Friday, March 7, 2014

Stuart Appleby wins Australian Masters as Tiger Woods rallies late to finish fourth

stuart appleby
Getty Images
Stuart Appleby rallied from a seven-shot deficit on Sunday, making birdies on the final two holes for a one-shot victory.
0
By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
Stuart Appleby ended a nine-year drought at home by winning the JBWere Australian Masters on Sunday, rallying from a seven-shot deficit with birdies on his last two holes for a 6-under 65.
Just after Tiger Woods closed with a 65 and ensured he'd finish the year without a title, Appleby knocked in a 30-foot par putt on the 16th hole to stay in the mix, took the lead with a 25-footer for birdie on the 17th and closed with a two-putt birdie for a one-shot victory.
"I figured I had to win once every 10 years," said Appleby, who last won on home soil in the 2001 Australian Open.
Adam Bland, who began the final round at Victoria Golf Club with a three-shot lead, missed a 10-foot eagle putt on the last hole that would have forced a playoff. He closed with a 73. Daniel Gaunt shot 71 and was alone in third.
Defending champion Woods completed an entire year without an official victory (he still has his unofficial Chevron World Challenge to play next month), although he finished in style. Woods made two eagles over the last four holes, played the last six holes in 6 under and matched his best score of the year with a 65.
Woods finished alone in fourth, his highest finish of a forgettable season. He tied for fourth in the Masters and U.S. Open.
About Appleby's only mistake on an overcast Sunday was missing the trophy presentation. Only when he heard his name over the speakers did he make a dash under the grandstands and onto the 18th green.
He won for the second time this year, having shot 59 to win the PGA Tour's Greenbrier Classic in West Virginia.
Appleby finished out of the top 125 on the PGA Tour money list a year ago for the first time since his rookie season in 1996. He had to use a one-time exemption from the top 50 in career money to keep his card and buy some time to find his game.
"This really wraps things up in a nice bow," he said.
Appleby was one shot behind Gaunt on the 16th when he pulled his tee shot into a thin lie in the bunker, tried to play a running shot and saw it come up 30 feet short. To lose a shot on that hole might have been the end of it. But the more he looked at the putt, the better chance he had of holing it, and he did.
Two groups behind him, Gaunt went over the back of the green, and his weak chip rolled back down the hill toward him, leading to a double bogey. On the 17th, his birdie putt from just off the green hit the pin and stayed out.
Appleby won for the 12th time worldwide, and the Australian Masters was the only big home event that had eluded him. He finished at 10-under 274 and earned just over $270,000.
What made it most special was winning in front of familiar faces.
"We play around the world for big money in big tournaments with big ratings," he said. "But to come home to Australia, it's for real. I think that hurt me too many times, because I was wanting to win."
Woods started the final round 10 shots behind. With a game reminiscent of his singles match in the Ryder Cup, he played his last six holes in 6 under, including a pair eagles, to get within two shots of the leader. With a final birdie from Appleby, Woods finished three shots behind at 277, as close to the winner as he has been all year.
"It would have been nice if I had gotten off to that start," Woods said of his finish. "It came too little, too late. I still needed some help. Unfortunately, it's not going to happen."
Woods also had a 65 in the first round of The Barclays at the start of the FedExCup playoffs on the PGA Tour.
He finished a calendar year without a victory for the first time in his career. He won the Australian Masters a year ago at Kingston Heath for his 82nd title worldwide and a No. 1 ranking that no one could argue.
Twelve days later, however, he ran his car into a tree outside his Florida home, and that led to revelations that he had been cheating on his wife. Woods spent nearly five months out of golf, including two months in rehab at a Mississippi clinic, returning at Augusta National.
Still, there were ominous signs early that this day would not work in his favor. Woods hit 2-iron on the 257-yard opening hole that he tried to either put in a bunker or on the green. Somehow, it carried the bunker and was nestled on the edge of a grass, a downhill lie so severe that he had no shot but to swat it into the sand. He missed a 4-foot par putt.
Woods also missed a 3-foot par putt on the eighth, and trailed by as many as 12 shots at one point.
Most of that was forgotten by the finish -- a short iron to 3 feet on the 13th, a 45-foot eagle putt on the 15th, an up-and-down from just off the 17th green for birdie, and the 15-foot eagle on the final hole.
Woods switched to a Nike putter, the Method 003 with a mallet shape, for the final round. He also changed putters from his Scotty Cameron at the British Open. In both cases, he attributed that to slow greens, on which he struggles.
"It was fun to make a couple of putts," Woods said. "It's amazing what happens when you get a putt to the hole. It actually does go in."
Woods had back-to-back top 10s for the first time all year.
It was the second straight week that he started and finished with good scores, only to fall out of contention in the middle two rounds. A week ago, Woods tied for sixth in the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai, 12 shots behind.
"I can do this in streaks," he said. "Unfortunately, I haven't done this for an entire round."

