Posts Tagged ‘the U.S Open’

A Devastating Fire At Milburn Golf & Country Club

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Milburn Golf & Country Club leaders were confident their storied club would survive Monday evening’s devastating fire.

“A club of this nature is about people, and the people are still going to be there,” said Bob Fischgrund, vice president of the club at 7501 W. 69th St. in Overland Park.

The fire spewed flames for hours, and high winds whipped smoke that could be smelled miles away. It started about 4:30 p.m., possibly on the clubhouse’s second floor, but authorities didn’t know what sparked it.

The club was heavily damaged. It took five hours to get the fire under control.

No one was injured. The club had been closed Monday.

A member of the club’s administrative staff was in the building Monday but was able to escape without injury, club president Greg Dunn said.

Officials were investigating a report that a roofing crew working at the club started a small fire about an hour before, Overland Park fire spokesman Jason Rhodes said in a statement. That fire was not reported, he said.

Built in 1917 on the Strang Line Interurban Railway, the club drew city visitors who rode the line to play golf. Downed by fire in 1932, the club came back, and these days it has hosted tournaments where local golfers tried to qualify for the U.S. Open.

“It’s a shame,” golfer Tom Watson said. “There are lots of memories, but they’ll just have to look forward to a new building and make new memories.”

Watson won the Missouri Amateur at Milburn in 1971, and the Watson Challenge was held there in 2008.

“It’s one of my favorite golf courses in the area,” Watson said. “It’s a really good test of golf. But gee whiz. What a shame.”

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Dozens of people lined Santa Fe Drive on Monday night, watching firefighters struggle to tame the three-alarm fire and recalling memories of Christmas parties, wedding receptions and summer days spent swimming and golfing there.

“You can see it on TV, but you don’t believe it until you actually see it,” Diann McCallum of Mission said.

McCallum, who graduated from Shawnee Mission North High in 1980, sang at the country club with the school choir every Christmas.

“It’s a gorgeous building. It’s really sad to see it go down,” McCallum said.

Kristen Johnson, 25, fought back tears. The night before her wedding two months ago, she wrote her parents how thankful she was her family joined the club because of the amount of time they spent there together.

“I just can’t imagine not spending a summer up here,” Johnson said.

“It’s certainly been an important fixture in the city’s history,” said Florent Wagner, the president of the Overland Park Historical Society. “Thousands of people have been married there.”

Club leaders were trying to learn the extent of the fire’s damage Monday night. Although the clubhouse sustained heavy fire and water damage, crews were able to keep the pro shop intact, Fire Chief Bryan Dehner said.

High westerly winds fanned the flames and made the blaze difficult to control. Crews had to bring water from a long distance because there were no nearby hydrants.

Jim Crilly, a homeowner on 69th Street who lives three houses away from the club, said a friend told him that he heard a loud popping noise from the clubhouse before the firefighters arrived.

Crilly said he went outside upon hearing the sirens and saw smoke that appeared to come from the west side of the clubhouse.

Monday’s fire wasn’t the first at Milburn. Flames destroyed the clubhouse in September 1932. Almost all the furniture and equipment — including a grand piano and 225 sets of golf clubs — were saved by caddies and caretakers.

Dunn said Milburn was insured and had being doing well financially.

“We’re going to continue, but it’s going to be a disruption to our operations,” he said.

The club employs 50 to 100 people. Several people had been planning to hold Christmas parties and other holiday celebrations at the clubhouse.

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McDowell Will Be The Highest-ranked Player In The Field At Diamond Country Club

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

McDowell, the U.S. Open champion and world No. 14, will be the highest-ranked player in the field this week at Diamond Country Club.

But Jimenez is among the hottest after becoming the first player on either the European or PGA Tour to win three times this season when he captured the European Masters two weeks ago (Kaymer joined him on Sunday).

Spain’s Rafael Cabrera-Bello won last year’s Austrian Golf Open after closing with a blistering 11-under 60 in the final round to beat Benn Barham by a shot. Cabrera-Bello is not scheduled to defend his title.

Golf Channel will have coverage of all four rounds beginning at 8:30 a.m. (et) the first two days and 7 a.m. on the weekend.

