KirkwoodGolf: 16 Mar 2013

Saturday, March 16, 2013

LEWIS PENALISED FOR CADDIE BUNKER BLUNDER, MIYAZATO LEADS BY FOUR

 FROM THE LPGA TOUR WEBSITE
Rolex Rankings No. 9 Ai Miyazato is staring down her 10th career LPGA Tour victory as she fired a flawless 5-under 67 to regain the lead at the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup heading into Sunday’s final round. 
 The Okinawa, Japan native only missed one green on Saturday and recorded her second bogey free round of the week with five birdies.
Despite feeling uncomfortable at the start of her round, Miyazato kicked it into gear and drained a 12-foot birdie putt on the 18th to gain momentum heading into tomorrow.
“I didn't hit any bad shots and I had a few chances, a few birdie chances out there but I couldn't make it,” said Miyazato. “But still towards the end I started to feel more comfortable with my putting.  The last putt was really clutch, I think, so that's going to be good momentum to tomorrow.”
Trailing four shots behind Miyazato is 2012 Rolex Player of the Year Stacy Lewis and Jee Young Lee.
Overcoming Obstacles… During Ai Miyazato’s seven years on the LPGA Tour she has notched nine career victories but to many people’s surprise the poised Okinawa, Japan native hasn’t always been confident.
During her first three years on tour, Miyazato found herself being consistently outdriven,  forcing her to compensate her swing and lose her fluid tempo which she has become so infamous for today. During her rookie year in 2006, she finished 61st in driving distance, in 1007, 131st and in 2008, 99th.
“Yeah, the first three years was really stressful for me because I wasn't really hitting it long and all the players hit pass me like 50 yards away and I was like this is no fair,” said Miyazato. “After that I worked on my swing and I just lose my tempo and balance and everything.  I lost my confidence, too.”
Knowing something had to change if she wanted to have a long, successful career on the LPGA Tour, Miyazato teamed-up with highly touted instructors Lynn Marriott and Pia Nilsson, founders of Vision54 to regain her confidence. 
“It wasn't a really good feeling and I thought my career was just finished,” said Miyazato. “But after that I met Pia and Lynn and they helped a lot, and now I know myself really well.  Even though I'm not still hit long, but I know I can putt and my short game is pretty solid and I have confidence with that.  
"So you don't have to really hit long to the fairway because the golf is not everything about distance.  You can ‑‑ if you can control yourself really well out there, the result's going to follow.  Now I know about that, so it's really comfortable right now.”
Two-stroke penalty…When Stacy Lewis (@Stacy_Lewis) finished her round on the 18th hole on Saturday, the 2012 Rolex Player of the Year thought that she trailed Rolex Rankings No. 9 Ai Miyazato by two shots heading into Sunday’s final round. 
Soon after, Lewis learned that there had been an issue on the 16th hole when she was in a bunker and that a two-stroke penalty might be assessed under Rule 13-4 due to her caddie, Travis Wilson, testing the sand in the bunker.
Lewis, Wilson and two of the LPGA rules officials went to the TV trailer to review the film of the incident and the decision was made to assess the penalty.
“I didn't see Travis do anything when we were playing, I wasn't looking at his feet obviously,” Lewis said. “So we looked at the video and you have to slow it down, zoom in on his foot, he walks into the bunker, he kind of pushes ‑‑ he kind of bounces his knees a little bit and his foot turns.  And that was kind of the big indicators that his foot turned and you could kind of hear the sand crunch a little bit.  So that's deemed to be testing the sand.”
“It’s a ruling on intent, so our whole purpose of that shot was to find out how much sand was in the bunker,” she added. “That's the unfortunate part.  It looks like he's going in there to see how much sand is in there when that really wasn't what he was trying to do.  
"So more than anything I just feel bad for him because he feels awful, but he's the best caddie out here, so we'll be fine.  We still have a chance to win tomorrow, so we'll be okay.”
