1/28/2013

Flesch's WD means an extra day at Augusta


Flesch's WD means an extra day at Augusta

Updated: April 3, 2005, 6:02 PM ET
Associated Press
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Steve Flesch felt a warm blast of wind on his face as he gazed down the first fairway Sunday afternoon at Augusta National, looking like a man who would not want to be anywhere else on earth.
The alternative was Atlanta, which made this moment even sweeter.
Flesch was among five players who entered the BellSouth Classic as a final tuneup before the Masters, then pulled out when the tournament didn't start for two days because of rain.
He played the back nine at Augusta on Saturday afternoon. As some players were just starting the second round Sunday afternoon in Atlanta, Flesch was headed to the first tee at Augusta to join Jonathan Kaye for a relaxing round with no spectators, no distractions, no worries.
"It's been so bad lately, you can't get into any kind of rhythm playing," Flesch said, noting that weather has interrupted play at eight of the 14 events this year on the PGA Tour, and the BellSouth Classic won't be finished until Monday.
He didn't come up with a phantom injury for withdrawing from the BellSouth Classic. He simply told tournament officials, as much by his early departure as any words he said, that the Masters was on his mind.
"You can always say you've got a bad back," Flesch said. "I just told them that wasn't how I wanted to prepare for this week. If I knew I was going to have play Monday, I never would have played the tournament."
He walked into one of the best weekends of the year.
The Sunday before the Masters is a practice round like no other major, on a course that looks like any other country club on a lazy afternoon. Players share the course with Augusta National Members and both bring friends, making it look more like a member-guest at the local club.
"This is special," Craig Parry said. "It's quiet. I think it's the best time to come, because there are no spectators. You just go out there and enjoy it for what it is."
Nothing captured the spirit of the afternoon quite like Nick Faldo, a three-time Masters champion who was fidgeting with a camera on the putting green as he waited for the 10th tee to clear so he could play with his son, 16-year-old Matthew. It was the lad's first time playing Augusta National.
"He was born three weeks before I won my first Masters," Faldo said, recalling his first green jacket in 1989 when he holed a 25-foot birdie on the second extra hole to beat Scott Hoch.
Matthew rapped a few putts, amazed at the speed of the green. Did his dad mention that the greens are probably faster than anything else he has seen?
"He'll figure it out soon enough," Faldo said.
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush was on the grounds, for reasons unclear, although he took time to chat with Jerry Kelly. It was a diverse blend of players -- members and their guests, first-timers like Mark Hensby, former champions Gay BrewerCharles CoodyFuzzy Zoeller and Ben Crenshaw, and players who simply couldn't wait to get started.
Scott Verplank (Oklahoma State) teed off with Todd Hamilton (Oklahoma). Ian Woosnam played with Jesper Parnevik and a guest of the Swede's, who hit his opening tee shot about 210 yards and into the trees.
Not to worry -- the Masters doesn't start until Thursday, and the real work doesn't begin until Monday, when the gates open to some 40,000 fans and players start trying to remember all the nuances about the only course where a major championship returns every year.
For Flesch, sunshine was the biggest treat.
Adam Scott turned into a prophet when he said at the Sony Open in Hawaii, the second week of the year, "For a tour that tries to follow the sun, it seems we play under water a lot of the time."
In consecutive weeks in California, the Nissan Open was cut short to 36 holes over five days because of rain, and the Match Play Championship lost one day because the course was under water.
Florida was just as bad. The Bay Hill Invitational lost all but three hours of the first day because of rain, and The Players Championship the following week got so much rain that the tournament didn't finish until Monday, when the leaders had to play 32 holes.
Then came the two-day delay in Atlanta.
"It seems like this year has taken forever, but I can't believe we're already at Augusta. Does that make sense?" Flesch said. "It just doesn't seem like I've played any golf this year."
That should change this week. The forecast is for mostly sunny skies, with a mild chance of showers on Thursday.
Augusta National is as green as ever, with azaleas and dogwoods bursting in bloom. With a golf club in hand, there was no better place to be.

