Wednesday, March 5, 2014

WGC-HSBC Champions: Dustin Johnson leads by five through 36 holes

Dustin Johnson
Getty Images
Dustin Johnson tied the course record with a 9-under 63 at Sheshan International Friday for a five-shot lead in the WGC-HSBC Champions.
0
By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
SHANGHAI (AP) -- Dustin Johnson tied the course record with a 9-under 63, four shots better than anyone else Friday, and built a five-shot lead in the HSBC Champions. It was the kind of score that might make everyone else wonder which course he was playing.
Except that Graeme McDowell saw the whole thing.
Crouched behind the 10th green at Sheshan International, McDowell looked over at the powerful American and said, "I've probably seen 18 of the best drives I've seen all year in the last two days." Moments later, after Johnson blasted another one down the middle, McDowell saw No. 19.
It was an impressive display, Johnson at his very best with the most important club in his bag. He ran off six birdies in his opening seven holes. He never hit more than 8-iron into a par 4. He twice came within 15 yards of driving the green on par 4s -- once with a 3-iron.
"I really drove the ball really well," Johnson said. "For me, that's a big key."
Johnson became the sixth player with a 63 at Sheshan International, last achieved by Martin Kaymer in the final round in 2011. He was at 12-under 132, five shots clear of Rory McIlroy (72), Bubba Watson (69) and Boo Weekley (67).
McIlroy couldn't keep up. No one could.
McIlroy, who started the second round of this World Golf Championship with a two-shot lead, made three birdies on the front nine to stretch his lead to four shots. At that point, Johnson was just getting warmed up. And it wasn't long before McIlroy started to cool off. He drove into the same bunker he was in on Thursday and made another bogey, and he didn't give himself any birdie chances over the last six holes.
On the par-5 14th, his wedge went just over the green and forced him to hit a delicate chip to save par. On the reachable par-4 16th, he drove into a tiny pot bunker left of the green and took two to get out, again scrambling for par. And on the par-5 18th, McIlroy hit his second shot into the water and made bogey.
"I just hit a couple of bad shots, and then I guess I let it affect me a little bit, and then I started to doubt myself sometimes," McIlroy said. "I didn't hit a lot of quality shots on the back nine."
At least he's still in the hunt for his first win of the year.
And if Johnson loses his stride, there are plenty of players behind him who are poised to make a move.
McDowell, Ernie Els, Sergio Garcia, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano and Ian Poulter were among those at 6-under 138. Phil Mickelson, trying to recover from his quadruple bogey-bogey finish to the opening round, had a 68 and was seven shots behind.
"I'm making a lot of birdies," Mickelson said. "But I've had too many mistakes. I'm going to continue to play aggressively out here, because I have to make birdies to catch the lead. And hopefully, I'll eliminate a few mistakes here or there."
The one positive from his finish Thursday? The last time Mickelson made a quadruple bogey was in the first round of the 2009 Tour Championship. He went on to win.
Even so, catching Johnson suddenly looks like a monumental task.
"It was kind of tough to focus when playing with Dustin Johnson hitting it 350 yards in the middle of the fairways," McDowell said after his 69. "It was a little demoralizing at times. But I was happy that I hung in there. If he keeps playing the way he's played the last two days, he'll be tough to catch.
"What's possible for an athlete like him who just rips it, that's not what's possible for the rest of us sometimes," McDowell added. "It was probably one of the best driving displays I've seen this year, for sure. It was pretty immense. He's got a short game to match, as well. When he's in the mood and when he's on form, he's pretty prolific."
Johnson wasn't in much of a mood when he took double bogey on his fourth hole of the tournament and made the turn in 1-over. Starting with his eagle on the par-5 second hole of his opening round, he has played his last 26 holes in 13-under par.
His tee shot was so long on the 10th hole that it was through a cart path that crosses the fairway. His only mistake was forgetting that the green falls off to the right, which he didn't realize until his shot tumbled down a steep slope. That led to his only bogey.
About the only thing that really tripped him up was a question from a Chinese reporter asking if he was aware he had so many female fans in China and if he brought his girlfriend with him. Indeed, Paulina Gretzky followed him around the course.
"It's my fiancee," Johnson said.
Weekley is no stranger to China, having played the World Cup at Mission Hills. He qualified for the HSBC Champions by winning Colonial, and he has played solidly for two days.
Johnson did not make the Presidents Cup, so he had a month off before going to Perth for a European Tour event. This is his first PGA Tour event of the 2013-14 season. He won the first event of the 2013 season, at wind-blown Kapalua in the 54-hole Tournament of Champions.
"It still hasn't hit me that this is a new season," he said. "I'd like to get off to a good start. I just want to play well the next two days."

