2014年3月5日星期三

Mike Goodes birdies first four holes, leads by two at Principal Charity Classi

Mike Goodes
Getty Images
Mike Goodes shot a 30 on the front nine at Glean Oaks on Friday, and matched his lowest overall score on the Champions Tour.
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By 
Luke Meredith
Associated Press

Series: Champions Tour
WEST DES MOINES, Iowa -- Mike Goodes opened the Principal Charity Classic by sticking all of his approaches next to the cup and tapping in for easy birdies.
Knowing such good fortune was unlikely to last, Goodes put it out of his mind and finished Friday's opening round of the Principal Charity Classic nearly as well as he started it.
Goodes shot a 7-under 64 to take a two-shot lead at Glen Oaks Country Club. Jay Haas, who won in Iowa in 2007 and 2008, leads a group at 5-under 66 that includes South African David Frost and former Masters champion Larry Mize.
Goodes opened his round with four straight birdies. He nearly had two more on Nos. 5 and 6 and he closed with back-to-back birdies on the 17th and 18th holes. Goodes shot a 30 on the front nine and matched his lowest overall score on the Champions Tour.
"Just tried to play after that because you know you don't want to start thinking about how good you are after four (holes)," Goodes said. "You're not going to finish too good then."
Goodes, whose only Champions Tour win came at the Allianz Championship in 2009, stumbled to a bogey on No. 7 before racking up back-to-back birdies.
Goodes and Larry Nelson, who were playing in the same group, went to No. 18 tied at 6 under. But Goodes watched Nelson hit a strong putt that shot past the hole en route to a bogey, which helped him judge his try well enough to sink it from above the hole at just under 20 feet.
"It's like a great shooter in basketball. It's my day, and you just keep shooting and think you're going to make everything," Goodes said. "You're seeing putts go in the hole, there's no reason to think the next one's not going to go."
Haas struggled in his previous two tournaments, tying for 29th at last week's Senior PGA Championship. But he had a 69 in his last round at Harbor Shores in Michigan and he carried it over into Friday.
Haas needed just 23 putts in the opening round, a welcome change of pace after struggling recently on the greens.
"Kind of a product of just working at it a little bit. Hit more solid putts and made some nice mid-range putts," Haas said. "My pace was good on my putts."
Graham Marsh, 68, scored the tournament's first hole-in-one since 2006 when he aced the 203-yard second hole. Marsh, who also had a hole-in-one on a different hole during a pro-am earlier in the week, blew his good fortune with three bogeys and a double bogey on the final seven holes and finished at 2 over.
"That's an amazing thing when you think about it," Marsh said. "I don't know if I've ever heard of three in one week, but I've still got three days to achieve it haven't I?"
Fuzzy Zoeller and John Harris both aced the 16th hole back in 2006.
Defending champion Bob Gilder opened with a 70. Gilder won at Glen Oaks for the second time in 2011 with a 30-foot birdie putt on the final hole as Mark Brooks three-putted for bogey.
Brooks, whose bogey on the notoriously difficult par-4 17th hole precipitated his downfall last year, made par on that one Friday en route to a solid 67.
Tom Lehman, Mark Calcavecchia and Kenny Perry were part of an impressive group at 3 under.

2014年2月11日星期二

National Opinion - Peter King



Posted Aug 1, 2008

By Mike Duffy



BR.com caught up with SI.com senior writer Peter King, who attended practice this week.


Training camp is at its midpoint, and with so many interesting storylines regarding Baltimore football, the Ravens have already welcomed some national football writers.



BR.com caught up with SI.com senior writer Peter King, who attended practice this week.



BR.com: You’ve been to countless training camps over the years. Does Ravens camp stand out at all to you?



King: “It’s probably the most fan-friendly camp in the NFL. And there are a lot of them. Camps are now becoming more and more fan-friendly than they ever were, and I think teams are responding to what fans want. Fans really love this, because they are able to touch players, and during the season you can’t touch a player unless you have just a chance encounter. Here, you know that you can touch players. I think it’s a great idea.

“I also think it builds an incredible amount of good will. I mean, is there a Ravens fan that will ever really boo Derrick Mason? Maybe if he drops a touchdown pass against the Steelers, but he’s built up so much good will here by signing 300 autographs a day. I just think it’s a smart thing for players to do and it’s a good thing for teams to do.”