Giving Back… Rolex Rankings No. 19 Angela Stanford is playing with a little extra incentive at this week’s RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup. The five-time LPGA Tour winner recently announced she will donate 50% of her winnings to her foundation, the Angela Stanford Foundation.
“It would be really cool to ‑‑ you know, I don't even know what the winner's check is, but that would be really cool to give that amount to my foundation,: said Stanford. “Any birdie from here on in is just more money for the foundation, so that's kind of cool when you're out there thinking about it like that.”
Each year through her foundation, Stanford awards scholarships to Texas residents who have been diagnosed with cancer or whose parent or guardian has been diagnosed with cancer.
“I've always wanted to help kids and I always thought it would be pretty cool to do it, but to finally get to, I guess, put your money where your mouth is and getting to meet some of these kids is pretty cool,” said Stanford. 
“They go through more than I ever have, so and they're only 17, 18 years old, so I think by being involved and getting to know these kids, it's helped my perspective also.”
Stanford is in prime condition to earn her foundation a large amount of money as she shot a 7-under 65 on Saturday to move into a tie for fourth. Stanford contributed much of her successful round to watching her beloved Texas Ranges in a spring training game on Friday.
“Yeah, I was lucky enough to get an early time yesterday and the Rangers were playing right down the road in Scottsdale against the Giants, so made it there about the bottom of the third,” said Stanford. “I love sitting at a baseball game.  I know I've taken some heat in the past for going to baseball games, but I love it.  It's the one thing that I can just go sit and watch baseball and not think about anything.  So it was great.  I got out of here quick and just kind of mentally got away from it.”
Legendary advice: Nancy Lopez partnered with JoAnne Carner on Saturday morning to win a nine-hole Hall of Fame exhibition over Pat Bradley and Betsy King at Wildfire Golf Club in Phoenix. But Lopez’s biggest impact at the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup on Saturday may have been the advice that she doled out to second-year LPGA Tour member Lizette Salas the previous day.
Salas shot a 6-under 66 in the third round to vault into a tie for fourth at 13-under-par and she credited a piece of putting advice that Lopez gave her on Friday as the key to her success. 
On Friday afternoon, Lopez spent the day following all 18 holes of Salas’ second round.
Salas, who is the youngest daughter of Mexican immigrants, has looked up to Lopez for a long time and the two got a chance to meet in person for the first time at last year’s RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup.  But this meeting was certainly a special one as Salas had her mentor following her golf round all day and then had dinner with Lopez later on that evening as well.
“It was one of the best days of my career so far,” Salas said. “I was kind of struggling on the front nine yesterday and she pulled up in her cart and she said, ‘Am I going to have to show you how to do this?’  And I was like ohhhh.   I shifted into gear and I shot 32 on my back nine.  She said, ‘Yeah, that works.’
“It was such an honour for her to watch my game and to get compliments from her is so important to me.  We had dinner, my dad came too, my caddie, we all had dinner, shared stories.  She's just a lovely person, not just a great golfer, but she's an amazing woman with lots of good stories.  She told me her Solheim Cup stories and it was a great, great day for me and my dad.”
LPGA “Drops the Ropes” on Sunday… After the final group tees off on the 18th hole Sunday, approximately 50 girls from the LPGA-USGA Girls Golf program will be let inside the ropes to enjoy LPGA action up close and personal. The girls will be escorted by chaperones and LPGA Foundation staff and they will walk along the left side of the 18th hole behind the LPGA players. The girls will continue to follow the final group and they will sit just off the left side of the green to watch the final putts drop.
Quotable… “It’s too quiet in here – it’s not that sad.” – said Stacy Lewis to the Media Center after a press conference regarding her two-stroke penalty.

