1/21/2013

How did Tiger's game look in debut?


How did Tiger's game look in debut?

Updated: January 21, 2013, 10:10 AM ET
By Bob Harig | ESPN.com
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- Tiger Woods left the Middle East long ago, another tournament to play this week, likely looking forward rather than back. If there is one thing we've learned about Woods over the years, he seems to not dwell on his failures. Certainly not for long.
Rory McIlroy, meanwhile, has another month to stew over his early exit at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship, where a couple of 75s were preceded by considerable fanfare as he became a Nike spokesman, put all of the company's clubs in his bag, then struggled.
Of course, some perspective is in order in both cases.
Although Woods will likely explain in more detail this week what happened during the second round of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship when he makes his first PGA Tour start of the year at the Farmers Insurance Open, he's probably much more focused on his game and where he can improve.
Somewhat lost in the rules situation that cost Woods a 2-stroke penalty and caused him to miss the 36-hole cut in the European Tour event was his uneven play over two rounds.
Every player can point to circumstances in rounds that cost him, but Woods has two simple ones: He played the first and second holes at Abu Dhabi Golf Club in 4-over par. The first is a relatively easy par-4, the second a par-5. At the very worst, Woods should play those four holes in 1 under. That's three pars and a birdie. He made all bogeys, a difference of 5 shots.
Woods missed the cut by 1 stroke, so the way he played those first two holes contributed greatly to him heading home early. He failed to hit those greens in regulation, and had some difficulty off the tee, managing to find just 11 of 28 fairways over two days. He hit only 19 of 36 greens.
But he made a nice run on the back nine Friday in what appeared to be a move to make the cut, and who knows how he might have fared over the weekend? It's hard to tell much from two rounds. As his swing coach Sean Foley said, "It was nine hours of golf."
In other words, don't get too caught up in such a small body of work. It's very little to judge, really. Woods putted nicely, but was not sharp in other areas. He had some distance control issues, as well as difficulty hitting fairways. There were a few moments when he looked solid, such as the final three holes of his front nine (16, 17 and 18) on Thursday, which was promptly undone by a topped drive that led to a bogey at the first. For the next 18 holes, Woods struggled, the penalty only adding to his woes.
"I didn't hit it particularly well," Woods said in his few comments about the second round. "I putted great but just didn't hit it very well."
He can get right back at it this week at Torrey Pines, perhaps the perfect place to return. Woods skipped the tournament a year ago because it conflicted with the Abu Dhabi event, but it has traditionally been very good to him. He has won the PGA Tour event there six times, finishing outside of the top 10 once -- a tie for 44th in 2011. It is also where he captured the 2008 U.S. Open.
As for McIlroy, he is staying in the Middle East and said he would spend the week practicing in Dubai. Unless he decides to add another tournament -- perhaps next week's Dubai Desert Classic? -- McIlroy is not scheduled to play again until the WGC-Accenture Match Play at the end of February.
If he were to get bounced early, McIlroy would head to the Honda Classic with very few competitive rounds in 2013 -- which is just what he needs to get used to his new clubs.
Then again, much of the angst has to do with the high-profile nature of his endorsement deal. And in retrospect, McIlroy was in a tough spot. The Jan. 14 Nike announcement was an all-day deal for him. The next day he met the media, barely practiced before seeing a few holes of the course. Wednesday was the pro-am and then came the tournament. Players switch clubs all the time, but not under that kind of glare.
"He's just not quite ready yet," said Ernie Els, who has made a couple of significant equipment changes in his career. "He can play with any clubs. He could play with left-handed clubs, he's so talented. He needs to put in the work and he'll be fine."
Said Padraig Harrington: "He can't let people get in his head and let him think anything. I played a few holes with him in practice and he was hitting it fine. The problem being the worlds' No. 1, he's in the spotlight, the focus is there. As much as you try to keep your head down, you guys are going to ask him the same questions that are leading. And you get asked that question enough, it gets into your head."
McIlroy has a few weeks without those questions, at least directly. Woods will begin fielding them in a matter of days.

