Sunday, December 29, 2013

Jaye Marie Green wins LPGA Tour Q-school

Jaye Marie Green wins LPGA Tour Q-school

AP - Sports
2012 U.S. Women's Open - Round One
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DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -- Jaye Marie Green completed a runaway victory in the LPGA Tour qualifying tournament Sunday, finishing with a record 29-under 331 total for a 10-stroke margin.
The 19-year-old Green, from Boca Raton, closed with a 4-under 68 on LPGA International's Jones Course. She broke the event 90-hole mark of 18-under 342 set by Stacy Lewis in 2008.
''This is going to be a week that I'll always remember,'' Green said. ''I was the most nervous on that last green when I didn't have to be, but I really was. But when that putt fell I was just speechless and I think I was just seeing stars really. It was a cool feeling. I just felt really relieved.''
The top 20 earned Category 12 status, the next 26 players received membership in Category 17, and the other 22 players who made the 72-hole cut got Symetra Tour status.
South Korea's Mi Rim Lee was second after a 69. Tiffany Joh finished third at 15 under after a 71.
Amy Anderson, the 21-year-old former North Dakota State star who won a record 20 college titles, was fourth at 14 under after a 69.
''This is not what I expected at all,'' Anderson said. ''The week or so leading up I was actually struggling with my game quite a bit. So I was thinking I would sneak in by the skin of my teeth. To come out here and just play well all week was really exciting and took the stress out of it.''
Green bogeyed the par-3 third hole, ending a 59-hole run without a bogey. She rebounded with birdies on Nos. 5 and 6 to make the turn at 1 under. She birdied Nos. 10 and 11, dropped a stroke on the par-3 14th and closed with birdies on the final two holes.
''It's been a dream come true really,'' Green said. ''Since I was a little girl it's what I've always wanted to do. Having my dad beside me, couldn't have been a better feeling really. Having all my family here is just awesome. I'm so overwhelmed right now, I don't how to react.''
Green, who lost to Lydia Ko in the final of the 2012 U.S. Women's Amateur, played on the Symetra Tour this year. She had three top-10 finishes and finished the season 29th on the money list.
''It really is the stepping stone to getting into the LPGA Tour,'' Green said. ''Just the things that I've learned, like the key elements that you need to be out there was a huge help. For that to happen so fast, like me being here today after my first season, I wasn't expecting it to come that fast.''

Golf-World Challenge winners

Golf-World Challenge winners

Reuters 
Dec 8 (Reuters) - Winners of the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge since it was first held in 1999. Zach Johnson won this year's tournament in a playoff with fellow American Tiger Woods at Sherwood Country Club in Thousand Oaks, California on Sunday (U.S. unless stated):
2013 Zach Johnson
2012 Graeme McDowell (Northern Ireland)
2011 Tiger Woods
2010 McDowell
2009 Jim Furyk
2008 Vijay Singh (Fiji)
2007 Woods
2006 Woods
2005 Luke Donald (England)
2004 Woods
2003 Davis Love III
2002 Padraig Harrington (Ireland)
2001 Woods
2000 Love
1999 Tom Lehman*
*at the Grayhawk Golf Club, Scottsdale, Arizona (Compiled by Mark Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Gene Cherry)

World Challenge winners

World Challenge winners

Reuters 
(Reuters) - Winners of the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge since it was first held in 1999. Zach Johnson won this year's tournament in a playoff with fellow American Tiger Woods at Sherwood Country Club in Thousand Oaks, California on Sunday (U.S. unless stated):
2013 Zach Johnson
2012 Graeme McDowell (Northern Ireland)
2011 Tiger Woods
2010 McDowell
2009 Jim Furyk
2008 Vijay Singh (Fiji)
2007 Woods
2006 Woods
2005 Luke Donald (England)
2004 Woods
2003 Davis Love III
2002 Padraig Harrington (Ireland)
2001 Woods
2000 Love
1999 Tom Lehman*
*at the Grayhawk Golf Club, Scottsdale, Arizona
(Compiled by Mark Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Gene Cherry)

