Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Players Notebook: Palmer plays his second round with heavy heart

Ryan Palmer at The Players Championship
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Ryan Palmer is tied for sixth at The Players Championship, despite dealing with the death of a friend in a traffic accident.
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By 
Mark Long
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. -- Playing with a heavy heart and the initials "CA" on his hat, Ryan Palmer managed to keep his composure before and during the second round of The Players Championship on Friday.
After was a different story. 
Playing just hours after the death of one of his best friends, Palmer got a little emotional following his par putt on the 18th green. 
"The day was over so I kind of let it all out for a minute," Palmer said after a 3-under 69 that left him at 8-under 136 and squarely in contention at TPC Sawgrass. 
Palmer got the call Thursday night that Clay Aderholt was killed in a car accident in San Antonio earlier in the evening. 
He talked to friends and his psychologist, whose advice focused on "being real calm and slow out there and just not getting too emotional." Palmer kept the tips in mind, which he credited with helping him get through an up-and-down round that featured five bogeys, four birdies and two eagles. 
"I had some rough holes, but I stayed strong, stayed positive and kept in the present, and that got me through," Palmer said. 
Palmer said he and Aderholt grew up together in Amarillo, Texas, attending the same middle and high schools as well as going to college together at Texas A&M. 
"All the way back to as long as I can remember," Palmer said. 
Palmer will enter Saturday's third round in a three-way tie for sixth, three strokes behind leader Sergio Garcia. 
He said his short game "saved" him Friday, and anyone who watched him play the Stadium Course knew exactly what he was talking about. He drained a putt from just off the green for eagle at No. 9 and chipped in from a bunker on the 11th for another. It was the first time he's ever managed two eagles in the same tournament, let alone the same round. 
"You've got to have things happen like that to be in contention to win, so I've had some things go my way," said Palmer, who never considered withdrawing from the field. "If we keep playing well and get a few more breaks on the weekend, who knows? We'll see what happens." 
CASTRO STUMBLES: Roberto Castro's stay atop the leaderboard at The Players was short-lived. 
The 27-year-old Castro, who shot 9 under Thursday, followed the round of his life with one to forget. He shot a 6-over 78 in the second round Friday and dropped into a tie for 29th. 
Despite the stumble, his outlook remained positive. 
"I wouldn't have been embarrassed or felt bad or anything if I would have shot two 76s this week," Castro said. "It's a hard golf course. I'm 3 under par and beating 110 of the best players in the world through 36 holes. So I just kept telling myself, `it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy.'" 
Only five golfers -- Derek Ernst, Brian Harman, George McNeill, Greg Owen and Y.E. Yang -- had worse second rounds than Castro. 
Castro, though, preferred to focus on his finish. After making a birdie, five bogeys and a double through 12 holes, he settled down and made six consecutive pars. 
"It was huge," he said. "I was 6 over par and sitting there looking at 16, 17 and 18. I saw (Thursday) every hole on the course is hard, so it was nice to finish with six really solid holes." 
HEADED HOME: Eleven former major winners, including Vijay Singh, headed home after missing the cut at The Players. Fourteen other major winners advanced to the third round. 
Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk, Ernie Els, Graeme McDowell, Lucas Glover, Stewart Cink, Geoff Ogilvy, David Toms, Keegan Bradley and Y.E. Yang joined Singh in getting the weekend off. 
EAGLE SIGHTINGS: The par-4 18th has historically been the toughest hole on the Stadium Course. 
And it's playing that way again this week -- but not without a couple of historic exceptions. 
After surrendering just two eagles over the previous 31 years during The Players, the finishing hole has given up two in as many days. Marc Leishman accomplished the feat Friday, holing out with a wedge from 172 yards away. Jason Dufner carded an eagle there Thursday. 
"As soon as I hit it, it looked like it was pretty good, and it was it pretty good," Leishman said. 
DIVOTS: The PGA Tour's longest active streak of cuts ended Friday when Billy Horschel put two balls in the water on No. 18. Horschel had made 23 consecutive cuts. He shot a 1-under 71 in the second round, finished at 3 over and missed the cut by three strokes. "It's a new learning situation," Horschel said. "I should have made the cut. The mistakes I made were just simple mistakes. Obviously, I didn't make enough birdies to offset them like I have in the past." ... Dustin Johnson (lower back) and Colt Knost (neck, spine) withdrew before the second round with injuries. ... The tournament encountered some parking issues Friday, with spectators getting turned away from full lots. Gorgeous weather and an increase in tickets put up for sale resulted in an estimated record crowd for the second round at TPC Sawgrass. 
 