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press

Broadhurst gets first win in 10 years


Broadhurst gets first win in 10 years

Updated: April 3, 2005, 4:03 PM ET
Associated Press
  • EMAIL
  • PRINT
CASCAIS, Portugal -- England's Paul Broadhurst won the Portugal Open by one stroke Sunday for his first European Tour victory in 10 years.
Broadhurst, 39, had seven birdies and three bogeys in a final-round 67 to finish 13-under at the par-71 Oitavos course near Lisbon.
He last picked up a tour trophy at the 1995 French Open.
Overnight leader Paul Lawrie of Scotland, the 1999 British Open champion, had five birdies but took seven shots at the par-4 17th and finished second.
Portugal's Jose Filipe Lima had three birdies in his final round and was third at 11 under.

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press

Shorter hitters could rule at Augusta


Shorter hitters could rule at Augusta

Updated: April 3, 2005, 7:57 PM ET
By Tim Rosaforte | Golf World
  • EMAIL
  • PRINT
It's that time of year already. The Masters is next week and the season is in focus.Phil Mickelson has played so many rounds at Augusta National the past two weeks that you'd think he was a member. Tiger Woods and Ernie Els were in good spirits at the Tavistock Cup. Vijay Singh is working on his game at TPC-Sawgrass, where the winds have died and the sun is shining. Augusta 2005 is shaping up as a battle of the giants ... or is it?
All year we've been talking Big Four. Then we get to the fifth major and we get the Little Four, a leaderboard of Lilliputians -- Fred FunkLuke DonaldScott Verplankand Joe Durant. "Peashooter," is the word Funk used to describe the contingent of mighty mites who were grinding to win the Players Championship. It was a Deane Beman Ball.
The former commissioner was famous not only for commissioning Pete Dye to design the Stadium course but also for drop-kicking 4-woods into greens whenJack Nicklaus was hitting 9-irons. Beman always had the classic Little Man's Disease, but there's no chip on Funk's shoulder.
"I kind of felt like Herbie the Volkswagen, the Love Bug, because ... the bombers are going 40 by me," said the 5-foot-8, 165-pound Funk, who simply motored down the fairways at an 85.7 percent clip last week.
The Players was a reminder that golf is golf and it's not how far but how many. You'd figure on wet fairways, where balls were plugging and picking up mud, that the Little Guys would be at a disadvantage.
Hard and fast is supposed to favor the more accurate hitters and make the 500-yard par-4s reachable. Long and sloppy is supposed to favor the bombers. Turning the page to Augusta, the last time we had a Muddy Masters, it was another little guy who came out on top, Canadian Mike Weir.
Judging from the rains that doused Atlanta on Thursday -- and the PGA Tour this season -- it figures to be a wet one at Augusta. If the new redesign wasn't too long for Weir, who ranks 145th this year in driving distance, then it won't be too long for any of the munchkins.
That pass Luke Donald made with a 4-iron on the 72nd hole was as pure as anything Singh, Woods, Els or Mickelson produced this year and a sign that he's ready for the big moment.
Scott Verplank: Nobody's got a bigger heart.
Joe Durant: One of the best iron men in the game.
And Fred Funk: Seven wins, including the Players, is a pretty strong career for a former college golf coach.
All this talk about a Big Four, and none of them have continued to rise the last three weeks. Woods at Bay Hill and the Players was not the Woods who won Doral. Singh had the back-to-back final-hole losses at Honda and Bay Hill before a quadruple-bogey at 18 took him out of the Players. Els had a final-round 69 in the wind Monday at Sawgrass, but experienced two quiet weeks in Orlando and Ponte Vedra. And Mickelson was on the board early at the Players, but shot 77-75 in the third and final rounds.
Just a word of caution to those who think a bomber will go long and win the Masters. When it comes to sizing the green jacket, this could be a year for a Weir to go 42-regular.