Johnson rallies to beat Woods in World Challenge

Johnson rallies to beat Woods in World Challenge

AP - Sports
A wild finish, a surprising winner at Sherwood
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Tiger Woods, right, congratulates Zach Johnson after Johnson won the first playoff hole to win the Northwestern …
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. (AP) -- The storybook ending at Sherwood had every element a golf fan could want - Tiger Woods with a commanding lead before a record crowd, clutch shots that kept getting better with every hole and a finish no one saw coming.

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Zach Johnson never looked the part of a winner until he was posing with the trophy.
''I feel very fortunate and somewhat lucky,'' Johnson said.
He also was very good.
Johnson was four shots behind with eight holes to play against the No. 1 player in the world. Tied for the lead on the 18th hole, Johnson quit on an 8-iron and hit into a hazard, and then went to the drop area figuring his only chance was to stuff it close to make bogey and hope Woods didn't save par from a bunker.
Johnson holed out from 58 yards for par, and won on the first extra hole when Woods missed a 5-foot par putt.
''So-called silly season, right?'' Johnson said.
The World Challenge was held at Sherwood for the 14th and final time. It moves next year to Isleworth in Florida.
It was only the fourth time in his career that Woods failed to win when he had at least a two-shot lead going into the final round, and the second time at Sherwood. Graeme McDowell made up a four-shot deficit in the 2010 World Challenge and beat Woods in a playoff.
That wasn't nearly as wild as the finish Sunday.
Johnson, who closed with a 4-under 68, nearly holed out from 88 yards on the par-5 16th hole. His tee shot on the par-3 17th hole covered the flag and landed 4 feet away for a birdie to tie for the lead. But he got caught up in the moment after Woods hit into the bunker, and his 8-iron came up woefully short and into hazard.
''It looked to me like it was going to be a very, very difficult 4 for him,'' Johnson said about Woods' bunker shot. ''I'm trying to get somewhat around the hole and make a 5. It wasn't exactly a full wedge shot, but it was one that I could be aggressive with - 58 yards, trying to hit it about 52, 53, and we saw what it did.''
The ball took three bounces, the last one just beyond the hole, and it stopped and spun back a few inches into the cup.
''A little too dramatic for me,'' Johnson said.
Woods hit a bunker shot just as exquisite to about 2 feet for a par that gave him a 70 and forced a playoff. They finished at 13-under 275.
In the playoff, Woods blinked first with a smooth 7-iron that tailed off to the right and into the same bunker, this lie even tougher. Johnson hit the green and two-putted for par, and while Woods hit another great shot out of the sand, his par putt to extend the playoff spun out of the left side of the cup.
''Zach, I don't know how the last three iron shots didn't go in the hole,'' Woods said. ''Pretty impressive what he did. He got me.''
Johnson won $1 million and should go to No. 9 in the world, the first time in his career he has been in the top 10.
Woods ended what he called a ''damn good year'' - five wins, the most of anyone in the world - with a shocking loss to Johnson. Two years ago, Woods ended the longest drought of his career when he went birdie-birdie at Sherwood to beat Johnson by one shot.
Matt Kuchar (67) and Bubba Watson (70) tied for third at 9-under 279.
The attendance Sunday was 24,922, a record for any round in 14 years at Sherwood. Traffic outside the tony club in the Santa Monica foothills looked like an LA freeway in what could be the last chance in the near future to see Woods in southern California.
Woods appeared to have his sixth title at Sherwood sewed up when Johnson missed a short par putt on the 10th hole to fall four shots behind with eight holes to play. Woods had said on Saturday that Johnson wasn't the kind of player who went away easily, and he was right.
Johnson picked up birdies on the 11th and 12th holes, and then got back in the game on the 14th when Woods three-putted from long range on the 14th, and Johnson saved his par with an 8-foot putt to get within one shot.
The rest of the way looked like the final rounds of a heavyweight fight, even if only one of them looked the part. Johnson has won 10 times on the PGA Tour including a major. What he lacks in power he makes up for with precision, and that was the case Sunday.
''The guy never ceases to amaze me,'' Johnson said. ''So yeah, I'll take pride in the fact that I played against the best, and I got one.''
Johnson looked almost apologetic when Woods missed his par putt in the playoff, and it was shocking to see. No one from his generation has made more clutch putts than Woods, who spoke about the topic earlier in the week.
But not this time.
It was not the way he wanted to leave Sherwood, where Woods has five wins and now five runner-up finishes. The only consolation was $400,000 for finishing second, bringing to just over $14 million the earnings he has donated to his foundation from the three tournaments (AT&T National, Deutsche Bank, World Challenge) that support his education programs.

