Monday, August 26, 2013

John Riegger leads Boeing Classic

NOQUALMIE, Wash. (AP) -- John Riegger shot an 8-under 64 on Saturday to open a three-stroke lead after the second round of theChampions Tour's Boeing Classic
The 50-year-old Riegger, making his fifth career start on the 50-and-over tour, had an eagle for the second straight day and added seven birdies and a bogey to finish at 11 under at TPC Snoqualmie Ridge.
Tom LehmanBernhard LangerKirk Triplett and Bobby Clampettwere tied for second. Lehman had a 67, Langer and Triplett shot 68, and Clampett had a 69.
Riegger pitched in for the eagle on the 590-yard, par-5 15th hole.
''It wasn't anything fancy'' Riegger said. ''It was just a straight-forward pitch. It landed just on the green and rolled in just like putt.''
He said he no idea at the time that shot pushed him into the lead
''I don't look at it (scoreboard),'' Riegger said. ''If I just go out there and play the way I'm capable of playing, things will take care of themselves. It's not going to do any good to worry about what someone else is doing.''
Riegger won twice on the Web.com Tour, the last in 2010.
''That tour helped me prepare for out here than the regular tour just because you have to go low and keeping going low because there's so many good players,'' Riegger said. ''As for my fifth event, these guys have been beating up on me for 30 years. We still have one more day to go and there's a lot of great players out here. There's some guys out here capable of shooting 63 or 64 on this golf course.''
Langer, the 2010 winner, chipped in for eagle in the 529-yard, par-5 eighth.
''Those were three beautiful shots for the eagle,'' Langer said. ''Then I hit it into the water next hole (for bogey). ... It's not over. Three shots sounds like a great deal. On this golf course, it can be gone in a hole or two. There is a lot of golf to be played yet. I think whoever is within five shots has a chance. I've won tournaments when I was seven shots back.''
Lehman birdied his final three holes.
Hometown favorite Fred Couples was 5 under after a 70.
First-round leader Bart Bryant, the Dick's Sporting Goods Open winner last week in Endicott, N.Y., followed his opening 66 with a 75 to drop into a tie for 20th at 3 under.
Scott Hoch withdrew because of an ankle injury.

Kuchar and Woodland share Barclays lead

By Larry Fine
 JERSEY CITY, New Jersey (Reuters) - Matt Kuchar and Gary Woodland battled to a tie for the lead at breezy Liberty National and will be paired for a final-round Sunday duel at The Barclays, the opening event of the FedExCup playoffs.
 Kuchar carded a one-under 70, while fellow-American Woodland shot a 68 to finish Saturday's third round locked at 12-under-par 131.
World number six Kuchar, who has two wins this season, was paired with big-hitting Woodland and came away impressed.
"Man, that guy can play some golf," said Kuchar, who led by two strokes after finishing a second round of 65 early Saturday morning. "Gary was really impressive."
 Said Woodland, who ran off four birdies in a row at one point, "I drove the ball beautifully all day, and finally I got some putts to go in."
 Unheralded Kevin Chappell fired a sensational, course record 62 to leap up the leaderboard and stand one stroke behind his compatriots in pursuit of his first title on the PGA Tour.
 A Kuchar-Woodland duel, however, is far from assured with world number one Tiger Woods lurking just four shots off the pace tied for fourth with England's David Lynn.
Woods and Lynn both returned two-under-par 69s on the waterside course under the shadow of the Statue of Liberty.
Woods, among 40 players who returned early Saturday morning to complete a second round 69 after play was suspended due to darkness in the weather-hit event, slipped from seven-under with a pair of bogeys but battled back with three late birdies to reach eight-under 205.
"Just hung in there and that was a grind," said world number one Woods, who has been bothered by a sore back after a poor night's sleep on a soft hotel bed this week.
 Seven players were tied at 206, including U.S. Open champion Justin Rose of England (70), Americans Bubba Watson (68), Rickie Fowler (71), Jim Furyk (70), Kevin Streelman (68) and 20-year-oldJordan Spieth (68), and Sweden's Jonas Blixt (70).
 Kuchar, who was grouped with Woods in the resumption of their second round, claimed a two-shot lead over Woodland and 2012 U.S. Open winner Webb Simpson at the 36-hole mark.
Woodland, playing in a threesome with Kuchar and Simpson, used a string of four successive birdies from the sixth to vault into a lead that grew to three strokes before bogeys at 11 and 12 and birdies by Kuchar at 13 and 14 created a tie.
The 29-year-old Woodland, who earlier this month won the Reno-Tahoe Open for his first PGA title, went ahead again with a birdie at 16 but bogeyed 17 after his tee shot plugged under the lip of a fairway bunker and he had to hit out sideways.
Simpson, meanwhile, slumped into a tie for 13th at six-under 207 after registering a 74.
In contrast to Simpson, Chappell soared into contention.
After starting his round at the 10th hole, 27-year-old Chappell caught fire from the 16th, his seventh hole of the day.
The little-known American made eight birdies in an 11-hole stretch from there, including four in a row from the third hole and just missed a final birdie opportunity at his last hole.
"Here, in the wind...if you would have told me someone was going to shoot 62 today, I would probably have laughed at you," Chappell told reporters after his spectacular round.
 The top 125 players on the FedExCup list qualified for The Barclays and the leading 100 players on the points list will advance to next week's Deutsche Bank Championship in Boston.
The winner of the playoffs finale, the 30-man Tour Championship, will receive a bonus prize of $10 million.
 (Reporting by Larry Fine, Editing by Gene Cherry)