'Drastic changes' for Phil Mickelson


'Drastic changes' for Phil Mickelson

Updated: January 21, 2013, 11:56 AM ET
ESPN.com news services
LA QUINTA, Calif. -- Phil Mickelson said he will make "drastic changes" because of federal and California state tax increases.
"It's been an interesting offseason," Mickelson said Sunday after the final round of the Humana Challenge. "And I'm going to have to make some drastic changes. I'm not going to jump the gun and do it right away, but I will be making some drastic changes."
MickelsonIf you add up all the federal and you look at the disability and the unemployment and the Social Security and the state, my tax rate's 62, 63 percent. So I've got to make some decisions on what I'm going to do.
-- Phil Mickelson
The 42-year-old golfer said he would talk in more detail about his plans -- possibly moving away from California or even retiring from golf -- before his hometown Farmers Insurance Open, the San Diego-area event that starts Thursday at Torrey Pines.
"I'm not sure what exactly, you know, I'm going to do yet," Mickelson said. "I'll probably talk about it more in depth next week. I'm not going to jump the gun, but there are going to be some. There are going to be some drastic changes for me because I happen to be in that zone that has been targeted both federally and by the state and, you know, it doesn't work for me right now. So I'm going to have to make some changes."
In November, California voters approved Proposition 30, the first statewide tax increase since 2004. It boosted the state tax rate on incomes of more than $1 million from 10.3 percent to 13.3 percent.
The federal taxes for Mickelson's tax bracket will also increase in 2013. According to the Wall Street Journal, rates on single incomes of more than $400,000 will go from 35 percent to 39.6 percent, while the Social Security tax will be raised from 4.2 percent to 6.2 percent.
"If you add up all the federal and you look at the disability and the unemployment and the Social Security and the state, my tax rate's 62, 63 percent," said Mickelson, who lives in Rancho Santa Fe. "So I've got to make some decisions on what I'm going to do."
Last year, Mickelson flirted with becoming a part-owner of the San Diego Padres franchise, which sold for $800 million in August. He was asked Sunday whether there was a correlation between the tax increases and what happened to the Padres' deal.
"Absolutely," Mickelson said.
He later explained why he was waiting to provide more details.
"I'll probably be in the media center, and I'll probably be a little more open to it because San Diego is where a lot more things, it's where I live, it's where the Padre thing was a possibility, and it's where my family is," Mickelson said. "And it just seems like a better fit than right here off of 18 on Palm Springs."
Mickelson closed with a 66 on Sunday to tie for 37th at 17 under in his season debut.
"I was rusty starting the year," Mickelson said. "I had a great four days here where I can work on my game with perfect weather and wonderful golf courses, where I could build some momentum. Heading into San Diego, I feel a lot more confident."
The tournament was his first since the HSBC Champions in early November in China. The Hall of Famer has 40 PGA Tour victories.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Abu Dhabi ends amid different script


Abu Dhabi ends amid different script

Updated: January 20, 2013, 12:05 PM ET
By Bob Harig | ESPN.com
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- The week began with the famous Sean Foley client as well as the newest Nike endorser grabbing all the headlines, creating the buzz and towering over the rest of the field at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship.
[+] EnlargeOlesen
Scott Halleran/Getty ImagesThorbjorn Olesen might not have been the highest paid, most well known new Nike endorser to play this week, but he was the highest finisher of the company's stable of golfers with his T-2 finish in Abu Dhabi.
But in the end, unheralded Jamie Donaldson earned the victory at the $2.7 million tournament, the Welshman taking home far less than either of the tournament headliners who bowed out on Friday with their appearance fees still intact.
Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy were long gone when Donaldson, a journeyman on the European Tour, 3-putted the final green to give both Justin RoseThorbjorn Olesen (who also just made the change over to Nike clubs like McIlroy) a chance to force a playoff. Neither Rose nor Olesen could get birdie putts to drop on the 18th green, however, leaving Donaldson a winner for the second time in his career.
For the second straight year, an under-the-radar player whom nobody was talking about amid all the pretournament hype walked off with the Falcon trophy.
Last year it was Englishman Robert Rock, who outplayed Woods in the final round to secure his second European Tour title, with McIlroy finishing second and Woods tied for third.
This year it was Donaldson, who managed a final-round 68 to surge past 54-hole leader Rose. Donaldson's lone previous victory was at last year's Irish Open.
"Obviously the lads, some of the top names, didn't make the cut," said Donaldson, 37, who earned $450,000 for the victory -- or less than half of what McIlroy received just to show up and some $2.5 million less than Woods.
Rose, who like Woods works with Foley and has been playing well for months, led after each of the first three rounds and appeared poised to capture his season-opening event after a strong end to 2012 in which he starred for the European Ryder Cup team, won a lucrative exhibition in Turkey and finished outside of the top 11 just once in his last six starts, including a runner-up to McIlroy eight weeks ago in Dubai.
"You want to close out with a chance to win when you have it and didn't do that today, but I didn't do a lot wrong, either," said Rose, 32, a five-time winner on the European Tour as well as a four-time winner on the PGA Tour; he won the WGC-Cadillac Championship at Doral last year, a victory that counts on both circuits.
"It's hard to beat yourself up about it. Jamie played a good round of golf today and Thorbjorn did as well. I did some things on the back nine that really, really counted, to be honest. I made some good putts and I hit a good putt at 18. I really was enjoying that last hole to try to make birdie, force the [playoff]. And made four-and-a-half."
Rose has been working with Foley for several years and has often credited his instructor's help to get his game turned around. It was hard to find much fault with Rose's performance here, other than coming up 1 shot short. Rose heads to the Qatar Masters this week before returning to the United States and his PGA Tour schedule.
Olesen, like McIlroy, is 23. Earlier this year, like McIlroy, who is also 23, he signed with Nike. Both are from Europe.
Of course, the similarities end there, as there are likely a few extra zeroes on McIlroy's endorsement checks and a far meatier résumé. Nonetheless, Olesen, who is from Denmark, has proved himself to be a solid up-and-coming player.
He contended in Abu Dhabi last year and was paired with Woods during the third round of the Open Championship at Royal Lytham, where he shot 1 stroke higher that day but came away feeling good about himself and went on to tie for ninth.
"It was a dream for me to play with him, especially in a major, in the second-to-last group," said Olesen, who went on to capture the Italian Open later in the year. "And I got a lot of confidence from it. I started a bit shaky but played well and got more belief in myself. It was nice."
Olesen later won the Italian Open for his first tour title and finished among the top 50 in the world at the end of the year, meaning a Masters invitation to play this April. Olesen is also expected to play the WGC-Accenture Match Play and WGC-Cadillac Championship in the coming months.
Like McIlroy, Olesen showed up in Nike gear this year and a bag full of new clubs, but he got his first taste of it in competition last week at the Volvo Champions in South Africa, where he tied for 31st. Few outside of Denmark new of his new affiliation, one that became a source of irony given McIlroy's struggles this week.
"He was under a lot of pressure," Olesen said of McIlroy. "It was probably good for me that nobody concentrated on me and I could do my own thing."
That wasn't the case for Rose, who led nearly the entire tournament, a surprise to no one as he is the fifth-ranked player in the world. If he were to consult with Foley, there wouldn't be much to say other than to keep on doing what you're doing -- and maybe get some good fortune, with a putt on the last green that lipped out.
"It reminded me exactly of the putt at 18 against Phil [Mickelson] at Medinah," Rose said of the birdie he dropped to pull out a huge singles match on the final day of the Ryder Cup, one that helped fuel Europe's comeback. "Just outside right edge and that's exactly where I hit it, and unfortunately this time the putt didn't go in for me.
"Would I swap it? No, I wouldn't."

