Sunday, August 25, 2013

Stadler finishes long day at The Barclays with one-shot lead

Stadler finishes long day at The Barclays with one-shot lead

CBSSports.com wire reports
Kevin Stadler shoots an opening-round 64 at The Barclays. (USATSI)
Kevin Stadler shoots an opening-round 64 at The Barclays. (USATSI)

JERSEY CITY, N.J. -- Kevin Stadler teed off just after breakfast and finished right before dinner. It took him nearly 11 hours to complete a 7-under 64 at Liberty National, his lowest score on the PGA Tour since the first week of February. And he still isn't guaranteed to be the first-round leader at The Barclays.
The FedEx Cup playoffs got off to a soggy start Thursday with two rain delays that lasted six hours.
It was a start-again, stop-again day on the bank of the Hudson River, but that didn't stop Stadler. He ran off three birdies early, then returned from the second delay and threw in four more birdies on a soft golf course.
Asked if it was difficult to stay mentally prepared, Stadler replied, "I'm never really mentally prepared. Same as usual. It was all good."
Tiger Woods, the No. 1 player in the world and in this playoff series, came out of the first delay by missing a short birdie putt on the par-5 13th and then rolling in three straight birdies to get into the mix. He cooled slightly after the slightly longer second delay, and failed to make birdie on any of the par 5s in his round of 67.
Woods didn't mind the long day. He was more concerned about the next long day on the horizon.
Only the top half of the draw finished the round. The later starters -- Ben Crane played only two holes -- were to resume the round Friday morning and then go straight to the second round. That left the top half facing extra holes on Saturday to get the tournament caught up.
"We're done," Woods said. "It was a long day, and tomorrow will be a short one. And then Saturday will be pretty much a marathon."
British Open champion Phil Mickelson and Masters champion Adam Scott were among those who didn't finish. PGA champion Jason Dufner had a 71, while U.S. Open championJustin Rose recovered from a double bogey on the par-5 13th for a 68.
Camilo Villegas, who started the season with conditional status and is No. 110 in the FedEx Cup standings, ran off four straight birdies around the turn and was the only player to reach 8 under -- for now -- until back-to-back bogeys late in his round. He had a 65, along with Henrik Stenson and Ryan Palmer.
"Three breakfasts, three warm-ups, two lunches and a bunch of birdies, which is good," Villegas said.
Jason Day and Matt Kuchar shot 66. Day made two bogeys that kept a good round from getting away from him. His ball dropped over the rocks and into the water to the left of the fifth green, and he got up-and-down from there. On his closing hole, the par-4 ninth, his drive went deep into the bushes and forced him to take a penalty drop. He got onto the green and made another bogey.
The rain allowed for some low scoring at Liberty National, which hosted The Barclays in 2009 and produced a winning score of 9 under. The course also went through significant changes to soften some of the landing zones and green complexes. Plus, there is virtually no rough.
Nothing allows for low scoring quite like soft conditions, however. Nearly half of those who finished their rounds shot in the 60s.
That group might have included Rory McIlroy, except for a few loose swings. He had three double bogeys and still managed a 71. McIlroy blasted out of a bunker and over the 15th green. His approach found the water on No. 5. And his tee shot on the ninth took a wicked kick off the cart path, over the bushes and a fence and out-of-bounds.
"The rest of it was actually pretty good," he said.
Stadler needed a good start. He hasn't had a top 10 since New Orleans in late April, and he started these playoffs at No. 87. Only the top 100 advance to the second tournament next week outside Boston, and the top 70 from there go on to the third event in Chicago.
"I've had a pretty lousy summer, but really started hitting the ball a lot better a couple of weeks ago and was looking forward to playing some golf again here recently," he said. "Finally got something out of it today."
Stadler has not played in any of the World Golf Championship and only one of the majors -- the PGA Championship, where he missed the cut -- so this event feels like a big one. It also happens to have arguably the strongest and deepest field on the PGA Tour, particularly since everyone earned a spot based on this year's play.
"All those guys are here this week, so in that regard, it's pretty cool," he said. "But it's just another week."
Stenson last year started the FedEx Cup playoffs at No. 117 and was gone after one week. He is one of the hottest players in golf, having been runner-up at the British Open, the Bridgestone Invitational and he was third at the PGA Championship. He is No. 9 in the standings this year, and his 65 on a long Thursday showed why.
"I came in from Europe on Monday night, so I'm a bit jet-lagged and I only saw the course once," Stenson said. "I'm very pleased with the way I played out there and took advantage of some good shots. And it was a little bit of a shaky finish."
He missed a short par putt on the par-5 eighth hole and had to make a 6-footer for par on the last.
"Got some good practice of night golf, because that's what we are going to have tomorrow night when we start our second round, I guess," he said.
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

