PGA GOLF Scoring Zone

GOLF TOP STORIES & LEADERBOARD

Golf Top Stories & Leaderboard

by Neftali Rivera on Nov.17, 2009, under GOLF TOP STORIES & LEADERBOARD

GigaGolf, Inc.
 

GOLF SCORING ZONE

Leaderboard – The Barclays 

           1 SCO Martin Laird                1:50pm color info 69 67 65   201
         Waiting to tee off on hole 1  
  T2   2 USA Dustin Johnson -                       1:50pm color info 71 69 64   204
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T2   3 AUS Jason Day -                                  1:40pm color info 67 67 70   204
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  4   10 AUS Adam Scott -                                1:40pm color info 66 71 68   205
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T5   4 ENG Justin Rose -                                 1:30pm color info 72 69 65   206
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T5   14 USA Ryan Palmer -                            1:30pm color info 66 74 66   206
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T5   6 USA Matt Kuchar -                               1:20pm color info 68 69 69   206
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T5   45 AUS John Senden -                            1:20pm color info 67 69 70   206
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T5   21 USA Vaughn Taylor -                        1:10pm color info 65 70 71   206
          Waiting to tee off on hole 1
  T5   48 USA Kevin Streelman -                    1:10pm color info 72 63 71   206

WINNIPEG, Manitoba — Overnight leader Michelle Wie shot an even-par 72 to share the lead with South Korea’s Jiyai Shin after Saturday’s third round of the CN Canadian Women’s Open.

Both players suffered plenty of mosquito bites after a rainy round that saw them finish tied at 10 under for the tournament at St. Charles Country Club.

“Actually, they tried to kill me,” laughed Shin, who wiped out Wie’s three-stroke lead with a 3-under 69.

Wie, who recorded three birdies to go along with three bogeys in her round, agreed with her playing partner. The native of Hawaii said the winged nuisances affected her game.

“I have to say of everything, the mosquitoes were the hardest to concentrate,” Wie said. “They were pretty bad. But I found out they were a little better on the greens than on the fairways.

“They were very bad on the rough, so I’ll try to avoid that tomorrow.”

Na Yeon Choi drained a 60-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole that moved her into a tie for third with fellow South Korean Jee Young Lee and Norway’s Suzann Pettersen at 6 under.

“I used the (mosquito) spray, but I feel like they (got) worse,” said Choi, who posted a 71. “I think they like the smell.”

Pettersen, the defending champion ranked No. 3 on the World Rolex Rankings, shot a 72.

“Today was just awful for me,” Pettersen said. “But I’m in reach of the top so it was a good day to play bad and hang in there.”

Three Canadians are part of the 73-player field looking for a share of the $2.25 million purse, with $337,500 going to the winner.

Charlottetown’s Lorie Kane was the low Canadian after posting a morning round of 4-under 68 that had her even for the tournament and tied for 26th.

Montreal’s Lisa Meldrum was 2 over and tied for 41st following a round of 71, while Adrienne White (75) of Red Deer was 4 over in a tie for 53rd.

Kane was smiling after rebounding from a 75 on Thursday and a 73 on Friday. The 15-year veteran’s third round featured spells of light rain and the ever-present mosquitoes.

“Being from Prince Edward Island, we can get some pretty nasty ones, too,” Kane said with a laugh when asked if the bugs were the biggest she’d ever seen. But these, I gave quite a bit of blood today.”

No Canadian has won the event — the only LPGA Tour stop in Canada — since Jocelyne Bourassa in 1973.

Wie, ranked No. 12 in the world, is seeking her first victory this season and second of her career. The 20-year-old joined the tour last season and won last year’s Lorena Ochoa Invitational. The Canadian Open is her 15th event of the season and her highest finish was third in May’s Tres Marias Championship.

No. 4-ranked Shin also joined the tour last year. The 22-year-old already has three victories, including last month’s Evian Masters. She’s also posted nine top-10 finishes this season.

Shin and Wie will play together Sunday for the fourth straight round this week.

“Tomorrow should be a fun game because right now Michelle, she has (been playing great),” Shin said. “And then also I have a good feeling, too.”

Rachel Hetherington of Australia had the lowest round of the day — and her season — with a 66.