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THOMPSETT MAKES TOP SIX IN YELLOWJACKET INVITATIONAL

Daniel Thompsett from Aboyne, Aberdeenshire, a student at Rocky Mountain College, Billings in Montana, finished joint sixth in a field of 39 players at the Yellowjacket Spring Invitational at Pryor Creek Golf Club, Huntley in Montana on Thursday-Friday.
Daniel, pictured, shot 74-80 for 154 over a par-72 course of 6981yd, finishing six shots behind the joint winners, Austin Westphal (North Idaho) (75-73) and Gage Huft (Montana State-Billings) (70-78).
North Idaho (599) won the team title ahead of joint runners-up Rocky Mountain and Montana State-Billings, both 618, in a field of five teams.

GEDDES, BRACE LOSE AS GRAND CANYON DRAW
 
Grand Canyon University, Arizona drew 3-3 with Duke University in a singles match-play match over the Arizona State University Karsten course at Tempe, Arizona.
The two Englishmen in the Grand Canyon line-up both lost - Mark Geddes from Cheshire went down 3 and 2, while Liam Brace from Suffolk lost by 2 and 1.
The Karsten Course is a tough one ... par 70 but measuring 7,0002yd.  
 

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CHLOE WILLIAMS RUNNER-UP IN NATIONS CUP INDIVIDUAL TOTALS


Spain won both the team and individual titles at the European Nations Cup women's tournament at Sotogrande on the Costa del Sol.
Spain (585) won the women's team trophy with a total of 585 at the end of four rounds.
Germany were runners-up with 590.
Wales filled third place with 596 and England were fourth on 598.
Ireland and Scotland did not enter teams.
Patricia Sanz Barrio (Spain) won the individual honours by seven shots with a one-under-par aggregate of 287 (74-71-69-73).
Runner-up was Chloe Williams, pictured, from Wrexham with scores of 76, 72, 70 and 76 for 294.
Nicole Larsen (Denmark) was third on 297 and World No 4 female amateur George Hall (England), the reigning British girls champion, came fourth on 298 with rounds of 73, 77, 74 and 74.

FINAL TEAM TOTALS
585 Spain.                              608 France
590 Germany.                         610 Holland
596 Wales.                             611 Finland
598 England                           612 Slovenia
605 Italy                                 618 Sweden
607 Denmark                          628 Belgium         

LEADING FINAL INDIVIDUAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72)

287 Patricia Sanz Barrio (Spain) 74 71 69 73

294 Chloe Williams (Wales) 76 72 70 76
297 Nicole Larsen (Denmark) 76 74 71 76
298 Georgia Hall (England) 73 77 74 74

SELECTED TOTALS
305 Bronte Law (England) 78 80 76 71 (T13)

306 Alex Peters (England) 75 80 74 77 (16th)
307 Becky Harries (Wales) 77 76 78 76, Amy Boulden (Wales) 81 72 77 77 (T17) 

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JEE YOUNG LEE CHASING FIRST LPGA TOUR WIN IN EIGHT YEARS

      An old picture of the 13 founder members of the LPGA Tour in the late 1940s. Pity they
                  couldn't get them all to look at the camera at the same time!