Next week is The Vivendi Cup, which pits a team from Great Britain & Ireland against one from Continental Europe. Great Britain & Ireland captured its fifth straight title last year.

NATIONWIDE TOUR

BOISE OPEN, Hillcrest Country Club, Boise, Idaho – Three players at this week’s Boise Open will be seeking their third victories of the season and an automatic promotion to the PGA Tour.

Chris Kirk, Tommy Gainey and Martin Piller have gone a combined 0-for-11 since their last titles, but any one of them could play this fall on the PGA Tour by winning at Hillcrest Country Club.

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Kirk, the tour’s money leader, captured his second win two starts ago at the Knoxville News Sentinel Open, then tied for 17th Sunday in Utah.

Gainey hasn’t won in his last seven tournaments since capturing the Chiquita Classic for his second victory in four starts. Piller has gone winless in three starts since the Cox Classic.

Last year’s Boise Open was won by Fran Quinn when he birdied the last hole to beat Blake Adams by a shot, earning his third title on the developmental tour. Quinn won again earlier this year, but has played mostly on the PGA Tour and is not in this week’s field.

Golf Channel will have coverage of all four rounds starting at 6:30 p.m. (et) on the first three days and 30 minutes later on Sunday.

Next week is the WNB Golf Classic in Midland, Texas, which was won by Garrett Willis last year.

UNITED STATES GOLF ASSOCIATION

USGA MEN’S STATE TEAM, Mayacama Golf Club, Santa Rosa, California – Two players from Pennsylvania’s winning 2009 team will be trying to defend their title at this week’s USGA Men’s State Team Championship.

Nathan Smith and Sean Knapp joined Mike Van Sickle for a three-shot win over Kansas last year. Van Sickle has since turned pro and will be replaced by Artie Fink Jr. on this year’s team.

Players will complete 18 holes of stroke play each day from Tuesday through Thursday with the lowest two scores from each three-player team counted towards that state’s total. The team with the lowest aggregate score through 54 holes is the champion.

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Dustin Johnson Says He Is Over A Summer Of Sunday Disappointments

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Maybe now everyone will believe Dustin Johnson when he says he is over a summer of Sunday disappointments.

First came an 82 on the final day after leading the U.S. Open. Then came a crushing blow at the PGA Championship, when he was denied a spot in the playoff for not realizing he was in a bunker and touching the sand with his club on the final hole.

Resilient as he is powerful, Johnson kept coming back for more.

The payoff came Sunday in the BMW Championship in Lemont, Ill., when the 26-year-old American was flawless on the back nine at Cog Hill and made up a three-shot deficit against Paul Casey to win for the second time this year. Playing in the final group for the fourth time since June, Johnson closed with a 2-under-par 69 for a one-shot victory.

“To finally get it done, especially after all the things I’ve gone through this summer … it can’t feel any better,” he said.

Johnson goes to the Tour Championship at No. 2 in the FedEx standings, with a clear shot at the $10 million bonus.

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One player he won’t have to beat at East Lake is Tiger Woods. The world’s No. 1 player sputtered at the start and shot 70 to tie for 15th, not nearly enough to move into the top 30 in the standings and advance to the FedEx Cup finale.

It’s the first time as a pro that Woods hasn’t been eligible for a tournament.

“That’s just the way it is,” Woods said. “I didn’t play well early in the year, and I didn’t play well in the middle of the year.”

Woods played with Phil Mickelson for the first time in 2010. Mickelson closed with a 67 and tied for eighth, his first top 10 since the U.S. Open.

LPGA: Yani Tseng made four birdies in a five-hole stretch on the back nine and beat Michelle Wie by a stroke in the Northwest Arkansas Championship in Rogers, Ark.

Wie (69) had a three-stroke lead on Tseng and two others coming into the final round. Juli Inkster, who had been in the tie for second, shot 72 and finished seven shots back. Tseng shot 65.

Briefly: PGA champion Martin Kaymer won the KLM Open in Hilversum, Netherlands, by four strokes. … Russ Cochran birdied the first playoff hole to defeat Fred Funk in the Songdo Championship in Incheon, South Korea, and earn his first Champions Tour victory.

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Andrew Parr Has Been Going Through A Maturing Process With His Golf Game

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Andrew Parr has been going through a maturing process with his golf game. A big part of that has been thinking like a kid again.