What are your impressions of John Harbaugh?



King: “It’s like Ray Lewis said, ‘Sometimes you need change.’ Change is good. This team was getting stale, and that’s not so much an indictment of Brian Billick. It’s just a fact of life. After a while, if you’re not getting the results you want, that’s what you do in sports. You change the coach and you try to change the culture a little bit.

“Harbaugh is a bundle of energy. I think he’s also a very, very smart man. He reminds me a little bit of [Boston Red Sox manager] Terry Francona in that Francona is an intelligent guy who knows how to deal with players, and I think John is basically the same way. Everybody wonders ‘Who is John Harbaugh?’ He’s a guy who basically has majored in the chemistry of people his whole life. It’s always fun to come to a team when the camp is new and getting used to new things, and I think John’s going to do a good job.”

People have said that this is a physical camp, as far as NFL standards go. Have you seen that?



“I didn’t see them going live, so I don’t know that [this is one of the more physical training camps], but I would assume that they’ll probably go live more than Billick’s camps. Brian was kind of a disciple of Bill Walsh, and Bill Walsh didn’t do a lot of hitting in the summer. But, I’m not sure that’s really going to matter much once the season starts. There are different philosophies that win, and some teams that haven’t beat each other up in training camp have won Super Bowls. Bill Parcells beat the tar out of his guys and is a real successful coach. I don’t think that’s going to have a lot to do with whether this team wins or loses eventually.”

What do you think about a three-man quarterback competition between Kyle Boller, Troy Smith and Joe Flacco? That is a rarity in the league.



“It is unusual, because usually you’ll have a veteran trying to hold off kids. And in some ways, Boller is that but you don’t think of him as a veteran. I’d be surprised if Troy Smith didn’t win it, at least at the start of the season. I think Kyle Boller is basically a been-there-done-that guy here. He’ll be a good insurance policy, but I’d be really surprised if he started the season.”

Would you be surprised if Flacco started at some point this year?



“I think that’s probably the way they’ve got things mentally set up. At some point, midway through the season or if they’re 1-5 or whatever, they’ll probably throw him in there. It’s the age-old debate. On draft day three years ago, would you have rather been Alex Smith or Aaron Rogers? Alex Smith gets picked first and gets handed the keys to a franchise, and Aaron Rodgers is buried behind Brett Favre. Everybody thought it was a recipe for disaster for him. But who would you rather be now?

Aaron Rodgers, even with the weird situation in Green Bay, clearly has a chance to establish himself for a long time. There will always be that debate, and if I were the Ravens – and Cam Cameron knows how to work with quarterbacks – it wouldn’t matter if I was 1-5 or 1-6, if I didn’t think Flacco was ready, I wouldn’t put him in there.”

Finally, is NFL training camp season one of your favorite times of year?



“It’s the best time of year, by far. I don’t see a lot of practice during the year. On this trip, I’ve seen Jason Campbell up close having a tremendous practice for the Redskins. I saw a lot of the new Philadelphia Eagles linebackers and defensive linemen who I haven’t really gotten a chance to watch very much. I’m seeing Smith and Flacco and Ray Rice here – guys who I don’t know very well. I was up in Green Bay and saw Aaron Rodgers take control of that team. You get to see things that, and if you weren’t out and about and had your eyes on it, you wouldn’t have a chance to see.

“It’s a good time of year to actually be able to sit down and talk to some guys that during the year might not be as cheerful as they are right now.”

2014年1月23日星期四

勇太「仕上がりは悪くない」2位発進



スポーツ報知 1月20日(月)7時4分配信


 第2回ALBAプロアマトーナメントが19日、レイクウッドGC西Cで行われ、2日間36ホールの男女シニア混合戦のプロの部(男6755ヤード、シニア6591ヤード、女6056ヤード、パー72)は、66で回った池田勇太(28)=日清食品=が首位と1打差の2位と好発進。ツアー史上初となる選手会長での賞金王を今季目標に掲げた。

 池田はショット、パットとも好調で8バーディー、2ボギー。「仕上がりは悪くない」と最終日逆転での今年初Vを見据えた。さらに「勝利をつかみ、金星を挙げ、王者になるぞ、で『勝金王』。強い俺を見せたい」と、今年の抱負を披露。昨季は賞金ランク9位だったが、09年の日本プロ選手権以来のメジャーVで自身初のキングの座を狙う。