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Donald sets pace at stormy Sun City

Donald sets pace at stormy Sun City

Reuters 
Luke Donald of Britain tees off on the 15th hole during the first round of the WGC-HSBC Champions golf tournament in Shanghai
.
View gallery
Luke Donald of Britain tees off on the 15th hole during the first round of the WGC-HSBC Champions golf …
SUN CITY, South Africa (Reuters) - Former world number one Luke Donald made a blistering start to the Nedbank Golf Challenge on Thursday but the first round was cut short by thunderstorms.
Five-under-par after 11 holes, England's Donald held a two-shot lead over Jamie Donaldson of Wales, Dane Thomas Bjorn and Zimbabwean Brendon de Jonge at the Gary Player Country Club.
Play was halted just after midday because of the threat of lightning from a storm that arrived quickly over the course and forced the 30-man field off for just under three hours.
They returned for another hour's play before being warned off again by a dramatic blast of the siren and play was eventually suspended. The first round will be completed on Friday morning.
Donald birdied the opening hole and eagled the long second to race to three under par. Four straight pars kept the 35-year-old on three under when forced off the course but the long delay did not deter the leader who picked up further strokes at the eighth and ninth.
De Jonge moved into contention with an eagle at the ninth where he holed out with a wedge.
Donaldson was three under after 12 but Bjorn is still back on the sixth with the prospect of 30 holes to play on Friday in order to complete the first and second rounds.
Defending champion Martin Kaymer went to two under par as the elite field set off to compete for a prize fund of $6.5 million
(Reporting by Mark Gleeson; Editing by Ed Osmond; mark.gleeson@thomsonreuters.com +27828257807 Messaging mark.gleeson.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net; l)

Donald leads, lightning halts play in Sun City

Donald leads, lightning halts play in Sun City

AP - Sports
Donald leads, lightning ends play in Sun City
.
View gallery
FILE - In this Nov. 17, 2013, file photo, Henrik Stenson from Sweden celebrates after winning the DP World Golf Championship, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Stenson is now in South Africa to play in the Nedbank Golf Challenge starting Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)
SUN CITY, South Africa (AP) -- Lightning halted the first round of the Nedbank Golf Challenge and Luke Donald's rapid start at the 30-man invitational on Thursday.
Donald opened with a birdie and an eagle on his first two holes and was 5 under after 11 when a second interruption for lightning caused players to come off the course for good.
The former top-ranked Englishman is two ahead of Jamie Donaldson and Thomas Bjorn. Donaldson played 12 holes, while Bjorn was 3 under with three birdies in six holes.
Playing for the first time since ending last season with the FedEx Cup and European money list titles, Henrik Stenson was 1 under after seven, with six straight pars after a birdie on No. 1.

Golf-Shot of the day must wait overnight to be recorded

Golf-Shot of the day must wait overnight to be recorded

Reuters 
SUN CITY, South Africa, Dec 5 (Reuters) - Brendon de Jonge played the shot of the day at a storm-curtailed Nedbank Golf Challenge at Sun City on Thursday, but will have to wait until Friday for it to be acknowledged by the scorers.
The burly Zimbabwean hit a wedge from just over 100 metres out to record an eagle on the ninth at the Gary Player Country Club, lofting it perfectly past the pin and watching as sharp back spin carried it back into the cup.
It took him to three under after nine holes and just two off the leader Luke Donald but De Jonge's official overnight score was still pegged at one under after eight holes because his playing partners have yet to finish the ninth.
Play was called off before U.S. Open champion Justin Rose and American Ryan Moore completed the hole as a severe thunderstorm threatened lightning and officials swiftly order the players to leave the course.
The scores are not updated until the three-ball completes the hole, said a spokesman for South Africa's Sunshine Tour, which co-sanctions the 30-man elite event with the European Tour.
De Jonge will only be credited with his eagle once the hole is completed when the field returns at 7.30am on Friday morning to finish the first round. (Reporting by Mark Gleeson; Editing by Ed Osmond; mark.gleeson@thomsonreuters.com +27828257807 Messaging mark.gleeson.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net; l)

