Sunday, March 2, 2014

Scott Stallings wins Greenbrier Classic, topping Bob Estes Bill Haas in playoff

scott stallings
Getty Images
Scott Stallings made six birdies on the back nine Sunday just to get into the playoff.
0
By 
John Raby
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
PGA Tour rookie Scott Stallings won the Greenbrier Classic on Sunday, sinking a birdie putt on the first playoff hole to beat Bob Estes and Bill Haas.
After watching Estes and Haas miss their birdie attempts on the 168-yard 18th hole, Stallings curled in a 7-footer for his first tour victory. He flipped his putter, then hugged and high-fived his caddie.
"To be a champion in such a great event is a huge blessing," Stallings said.
The 26-year-old Stallings made six birdies on the back nine to make the playoff, where he earned a winner's check of $1.08 million and a spot in the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.
"I've wanted to do this since I was a little kid," Stallings said. "I was that little boy running around chasing autographs and yelling at guys because they wouldn't stop and sign my golf balls."
It marked the second straight week that a tournament was won in sudden death. Sean O'Hair beat Kris Blanks on the first playoff hole a week ago at the RBC Canadian Open.
In just its second year, the Greenbrier Classic produced another dramatic finish. Stuart Appleby shot 59 in last year's final round, including a birdie on the last hole to beat Jeff Overton by a stroke.
Haas earned his fourth top-10 finish of the season, while the 45-year-old Estes missed out on his first tour win since 2002 and fifth overall. Estes battled a wrist injury earlier this year and was playing in just his seventh tournament.
Estes shot 6-under 64 and was the clubhouse leader at 10 under, then watched as Haas birdied the par-5 17th six groups later to join him after a 67.
Stallings, who shot 69, bogeyed the par-5 17th after his drive went out of bounds and he needed a birdie at No. 18 to make the playoff. He sank a 5-footer to do it.
After signing his scorecard, Stallings made his impromptu sprint and said later he wasn't too winded for the playoff.
"Running from the back of the green to the tee to go to the playoff is something I'll never forget," he said. "I've been working with a trainer for about a month, so he should be proud."
Estes waited more than an hour between the final round and the playoff. He went to eat, then warmed up on the practice range, hitting his 8 iron and putter to prepare for No. 18, and driver, 5 wood and sand wedges for No. 17 if it went that far.
"I felt like I did everything exactly right," Estes said. "I just didn't make the birdie putt on 18."
Jimmy Walker (68), Andres Romero (65), Brendon de Jonge (66), Cameron Tringale (67) and Gary Woodland (69) finished at 9 under.
After last year's tournament, the course was lengthened more than 200 yards and the reseeded greens were less receptive to approach shots this time around. Appleby and Phil Mickelson were among those missing the cut, and the low rounds of the tournament were 62s shot by Anthony Kim and Walker on Saturday.
There were birdies to be made Sunday, just not the boatload that Appleby enjoyed last year.
Kim, the third-round leader, missed four birdie tries under 14 feet on the first six holes. He three-putted the par-3 8th, then hooked his tee shot into trees on the next hole and made bogey. He shot 74 to finish at 6 under, tied with four others.
Webb Simpson overcame a double bogey on the first hole, made five birdies on the front nine and took the lead briefly after a 3-footer for birdie at No. 9. It would be his last. He bogeyed the next hole and never recovered. He shot even par and finished tied with Kyle Stanley at 8 under.
Simpson relinquished the lead to Haas, who had back-to-back birdies at No. 8 and 9. Haas made bogey at No. 15 to give Estes the lead, then tied him two holes later.
Stallings started the day a shot out of the lead and seemed to take himself out of contention with three bogeys on the front nine. He responded with four birdies on the first five holes on the back, then hit a 103-yard wedge within a foot of the hole on the par-4 16th to move to 10 under before getting into trouble on No. 17.