PGA Tour unveils 2011 schedule with 45 events, few changes from 2010

pga tour banner
Getty Images
The 2011 schedule released Wednesday includes 45 official-money tournaments, down one from 2010.
0
By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
The PGA Tour lost one tournament and picked up seven new title sponsors for a 2011 schedule that is not much different than last year and still offers about the same amount of prize money.
The schedule released Wednesday includes 45 tournaments that count toward official money, down one from last year after the Turning Stone Resort Championship decided not to renew.
Despite losing that tournament, however, total prize money hardly missed a beat. Assuming the majors keep their purses at least the same, the total is $288 million -- an increase of $3.8 million that offsets the $4 million Turning Stone purse. The 17 tournaments had slight purse increases built into their contracts.
FedEx will become title sponsor for one year at the St. Jude Classic in Memphis, Tenn., held a week before the U.S. Open. FedEx had been the title sponsor until it shifted its focus to the FedExCup in 2007.
Six new title sponsors had already been announced, a strong showing in this economy. Those were Hyundai (Kapalua), Farmers Insurance (San Diego), Wells Fargo (Charlotte, N.C.), Cadillac (Doral, Fla.), McGladrey (St. Simons Island, Ga.) and CIMB (Malaysia).
That leaves only two tournaments on the schedule that do not have sponsors: The Heritage at Hilton Head and the Bob Hope Classic. PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem has said both events could make it at least another year without one.
“The 2011 schedule reflects the overall strength and stability of the PGA Tour,” he said.
Only four tournaments remain in the Fall Series -- held after the FedExCup is over -- with the Viking Classic in Mississippi moving to the same week as the British Open.
The Disney event will be held before the tour leaves the country for a two-week swing through Asia. This year, Disney was the week after the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, which is a World Golf Championship event that does not count toward official money. Three players -- Heath Slocum, Richard Johnson of Sweden and Rickie Fowler -- flew from China to Florida to play this year.
The tour will have another week off in September, only this time it will be after the second playoff event at the Deutsche Bank Championship outside Boston. That tournament traditionally ends on Labor Day, and there were concerns it made for a quick turnaround the following week.
Next year, players will have a week off after Boston before going to the BMW Championship at Cog Hill outside Chicago, followed by the Tour Championship in Atlanta.
The West Coast was reconfigured this year because of the Olympics and returns to its usual lineup. The Phoenix Open will be played the first week in February, followed by Pebble Beach and Riviera, leading to the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.
The Match Play Championship has changed its format from a 36-hole championship match. Instead, four quarterfinal matches will be played Saturday, with two semifinal matches Sunday morning and an 18-hole championship match Sunday afternoon.
“We believe this will enhance the viewing experience for the fans on site as well as our NBC television audience,” Finchem said.
Here is the complete schedule:
Jan. 6-9
Hyundai Tournament of Champions
Kapalua, Hawaii
Jan. 13-16
Sony Open in Hawaii
Honolulu, Hawaii
Jan. 20-23 Bob Hope Classic
La Quinta, Calif.
Jan. 27-30
Farmers Insurance Open
La Jolla, Calif.
Feb. 3-6
Waste Management Phoenix Open
Scottsdale, Ariz.
Feb. 10-13
AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am
Pebble Beach, Calif.
Feb. 17-20
Northern Trust Open
Pacific Palisades, Calif.
Feb. 23-27
WGC-Accenture Match Play Champoinship
Marana, Ariz.
Feb. 24-27
Mayakoba Golf Classic at Riviera Maya-Cancun
Playa del Carmen, Mexico
March 3-6
Honda Classic
Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.
March 10-13
WGC-Cadillac Championship
Doral, Fla.
March 10-13
Puerto Rico Open
Rio Grande, Puerto Rico
March 17-20
Transitions Championship
Palm Harbor, Fla.
March 24-27
Arnold Palmer Invitational
Orlando, Fla.
March 31-April 3
Shell Houston Open
Humble, Texas
April 7-10
The Masters
Augusta, Ga.
April 14-17
Valero Texas Open
San Antonio, Texas
April 20-24
The Heritage
Hilton Head Island, S.C.
April 28-May 1
Zurich Classic of New Orleans
Avondale, La.
May 5-8
Wells Fargo Championship
Charlotte, N.C.
May 12-15
The Players Championship
Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.
May 19-22
Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial
Fort Worth, Texas
May 26-29
HP Byron Nelson Championship
Irving, Texas
June 2-5
Memorial Tournament
Dublin, Ohio
June 9-12
FedEx St. Jude Classic
Memphis, Tenn.
June 16-19
U.S. Open
Potomac, Md.
June 23-26
Travelers Championship
Cromwell, Conn.
June 30-July 3
AT&T National
Newtown Square, Pa.
July 7-10
John Deere Classic
Silvis, Ill.
July 14-17
The British Open
St. George's, England
July 14-17
Viking Classic
Madison, Miss.
July 20-24
RBC Canadian Open
Vancouver, B.C.
July 28-31
Greenbrier Classic
White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.
Aug. 4-7 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational
Akron, Ohio
Aug. 4-7
Reno-Tahoe Open
Reno, Nev.
Aug. 11-14
PGA Championship
Johns Creek, Ga.
Aug. 18-21
Wyndham Championship
Greensboro, N.C.
Aug. 25-28
The Barclays
Edison, N.J.
Sept. 2-5
Deutsche Bank Championship
Norton, Mass.
Sept. 15-18
BMW Championship
Lemont, Ill.
Sept. 22-25
The Tour Championship
Atlanta, Ga.
Sept. 29-Oct. 2
Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open
Las Vegas, Nev.
Oct. 6-9
Frys.com Open
San Martin, Calif.
Oct. 13-16
McGladrey Classic
St. Simons Island, Ga.
Oct. 20-23
Children's Miracle Network Classic
Lake Buena Vista, Fla.
Oct. 27-30
CIMB Asia Pacific Classic
Selangor, Malaysia
Nov. 3-6 WGC-HSBC Champions
Shanghai, China
Nov. 17-20
Presidents Cup
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Nov. 24-27
Omega Mission Hills World Cup
Hainan Island, China