The 27-year-old Londoner has spent the last year — since he made an early splash at the U.S. Open in 2009 by leading after three holes — reinventing himself in all aspects of his game. He’s been working with Canadian swing coach Sean Foley — who will soon count Tiger Woods among his clients, if he doesn’t already — as well as taking a whole different mental approach.

And while it may not be translating to results right now, Parr believes he’s in much better shape.

“I’m feeling nice about where my game is at right now,” he said Wednesday after a practice round for the Economical Insurance Group Seaforth Country Classic, in its third season as a Canadian Tour event. “It’s been a really awesome year for me for learning. Golf and life don’t always go according to a timeline, but I feel I’m in a much better place, physically, emotionally and mentally, than I’ve ever been.

“Things happen at different ages for different people and I feel good about what I’ve learned about myself up to now.”

A major part of his new approach has been between the ears.

“One of the things I’ve learned the last little while is you can’t live your life making other people happy. That’s impossible. I wanted to play golf at a high level for a much different reason three or four years ago than I do now. For the first time, I’m enjoying the day-to-day, enjoying the moments on the course.

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“Golf used to be a means to an end. Now it comes from a pure childlike place, seeing the type of magic that can happen when the ball goes in the hole. It’s all about deconditioning yourself from other people’s beliefs and really finding the inner child, the kid that believes in dreams.”

His dream, of course, is to make it on the PGA Tour, but he said missing the U.S. Open cut at Bethpage Black on Long Island last year may have been a blessing in disguise.

“If I’d made the cut and gone on from there, I wouldn’t have been able to commit full-time to the changes I needed to make,” he said. “Whenever you’re faced with having to get better, it’s easier to be open to the changes you have to make. It’s taken me a full 8-12 months to incorporate everything, but now I feel like I don’t have to think about it any more.”

A quick glance at the dry Canadian Tour stats will show Parr is 52nd on the money list with $9,420.18, with his best finish a tie for 11th at the Times-Colonist Open in Victoria, B.C., at the end of May. That could be viewed as a disappointing season, but Parr is taking a broader perspective.

“It’s easy to look at a scorecard from 2,000 miles away and judge,” he said. “Golf has its ups and downs and while the results may not be there, if you’re with me week to week you’ll see I haven’t played poorly, I just haven’t won. But I felt I was really close last week.”

At the Jane Rogers Championship last week at Greystone Golf Club in Halton Hills, Parr got a flash of what could be as he opened with a six-under 65, but followed it with rounds of 73, 75 and 74.

“To be honest, I played well enough the first two rounds to put myself in contention, but Greystone is super severe and if you hit it on the wrong side of the hole, you can make big numbers fast and that’s what I did a couple of times.

“It was just kind of weird in that I ended up hitting a lot more high-quality shots in the last couple of rounds than I did in the first two, but I just didn’t get anything out of them. I felt a lot more consistent the last two rounds and that was exciting for me.”

Seaforth is a far less severe test and low scores are the norm.

“It’s an interesting course,” Parr said. “There are a couple of holes you need to be patient on and a bunch on the back you really need to attack. It’s a course you can get on a roll on and I think you’ll see a bit of that this week. I’m taking a bit of a different approach, just trying to get the ball in the fairway instead of forcing things because they’ve grown the rough here and narrowed the fairways.”

Buoyed by a new sponsorship from Marret Asset Management, Parr knows he doesn’t have to worry about making ends meet while pursuing his dreams.

“If you worry about money on the Canadian Tour, you’re missing the point,” he said. “The point of being on the Canadian Tour is to get off the Canadian Tour. You’ll never make a living on the Canadian Tour; it’s here for development.”

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Dustin Johnson Still Keeps Fielding The Same Question About His Final-round Implosion At The U.S. Open

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

It’s been two months and Dustin Johnson still keeps fielding the same question about his final-round implosion at the U.S. Open. How long did it take you to get over Pebble Beach?

“Not very long,” he insists.

Those are certainly three words nobody has ever associated with the bomber from Myrtle Beach. But people need to start realizing that the shortest thing about Dustin Johnson is his memory. With him once again in the thick of it at a third straight major, the 82 that blew his big lead at Pebble Beach is ancient history.