Browne ready for 3M Championship despite fatigue of 12 weeks on road

olin browne
Getty Images
For the past three months straight, Olin Browne has worked in front of the camera and behind it.
0
By 
Associated Press 

Series: Champions Tour
Olin Browne is looking forward to a home-cooked meal next week.
He has spent 12 weeks on the road playing on the Champions Tour or serving as a television analyst during the U.S. Open and British Open.
"I'm tired, but it's a really good tired," Browne said Wednesday at the TPC Twin Cities, site of this week's 3M Championship.
Three days earlier, the 52-year-old Browne won the U.S. Senior Open by three shots.
"I'm still foggy about what's been happening, I haven't slept a lot," he said. "I came right up here and I'm just trying to catch up."
Browne is likely not alone when it comes to the fatigue factor.
With three majors in a five-week span, it wouldn't have been surprising for some of the top Champions Tour players to take this week off. Instead, a full field is expected for the tournament.
Besides last week's event, the Senior British Open was held two weeks ago in England. The players have next week off before the Senior Players Championship.
"That wears on you," Browne said. "I'm really, really looking forward to going home next week."
Whether it's the course where players have shot low scores in recent years or some of the biggest galleries on tour, the 3M Championship has become a must-play event for the top golfers of the 50-and-over set. For the third straight year, admission is free.
"It's a fantastic field again," said Bernhard Langer, who chipped in on 18 to win the event two years ago.
Defending champion David Frost established a tournament scoring record with a 25-under 191 total last year, including a final-round 61. Mark Calcavecchia finished five shots back. The average winning score the last six years is minus-18.
Scores could be that low again.
The course received more than 1.5 inches of rain overnight Saturday, six-tenths of an inch Monday, and another quarter-inch Tuesday.
"If there are soft greens out here, look for guys to make a ton of birdies," said Browne, who tied for eighth last year at 15 under. "Guys do go deep here."
Most players refuse to predict a winning number.
"It's all relative to how you play," said David Eger, ninth in the season-long points race.
Fred Couples -- returning to competitive golf after missing two months with a back injury -- is scheduled to play the tournament for the first time, as is Minnesota native Tom Lehman, who is the course architect along with Arnold Palmer. Lehman is a three-time Champions Tour winner in 2011.
"You always want to play the best," Langer said.
Brad Faxon, an eight-time winner on the PGA Tour who turned 50 on Monday, is scheduled to make his Champions Tour debut this weekend.
"There's not many places people look forward to turning 50," said Faxon, who has struggled on the PGA Tour the past few years. "This is a fresh start. ... It's kind of a rebirth."
Browne hopes the week is another step in ending his up-and-down season. He finished in the top eight in five straight tournaments early in the season, but was better than 23rd just twice in his next nine starts.
His iron play was better last week, and he made a tweak when hitting his driver.
"It feels great," he said. "It certainly motivates me to continue doing what I'm doing so that I can do that or be able to do that more frequently. ... You get so few opportunities to do something like that, that, to me, the important thing was to embrace the challenge and do the very best I could."
How does he keep it going?
"I'll let you know on the weekend," he said with a slight smile. "I'm trying to get some rest, I'm having a hard time doing that. My phone is ringing off the hook and I've gotten a lot of emails. I'm trying to respond to all those people. It's really nice that people take the time, and I want to make sure I get back to them."

Jay Haas birdies final hole to secure 3M Championship, first win in two years

jay haas
Getty Images
Jay Haas finished with a 15-under 201, the highest winning score at the 3M Championship since 2006.
0
By 
Associated Press 