Sweden's Hedwall grabs Canadian Women's Open lead

Swedish Solheim Cup star Caroline Hedwall fired a six-under par 64 to grab a one-stroke lead after three rounds of the LPGA Canadian Women's Open.
Hedwall, seeking the first LPGA title of her career, had seven birdies and just one bogey at Royal Mayfair Golf Club on Saturday and had a 54-hole total of 10-under par 200.
She was one stroke in front of Solheim Cup teammate Suzann Pettersen of Norway who carded a five-under 65 and defending champion Lydia Ko, the New Zealand teen phenom who posted a 67.
Ko's victory in this event last year at the age of 15 years and four months made her the youngest player to win an LPGA title.
Although Hedwall has never won on the US women's tour, she is a five-time winner on the Ladies European Tour and arrived in Canada after a blockbuster performance in Europe's Solheim Cup match play triumph over the United States in Colorado.
She was the only player on either team to play all possible five matches and became the first player in the history of the trans-Atlantic match play duel to go 5-0.
"I was a little tired on Monday, Tuesday and also Wednesday, but when the tournament starts I think last week just gave me a lot of energy and self confidence, so I can't feel anything," the 24-year-old Hedwall said.
Her playing partners, Pettersen (65) and Brittany Lincicome (66) had solid rounds of their own and were two of only five players to shoot 66 or better in the third round on Saturday.
"It was definitely inspiring playing with Suzann and Brittany today," Hedwall said. "We hit it close and we made a lot of putts, so it was a lot of fun."
Hedwall will be paired with Pettersen and Ko in the final round. Kofive birdie and two bogeys in her round of 67 and said she feels she's in good position to try to defend her title.
"I was three shots back from the leader yesterday, and I'm one shot back at the moment, so I'm getting much closer to the leader," the 16-year-old said. "I played pretty well out there."
Second-round co-leaders Park In-Bee of South Korea and Cristie Kerr of the United States both slipped back, Park's four-over 74 leaving her six strokes adrift in a group on 206 and Kerr falling seven off the pace with a 75.
World number one Park, winner of three major titles this year, had one birdie, three bogeys and a double bogey on the par-3 11th.
"Just the overall day, everything seemed like it didn't go the right way," Park said. "It wasn't that bad of drives, but it just ended up in the rough, and you really have no shot from the rough. I was putting, and nothing really wanted to go in. I burned a lot of edges. Just one of those kind of days. We still have tomorrow."

