Monday, October 7, 2013

Masters: Guan Tianlang receives 1-stroke penalty for slow play


Masters: Guan Tianlang receives 1-stroke penalty for slow play












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With a one-stroke penalty for slow play on Friday, China's Guan Tianlang shot a 3-over 75. (Getty Images)

PGA.COM April 12, 2013 8:03 PM


AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) -- Guan Tianlang, the 14-year-old Chinese golfer who added some buzz to this year's Masters, was hit with a one-stroke penalty for slow play during Friday's second round, hurting his chances of making the cut.


The youngest player ever at Augusta National was assessed the penalty after his second shot at the 17th hole, turning what would have been a par into a bogey. He finished at 3-over 75 for the round, giving him a 4-over 148 total. The penalty was believed to be the first for slow play at the Masters.

"I respect the decision they make," said Guan, who spent almost 90 minutes after his round talking with rules and tournament officials. "They should do it because it's fair to everybody."

Conditions at Augusta National are notoriously tricky in perfect weather, and the swirling, gusty winds blowing Friday only made them more difficult. Though Guan had played about a dozen practice rounds before the tournament, it often takes golfers years to figure out the best way to play Augusta National and Guan repeatedly sought the advice of his caddie, Brian Tam, who is a regular caddie at the course.

The teenager tossed blades of grass into the air before many of his shots to test the wind and was often indecisive about his clubs, pulling one, taking a few practice swings and then asking for another one.

"I just changed my routine before the Masters and the routine is good, but I think today is pretty hard," said Guan, the youngest golfer to play any major in 148 years. "You need to make the decision, but the wind switched a lot. But that's for everybody."

The Masters follows the Rules of Golf, written by the U.S. Golf Association and the Royal & Ancient. Rule 6-7 requires golfers to keep up "with any pace of play guidelines that the committee may establish." For a threesome at Augusta National, those guidelines set a target of 4 hours, 38 minutes to play 18 holes. Once a group is warned it is "out of position" -- too far behind the group just ahead -- each player is timed and allotted 40 seconds to play the shot.

Guan and his playing partners, Ben Crenshaw and Matteo Manassero, never held up the group behind them. But Fred Ridley, the competition committee chairman at Augusta National, said they were first warned for being out of position at No. 10.

The eighth grader went on the clock two holes later, and received his first warning at the 13th.

"In keeping with the applicable rules ... he again exceeded the 40-second time limit by a considerable margin," Ridley said in a statement.

Guan said he understood the warning, and tried to pick up his pace.

"A little bit," he said. "But I think my routine is good. The only problem is I have to make the decision."

Guan had a long delay on the par-3 16th. After a gust of wind dunked Manassero's tee shot in the water, he spent more than five minutes debating clubs with Tam.

"When the caddie pulls the club for him, I think he's ready. But he just sometimes -- most of the times -- he takes a little too long. He just asks questions that I think he knows, just to be sure, just to be clear in his mind," Manassero said.

"If I would have took more time on 16, I probably would have saved two shots, as well," Manassero added.

John Paramor, the chief referee for the European Tour, said he warned Guan as the group walked to the 17th tee that he needed to speed it up. But Guan had another long delay before his second shot on the hole, and Paramor pulled him aside as the teenager approached the green. Paramor informed Guan he was being assessed a one-stroke penalty, and they had an animated discussion for almost five minutes.

"You give him the news, the best you can," Paramor said.

Guan's father, Han Wen, was following his son, and a friend approached Paramor for the explanation. It was then relayed to Han Wen, who refused to question it.

"A rule is a rule," he said. "It's OK."

But the penalty rattled Guan, who missed an easy birdie putt on 17. He pulled himself together on 18, nearly holing out from a greenside bunker. His father yelled, "Yes!" when the ball hit the back of the cup and bounced a few inches past the hole, leaving an easy par putt.

"No problem," Han Wen said. "No problem."

He waited for his son behind the 18th green, and repeatedly patted Guan's shoulder as they walked together to the scoring building.

"I was a little bit (emotional) on the 17th green and I didn't make that par putt," Guan said. "But on the 18th, I think I did a pretty good job, saved the par. So I still have a chance."