Series: Champions Tour
Standing on the 18th green needing a two-putt to win, Jay Haas stood over his putt and backed away.
Then he did it again.
He finally two-putted from about 30 feet for birdie to win the 3M Championship Sunday, beating Tom Lehman, Kenny Perry and Peter Senior by one shot. It was his first Champions Tour victory in two years.
"I probably should have just run up there and hit because the more I backed off the more my arm started to shake and my hands were shaking," he said. "I'm all about speed, and I have a picture in my head of how hard I want to hit it and I just couldn't see that speed for some reason.
"I was just thinking about don't hit it fat, don't rip it by, don't do all this stuff, all these negative thoughts, so I backed away," he explained. "Then I kind of heard something kind of rustling around and I backed away again. I was just trying to be as ready as I could be."
Haas smiled when asked how nervous he was playing the final few holes, especially the par-5 No. 18 with an approach shot over water.
"I don't think I've ever been not nervous on the final hole with a chance to win," he said. "I hope I continue to be that way."
Haas started the day one shot behind Senior and John Huston and had a 68 to finish at 15-under 201, the highest winning score at the tournament since 2006.
"Jay played better and deserved to win," said Lehman, a Minnesota native who increased his lead in the season-long points race.
Four weeks ago, Haas led going into the final round of the Nature Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach, but finished tied for second. It was an experience that benefited the 57-year-old Sunday.
"My score wasn't great that day, but I hit a lot of good shots under pressure," he said. "I probably hit some of the best shots (today) on the back nine that I've hit in a long time. It was nice to do that under pressure and know that I could still do that. I didn't know if it would ever happen again. I've seen some of the 'Old Guard' win a few times lately, so I didn't think my age was that much of a factor. I just needed to play better and hit better shots."
Seven players were in the lead at 12 under with six holes to play.
Haas, who birdied three straight holes on the front side to get to 13 under before a bogey at No. 10, birdied No. 14 to open a two-shot lead. Perry, who missed a 1-foot par putt on the same hole, birdied No. 16 to get within one and -- playing two groups in front of Haas -- tied Haas with a birdie on No. 18 after his eagle attempt slid just right. Playing in the second-to-last group, Lehman also birdied No. 18 to temporarily move into a first-place tie.
Forty-six players birdied the final hole and five recorded eagles.
Perry, who has four top-10s in six Champions Tour starts, birdied three of first four holes and five of his first seven to get to 13 under, but struggled to get out a bunker on the par-4 No. 9 and recorded a double-bogey. He was 3 under on the back nine.
"I told my caddie I'm close. I told my wife, I'm playing really good golf," he said. "It's been a rollercoaster ride out here. I averaged seven birdies a day out here, but I couldn't eliminate the mistakes and that's what got me."
Lehman, who started the day two back, said he was undone by not getting a birdie until the 11th hole. He birdied three of his final seven holes.
"Yesterday was the day that really hurt me," he said. "Making three stupid bogeys yesterday was a real mess up."
In a rather uneventful round, Senior bogeyed No. 9 and birdied Nos. 12, 16 and 18.
Hal Sutton (67) finished two shots back and Tom Watson (65) and Mark O'Meara (68) were three behind. Watson made a 70-foot eagle putt on the final hole, which was statistically the easiest hole all week.
Huston and Olin Browne were among a group of nine players to finish at 11 under.
Browne, who won last week's U.S. Senior Open and started the day 10 shots off the pace, shot the day's low round, a 9-under 63.

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Ravens Hire TEs Coach Brian Pariani, Promote Steve Spagnuolo To Secondary Coach



Posted Jan 29, 2014

Ryan MinkBaltimoreRavens.com Staff Writer@Ravens All Ryan Mink Articles



Steve Spagnuolo is also becoming the team’s assistant head coach.



The Ravens have hired Tight Ends Coach Brian Pariani and have appointed Steve Spagnuolo as their new secondary coach. Spagnuolo has also been named the team's assistant head coach.

Pariani replaces the longest-tenured coach on John Harbaugh’s staff, Wade Harman, who was with the team from 1999 to 2013.

“Brian has earned a reputation as one of the NFL’s top tight ends coaches, and we’re excited that he was available and willing to join us,” Harbaugh stated.

“Another factor that immediately makes him valuable to us is his familiarity with the offense we want to run. We are making changes on offense, and Brian will be able to help teach and implement them.”

Tight ends see a lot of action in Offensive Coordinator Gary Kubiak’s offensive system. In 2012, the Texans used the most two-tight end sets in the NFL.

Now Kubiak will have somebody he’s very familiar joining him in Baltimore to coach the tight ends. Pariani was Gary Kubiak’s tight ends during his entire tenure as head coach in Houston (2006-2013). He was previously a tight ends coach with Kubiak in Denver as well.