Park, with third-round 74, lags behind at Women's British

Park, with third-round 74, lags behind at Women's British

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -- Inbee Park says her bid to become the first golfer to win four straight professional majors in the same season is now "almost impossible."
Even in good scoring conditions Sunday morning at St. Andrews, Park couldn't get a putt to fall. She wound up with a 2-over 74 in the wind-delayed third round of the Women's British Open and was nine shots behind 54-hole leader Morgan Pressel.
"I really think it's almost impossible to do," Park said about staging a big rally Sunday afternoon. "There's not many holes left to play now. This golf course, it is playing tough for me. The greens are getting firmer. It's tough to hit the ball close to the pin. You have to hole long putts here, but it doesn't seem to be going in."
It didn't get any better in the fourth round when the 25-year-old South Korean opened with a double bogey.
Nothing summed up her third round like the 18th hole.
Park had a 10-foot birdie putt that looked good all the way until it dipped around the left side of the cup. Park shook her head and, after tapping in for par, continued shaking her head as she walked over to her caddie.
On Saturday, Park was 1-under through four holes when the third round was suspended by 65 kph (40 mph) gusts that moved balls on the greens. Sunday morning presented a better chance to score. It was calm when the round resumed. A 43-person maintenance staff used mowers on the green, but the blades were raised so that only the dew was removed. The greens were not cut in case of more high wind.
She made bogey on No. 6 and dropped two more shots coming back, while leaving several putts short.
"Today nothing wanted to drop," Park said. "I didn't strike the ball bad at all today. It was good conditions for scoring, and I didn't really take advantage. You get days like that. It's OK. You can't play good every day."
And even if she doesn't win the Women's British Open, she still has three majors she can cherish this year -- the Kraft Nabisco Championship in April, followed by the LPGA Championship and the U.S. Women's Open.
Since the modern version of the Grand Slam began in 1960 -- Bobby Jones won two professional and two amateur majors in 1930 -- Park was the only player to win the first three majors of a season. The only other pro to do that was Babe Zaharias in 1950, when the LPGA Tour only had three majors.
Ben Hogan won three majors in 1953, though the British Open at Carnoustie was held one week after the PGA Championship. Hogan couldn't play the PGA Championship, physically because of his battered legs and logistically because Open qualifying was the same week as the PGA.
Tiger Woods won the final three majors of 2000 after tying for fifth in the Masters.
Woods, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Annika Sorenstam each got halfway to the Grand Slam and couldn't get the third leg.

