WGC-Accenture Match Play marks first global gathering of the year
Golf at the highest level has become such a global game it’s tougher than ever to pinpoint the best professional tour, the most fertile country for world-class players, the most impressive young talent, or even, in the absence of Tiger Woods, the top player.
With Woods out indefinitely, the game is a land grab contested by old reliables like Kenny Perry, 49, Steve Stricker, 42, and Vijay Singh, 46; global stars like Padraig Harrington and Geoff Ogilvy; and several would-be No. 1s including (but not limited to) Ryo Ishikawa, Dustin Johnson, Martin Kaymer, Rory McIlroy and Michael Sim.
No tournament better exemplifies the game’s current state than the frenzied free-for-all that is the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship at 7,849-yard Ritz-Carlton Golf Club in Marana, Ariz., starting Wednesday. “There are no easy draws in this event,” said Lee Westwood, the second seed this week, who will play countryman Chris Wood in the first round. “[These are the] top players in the world. So everybody’s quite capable of shooting a 63 or 62 out there.”
The Accenture will mark the first truly global gathering of the year, a season in which one of the biggest stories has been the shift in the balance of power between the U.S. and Europe. While fields on the PGA Tour’s West Coast Swing have been largely unremarkable and at times dismal, the European Tour has flourished. That’s only partly because of American players traveling overseas for appearance fees. More importantly it owes to a new look atop the World Ranking that’s been years in the making. Of the top 20 players in the ranking, only six are Americans, and two (Woods and the vacationing Phil Mickelson) are not in the field this week.
Nine years after he won the tournament as the 55 seed, Stricker takes the top seed into the Accenture, but the prohibitive favorite is Ogilvy, a two-time Accenture winner and three-time finalist who has racked up an incredible 17-2 career record in this event.
Then again, perhaps the favorite is England’s Ross Fisher, who advanced to the tournament’s final four last season and later won the Volvo World Match Play.
The favorite certainly wouldn’t seem to be Westwood, who has never advanced past the second round in nine Accenture starts, many of his losses coming in extra holes. Unlike those years, though, he is coming into this week on a good note, having won the Race to Dubai to end 2009 and notched two top-three finishes in his last two starts.
When Westwood left home Sunday, and his 5-year-old daughter Poppy asked him when he would return, he wasn’t sure what to tell her and her older brother Samuel. “I said, ‘Historically, Thursday; optimistically, Monday,’ ” he said at his press conference at Dove Mountain, prompting laughter. “They looked at me quizzically.”
Theories on match play run the gamut. Do you play the man or the course? Is gamesmanship important, and how is it best and most subtly deployed?
Johnson, coming off his victory at Pebble Beach, said on Tuesday that he didn’t know and didn’t much care who he’s playing beyond Camilo Villegas in the first round. The assembled media were incredulous; hadn’t he bothered to look at a bracket? “If one is sitting next to me at breakfast, of course I’ll look at it,” Johnson said. “But I’m not going to go out of my way to find the bracket to see who is in it. Everyone here is good. They don’t make it here because of a fluke. So it really doesn’t matter who you’re playing, it’s going to be a tough match and you’re going to have to play well.”
The winner of the Johnson-Villegas match will play either Alexander Noren of Sweden or the one guy everyone would just as soon avoid in Tucson: Ogilvy. That said, it’s conceivable that Ogilvy hasn’t been getting much quality sleep or practice time. His wife Juli delivered the couple’s third child, Harvey Jack Ogilvy, last Thursday.
Most intriguing at the Accenture are the rookies, who will show soon enough what they think of the quirky format. Ishikawa and Sim play each other for the right to face Stricker or Ross McGowan in the second round. Ryan Moore, a match-play terror as an amateur, will face Ernie Els, a match-play terror in Wentworth, England.
As always in this format, someone will shoot 66 and lose, and someone will card a 73 and win. “I think you need more luck in match play than in stroke play,” Westwood said. “You can’t ease your way around-you have to come out all guns blazing.”
• In other action on the PGA Tour, David Duval tries to maintain momentum from last week’s runner-up finish at the Mayakoba Classic in Cancun, Mexico, golf’s version of the NIT. The Mayakoba, played at one of the sweetest spots if not the sweetest spot on the Tour schedule, is famous for reviving careers, most notably that of 2008 champion Brian Gay, who went on to win twice on Tour in 2009 and is in the field for this week’s Accenture.
• Speaking of coming out with guns blazing, the LPGA Tour kicks off at the Honda PTT LPGA Thailand this week. Number one-ranked Lorena Ochoa, the defending champion, headlines a strong field that also includes No. 2 Jiyai Shin, Michelle Wie, Paula Creamer, Morgan Pressel and Christina Kim. The Honda PTT will mark the beginning of the LPGA’s new agreement with the Golf Channel, which will give the circuit a much-needed permanent home.
• On the Champions Tour, Tommy Armour III will try to stay hot at the Allianz Championship, starting Friday at The Old Course at Broken Sound in Boca Raton, Fla. Armour shot a final-round 61 to finish runner-up in his Champions debut at the ACE Group Classic last week. Michael Allen, who tied for fifth place at the PGA Tour’s Farmers Insurance Open last month, and Bernhard Langer are also in the field.
Categories: golf putting Tags: Accenture Match Play, Accenture Match Play Championship, Appearance Fees, Dustin Johnson, Fertile Country, Geoff Ogilvy, Global Game, Global Stars, Lee Westwood, Marana Ariz, Michael Sim, Padraig Harrington, Phil Mickelson, Ritz Carlton, Rory Mcilroy, Steve Stricker, Vijay Singh, West Coast Swing, Wgc Accenture Match Play, Wgc Accenture Match Play Championship
Pre-Swing Fundamentals Reduce Golf Handicaps
Vijay Singh works harder than anyone on the Tour. He spends hours and hours every day working on his game, practicing every facet of it—from putting to chipping to driving—so that he can be the best he can be. In fact, his practice sessions are legendary among the world’s best players. Needless to say, his determination has paid off. He’s earned millions and millions of dollars in prize money.