Known for being an intense, business-like coach, Pariani has a track record of getting the most out of his tight ends. He has developed strong pass-catching tight ends who are also good at blocking in the Texans’ stretch-zone run scheme.

Owen Daniels was a fourth-round pick who became a two-time Pro Bowler (2008 and 2012). Daniels caught 70 passes for 862 yards and two touchdowns in 2008, and 62 passes for 716 yards and six scores in 2012.

Houston’s Garrett Graham, another fourth-round pick, turned into a solid receiving option last year when Daniels went down. He caught 49 passes for 545 yards and five touchdowns. Rookie sixth-round pick Ryan Griffin also caught 19 passes for 244 yards and one touchdown last year.

The Ravens will be looking for Pariani to do the same with whatever tight ends they have on the roster next year. They currently only have two tight ends on the roster in Matt Furstenburg and Nathan Overbay.

Dennis Pitta and Ed Dickson are both unrestricted free agents. Pitta said he would “love to stay” and General Manager Ozzie Newsome said “we would like to have Dennis on our football team.”

Pitta is very much in the same mold as Daniels, both as sizeable pass-catching tight ends who can find openings in zones, create mismatches and flex out wide. Fullback Kyle Juszczyk may also work with Pariani and could be more of a pass-catching option in Kubiak’s system.

Spagnuolo, who was a senior defensive assistant last year, will be filling the void left by Teryl Austin’s departure to be Jim Caldwell’s defensive coordinator in Detroit.

Spagnuolo will be returning to being a secondary coach for the first time since he was coaching with Harbaugh in Philadelphia (2001-2003). Although Spagnuolo has been a defensive coordinator (New York Giants, New Orleans Saints) and head coach (St. Louis Rams), his roots are coaching defensive backs.

The Ravens have a talented, young group of defensive backs for Spagnuolo to work with. CornerbackJimmy Smith emerged last year, and is expected to start opposite Lardarius Webb again in 2014. RookieMatt Elam started nearly the entire year, and the Ravens could welcome in a new playmaking free safety, according to Newsome’s desires.

Last season, Spagnuolo helped Defensive Coordinator Dean Pees studying opponents and contributed some ideas and insight that were different from what the Ravens had done in the past.

“How fortunate are we to have a former NFL head coach, former defensive coordinator and secondary coach become the Ravens’ coach for our defensive backs?” Harbaugh said.

“Steve is one of the outstanding teachers in the NFL, and he already worked with our defensive staff and players last season as a senior assistant. Our players respect him, and a number of our veteran defensive backs recently said to me that they wanted Steve to coach them.”

Special Teams Coordinator Jerry Rosburg was the team’s assistant head coach, and has moved up to associate head coach.

Monday, December 23, 2013

<中間速報>森田、宮里美香が好スタート!さくらは1アンダー




2010年11月25日13時05分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア1 森田 理香子 -5
2 佐伯 三貴 -3
不動 裕理 -3
4 ジョン・ミジョン -2
竹末 裕美 -2
宮里 美香 -2
7 飯島 茜 -1
キム・ナリ -1
9 有村 智恵 0
アン・ソンジュ 0


順位の続きを見る


LPGAツアーチャンピオンシップリコーカップ 初日>◇25日◇宮崎カントリークラブ(6,520ヤード・パー72)

 国内女子ツアー最終戦「LPGAツアーチャンピオンシップリコーカップ」が今年も宮崎県にある宮崎カントリークラブで開幕した。12時50分現在、森田理香子が5アンダーまでスコアを伸ばし首位、宮里美香佐伯三貴らが3打差の2位につけている。

 ディフェンディングチャンピオンの横峯さくらは前半を終えて1アンダー、今季の賞金女王に輝いたアン・ソンジュ(韓国)は同じく前半終えて1オーバーとなっている。有村智恵は12番まで終了して1オーバー、今季初勝利を狙う諸見里しのぶは16番まで終えて6オーバーと大きく出遅れている。