Lewis wins Women's British Open, Park fades on marathon Sunday

Lewis wins Women's British Open, Park fades on marathon Sunday

CBSSports.com wire reports
Stacy Lewis continues her dominance at St. Andrews, this time to win the Women's British Open. (Getty Images)
Stacy Lewis continues her dominance at St. Andrews, this time to win the Women's British Open. (Getty Images)
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -- Stacy Lewis had another big week at St. Andrews and left with an even bigger prize -- a major championship at the home of golf.
Lewis finished a marathon Sunday with exquisite birdies on the last two holes of the Old Course to close with an even-par 72 and win the Women's British Open by two shots. It was her second major on the LPGA Tour, ending a record streak of 10 straight majors won by Asian players.
The last time the 28-year-old Lewis was at St. Andrews was in 2008 for the Curtis Cup, and she went 5-0 to lead the Americans to victory.
This was even sweeter, and it required no less than her best golf in conditions so blustery that Lewis was the only player at par or better in the last 21 groups. Three shots behind on the back nine, Na Yeon Choi gave her a chance with consecutive bogeys, and Lewis took it from there.
"It's unbelievable," Lewis said. "It all happened so fast at the end. You're afraid for every shot, and all of a sudden you make a couple of birdies and it's over."
On the par-4 17th, the famous Road Hole, Lewis drilled a 5-iron that tumbled onto the green and settled 3 feet below the cup for a birdie to reach 7-under and give her a share of the lead when Choi three-putted the 14th hole from about 80 feet.
Walking off the green, Lewis said she told her caddie, "One more."
A driver left her some 40 yards short of the green, and the Texan used a putter to whack the next shot through the Valley of Sin about 25 feet past the hole. She made that for another birdie to post a score at 8-under 280 and see if anyone could catch her.
Choi, who won the U.S. Women's Open last year, was trying to salvage pars to give her a reasonable shot at birdie on the final hole. It all came undone on the 17th. Choi's hybrid from the fairway was too strong and settled in a clump of rough, just inches from going down the slope onto the road. She chipped to 6 feet, but pulled the par putt. When she failed to holed out from the fairway, Lewis had the title.
Inbee Park's bid to become the first pro golfer to win four straight majors in one season ended early -- very early.
Park returned to the Old Course first thing in the morning to resume the third round, which was suspended Saturday because of 40 mph gusts. In calm conditions, Park couldn't cut into a large deficit and shot 74 to fall nine shots behind. Then, she began the final round by four-putting for double bogey. Park closed with rounds of 74-78 and finished 14 shots behind.
"I've done something amazing this season," Park said. "I won three straight majors. I don't know if I can do that again."
Choi, who had a three-shot lead with six holes to play, had back-to-back bogeys from about 80 feet, and her bogey on the 17th led to a 73. He tied for second with Hee Young Park, one of four players who had a share of the lead at one point in the final round. Park also had a 73.
Morgan Pressel, who had a one-shot lead going into the final round, was tied one shot behind Choi until getting into trouble off the tee at the 12th and taking double bogey. Her last hope was a birdie-birdie finish, just like Lewis, only her shot into the 17th went over the green and onto the gravel path separating the putting surface from the road.
Pressel, a major champion at 18 in 2007 at the Kraft Nabisco, closed with a 76 and had to settle for her consolation prize. She tied for fourth with Suzann Pettersen (74), enough to boost her world ranking and grab one of the last two spots on the Solheim Cup team. The other spot available through the ranking went to Lizette Salas, who finished alone in sixth place.
It was the second time the Women's British Open was played at St. Andrews, and Lewis provided another quality winner. Lorena Ochoa won in 2007.
Lewis last year became the first American since Beth Daniel in 1994 to win LPGA player of the year, which is based on a points system. Then, she won twice early this season to reach No. 1 in the world. That lasted only until Park won the first major and kept right on going.
Sunday was another stage for Lewis to show her grit.
She was diagnosed with scoliosis when she was 11, so severe that she wore a back brace for 18 hours every day from age 11 until she got out of high school, and then had to have surgery when that didn't correct the curvature in her spine.
She went on to win an NCAA title at Arkansas, star at St. Andrews for the Solheim Cup and then take the 54-hole lead in her first U.S. Women's Open as a pro. Lewis won the Kraft Nabisco in 2011, the last American major champion in women's golf until her remarkable performance Sunday.
Nothing was more impressive than her 5-iron on the 17th, one of the toughest par 4s in golf that starts with a blind tee shot over the corner of the Old Course Hotel. Lewis drilled it in the middle of the fairway, and couldn't remember how far she had for her second shot. With the wind, it didn't matter. This is the kind of shot that must be felt, and her 5-iron was hit with the right trajectory and line to catch the slopes perfectly and feed toward the hole.
"That might be one of the best of my career," Lewis said. "I was trying to hit it 160 yards in the air. It worked out perfectly."
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