While you’d probably like to spend more time practicing and playing golf, you can’t always do it. You have too many responsibilities. But hitting balls at the range or taking golf lessons from a pro isn’t the only way to cut strokes from your golf handicap. You can also do it by working on key pre-swing fundamentals—fundamentals that many a weekend player overlooks. By ingraining them, you’ll trim strokes from your golf handicap without ever picking up a club.
Below are six pre-swing fundamentals that help you cut strokes from your scores without going to the driving range:
1. Acquire The Right Mind Set
Having the right mind-set before swinging the club is crucial. It’s even more crucial when driving. Hitting a good opening shot gets you started on the right foot. So work on having a positive attitude before hitting the ball. Don’t think, “Don’t hit it in the water.” Think, “I’m going to hit it right down the middle.” That way, you’ll create positive images of successful shots in your mind. That develops self-confidence.
2. Perfect Your Grip
Many golfers—especially beginners—overlook the importance of having the right grip. These players don’t fully understand how the grip affects your swing. Since your hands are the only part of your body touching the club, how you grip it is critical. It determines clubface position. If your grip is incorrect, your clubface will mirror it and be either open or shut. The perfect grip has both hands rotated 45 degrees to the right for right-handed golfers.
3. Develop Good Posture
Posture is another pre-swing fundamental weekend golfers overlook. Golf is an athletic activity. You must be in the optimum starting position to be able to “explode” when you need to. If you’re slouched over or too straight at address, you can’t generate the kind of swing discussed in golf lessons and golf tips. In short, good posture lets you make a good pivot. Use a full-length mirror to examine your posture. Make sure you’re in the right position at address.
4. Apply Proper Grip Pressure
Work on holding the club with the right grip pressure. If you grip the club too hard, you’ll “strangle it,” preventing you from swinging fluidly. If you hold the club too loosely, you’ll lose it during your swing. You must apply the right grip pressure to strike the ball well. Good swings come from good, free-flowing pressure, not death grips. More importantly, applying the right grip pressure produces the right tempo during your swing.
5. Align Your Body Properly
If you’ve ever shot a gun, you know there’s no point in pulling the trigger if you don’t aim the gun properly. The same thing is true in golf. If you don’t aim yourself properly, you won’t hit your target. When your bodylines cross, your chances of making a free flowing swing greatly diminish. That means anything can happen. Work on aligning your body to the target line and let your swing flow. Good alignment produces a good swing path.
6. Find The Right Ball Position
All good swings start with the club descending into the ball—even when you hit driver off the tee. But playing the ball too far back or too far forward in your stance when driving throws your swing off. You’ll pop the ball up, dribble it off the tee, or hit some other type of ugly, embarrassing shot. Good ball position results in good contact. Lay a club down so the toe is against the heel of your front foot. The shaft will stick out two inches from your heel. That’s where your want to position the ball on a drive.
These six pre-swing fundamentals are as critical as any swing fundamentals you work on in golf instruction sessions or read about in technical articles offering golf tips. They are timeless. Work on them in your home or at the office as often as you can and make then an integral part of your pre-shot routine. Ingraining them will impact your golf handicap more than your think.
Jack Moorehouse
http://www.articlesbase.com/golf-articles/preswing-fundamentals-reduce-golf-handicaps-1018719.html
Categories: golf putting Tags: Balls, Driving Range, Facet, game, Golf Handicap, Golf Handicaps, Golf Lessons, Good Posture, Handed Golfers, Having A Positive Attitude, Images, Playing Golf, Posture, Practice Sessions, Prize Money, Right Foot, Self Confidence, Strokes, Swing Fundamentals, Vijay Singh
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2003

Tiger Woods and the PGA Tour continue their exclusive relationship with EA SPORTS for a fifth game in the best-selling professional golf series. Fourteen courses are available in this version, six of which are based on authentic venues in Pebble Beach, Sawgrass, the Royal Birkdale Golf Club, Princeville, Torrey Pines, Poppy Hills, Spyglass Hill, and Scottsdale. Players will be able to compete as or against 17 PGA Tour athletes, including Ty Tryon, Brad Faxon, Vijay Singh, Mark Calcavechhia, and more. In addition to the pros, players can select one of nine original characters created specifically for this version, or one of seven returning characters from Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2002. The game once again employs the Total Precision Swing system for analog club movement, and the broadcasting duo of David Feherty and Bill Macatee handle the commentary during competition. Top performances during a round can earn players Trophy Balls for achieving certain milestones in drives, chip-ins, and putts. New modes of play include the SkillZone, which involves competing in a series of mini-games for points after first purchasing a bucket of balls. Players can also attempt to finish one of 18 new scenarios taking place in specific situations on the links. Speed Golf returns from the previous game, allowing two players to race through a series of holes on a split-screen, and a new Create-a-Course feature allows would-be golf designers to assemble their dream course by picking and choosing from any of the available holes. ~ Scott Alan Marriott, All Game Guide Golf Games Sports Games Universal
Categories: mini golf putt Tags: Birkdale Golf Club, Brad Faxon, Bucket Of Balls, Course Feature, David Feherty, Dream Course, Fifth Game, Game Guide, Golf Series, Pga Tour 2002, Pga Tour 2003, Poppy Hills, Royal Birkdale Golf, Royal Birkdale Golf Club, Speed Golf, Spyglass Hill, Tiger Woods Pga Tour, Tiger Woods Pga Tour 2002, Ty Tryon, Vijay Singh