FROM THE LPGA WEBSITE
It’s been nearly eight years since Jee Young Lee last won on the LPGA Tour but the 27-year-old South Korean is leading after two rounds of the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup at Phoenix.
Lee fired an 8-under 64 on Friday at the Wildfire Golf Club and leads by one over Rolex Rankings No. 9 Ai Miyazato. Trailing four shots behind Lee is 2012 Rolex Player of the Year Stacy Lewis, who shot a 7-under 65 in the second round to jump from a T11 into solo third place.
Jee Young Lee has had her fair share of ups-and-downs the past two seasons on the LPGA Tour. In 2011, the South Korean missed 10 cuts in 15 starts and in 2012; she missed five cuts in 13 starts. 
Part of Lee’s struggles could be attributed to a wrist injury which required surgery in 2010 in October following the Sime Darby LPGA Malaysia.  
“Actually, in 2010 after Malaysia, Malaysian Open, I had surgery, right wrist surgery,” said Lee, “so I'm going to, you know, like rehab and then I'm going to lose a little confidence after that.”
If the first two days of the RR Donnelley LPGA Classic are any indication, it looks like Lee’s confidence is just fine as she currently holds a one-stroke lead. After surgery, Lee took two months off from golf and now feels as if her wrist is healthy.
“Much better this year,” said Lee. “I didn't golf like two months, so it's going to be better, better for wrist.”
Ai Miyazato’s poise and charisma on the golf course is something most people idolise. With her smooth, fluid swing, the nine-time LPGA Tour winner never gets flustered, no matter the execution of any golf shot.
Despite Miyazato’s calm demeanour on the course, it hasn’t always been an easy thing to accomplish for the Okinawa, Japan native. One thing that has seemed to help Miyazato this week is her love for the RR Donnelley LPGA Classic.
“Well, it's not easy to be calm all day, but I just worked hard on just trying to control myself really well out there,” said Miyazato. “Like I said, I'm just happy to be here and playing in the tournament again and just very thankful for all that.  So that's why I think I felt really calm out there.  Of course I'm playing good, too, but I enjoy playing golf right now, so just make it simple.
Statistically speaking, the numbers speak volumes for the type of player Miyazato is with top-15 rankings in putting average and rounds under par. Her impressive play hasn’t gone unnoticed amongst her players including 2012 Rolex Player of the Year Stacy Lewis who boasted about Miyazato’s game in her post-round press conference.
“Ai's going to be hard to chase,” said Lewis. “She's a good frontrunner.  She hits a lot of fairways, a lot of greens, hits it really straight.  When she gets her putter going, she's one of the best putters in the world.  I was surprised that she went pretty low today considering what she did yesterday.  It's usually hard to follow a number like that.  So she'll definitely be hard to catch.” 
Yani Tseng currently holds the coveted number one spot in the Rolex Ranking but for the first time in 109 weeks, it is up for grabs at this week’s LPGA Founders Cup. 
If Stacy Lewis  wins this week and Tseng finishes third or worse, the American will take over as the number one player in the Rolex Rankings.
Lewis currently sits four-strokes off the lead heading into the third round and the six-time LPGA Tour winner admits the thought of taking over as Rolex Rankings No. 1 has crept into her mind several times this week.
“It's definitely on my mind, you kind of look at what Na Yeon and Yani are doing and kind of pay attention to it,” said Lewis. “But then you've got Ai going crazy the last two days, so there's so much out of your control that you can't control that I've just got to take care of myself.” 
Ironically, Lewis and Tseng were paired together during the first two days of the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup but the discussion of the race for No 1 never came up in conversation. According to Lewis, the duo stuck strictly to discussing activities pertaining to outside the ropes.
“We've not talked about Number 1 at all, not at all,” said Lewis. “I don't know, we just talked about ‑‑ I don't know what we talked about.  We talked about where we went to dinner last night and what we were going to do the rest of the day.  I don't know.  We just kind of talked about random things, but we don't really talk about golf and the rankings and things like that.” 
Coming off one of her best seasons in years on the LPGA Tour, England-born Australian Lindsey Wright didn’t want anything to hamper her preparation this past offseason.
Unfortunately for Wright, a freak injury while attending a friend’s bachelorette party in early January left her with a broken foot. So Wright wound up taking much more time off from golf than she anticipated.
“I actually was walking and I had a slight heel on and my foot kind slipped and I braced and it just popped,” said Wright, who had to withdraw from the first three LPGA events of the year due to the injury.
 “I actually think it was a stress kind of fracture. I'd been working really hard on my pivot in my golf swing and so there's been a lot of stress on that left side anyway.  I just think it made it worse.”
The 33-year-old hadn’t played golf since the CME Group Titleholders in November and only began practising a week and a half ago in preparation for her first tournament of the year this week at the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup. 
But it didn’t appear that the lengthy layoff did anything to hamper her game as Wright followed up an opening round 68 with a 5-under 67 in Friday’s second round.
“Coming into this season, to be honest, I have had no expectations,” said Wright, who finished 49th on the Money List last year with two top-10 finishes. 
“I was nervous playing this tournament this week because it's the first time I hadn't prepared myself by playing three or four tournaments.  But in saying that, I kept it really simple in my practice and just kept going back to basics.  I mean, I made a few mental mistakes, which it's obvious that I haven't played, get ahead of yourself and that's where I made mistakes today, but all in all I'm pretty confident, I feel pretty good.  I did a lot of swimming in the time I couldn't walk, so that actually kept my quite flexible and stronger in my shoulders.  I'm actually hitting the ball really well.”
A total of 74 players made the cut which fell at 2-under-par 142
This week’s RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup is all about honouring the women who helped make the LPGA what it is today. Of Note… Kim Welch had a hole-in-on on the 163 yard 14th with a 6-iron…Cristie Kerr made one of the biggest moves of the day, shooting a 7-under 65 to move from a T59 into a T9 at 8-under-par ..
Those who missed the cut with aggregates above 144 included big names such as Michelle Wie (United States), Suzann Pettersen (Norway) and Laura Davies (England). See below.

 SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 144 (2x72)
129 Jee Young Lee (South Korea) 65 65
130 Ai Miyazato (Japan) 63 67
133 Stacy Lewis (US) 68 65
135 Danielle Kang (US) 68 67, Lindsey Wright (Australia) 68 67, Amy Yang 68 67, Candie Kung (Taipei) 66 69, Gerina Piller (US) 66 69.

