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Archive for April, 2011

Donald a round away from No. 1

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) — Luke Donald was more concerned about who was behind him at The Heritage than what’s ahead should he win Sunday.

Donald shot a 1-under 70 on Saturday to take a one-stroke leader over defending champion Jim Furyk after three rounds at Harbour Town Golf Links. A victory would vault the third-ranked Donald to No. 1. Donald knows if thinks too much about that, he’ll lose sight of the stellar field trying to chase him down.

“I think there’s a bunch of people behind us that have a good chance, too, so I don’t count anyone else out,” he said. “It should be a good battle out there.”

It usually is with Donald and Furyk.

Furyk, the American ranked 13th in the world, used a par save from the bunker on the 72nd hole to win the Tour Championship by a stroke over Donald last year and claim the $10 million FedEx Cup bonus.

Donald came right back the next week, beating Furyk 1-up in Ryder Cup singles in Europe’s victory.

“I got a little revenge,” he said.

This time the prize for Donald would be two-fold: His first season with multiple wins on the PGA Tour and the elevation to No. 1 in the world.

There were seven of the world’s top 20 players here this week, a field strong enough to push Donald past the idle No. 1 Martin Kaymer and No. 2 Lee Westwood.

Westwood would take the top spot with a win at the Indonesian Masters, where he holds a five-stroke lead, should Donald falter.

The two Englishmen exchanged messages about their play.

“Yeah, he sent me a message yesterday just saying, ‘Good playing,’ and I sent one back,” Donald said. “We’re obviously Ryder Cup partners and we’re friends off the course. We never wish bad on each other.”

Donald let a few early nerves show through by hitting his approach to par-5 second hole out of bounds left, leading to a double-bogey 7 that dropped him from the lead.

But Donald steeled himself with two solid par saves on the third and fourth holes when his iron play was shaky. He was in the rough in front of a trap on par-4 third, yet chipped it up to 6 feet for the par.

Then, Donald was well right of the green on the par-3 fourth. Again, he saved himself with the short game, chipping inside of 2 feet.

Donald regained his momentum on the par-5 fifth with a 12 footer for birdie.

“Those up-and-downs and keeping some momentum going where I wasn’t going completely backwards was big for me,” Donald said.

Brendon de Jonge (66) and Scott Verplank (67) were two shots behind at 9 under. Masters runner-up Jason Day (71), Ricky Barnes (67) and Tommy Gainey (67) were 8 under.

Furyk held the lead for much of the back nine at Harbour Town Golf Links, but bogeyed the closing lighthouse hole for a 69 to drop back.

Donald, who won the Match Play Championship and was fourth at the Masters, called on the steady, focused style that made him one of the world’s best to move back to the top with birdies on the fifth and seventh holes. Donald’s put his approach on the 16th hole to 3 feet for his final birdie to reach 11 under.

Furyk had his chance to hold on to a share of the lead, but sent his second shot on the 18th hole into a bunker behind the green, and could not make the 16-footer for par after blasting out.

Furyk and Donald will be paired in the final group Sunday for what sets up as a fabulous finish in what might be the final Heritage. A PGA Tour fixture since 1969, the tournament is without a title sponsor, which tour and event leaders say is essential for returning in 2012.

Both have become Harbour Town masters, combining for 14 rounds in the 60s over the past three tournaments.

“I think I’m there, I’m in position and when I play well I feel like this golf course really suits my game,” Furyk said.

Originally Published On: www.golf.com – Original Article Here

Lundqvist Doesn’t Get a Nod for Vezina

Bruce Bennett/Getty Images

Henrik Lundqvist

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The Rangers’ Henrik Lundqvist, who led the NHL this season with 11 shutouts and won at least 30 games for the sixth consecutive season, was not among the three finalists for the Vezina Trophy, awarded annually to the league’s top goaltender. Boston’s Tim Thomas, Vancouver’s Roberto Luongo and Nashville’s Pekka Rinne—the leaders in both save percentage and goals-against average this season—were the three nominees, the league announced Friday. Lundqvist has been a Vezina finalist three times in his NHL career, but he hasn’t yet won one of the coveted trophies.