amie Donaldson wins in Abu Dhabi


amie Donaldson wins in Abu Dhabi

Updated: January 20, 2013, 11:51 AM ET
Associated Press
ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates -- Jamie Donaldson won the Abu Dhabi Championship by one shot Sunday, with Justin Rose narrowly missing a birdie putt on the 18th that would have forced a playoff.
Rose's 8-foot putt rimmed out of the hole, giving the Welshman his second European Tour victory. He shot a 68 to finish at 14-under 274.
Rose (71) threw his club up in the air in frustration while Donaldson flashed a relieved smile. Rose tied for second with Thorbjorn Olesen (69) of Denmark, who also failed to force a playoff on the 18th when his 15-foot birdie putt rolled past the hole. Olesen, playing with Rose, had putted first.
"It was a tough field, brutal golf course," said Donaldson, whose win will move him in into the world's top 30.
It was fifth-ranked Rose's tournament to lose. The Englishman had a two-shot lead over Donaldson and Olesen and led all week, hitting greens and making timely putts. But he was shaky from the start Sunday, scrambling early to save pars and then hitting errant drives on Nos. 5, 11 and 16 that led to bogeys, while finding it difficult to read the greens.
"It was definitely hard work today," Rose said. "You want to close out with a chance to win when you have it and didn't do that today. But I didn't do a lot wrong, either."
The 47th-ranked Donaldson won his first tournament last year in his 266th European Tour event.
After Rose hit a drive into the trees for a bogey on No. 16 then missed a 12-foot birdie putt on the 17th, Donaldson appeared in control. But the Welshman didn't make it easy for himself. He missed a long birdie putt on the final hole and then a 5-foot putt for par. He settled for a bogey and figured there would be a playoff.
"It was annoying to finish like that," Donaldson said. "But you need a little luck sometimes in golf to win."

Weaver: Men in blue 'were tremendous'


Weaver: Men in blue 'were tremendous'

January, 20, 2013
JAN 20
4:34
PM ET
On the March day in 1996 when Earl Weaver was elected to the Hall of Fame, his wife, Marianna, rushed out of their home, borrowed a ride on a golf cart and rushed to the ninth hole to give him the news.

For a moment, Earl said, his knees grew weak and his hands shook, and he bogeyed the hole. But he rallied, he said, to win the round against the rest of his foursome.

"I'm 65, I got my Medicare card, and I shot 80 today," Weaver told me later that day.

I was working for the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel at the time, and Weaver was a long-time resident of nearby Pembroke Pines -- coincidentally, the same town in which new Red Sox first baseman Mike Napoli went to high school.

I thought back on my conversation with Weaver that day upon hearing Saturday that he had died at the age of 82. Weaver, of course, was famous for battling umpires, earning 91 ejections over the course of his 17-year career.

"The last thing my mother used to say to me before I'd go to the ballpark was 'Please, don't get thrown out,'" Weaver said that day. "Every time I did, I called and said I was sorry."

And for that day, at least, he was willing to pay tribute to the men in blue.

"While I was manager, they made about 20,000 calls, including balls and strikes," he said. "And I only thought they got about 90 of 'em wrong.

"And the greatest thing is, when I walked up to home plate [the game after an ejection], their minds were clear, like yesterday never happened. That's my tribute to them. They were tremendous."