Masters officials met Guan and his playing partners outside the building and had a brief discussion with them before the players entered the building. Crenshaw and Manassero eventually emerged, but it would be more than an hour before Guan came outside, flanked by his parents. He was composed as he spoke with the media, and said he didn't try to talk officials into rescinding the penalty.

"I just want to know why they're going to do that, and they told me," Guan said. "I just learned a lot from them, and they told me how to keep it faster or whatever."

But the ruling could be the difference between Guan playing the weekend or going home. The top 50 players make the cut, as well as those within 10 strokes of the lead.

"It's still a great week for me," Guan said. "I've enjoyed it so far, and I learned a lot."

The last player to be penalized for slow play at a major was Gregory Bourdy in the 2010 PGA Championship at Whistling Straits.

Masters Winners from Day Two


Masters Winners from Day Two











Travis Mewhirter April 12, 2013 8:33 PM




COMMENTARY


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Day two of the Masters has concluded. We saw a teenager make a cut, Tiger take the lead, Sergio collapse, and some old guy named Couples is still hanging around. My winners from Friday.
1. Tianlang Guan

I will never be able to stress this enough: this kid is 14 years old. He was my No. 1 in yesterday's winners for the simple fact that he is an eighth grader playing at Augusta National in the smallest major championship field there is. He is my No. 1 after Friday's round because he is 14 years and 5 months old and made the cut in said major championship. This makes him almost two full years younger than the previous record-holder for the youngest to make a major cut since 1990. What's more, he was assessed a one-stroke penalty for slow play. This, in the end, bumped him up to 4-over-par for the tournament, right on the projected cut line at the time. How did the teenager who is still years away from being legally allowed to drive a golf cart react?

"I respect the decision," he told ESPN.

Guan won on all levels on Friday. He won on the course, off the course, in the media room - everywhere. And he's my winner today.
2. Fred Couples

Couples hasn't won at Augusta in 21 years. He's 53 years old and wakes up most mornings with back pain. On Saturday, he will wake up tied for second in his 29th Masters, knotted up with Marc Leishman and one back from leader Jason Day. He wasn't spectacular on Friday, hitting just 10 greens, but there's no griping over a 4-under-par 68 with a bogey on 18.

"It's a hard course out there," Couples told ESPN. "I felt very good about what I shot. I had a couple of little hiccups out there and did some other good things to shoot my score. But the golf course is winning today."

Fifty-three years old and tied for second, Fred? I'd say you're winning.
3. Australia

How bad do these guys want to win a Masters? Before we get started on Norman's well-documented Masters curse or Bruce Crampton's stymied comeback, let's just take a look at the present. Jason Day and Adam Scott came painstakingly close in 2011, before Charl Schwartzel closed in with a never-before-seen four straight birdies and stole the show, leaving the Aussies once more bereft of a Masters title.

But they sure seem to be making the extra effort this year. Leishman led yesterday and now sits comfortably tied with Couples at No. 2 while his compatriot, Day, leads the field at 6-under-par. Scott, who it seems is only a matter of time before he takes one home, stands in seventh with Tiger Woods, Justin Rose and a host of others.

The last Aussie in the field is John Senden, and he's tied for 14th at 2-under. If this isn't the year it happens, it's difficult to say when, if ever, a bigger opportunity will come along.
4. Angel Cabrera

The four-spot goes to Cabrera, the 2009 champion, because he was one of the scant few without an epic collapse down the stretch. In fact, he did quite the opposite of the likes of Dustin Johnson (two double-bogeys and a bogey in the final four holes) or Sergio Garcia (finished with a 76, 10 shots higher than yesterday). Cabrera closed with five birdies in his final six holes to finish with a total of 140 through two days and earn him a spot tied for fourth with Jim Furyk and Brandt Snedeker.
5. Tiger Woods

Yes, Woods is out of the top five after day two, a position that just one of that past 14 Masters' winners have come back to win from. But at one point, Woods held a share for the lead. That was enough for the golf world to stop, for ESPN to grin from ear to ear, and for twitter to explode. Due to equal parts bad luck and sloppy play, Woods finished three back from Day at 3-under. But if you're Day, and you see Woods in big, red lettering just three shots behind and playing in a later group, are you comfortable? Not a chance. All Woods needs to do is to keep within striking distance. We've seen what can happen on the weekends when he does.