Woods finds good and bad in Sherwood farewell

Woods finds good and bad in Sherwood farewell

Reuters 
By Mark Lamport-Stokes
THOUSAND OAKS, California (Reuters) - Tournament host Tiger Woods expressed bitter-sweet feelings after he lost out in a playoff for the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge on Sunday as the elite event ended a run of 14 years in California.
Next December, the World Challenge will shift to Isleworth Country Club outside Orlando in Florida, but Woods will long treasure memories of his five previous victories here and the $25 million raised by the tournament for his foundation.
"It is very sad to obviously leave Sherwood (Country Club) because there are so many great memories for me personally," world number one Woods told reporters after being beaten at the first extra hole by fellow American Zach Johnson.
"This was the last time my dad (Earl) ever got a chance to watch me play live, and this event has always had special meaning for my father and me.
"Without this event, we wouldn't be able to build the learning center which we did down in Orange County, and over 100,000 kids have now gone through our facilities."
Woods, World Challenge champion in 2001, 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2011, had been bidding for his sixth tournament victory of 2013 but was still able to reflect on a highly successful campaign after being denied by Johnson.
"Pretty damn good year," said Woods, who won a season-high five times on the PGA Tour before being voted Player of the Year for a record 11th time.
"Five wins, and you know, on some pretty good venues, so I'm very pleased with the year."
Though Woods failed to add to his career haul of 14 majors, he won five of his first 11 PGA Tour events, clinching the Farmers Insurance Open, the WGC-Cadillac Championship, the Arnold Palmer Invitational, the Players Championship and the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.
MAJOR LIKING
Woods especially likes the look of the venues for next year's majors.
He has always enjoyed playing at Augusta (Masters), has placed second and third in the last two U.S. Opens staged at Pinehurst and has previously triumphed at both Hoylake (2006 British Open) and Valhalla (2000 PGA Championship).
"I've won at every one, except for Pinehurst, and I'm trending in the right way," Woods said. "I've finished third, second. You get the picture, right?
"So I'm looking forward to the major championship venues next year. They have set up well for me over the years and I look forward to it."
As for his form at Sherwood Country Club this week, Woods was particularly pleased with the success of a new driver he put in his bag while he bemoaned his putting on three of the four days.
"I drove the ball great this week," he said. "I found a nice driver and I'm very pleased at the changes that I found in that. I think changing the shaft really made a big difference there.
"Most of the week though, except for Friday, I was struggling with my putting, blocking putts. Today was a perfect example of that. I blocked a lot of putts and just had a tough time finding my release point.
"The last hole, you know, being left-to-right and I just didn't want to block that one, and I didn't. I over released it."
Woods lipped out with a five-footer to bogey the first extra hole after Johnson had safely two-putted there for par.
"Putting comes and goes," said Woods. "It is what it is. You have your good days and bad days. Friday I made everything. And today was just one of those days where I just didn't make a lot."
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes; Editing by Gene Cherry)