Woods shoots 70, coasts to 8th win at Bridgestone

Woods shoots 70, coasts to 8th win at Bridgestone

CBSSports.com wire reports
AKRON, Ohio -- They say par is a good score in a major.
If that's true next week at the PGA Championship, then Tiger Woods has already done his share of preparation.
Woods played safe and smart with a big lead, parring 16 holes in an even-par 70 Sunday to coast to a seven-shot victory at the Bridgestone Invitational for his eighth win at the event -- matching the PGA Tour record he already shared for victories in a single tournament.
"As blustery as it was, it was going to be really hard for someone to shoot 62 or 63," Woods said. "If I didn't give any shots away and played my game and shot even par or better, I'd force these guys to go and shoot something super low on a golf course that wasn't going to give it up under these conditions."
As he walked to the scorer's trailer to finalize his score, he scooped up 4-year-old son Charlie, who hugged him tightly as his father strode past the large gallery wildly cheering his landslide victory.
"This is the first win he's ever been at," Woods said. "That's what makes it special for both of us."
Daughter Sam was on hand when Woods, won the U.S. Open in 2008, before his personal life imploded. Now Charlie will have some memories of dad in the winner's circle.
"They always say, 'Daddy, when are you going to win the tournament?' It was a few years there, or a couple years, I hadn't won anything," Woods said, smiling. "'Are you leading or not? That's a stock question. 'Not leading.' 'Well, are you going to start leading?' 'Well, I'm trying.'"
After a second-round 61 in which he flirted with 59, Woods ended up at 15-under 265 to easily beat defending champ Keegan Bradley and Henrik Stenson.
Bradley, a huge fan of Tiger's when he was a youngster, was asked if he liked to see Woods dominate like he did a decade or so ago.
"When I was younger, I did," Bradley said. "You know, I hate to sit here and go on and on about how good he is, but he is. It's difficult because I really want to get up there and contend with him. But he's just ... this week he's playing really well."
Woods' mastery at Firestone Country Club allowed him to again match Sam Snead's PGA Tour record for wins in an event. Snead won the Greater Greensboro Open eight times. Earlier this year, Woods won at Bay Hill for the eighth time.
As if he weren't already the favorite next week in the PGA Championship at Oak Hill, the lopsided victory reinforced it.
No one ever got within six shots all day of the world's No. 1.
When he had a good shot at a pin, he took it. Otherwise, he took few, if any, risks.
He birdied the 10th hole, then offset that with a three-putt bogey at the 14th hole. But by then most of the field was thinking about catching flights to Rochester instead of catching Woods.
Bradley, who won a year ago when Jim Furyk double-bogeyed the 72nd hole, shot a 67 to get to 8 under along with Stenson, who had a 70 while playing with Woods.
"He kind of punctured this tournament on Friday," Stenson said. "He did what he needed to do today."
Tied for fourth were Cleveland-born Jason Dufner (71), Miguel Angel Jimenez (69) and Zach Johnson (67) at 6 under. Bill Haas and Chris Wood each shot a 71 and were at 5 under, withMartin Kaymer, who matched the day's best round with a 66, at 4 under along with Furyk,Richard Sterne and Luke Donald.
For those betting Woods won't win next week at Oak Hill, keep in mind that he has already won both the Bridgestone and the PGA Championship in the same year three times in his career (2000, 2006, 2007).
Still, the odds do not favor him coming right back with another win. In the 19 times in which he has won his last start before a major, he's only followed up with a win four times: 2000 U.S. Open (after winning The Memorial), 2001 Masters (Players), 2006 PGA (Buick) and 2007 PGA (Bridgestone).
The victory was Woods' 79th on the PGA Tour, drawing him within three of Snead's record 82 triumphs.
"The total body of work is pretty good," Woods said. "One of the things I'm proud of, obviously, is how many times I've won, plus won World Golf Championships and how many years I've won five or more tournaments in a season. What is it, like eight or nine times? Ten? That's not bad, either."
Lest anyone think he'll have difficulty surpassing Snead's total, consider that Woods is over 10 years younger (he's 37) than Snead was when he won his 82nd and final event, the 1965 Greater Greensboro.
Even though he's a California native, Woods has found a second home in Ohio where he has 13 victories -- five at the Memorial Tournament.
Woods won the Bridgestone, and it's forerunner the NEC Invitational, about every way imaginable: overcoming a crazy shot that went onto the clubhouse roof, putting out in almost total darkness, running away early, outdueling a foe down the stretch.
Woods, who has five wins this year to have at least that many in a year for the 10th time, also has won 18 World Golf Championship series events in just 42 starts.
Really, he won the tournament in the rain Friday.
The 61 he had in the second round -- he needed to go just 2 under over the final five holes to shoot a magical 59 -- matched his career best, mustered three previous times including once before at Firestone.
In the two previous times he won the Bridgestone and then played in the PGA Championship, he finished first at Southern Hills in 2007 and then placed second -- blowing a final-round lead to Y.E. Yang -- in 2009 at Hazeltine.
He's far from a lock next week, however.
Woods has not won in his last 17 starts in a major, calling into question his shot at surpassing Jack Nicklaus' record 18 victories in majors. Woods has 14 -- and all eyes will be on him as he heads to Pittsford, N.Y.
Among those watching him will be the defending champion.
"The second-round 61 was phenomenal," 2012 PGA Championship winner Rory McIlroysaid. "He does well on every course he plays, but he comes back to a few courses on tour that he seems to really excel at.
"And, obviously, this is one of them."
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

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