“That’s my personality,” he said of a career hiccup he got over the next day. “I don’t look too much behind me. I look forward. Dwelling on it can’t help anything.”

If Johnson didn’t prove that by climbing into contention at the British Open last month (he tied for 14th after a double bogey-bogey finish cost him a spot as low American), he’s proving it this week on yet another seaside golf course. By tearing down the par-5s at Whistling Straits to size, he sits at 5 under and tied for third among those in the clubhouse.

Forget about the U.S. Open, already. He’s got another major he’s trying to win.

“It was kind of a fluke thing or whatever you want to call it,” Johnson said of the early triple-double-bogey stretch that eviscerated this three-shot lead on Graeme McDowell and sent him spiraling to a ninth-place finish. “I just played bad. Golfers have bad rounds of golf. So, no, I got this tournament to look at and I always try to focus on what I’m doing at the time and not what I did in the past.”

Don’t believe that the experience has tempered Johnson’s way at all. He still attacks golf courses with power and abandon that some might call reckless. To him it’s as normal as breathing.

Through two rounds amid the stops and starts at Whistling Straits, Johnson has hit only hit 13 of 28 fairways yet played the par-5s in 6 under.

“I’ve never hit any, like, terrible golf shots,” he said of his performance so far. “But you know, to my standards, I haven’t hit any really good golf shots, either.”

Johnson still seems to be feeling his way around a golf course that he wasn’t so sure about when he arrived in Wisconsin.

“The first time you walk out here, you say, ‘Where the hell do you hit the golf ball?’” he said.

Not where normal golfers do, that’s for sure. Johnson has a whole different set of lines off the tee than most of his peers. Take the way he turned the 598-yard fifth hole, called Snake, into a pitch-and-putt on Friday. He saw Bubba Watson take an aggressive line across all sorts of watery mess the day before and thought, “If he can do it, so can I.”

So Johnson unloaded his drive on a line Pete Dye never envisioned and left himself 149 yards to the hole, hit his wedge to 30 feet and drained the putt for eagle.

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“I hit it way right,” he said. “I like it. I think it’s great. It fits me perfect.”

On the par-4 sixth hole, which measured 315 yards on Friday, Johnson sailed the green with a driver that carried about 335 yards and had to settle for par.

“I didn’t expect it to go that far,” he said. “Kind of it went a little too far.”

We can’t relate. Then on the par-3 seventh that played downwind 200 to the flag, Johnson sailed his 9-iron 220 yards over the green and took bogey.

“It’s just really hard for me to be back at 200 yards and say it’s a 9-iron,” he said. “I just can’t do it.”

Ditto. But at least he knows his limitations. But the funny thing about Johnson is that the power game is only a means to his short game, which like John Daly years ago is an incongruous strength. What keeps that fresh is playing a lot of practice-round money matches with Phil Mickelson, one of the best short-game artists ever.

“I play with Phil a lot, and if you don’t get up and down you lose,” he laughed.

His combination of strength and touch, along with his ability to put the horrific stuff behind him, could make him an obvious choice for the Ryder Cup. Johnson got knocked out of the top eight last week by Hunter Mahan but still sits ninth and one spot ahead of Tiger Woods in the standings. The top eight are assured spots on Sunday night.

“I definitely would like to make it in the top eight, earn my way on the team without a captain’s pick,” the former Walker Cup player said. “My golf will take care of that. So I can’t worry about it. All I can do is focus on my golf, and if I play well, I’ll be on there.”

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Flash Back Four Months’ Golf Major Championship

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Flash back four months, to the first major championship of the year. As Tiger Woods embarked on his much-anticipated return to golf at the Masters, Graeme McDowell and Louis Oosthuizen roamed Augusta National in familiar anonymity.

McDowell shot 75-74 and missed the cut. Oosthuizen shot 75-77 and missed the cut. Few people noticed.

Fast forward to the final major of the year this week at Whistling Straits. Woods still commands most of the attention – funny how that happens with 14 major titles, a salacious scandal and startling slump on the course – but McDowell and Oosthuizen no longer wade in obscurity.