SELECTED SCORES
140 Karen Stupples (England) 70 70 (T39)
142 Jodi Ewart Shadoff (England) 71 71 (T60)

MISSED THE CUT (142 and better qualified)
144 Felicity Johnson (England) 69 75, Becky Morgan (Wales) 75 69, Suzann Pettersen (Norway) 73 71
146 Michelle Wie (United States) 74 72
147 Laura Davies (England) 73 74
150 Carlota Ciganda (Spain) 74 76     

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LAURA DIAZ NAMED US SOLHEIM CUP ASSISTANT CAPTAIN

FROM THE LPGA WEBSITE
 PHOENIX  – U.S. Solheim Cup captain Meg Mallon announced today that two-time LPGA champion and four-time Solheim Cup participant Laura Diaz will serve as an assistant captain when the U.S. takes on Europe at the 13th staging of the event at Colorado Golf Club in Parker, Colorado from August 13-18.
Diaz, an LPGA Tour member since 1999, joins Dottie Pepper as an assistant captain. Today’s announcement was made by LPGA Chief Communications Officer Kraig Kann in the media centre at the RR Donnelley LPGA Founders Cup – the first event of the LPGA’s 2013 North American schedule – with Mallon and Pepper in attendance. 

Solheim Cup points are available to all U.S.-born LPGA players who earn top-20 finishes in Phoenix and all other LPGA events, with points being doubled at the major championships.
“I’m thrilled to have Laura Diaz join Dottie and me as captains of the 2013 U.S. Solheim Cup Team,” Mallon said. “Laura brings great enthusiasm and experience to the team. She will be my eyes and ears on the LPGA Tour this season while she plays alongside potential U.S. Team members.”
Diaz was elated by the honour.
“It is the biggest honour of my career thus far, partially because of what the job entails, but more so because a former teammate of mine had the freedom to choose anyone she wanted, and she chose me,” Diaz said. “The respect that I have for Meg as a player and a person is the reason I feel so honored.”
Diaz is a four-time U.S. Solheim Cup Team member (2002, 2003, 2005, 2007), enjoying three team victories while amassing a 6-6-1 record and earning 6½ points for Team USA. Both of her victories – the Welch’s/Circle K Championship and the LPGA Corning Classic – came in 2002, and Diaz has notched 57 top-10 finishes while earning more than $5 million during her impressive career.
Diaz plans to play a full 2013 schedule and hopes to qualify for the U.S. Team, a reality that would be just fine with Mallon.
“Laura has also proven that she still has game and is capable of having a big year on Tour this season,” Mallon said. “If the opportunity arises, I believe she could handle being a playing assistant.”
Diaz is looking forward to a big year in 2013.
“I’m hoping to have a blowout year and be a participant on the team,” she said. “I have the drive to continue participating in the Solheim Cup as a player.”
Before turning professional in 1997, Diaz was a member of the Wake Forest University golf team, where she was the 1995 Atlantic Coast Conference champion, a First-Team All-American from 1996-97 and the 1997 Female Athlete of the Year. 

Diaz also won the 1995 North-South Amateur Championship, 1996 Eastern Championship and advanced to the quarterfinals of the 1996 U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship during her amateur days.
“One of the main things I can bring to this year’s team as Assistant Captain is my experience on three victorious U.S. Teams and one that was nearly victorious,” Diaz said. “Also, I know all the players very well, and I’m out there competing against them on a regular basis. I can be Meg’s eyes and ears and really know what’s going on.
“Because the girls know me and see me between the ropes, I hope they feel comfortable communicating with me on a weekly basis.”
Diaz joins Debbie Massey (2000), Jane Geddes (2002, 2003), Donna Caponi (2005), Beth Daniel (2007), Mallon (2009), Kelly Robbins (2009), Sherri Steinhauer (2011), Juli Inkster (2011 – playing assistant) and Pepper (2013) as the 10th different assistant captain in U.S. Team history.
Diaz is one of six LPGA Player Directors on the LPGA Board of Directors, serving as Vice President. She and her husband, Kevin, have two children, Cooper and Lily.


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