Friday, November 29, 2013

高山が接戦を制し今季2勝目!「競り合いすぎて楽しかった」



2011年11月27日19時20分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア優勝 高山 忠洋 -15
2 宮里 優作 -13
3 上田 諭尉 -10
4 薗田 峻輔 -8
冨山 聡 -8
上井 邦浩 -8
7 白 佳和 -7
藤田 寛之 -7
尾崎 直道 -7
小田 孔明 -7


順位の続きを見る





今季2勝目を挙げた高山忠洋(撮影:岩本芳弘)








もっと写真を見る(10)




カシオワールドオープン 最終日◇27日◇Kochi黒潮カントリークラブ(7,280ヤード・パー72)>

 高知県にあるKochi黒潮カントリークラブにて開催された、国内男子ツアー「カシオワールドオープン」の最終日は、単独首位でスタートした高山忠洋と、2位の宮里優作との一騎打ちに。最後まで接戦が続いたが宮里が17番のボギーで後退。高山は最終18番パー5の2打目を約1メートルにつけるスーパーショットをみせ大事な場面でイーグルを奪取。最後は2打差をつけ開幕戦以来となる今季2勝目を挙げた。

宮里優作、最後まで競るも初優勝はならず…単独2位で終戦

 「ショットの調子が悪かったので不安の方が大きかった」と高山は勝てて安堵の表情。18番では「優作の飛距離ならバーディを獲ってくるのでとにかく2オンで、最低でもバーディにしないと追いつかれる」と最後まで気の抜けない展開。しかし、「競り合いすぎて楽しかった。最後まで分からなかったので。今考えると楽しかったですね」宮里との激しい戦いも楽しむことができた。

 この勝利で賞金ランキングは2位に。「べ・サンムンと優勝争いしている時に目標1億円にしたいねなんて話してましたが、それが手の届くところまできて嬉しい」。目標まで約300万円だ。そして、今季複数回優勝したのは日本勢では高山のみ。「日本勢がというより、日本ツアーとしてみているので。べ・サンムンの3勝が最多勝、並ぶにはもう1勝」。最多勝に向けショットにはまだ不安が残る状況だが、「チャンスがあれば気合でいきたいですね」と抱負を語った。

 03年に手首を壊して以来、ずっとケガと付き合いながらのゴルフ。手首のスペシャリストという専属トレーナーの力を借りてここまでやってきた。先週の「ダンロップフェニックス」では左手小指がしびれて棄権、そして翌週の優勝。「彼がいないと優勝どころか、満足に練習もできない。あとは奥さんの存在、これを忘れたらいけない(笑)」、トレーナーと美人妻の助けで掴んだ通算5勝目。6勝目も2人の助けがあれば、きっと挙げられるだろう。

【最終結果】
優勝:高山忠洋(-15)
2位:宮里優作(-13)
3位:上田諭尉(-10)
4位T:薗田峻輔(-8)
4位T:冨山聡(-8)
4位T:上井邦浩(-8)
7位T:白佳和(-7)
7位T:藤田寛之(-7)
7位T:尾崎直道(-7)
7位T:小田孔明(-7)
11位T:石川遼(-6)他3名

宮本勝昌の連続試合出場が151で途切れる




2011年11月27日19時46分




リーダーズボード
順位 選手名 スコア優勝 高山 忠洋 -15
2 宮里 優作 -13
3 上田 諭尉 -10
4 薗田 峻輔 -8
冨山 聡 -8
上井 邦浩 -8
7 白 佳和 -7
藤田 寛之 -7
尾崎 直道 -7
小田 孔明 -7


順位の続きを見る


カシオワールドオープン 最終日◇27日◇Kochi黒潮カントリークラブ(7,280ヤード・パー72)>

 最終戦となる「日本シリーズJTカップ」の出場権を得るためには、「カシオワールドオープン」で単独3位以内に入ることが条件だった宮本勝昌。しかし、初日から出遅れるとなんとか予選を通過したものの、トータル13オーバー64位に終わり、残念ながら連続試合出場記録は151で途切れることになってしまった。

 宮本は05年の「アジア・ジャパン沖縄オープン」からこの試合まで151試合に連続出場。今季は2年ぶりに選手会長の重責を背負いながらの戦いだった。