Monday, January 28, 2013

Frustrated Tiger opens with 74


Frustrated Tiger opens with 74

Updated: April 9, 2005, 10:18 AM ET
Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Putting a ball into the water usually only happens on a hole with a windmill.
That didn't stop Tiger Woods from dunking one Thursday at The Masters.
Tiger Woods
AP Photo/Morry GashWoods has failed to break par in his last three first rounds at The Masters.
In a bizarre opening to his bid for a fourth green jacket, Woods watched helplessly as his eagle putt on the 13th hole ended up in Rae's Creek instead of the bottom of the cup.
A seemingly routine birdie turned into a bad bogey -- and that was just the start of his afternoon of misery on a rain-soaked Augusta National course.
By the time darkness brought his round to an end after only 12 holes, Woods also had a shot hit a pin and go into a bunker and played from one set of trees to another on a hole he usually handles with ease.
He returned Friday to find even more problems, hitting a tree on the eighth hole for a bogey and finishing his first round at 2-over 74, seven shots off the lead. Woods signed his scorecard and headed toward the clubhouse, saying only "gotta eat" when asked about his first round.
The day before, Woods committed one of golf's ultimate sins when he stroked a 70-footer that sped past the hole and didn't stop moving until it reached the water.
Woods looked stunned as his caddie, Steve Williams, pleaded with the ball to slow down. But it kept going, drawing a gasp from the crowd before disappearing down a slope into the creek.
Things didn't get any better on a day when Woods tossed clubs, kicked his bag, and looked as frustrated as The Masters officials watching thunderstorms delay the first round by more than five hours.
Just for good measure, Woods had to sit through a review by Masters officials over whether he was standing astride the hole while tapping in a putt on the 14th hole. After looking at video, officials ruled there was no violation.
It wasn't what Woods envisioned two days earlier when he told the media his game was peaking.
"I know my ball striking is there," Woods said.
Whether he felt the same after a gloomy first day wasn't known. After being driven in from the course when play was suspended by darkness, Woods declined comment and quickly drove off with a rules official.
Whatever he was thinking couldn't have been good.
Woods not only putted a ball in the water, he also duck-hooked a drive into a tree on No. 2 and then sprayed his next shot into the trees all the way on the other side of the fairway.
Disgusted, he kicked at his bag as he walked up to the ball in the woods. He then hit his next shot into a greenside bunker and had to hole a 25-footer for par.
And even when Woods hit it good, bad things happened.
His wedge on the first hole hit the pin, only to kick back and roll into the front bunker. What likely would have been a birdie turned into a bogey, further dampening his mood.
And he didn't get much sympathy from one of his competitors.
"He's had a few good breaks over his career," Chris DiMarco said. "It's golf. It's just the way it is."
Woods had to start on the back nine when thunderstorms forced Masters officials to juggle tee times. He was 1-over after three holes when he came to the 13th, which traditionally ranks as one of the easiest holes on the course.
Woods reached the green of the par-5 with a tough shot out of the pines, but his ball bounded some 70 feet past the pin tucked in front. He lined up his eagle putt, gave it a rap with his putter and watched as it raced past the hole, picked up speed and rolled off the green.
Woods was walking toward the hole when the ball disappeared, going down the hill and rolling into the water. He took off his cap in disbelief as Williams ran for the bag he had left on the next tee in case his boss wanted to try to wedge it out of the water.
Instead, Woods called over a rules official and placed another ball where his had originally been. Then he putted again, this time for par. That putt ended up about a foot from the hole, and Woods tapped in for bogey.

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press

Wie starts with qualifier May 13 in Hawaii


Wie starts with qualifier May 13 in Hawaii

Updated: April 6, 2005, 5:17 PM ET
Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- The next step for Michelle Wie is the toughest test in golf.
Michelle Wie and Father
Michelle and her father, B.J., know the odds of qualifying are long.
The 15-year-old from Honolulu entered the U.S. Open on Tuesday, although she faces a long and improbable road to Pinehurst No. 2.
The first stop will be an 18-hole local qualifier May 13 at Turtle Bay on Oahu, the same course where she tied for second in an LPGA Tour event in February from a shorter set of tees. Wie likely would have to finish first or second at Turtle Bay to advance to a 36-hole sectional qualifier in June.
"Michelle is excited about this,'' her father, B.J. Wie, said from the University of Hawaii, where he is a professor. "To make it through local qualifying will be challenging. I hope she can make it into sectional. That would be a good experience. For her making it into the main event will be difficult. Her chances will be low.''
Her entry left the USGA officials scanning the record books to see if any other woman had tried to qualify for the U.S. Open, the second-oldest championship in golf.
Wie also entered the U.S. Amateur Public Links qualifying for the second straight year, which she sees as her best chance of ever playing in the Masters. The winner of the Public Links gets an invitation to Augusta National.
A year ago, Wie came up two shots short of qualifying for 64-player tournament of match play.
Wie rose to national prominence by becoming the youngest winner of a USGA championship for adults, capturing the Women's Amateur Public Links at age 13. In her PGA Tour debut at the 2004 Sony Open, she shot 68 in the second round at Waialae Country Club and missed the cut by one shot.
Since then, she has taken a path like no other teenager in golf.
Now in the 10th grade at Punahou School in Honolulu, she already has played 20 times on the LPGA Tour, twice on the PGA Tour and once each on the Nationwide and Canadian tours.
She has been criticized for not playing against girls her own age and piling up trophies, but her father said she is driven by playing against the best.
"That's her main interest, going into the men's world,'' her father said.
She has shown she can play just fine with the women. In three LPGA tournaments this year, including a major, Wie has tied for second, tied for 12th and tied for 14th two weeks ago at the Kraft Nabisco Championship. If she were a pro, she would have enough money to be 10th on the money list.
Wie plans to play Turtle Bay from the back tees at least twice before local qualifying. Her father noted that the entry fee for the U.S. Open was $125.
"The USGA charges very little for an entry fee,'' he said. "In this state, that's the cost of one round of golf.''
Wie finishes the 10th grade at the end of the May, and her next tournament will be the LPGA Championship on June 9-12 outside Baltimore.
Her father said she would qualify for the U.S. Amateur Public Links on June 14 at Cedarbrook Golf Course in Pittsburgh. If she were to make it out of local qualifying for the U.S. Open, she would have to play the 36-hole sectional on the Monday and Tuesday before the LPGA Championship.
Wie already has qualified for the U.S. Women's Open at Cherry Hills in Denver the last week in June, having tied for 13th last year at age 14.

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press

Masters Tee Times


Masters Tee Times

Updated: April 10, 2005, 11:18 AM ET
ESPN.com
All times are ET.
Sun.Pairing
11 a.m.
11:10 a.m.
11:20 a.m.
11:30 a.m.
Jonathan Kaye, Stehen Ames
11:40 a.m.
11:50 a.m.
12 p.m.
12:10 p.m.
12:20 p.m.
12:30 p.m.
12:40 p.m.
12:50 p.m.
1 p.m.
1:10 p.m.
1:20 p.m.
1:30 p.m.
1:40 p.m.
1:50 p.m.
2 p.m.
2:10 p.m.
2:20 p.m.
2:30 p.m.
2:40 p.m.
2:50 p.m.
3 p.m.