—Mike Sielski

Knuble out Again for Saturday vs. Rangers

If the Washington Capitals are to finish off the Rangers on Saturday in Game 5 of the Eastern Conference quarterfinals, they’ll have to do it without one of their better forwards. Mike Knuble will miss the game, Washington coach Bruce Boudreau told reporters Friday, with what is presumed to be an injury to his right hand. During Game 3, a slapshot by Capitals defenseman Mike Green struck Knuble in the hand; Knuble already sat out the Caps’ 4-3, double-overtime victory in Game 4 on Wednesday.

—M.S.

JOE GIZA/Reuters

A rain tarp covers the field at Camden Yards.

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Rainouts Threatening The Yanks’ Bullpen

Rainouts are piling up for the Yankees: After their third of the season Friday night, April showers threaten to wear down the team’s bullpen going forward. They had plenty of off-days early, but with only one off-day until May 21, they will push their bullpen hard over the next month—and probably for the rest of the season, considering how rarely the Yankees starters last deep into games. Rescheduling rainouts into doubleheaders only makes that road harder.

“It makes it tough. It makes it tough on your bullpen, tough on your guys, but what are you going to do?” Manager Joe Girardi said.

—Daniel Barbarisi

© 2011 Wall Street Journal (www.wsj.com)

Originally Published On: online.wsj.com – Original Article Here

At Phillies Game, Robot Takes The Mound

Story By: All Things Considered

A one-armed robot, called PhillieBot, threw out the first pitch at the Philadelphia Phillies game against the Milwaukee Brewers Wednesday. Robert Siegel and Michele Norris have more.

Originally Published On: www.npr.org – Original Article Here

Scott, Cabrera, Schwartzel on the move at Masters

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Adam Scott will take a 67 any day at Augusta National.

Doing it on moving day at the Masters made it that much better.

The Australian made up some serious ground on the Masters leaderboard Saturday after matching Angel Cabrera and Bubba Watson for low round of the day. Tied for sixth at 7-under, Scott is five shots behind leader Rory McIlroy.

“I felt like I played OK the first two days, just a little bit off,” Scott said. “But today, everything kind of fell into place. It was nice to get a bit of momentum going and keep it going for most of the round.”

Cabrera, Watson, Charl Schwartzel and Bo Van Pelt also made big moves. Cabrera, the 2009 Masters champion, and Schwartzel are tied for second at 8-under with K.J. Choi and Jason Day, while Van Pelt is in eighth place behind Scott and Luke Donald.

Going low is one way to climb the leaderboard. But Scott and Co. got a big assist from the guys who’d been ahead of them, too. The last five groups Saturday were a cumulative 11 over, with only McIlroy and Choi shooting below par.

“I think there was a little bit less expectations because those (last groups) are always going to have a little bit more pressure than what we had,” Schwartzel said. “No disrespect to them, but playing out in front there, I don’t think you’re going to go very far a lot of times unless you really get something going.

“It was almost nice to tee off where I did and sort of sneak in from behind.”

Scott hasn’t finished in the top 10 at the Masters since 2002, his first trip to Augusta National. But he arrived here full of confidence after a tie for sixth at Doral.

Then he opened with a 72, and played the front nine Friday at even par.

“I was just trying to not get frustrated with myself, because I was feeling so good,” Scott said. “Going into the back nine yesterday, I know I’m right around the cut line, and it’s never a nice place to be. I played a really solid back nine yesterday, and I was happy with that. But still, the rhythm of my golf swing isn’t quite where I felt it in practice, and even in the practice rounds. Today it fell back into place.

“I think I did a good job of not getting frustrated seeing everyone go low, and just fighting the momentum out there.”

Beginning the day at 2 under, Scott got rolling with a 12-foot birdie putt on the second hole. He picked up two more strokes before the turn, only to give one back on the 10th. But he holed a 30-footer on 11 for a birdie, and eagled the par-5 13th. After two-putting from “100 feet almost” on the par-5 15th, Scott was at 8-under, with three holes still to play.

But Scott played those holes at 1 over.

Still, he can at least see the leaders.

“They always say the Masters starts on the back nine on Sunday. I’ve got to get myself there first,” Scott said. “I’ve got still at least another solid nine holes to play before I’ve got a real chance.”

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, SEVE: Seve Ballesteros’ birthday is still a big deal, even if he’s not at the Masters.