One player who wasn’t feeling great Saturday was No. 8-ranked Paula Creamer of the U.S., but mosquito bites weren’t to blame.

Aside from playing with a thumb injury, Creamer began suffering from what she believed was food poisoning in the morning. She saw a doctor and had a shot before her round and another at the turn.

“This was the hardest thing I’ve had to do,” said Creamer, who still recorded a 70 and was tied for ninth at 4 under with fellow American Morgan Pressel.

“I’ve played through a lot of pain and I’ve played through being sick a bunch, but this was a hard one. The weather didn’t help much, either.”

GLENEAGLES, Scotland — Colin Montgomerie has finally revealed one of his Ryder Cup decisions — not who will be handed a wild card, but how the match will start.

And following the lead of Seve Ballesteros, who considered it one of the masterstrokes of his 1997 success when he changed the format at Valderrama, Montgomerie has gone for fourballs first at Celtic Manor on Oct. 1.

Europe’s four victories in the last six matches have all come with the opening session being fourballs — and America’s two wins came when Ben Crenshaw in 1999 and Paul Azinger two years ago reverted to foursomes first.

Hal Sutton chose not to do that at Oakland Hills in 2004 and lost.

Surprisingly perhaps, Montgomerie was leaning towards foursomes earlier in the year, but with at least five untested players likely to be in his line-up — Rory McIlroy, Martin Kaymer, Ross Fisher and Francesco Molinari are certainties, Peter Hanson is on course to join them and Simon Dyson or Alvaro Quiros could yet make it six — he has gone for the safer option.

“Foursomes is the most difficult form of golf and I had a gut feeling it might favor us this time, but it’s easier to get new caps involved straightaway in fourballs,” he said. “Recent results also suggest it works better for us, so that’s what I went for when I signed the captains’ agreement.”

Montgomerie’s decision increases the chances of Northern Ireland natives Graeme McDowell and McIlroy kicking things off for Europe. Both have expressed that wish after winning all three games when they led the way for Britain and Ireland against Continental Europe last September in the Seve Trophy matchs.

As for the three wild cards, they will be named on Sunday evening after the conclusion of the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles.

PARAMUS, N.J. — Tiger Woods spent two days with instructor Sean Foley in Florida before coming to the Barclays, this after the Canadian-born coach worked with him during the PGA Championship.

Still to be decided is whether Woods wants to revamp his swing.

From past experience, Woods knows that takes time. He overhauled his swing under Butch Harmon after the 1997 Masters, and it took nearly two years before he felt he had it down. Another overhaul under Hank Haney took about that long.

“That’s the reason why the hesitation, because I know it’s going to take a long time,” Woods said after opening with a 65 at Ridgewood. “If it takes less than that, that’s still a long time.”

Even so, some of the drills appear to be working.

Foley had caddie Steve Williams hold the end of a wedge over Woods’ right ear at Whistling Straits to keep his head from moving. During his pro-am round, Woods tucked a golf glove under his right armpit to keep his arms more connected.

The payoff was not just the 65. Woods said his session on the range Thursday morning was not going particularly well, yet he knew what was wrong and was able to fix it.

“I had a week-and-a-half of prep time before here. I get off to a bad start in warm-up, at least I know how to fix it. And then once I fix it, I was able to go out and play,” he said. “But if that happened at the PGA, I wouldn’t have played like I did today.”

The turnaround was remarkable. Woods missed only one fairway and essentially only two greens (one was on the fringe).

There has been talk that Foley’s teaching are similar to the “stack-and-tilt” method taught by Andy Plummer and Mike Bennett, whose clients have included Mike Weir, Dean Wilson and Aaron Baddeley over the years.

“There are some parts of it that do look like it,” Woods said. “But there are other parts that are very, very different.”

Woods is not sure when he will make up his mind. He is getting through the PGA Tour playoffs, however long they last for him, then most likely the Ryder Cup, then a two-week trip to Shanghai and Melbourne in November, concluding with his Chevron World Challenge the first week of December.

“It’s something I’m still mulling over,” he said. “When I do commit, I will commit to it. I just haven’t figured out which way I’m going to go with it yet.”

Comments Off :, more...

Looking for something?

Use the form below to search the site:

Still not finding what you're looking for? Drop a comment on a post or contact us so we can take care of it!

Archives

All entries, chronologically...