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Pornanong Phatlum wins Dubai Ladies Masters

Pornanong Phatlum wins Dubai Ladies Masters

AP - Sports
Pornanong Phatlum wins Dubai Ladies Masters
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Pornanong Phatlum of Thailand, right, hugs his brother and caddie after she wins the final round of the …

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DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Thailand's Pornanong Phatlum rallied to win the Dubai Ladies Masters on Saturday, hitting a 54-degree wedge to 2 feet on the par-5 final hole for a birdie and a one-stroke victory over American Stacy Lewis.
The 24-year-old Phatlum closed with a 6-under 66 to finish at 15-under 273 in the Ladies European Tour's season-ending event. She also birdied the par-4 17th at Emirates Golf Course.
''I am very excited,'' Phatlum said. ''I just played my own game and stayed calm under pressure. I have learned how to stay focused through meditation. ... When I'm on the course, I just play my game and I didn't think about the win. ... I don't want to pressure myself.''
The third-ranked Lewis, a three-time winner this year on the LPGA Tour, bogeyed the par-3 15th and closed with three pars for a 69. She missed a 40-foot birdie putt on No. 18.
''I'm disappointed,'' Lewis said. ''The back nine that Pornanong played was pretty impressive. She hit golf shots when she needed to and made the putts and I didn't. It's been a really good year. It's had its highs and lows. I've played some really consistent golf.''
Phatlum, 23rd this year on the LPGA Tour money list with $600,210, earned $102,770 for her second LET victory. She also won the 2012 Women's Indian Open.
Spain's Carlota Ciganda was third at 7 under after a 71.

Belgian golf psychologist to Ernie Els dies at 62

Belgian golf psychologist to Ernie Els dies at 62

AP - Sports
Belgian golf psychologist to Ernie Els dies at 62
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File - In this Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013 file photo, South African Ernie Els tees off the 9th hole during the first round of the HSBC Champions golf tournament at the Sheshan International Golf Club in Shanghai, China. Els says he is considering cutting his golf schedule even more to spend time with his family, it was announced on Thursday, Dec. 5, 2103. The four-time major winner has already slowed down over the past few years, playing 19 tournaments on the PGA Tour and only seven European Tour events last season. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko, File)
SUN CITY, South Africa (AP) -- Ernie Els had another sad day upon learning that his former psychologist, Jos Vanstiphout, had died of a heart attack.
A friend of the psychologist said Vanstiphout died Friday night of a heart attack, the European Tour said. The friend, Xavier Champagne, said Vanstiphout broke his hip two years ago in a fall from a ladder, and in recent months had been dealing with shortness of breath.
Vanstiphout was 62.
Born in Belgium, he became interested in golf psychology after reading Tim Gallwey's book, ''The Inner Game of Golf.''
He worked with Retief Goosen when the South African won his first U.S. Open in 2001 at Southern Hills, where Goosen three-putted for bogey from 12 feet on the last hole to allow for a playoff, and then beat Mark Brooks the next day.
He more famously worked with Els, who won his first British Open in 2002 after the first sudden-death playoff in Open history.
Els, speaking at the Nedbank Challenge in South Africa, received the news two days after the death of Nelson Mandela. He said Vanstiphout meant much to his career.
''We really connected and there was a genuine love for each other there,'' Els said. ''It was a love-hate at times, as everyone will know, but the stuff he taught me and the way that he did it was totally different. His approach was unique, and I know he got under a lot of people's skin. But for me, he was just brilliant.''
Els said he respected the no-nonsense approach of Vanstiphout, using tough talk even in the best of times. Els recalled his round of 60 at Royal Melbourne.
''I walk onto the range the next day and he is all over me again,'' Els said. ''I said, 'What?' And he looked at me and he said, 'You know and I know that you should have shot 58.' That was the way he was, and he knew me very well, and was one of the only people who could say that to me.''

Jaye Marie Green leads LPGA Tour Q-school

Jaye Marie Green leads LPGA Tour Q-school

AP - Sports
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Jaye Marie Green increased her lead to nine strokes Saturday in the LPGA Tour qualifying tournament, reaching 25 under after four rounds.
The 19-year-old Green, from Boca Raton, had a 5-under 67 on LPGA International's Hills Course. She has gone 57 holes without a bogey since dropping a stroke on her 15th hole Wednesday in an opening 62.
''I was telling my dad after I shot 10 under on the first day that I wanted to get to 20 under before Sunday because then I'll have a big cushion,'' Green said. ''Today, when I got to 25 under I was like, 'Shoot, now I want to get to 30 under.' I'm starting to get a little greedy. But I like having such a cushion, which makes me focus on my game and not so much of the leaderboard.''
She was 29th on the Symetra Tour money list this year.
South Korea's Mi Rim Lee was second after a 69, also on the Hills Course. She had a course-record 61 on Friday on the Jones Course.
The top 20 after the final round Sunday will earn Category 12 status, Nos. 21-45 and ties will receive membership in Category 17, and the other players who made the 72-hole cut will get Symetra Tour status.
Tiffany Joh was third at 14 under after a 68 on the Hills Course.
Amy Anderson, the 21-year-old former North Dakota State star who won a record 20 college titles, was fourth at 11 under after a 70 on the Hills Course.
South Korea's Seon Hwa Lee, a four-time winner on the LPGA Tour, and Kathleen Ekey were 10 under. They shot 70, both on the Hills Course.
Cheyenne Woods, Tiger Woods' niece, missed the cut. She closed with a 73 on the Hills Course to tie for 102nd at 8 over.