The two-time champion, who is not here as he battles brain cancer, turned 54 on Saturday. Several European players tweeted birthday wishes to the Spaniard before they teed off, including third-round leader Rory McIlroy, and Jose Maria Olazabal called Ballesteros before he left for Augusta National.

“I called to say ‘Happy Birthday,’ and to pass along all of the good wishes from the rest of the champions,” said Olazabal, a fellow Spaniard and two-time Masters winner.

Earlier this week, Phil Mickelson went with a Spanish-themed Champions Dinner in Ballesteros’ honor.

Ballesteros is undergoing chemotherapy, which Olazabal said “takes a toll” on him. But he has been following the Masters, where Ballesteros’ second victory in 1983 set off a wave of dominance by European golfers. A European won the green jacket eight of the next 11 years.

“Obviously he roots for the Europeans, without a doubt, so he’s happy in that sense,” Olazabal said. “He always believed this golf course suited the Europeans better than the U.S. Open, for example.”

LEFTY’S LAMENT: Defending champion Phil Mickelson figured Saturday would be the day to go low and get back into the mix.

He barely moved.

Mickelson made only three birdies in the third round for a 71, leaving him nine shots out of the lead and in need of an improbable comeback if he wants to win a fourth green jacket and rise to No. 1 in the world.

After making 18 birdies last weekend to win the Houston Open, Mickelson feels he can’t make anything at all.

“Yeah, it’s been a little frustrating on the greens,” he said. “I putted so well last week at Houston, I expected to come out this week and kind of light it up. And I have struggled getting the right reads, I struggled getting the right speed. I just have struggled to get it going this week.”

That doesn’t mean he has given up.

The biggest comeback in Masters history was eight shots by Jack Burke Jr. in 1956, the year Ken Venturi shot 80.

“I’m going to be quite a few back, but on Sunday a lot can happen,” Mickelson said. “I’m not going to count myself out. I’ve shot low scores here before, I believe I can do it again and I’m going to give myself every opportunity tomorrow to do that.”

ONE GOOD MEMORY: Rickie Fowler has one good memory to take from an otherwise disappointing afternoon.

The 22-year-old was paired Saturday with former Masters champion Fred Couples, who seems to shave a dozen years or so off his age any time he drives up Magnolia Lane. The 51-year-old, who won at Augusta National in 1992, is in contention for a second straight year, going into the final round tied for ninth at 5-under.

“A couple times I had to sit back and remind myself we’re playing the Masters on Saturday and I’m getting to play with Freddie, someone who I’ve looked up to since I was a little kid,” Fowler said. “It was obviously not the round I wanted, but I was just out there a couple times reminding myself to try to calm me down a little bit and relax.”

Fowler began the day tied for seventh after playing “Can you top this?” in the first two rounds with fellow Whiz Kids Rory McIlroy and Jason Day. But while McIlroy and Day were holding their own on Saturday, Fowler backed up with a 4-over 76. He’s now 1-under, 11 shots behind McIlroy.

“The game feels really good,” Fowler said. “I got a couple bad breaks and then made a couple bad swings that cost me. Some of those things just happened at the wrong time.”

ERNIE AND THE MARKER: Ernie Els was the first to tee off Saturday, having made the cut on the number. It’s an unusual spot for the three-time major champion, so he was surprised to find that he would have company.

Els played with a non-competing marker, Augusta National member Jeff Knox. The Big Easy could have played by himself, but Knox was already waiting when Els got to the first tee.

“We went and played,” Els said. “I didn’t ask any questions.”

Knox is no slouch, once shooting a 61 from the member tees at Augusta. Els wasn’t sure what he shot, although Knox held his own and often had the honors on the tee as Els struggled to a 76.

“He shot about the same as I did,” Els said. “He played really well.”

Asked if he was aware that Knox had shot 61 at Augusta, Els said: “He told me. Pretty impressive for any tees. I don’t care if you play off the ladies tees, that’s pretty impressive. So we’ll probably see him tomorrow again.”

If Knox plays, it will be with K.T. Kim, who shot a 78 and was in last place.

Originally Published On: www.golf.com – Original Article Here

Royals stifle Tigers

© 2011 STATS LLC STATS, Inc

Originally Published On: sportsillustrated.cnn.com – Original Article Here



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