Travis Mewhirter has been working in the golf industry since 2007, when he was a bag room manager at Piney Branch Golf Club in Carroll County, Maryland, and has been involved, as a player, since 2004. Since then, he has worked at Hayfields Country Club, where the Constellation Energy Classic was formerly held, and has covered golf at the high school, college, and professional levels.

Tiger Woods in position for 5th Masters win


Tiger Woods in position for 5th Masters win











Jay Busbee April 12, 2013 9:06 PMYahoo Sports


AUGUSTA, Ga. – The ball had rolled off the green at 14, into the thick fringe and right up to the feet of a young boy and girl. The late-afternoon sun hung low over the tops of the pines, almost directly in their eyes, and so they hadn't seen the ball until it was literally almost in their laps. As the course marshal ushered them out of their seats and away from the ball, their eyes widened. Tiger Woods, who at this moment was leading the Masters, was approaching.



Woods didn't pay attention to the gallery around him; his eyes were focused on the green, which from his vantage point tilted like a table with a phone book under one leg. He set his feet, drew back his club, and … a photographer's shutter clicked.

"Are you kidding me?" Woods sighed, stepping away from the ball and staring daggers into the crowd.

[Related: Tianlang Guan penalized for slow play at Masters]

A deep breath, a re-set of position, and Woods neatly chipped to within a few feet for an easy par. No big deal in the grand scheme of the round, but this was exactly the kind of hole that, in recent years, could have derailed Woods' entire day, if not his entire weekend. This time, though, he worked with adversity rather than merely griping about it, and the result was a reasonable 1-under round to leave him at 3-under for the tournament and three strokes out of the lead. It could have been better, yes, but it could have been so much worse.

Fans and haters alike had plenty to work with on this day. Woods came into Friday in typical Augusta position: rolling off a decent but unspectacular Thursday round. In his 18 previous appearances at Augusta, he's averaged a 72.1 in the first round. Thursday, he carded a respectable 70.

It's the middle two days of the tournament where Woods really gets rolling; he averages 70.6 on Friday and 69.9 on Saturday. And for those hoping for Woods to capture his first Masters since 2005 – and his first major of any vintage since 2008 – Friday provided a perfect example of why Tiger might just run away with this thing after all. It's got nothing to do with "Destiny" or "Fortune" or any of those other amorphous concepts that could double as dancers' names; it's simply the fact that when he's focused, Woods can play within himself in a way that allows him to both gain ground and minimize damage.

[Related: Jason Day takes lead into weekend]

Consider the 15th hole. Just after saving par from the fringe, Woods had a perfect chance at a birdie and an opportunity to open up some space on the field. But his approach was too good, hitting the flagstick and ricocheting into the water. It was one of the roughest breaks Woods has ever suffered at Augusta, and you could understand if he slipped off the track and put up a double-bogey or worse.





View gallery.Only he didn't. His follow-up approach landed within two feet of the hole, an easy tap-in to stop the bleeding. A sand save on 16 later, and Woods entered the home stretch looking like he'd end up no worse than one stroke off the lead.



But Tiger sits three strokes behind leader Jason Day, in part because of a late lapse in concentration on 18. He three-putted the hole and walked to the clubhouse knowing he'd let a crucial stroke slip away.

"I really swung the club well and didn't really get a lot out of the round," he said. "Granted, these conditions were tough. It was swirling all over the place. I got a wrong gust on 12, I almost hit it in the TV tower. … It's tough out there."

The leaderboard around Woods isn't necessarily a terrifying one, but it's solid enough. The players alongside and ahead of him have won a grand total of four majors – two by Angel Cabrera and one apiece by Fred Couples and Jim Furyk.

[Watch: Breaking down Friday at the Masters]

And there are plenty of hungry challengers right on Tiger's Nikes; Rory McIlroy is but a stroke back, and Steve Stricker and trendy Masters favorite Matt Kuchar are within striking distance as well. If Woods is going to win his fifth green jacket – and history suggests he's still in a very good position to do so – he'll have to outdistance every other player in the world top five, and all but two of the world top 10.

"There's a long way to go," he said Friday. "We got 36 holes, and this is a tricky test."

He's good enough to beat anybody at Augusta. But is he still good enough to beat everybody? We're about to find out.

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