Shot of the day must wait overnight to be recorded

Shot of the day must wait overnight to be recorded

Reuters 
International team member Brendon de Jonge of Zimbabwe reacts after making his putt on the sixth hole at the 2013 Presidents Cup golf tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio
.
View gallery
International team member Brendon de Jonge of Zimbabwe reacts after making his putt on the sixth hole …
SUN CITY, South Africa (Reuters) - Brendon de Jonge played the shot of the day at a storm-curtailed Nedbank Golf Challenge at Sun City on Thursday, but will have to wait until Friday for it to be acknowledged by the scorers.
The burly Zimbabwean hit a wedge from just over 100 meters out to record an eagle on the ninth at the Gary Player Country Club, lofting it perfectly past the pin and watching as sharp back spin carried it back into the cup.
It took him to three under after nine holes and just two off the leader Luke Donald but De Jonge's official overnight score was still pegged at one under after eight holes because his playing partners have yet to finish the ninth.
Play was called off before U.S. Open champion Justin Rose and American Ryan Moore completed the hole as a severe thunderstorm threatened lightning and officials swiftly order the players to leave the course.
The scores are not updated until the three-ball completes the hole, said a spokesman for South Africa's Sunshine Tour, which co-sanctions the 30-man elite event with the European Tour.
De Jonge will only be credited with his eagle once the hole is completed when the field returns at 7.30am on Friday morning to finish the first round.
(Reporting by Mark Gleeson; Editing by Ed Osmond; mark.gleeson@thomsonreuters.com +27828257807 Messaging mark.gleeson.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net; l)

US golf star undeterred by Bangkok protests

US golf star undeterred by Bangkok protests

AFP 
This handout photo taken and received from OneAsia on November 9, 2013 shows Rickie Fowler of the US playing a shot during the third round of the Australian PGA Championship at the RACV Royal Pines Resort golf club on Australia’s Gold Coast
.
View gallery
This handout photo taken and received from OneAsia on November 9, 2013 shows Rickie Fowler of the US playing a shot during the third round of the Australian PGA Championship at the RACV Royal Pines Resort golf club on Australia’s Gold Coast (AFP Photo/Khalid Redza)
Bangkok (AFP) - American golf star Rickie Fowler Thursday said he was ready to play in protest-hit Thailand next week but admitted he might have second thoughts if something "crazy" happens.
Fowler, one of the headliners at the December 12-15 Thailand Golf Championship near Bangkok, was speaking after several days of violent demonstrations rocked the Thai capital.
"I haven't caught too much on TV. I've heard a little bit of the news. I'm not too worried about it. I'm excited to come see Bangkok," he told journalists on a conference call.
"I've heard a lot of good things, and I trust that everyone with the tournament and everyone organising the event will look after us quite well and we'll be just fine."
Asked whether he had considered pulling out, Fowler said: "No, there's nothing yet. I'm sure, you know, if anything crazy were to happen, I may have a couple questions. But I know all the guys from the US are excited to come."
Anti-government protesters have been fighting street battles with police as political violence returns to Bangkok, three years after dozens died in a crackdown on mass rallies.
Barbed wire and barricades have sprung up around the city after protesters clashed with police, who fired tear gas, water cannon and rubber bullets.
However, the $1 million Thailand Golf Championship will be played at the Amata Spring Country Club, outside Bangkok and well away from the protests.
Fowler said he was confident that visiting players, who also include Henrik Stenson, Justin Rose, Charl Schwartzel and Bubba Watson, would not face any problems.
"I haven't heard about any of the (security) arrangements, anything that's changed," said the 24-year-old.
"But I know the tournament will be there to look after us and make sure we're good to go when we land and get us into Bangkok and settled into the hotel and get ready for the week."
He added: "Bubba is one of my best friends on tour. I know he's excited about coming back. He was there last year and had a great time."
No comment was available from tournament organisers following requests from AFP.