Fans routinely offered congratulations as McDowell and Oosthuizen played practice rounds the past two days. Instead of inspiring quizzical looks from the galleries, McDowell now hears muffled whispers of, “Hey, he’s the guy who won the U.S. Open.” Oosthuizen hears similar references to his British Open victory.

The trip from unknown to major champion has never been quicker.

As the PGA Championship begins today on the muggy, rain-soaked shores of Lake Michigan, more players than ever realistically can picture themselves hoisting the Wanamaker Trophy on Sunday night. History gives weight to such dreams: Eight different players have won the past eight majors, none of them named Woods.

Five of those eight players were first-time major champs, from Lucas Glover, Stewart Cink and Y.E. Yang to McDowell and Oosthuizen. Cink might have counted as a logical candidate for a breakthrough on the grand stage, but it’s safe to say the other four came charging out of the wilderness.

McDowell compared the phenomenon with tennis, where he described the No. 50 player in the world as having “absolutely no chance” against Roger Federer or Rafael Nadal. That’s clearly an exaggeration, but it’s still more likely for the No. 50 golfer in the world to take down Woods or Phil Mickelson on any given day.

McDowell, ranked No. 37 at the time, did it June 20 on the storied links of Pebble Beach. Oosthuizen was ranked No. 54 when he steamrolled the field at St. Andrews.

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“That’s one of the great things about our sport,” McDowell said. “There’s no doubt our fields are much more wide open, so you get a relative no-name on the leaderboard on the weekend and they can go on and win.”

Or, as Oosthuizen said, “You have such strong fields every week. It’s not just three or four guys who stand out – it’s probably 50 guys.”

Do not expect this trend to end anytime soon. Woods eventually will find his way again, but it might not translate to another boatload of major titles – not with young men such as Rory McIlroy, Rickie Fowler and Ryo Ishikawa on the rise, not with players such as McDowell and Oosthuizen ready to thrive.

History suggests it will be difficult for the first-timers to win a second major. The landscape is littered with one-hit wonders in the past decade, from Rich Beem (2002 PGA) and Shaun Micheel (’03 PGA) to Todd Hamilton (’04 British Open) and Michael Campbell (’05 U.S. Open).

But the proliferation of recent first-timers feeds the cycle. Oosthuizen found hope in watching fellow South African Trevor Immelman win the Masters in 2008. McDowell, from Northern Ireland, gained confidence seeing good friend Padraig Harrington (from Ireland) snatch three major titles in 2007 and ‘08.

“I think players gain a lot of belief from seeing first-time winners,” McDowell said. “There’s no doubt a few names popped into my head Sunday at Pebble Beach: Y.E. Yang, Trevor Immelman, Zach Johnson. I was taking some belief from those guys doing it. … Guys aren’t scared anymore.”

Yang stripped away any fear in last year’s PGA, when he stared down Woods in their final-round duel. The pack has become even more emboldened this year, as Woods struggles to rediscover his game.

It doesn’t hurt that the modern player – equipped with athletic ability, a super-sized driver and space-age golf ball – smacks shots halfway to the moon. If young power hitters also bring soft touch around the greens and play intelligently, they can contend in majors.

“Twenty years ago, (Nick) Faldo just plodded his way around the course,” McDowell said. “Now guys go for everything.”

Golf still needs the big names to stay in the hunt, as Woods, Mickelson and Ernie Els did at Pebble Beach. Another runaway win by an unknown this week, a la Oosthuizen at St. Andrews, would not hold the attention of television viewers.

There are plenty of major-less players eager for their moment: McIlroy, Fowler, Hunter Mahan, Jeff Overton. Like it or not, the race is more wide open than ever before.

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Mickelson Has Suffering From Psoriatic Arthritis

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

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Mickelson the famous golf star has announced on Tuesday that he has suffering from psoriatic arthritis. This causes his immune system to attack his joints and tendons. First symptoms of the disease were shown to him five days before the U.S Open. He could not even walk due to pain. The disease has been controlled and according to Mickelson the disease has not affected much his long term health.

According to the rough statistics one million people are suffering from psoriatic arthritis. The world’s number one golf star is taking Enbrel which has cured a lot of patients suffering from psoriasis, psoriatic arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis and other immune system diseases. Mickelson said that Enbrel has already improved him about 90% and he is sure that he will be absolutely fine soon.

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