67. Last year in British Columbia, the New Zealand amateur became the youngest winner in LPGA Tour history at 15 years, 4 months.
"I was three shots back from the leader yesterday, and I'm one shot back at the moment, so I'm getting much closer to the leader," Ko said. "I played pretty well out there. I made five birdies and two bogeys. I was overall really happy, and I was 8 under coming into the final round last year, so one shot better, which leaves me in a good place."
Hedwall had seven birdies and a bogey in the third round after opening with consecutive 68s.
"To be honest, I don't really remember my round," Hedwall said. "I have no idea where I make birdies. I just remember making a bogey. I hit it over the green and had a pretty good chip, I just didn't make the putt."
Hedwall has eight professional wins worldwide on the Ladies European Tour and the Australian Ladies Professional Golf Tour.
"I'm just looking forward to tomorrow," Hedwall said. "It will be exciting playing in the last group. I won on the European Tour, now I'm just waiting for my first LPGA victory. We'll see, hopefully it comes tomorrow."
Brittany Lincicome and I.K. Kim were two strokes back at 8 under. Kim had a 65, and Lincicome, the 2011 winner at Hillsdale in Quebec, shot 66.
Lincicome played in a group with Hedwall and Pettersen.
"I shot 66 today and got beat badly by these two," Lincicome said. "Even from the first hole, from the very start of the day we were draining birdies, and I kind of was making my own little inside jokes about our group. We were 8 under after 8, 9 under after 9, and kind of playing match play with everyone else.
"I had a great time. I don't know about them, but it was just fun to kind of hang out and I think the chatter and the laughter out there kept it light out there, and we made a lot of birdies."
Top-ranked Inbee Park, tied for the second-round lead with Cristie Kerr, had a 74 to fall six strokes back at 4 under. Park swept the first three majors of the season and has six tour victories this year.
"Just the overall day, everything seemed like it didn't go the right way," Park said. "It wasn't that bad of drives, but it just ended up in the rough, and you really have no shot from the rough. I was putting, and nothing really wanted to go in. I burned a lot of edges. Just one of those kind of days."
Kerr was another stroke back after a 75.
Charley Hull, the 17-year-old English player coming off a strong performance in the Solheim Cup, was 4 under after a 71.
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

Woodland, Kuchar co-lead at Barclays; Woods fourth

Woodland, Kuchar co-lead at Barclays; Woods fourth

CBSSports.com wire reports
JERSEY CITY, New Jersey -- Gary Woodland and Matt Kuchar exchanged birdies and bad breaks and wound up tied for the lead at The Barclays.
Kuchar, who completed five holes of his second round Saturday morning for a 6-under 65 and a two-shot lead, was tied with Woodland on the reachable par-4 16th when his putt ran into a sprinkler and stopped, costing him a reasonable chance at birdie. He wound up with a 70 in the third round.
Woodland had a one-shot lead until his tee shot on the 17th plugged in the far end of the fairway bunker, effectively costing him a full shot. He blasted out sideways, made bogey and had to settle for a 68.
They were at 12-under 201, one shot ahead of Kevin Chappell, who broke the tournament course record with a bogey-free 62.
Chappell's round was so strong that it was 10 shots better than the average score at Liberty National, where the wind was blowing about 10 mph.
"In the wind, if you would have told me someone was going to shoot 62 today, I would probably have laughed at you," Chappell said.
Tiger Woods spent another round grabbing his lower back and bending over gingerly to put his ball on the tee and retrieve it from the cup. He was on the fringe of contention for much of the blustery afternoon until two solid shots on the par-5 13th for a birdie, driving the 16th green for a two-putt birdie and closing with a 10-foot birdie putt on the 18th for a 69 that left him very much in the picture at 8-under 205.
"It starts off great every day, and then it progressively deteriorates as the day goes on," Woods said of his lower back, which he hurt from what he said was a soft bed in his hotel room. "Hopefully, tomorrow it will be one of those days again. Fight through it and see if I can win a tournament."
David Lynn of England, who earned his PGA Tour card a year ago from his runner-up finish in the PGA Championship, also had a 69 and was tied with Woods, four behind. The large group at 7-under 206 included 20-year-old Jordan Spieth, Bubba Watson, Jim Furyk, Justin Rose and Rickie Fowler.
With a dozen players separated by five shots, pure greens at Liberty National and limited rough, the first event of the FedEx Cup playoffs is still very much up for grabs.
Chappell's round was evidence that even in windy conditions, low scores are available. For the former UCLA Bruin, it was really was simple as making putts, most of them in that 10-foot to 15-foot range. There were a few par saves on the back nine, and six birdies on the front.
"I just really holed all the putts that you kind of expect to hold but you don't always hole," he said.
Kuchar and Woodland will be in the final group for the second straight day, and they certainly aren't strangers. Their caddies knew each other from the LPGA Tour, and they became friendly enough that Kuchar picked Woodland to be his partner in the World Cup two years ago. The Americans won for the first time in over a decade.
Earlier this week, they were at the Braves-Mets game and went into an indoor batting cage. Kuchar pitched and was impressed with how well Woodland swung the bat, which is not to say he was surprised.
Woodland is regarded as one of the best athletes on tour -- a promising baseball player in high school who first went to a Division II school to play basketball and then transferred to Kansas to play golf.
But he has disappeared since winning at Innisbrook two years ago, mainly from injuries to both wrists. He began working with Claude Harmon in the spring, and he hired mental coach Julie Elion right before his season turned around by winning the Reno-Tahoe Open.
"I've really let my game take over," Woodland said.
He surged into the lead during a four-hole stretch to close out the back nine -- a 5-iron into the par-5 sixth, a sand wedge to 10 feet for birdie on No. 7, a 4-wood for his second shot on the par-5 eighth for birdie, and a 6-iron for a fourth straight birdie on the ninth.
Kuchar caught up by playing bogey-free on the back nine.

Monday, January 28, 2013

British Open qualifying


British Open qualifying

Updated: April 6, 2005, 9:56 AM ET
Associated Press
KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- Scores Wednesday from British Opening qualifying at the par-72, 6,959-yard Saujana Golf and Country Club:
Rick Gibson, Canada              66  6-under
Mardan Mamat, Singapore          66

Danny Chia, Malaysia             67  5-under

Yeh Wei-Tze, Taiwan              68  4-under

Jason Dawes, Australia           70  2-under
Bryan Saltus, United States      70

Soushi Tajima, Japan             71  1-under
Jeev Milkha Singh, India         71
Scott Barr, Australia            71
Richard Moir, Australia          71
Kim Felton, Australia            71

Simon Yates, Scotland            73  1-over
Peter Teravainen, United States  73
Rahil Gangjee, India             73
Amandeep Johl, India             73

Akinori Tani, Japan              74  2-over
Greg Hanrahan, United States     74
Jyoti Randhawa, India            74
Sushi Ishigaki, Japan            74
Unho Park, Australia             74

Adam Fraser, Australia           75  3-over
Terry Pilkadaris, Australia      75
Yoshinobu Tsukada, Japan         75
Zaw Moe, Myanmar                 75

Lee Sung-man, South Korea        76  4-over
Marcus Both, Australia           76
Ross Bain, Scotland              76

Angelo Que, Philippines          77  5-over
Pat Giles, Australia             77

David Gleeson, Australia         80  8-over

Kyi Hla Han, Myanmar             81  9-over

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press