Argentina's Gonzalez leads at Gleneagles by a shot

Argentina's Gonzalez leads at Gleneagles by a shot

CBSSports.com wire reports
GLENEAGLES, Scotland -- Ricardo Gonzalez shot a second straight 7-under 65 Friday, giving him a one-shot lead after two rounds of the Johnnie Walker Championship.
The 352nd-ranked Argentine birdied three of his opening seven holes before finishing with five straight birdies. That put him at 14-under 130 on the PGA Centenary course that is hosting the Ryder Cup in 2014.
Austria's Bernd Wiesberger, who shared the first-round lead with Gonzalez, shot a 66 that left him alone in second place.
The 43-year-old Gonzalez is a four-time winner on the European Tour, with his last victory in 2009. Since then, both his parents died.
"The last two years have been very difficult personally," he said. "So if I win I would like to dedicate it to my mother and father. That's my target this week."
Mark Foster, who lost in a playoff at Gleneagles in 2011, added a 67 to an opening-round 66. He was tied for third with fellow Englishman Tommy Fleetwood (65).
Brooks Koepka of the United States was fifth, four shots behind. He had a second-hole eagle to go with four birdies in a 66. Koepka is assured full European Tour membership in 2014 after winning three times this year on the secondary Challenge Tour.
England's Paul Waring equaled the Centenary course record with a 63, but is tied for 19th place because of a 75 Thursday.
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

Park, Kerr share lead in Canada

Park, Kerr share lead in Canada

CBSSports.com wire reports
EDMONTON, Alberta -- Top-ranked Inbee Park shot a 5-under 65 on Friday for a share of the second-round lead with playing partner Cristie Kerr in the Canadian Women's Open.
Park, the South Korean star who swept the first three majors of the season and has six LPGA Tour victories this year, had seven birdies and two bogeys at Royal Mayfair to match Kerr at 8-under 132.
Kerr, coming off the United States' loss to Europe in the Solheim Cup, shot her second straight 66. She won the Kingsmill Championship in May for her 16th career LPGA Tour title.
"It's a course where you have to really shape the ball off the tee and be creative," said Kerr, the 2006 winner at London Hunt in Ontario. "I played very well the last couple of days. It's unfortunate I bogeyed the last hole today, but that's what happens when you hit an errant shot and have to chip out to a difficult pin."
On the par-4 18th, Kerr drove into the left rough and was startled on her approach when a door on a portable restroom slammed shut.
"I mean, (the noise) really scared me," she said. "I could have hooked (the ball) in the water."
Park also bogeyed the final hole. She's returning to play after a break in South Korea following a failed bid in the Women's British Open to become the first professional to win four straight majors in one season.
"I worked on a couple of things after that because I wasn't hitting it my best at the British Open. I'm obviously hitting it a lot better this week and putting a lot better," she said. "On the greens, I was really comfortable because they're so pure wherever you hit it, it's just going to go right there."
Park holed out from 20 yards from a bunker on the par-4 first hole for a birdie.
"I always love to start with a birdie," Park said. "It's like a good luck charm for me."
She finished second last year at Vancouver Golf Club, three strokes behind teen star Lydia Ko.
Park and Kerr will play together for the third straight day Saturday.
"It's always fun to play with Inbee," Kerr said. "She always plays well, and I enjoy playing with her."
Angela Stanford, 0-4 for the United States in the Solheim Cup, and France's Karine Icher, a member of the winning European team, were a stroke back. Icher had a 66, and Stanford shot 68.
"Good putting made the difference today," Icher said. "The course is quite hard, (with) tricky fairways and big rough, so I'm looking to get some good drives and putts on the weekend."
Ko was 6 under after a 69. Last year in British Columbia, the New Zealand amateur star became the youngest winner in LPGA Tour history at 15 years, 4 months.
"I've just got to play my own game and hopefully get some more putts rolling in," Ko said.
Paula Creamer and 49-year-old Laura Davies also were 6 under. Davies had a 66, and Creamer shot 68.
"I'm holing putts," Davies said. "That's the difference. ... You know, you can't compete if you can't hole putts."
Charley Hull, the 17-year-old English player coming off a strong performance in the Solheim Cup, was 5 under after a 66. She played alongside Ko in the first two rounds.
"I played pretty solid," Hull said. "I wasn't hitting that good today on the front nine with my tee shots because I felt a little tired out there. The back nine I got something going, holed a few putts and I'm pretty pleased with that."
Michelle Wie missed the cut with rounds of 73 and 76. She won the 2010 tournament at St. Charles in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
"I'm completely under the weather," said Wie, also a member of the losing U.S. Solheim Cup team. "I was struggling today, just could not get out of bed. I just felt really sick today, though that is no excuse.
"I'm going to take advantage of the two days I'm not playing, and just not leave my bed and just kind of sleep for 40 hours straight."
U.S. teammate Stacy Lewis withdrew Thursday after an opening 74, citing illness.
Sweden's Caroline Hedwall, a record 5-0 in the Solheim Cup, was 4 under after her second straight 68.
Copyright 2013 by STATS LLC. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.

Dental articles