Friday, August 31, 2012

LAST HOLE AT TPC BOSTON NOW HAS A SMALLER GREEN

FROM THE CBS SPORTS.COM WEBSITE
ORTON, Mass. (AP) - The latest tweak by Gil Hanse at the TPC Boston was to the 18th green, which has proven to be pivotal in recent years.
It's where Chris Stroud hit a 3-iron to 3 feet last year for eagle to narrowly advance to the next round in the FedEx Cup playoffs, and where Ernie Els and Geoff Ogilvy both got up-and-down from behind the green for birdie to advance.
This year, the par-5 closing hole might be a little tougher in the Deutsche Bank Championship.
The green not only is a smaller target, it has been elevated by a few feet and drops off severely behind and to the left of the green. The putting surface used to be larger, and rough to the left made it an inviting place to miss.
"The green is way different. We can't bail left," Tiger Woods said. "Based on the pin, we've got to figure out where the spot is to miss it. The good news is we've got probably another 8 or 10 yards from over the hazard to the front edge of the green that we can land the ball in, and hopefully that'll be enough to keep it on the green."
Nick Watney said he considered the 18th hole more like a par 4 if the drive was in the fairway, because even though it was a long iron or hybrid for the second shot, missing to the left was still a fairly simple up-and-down for birdie.
"Now, I bet there will be a lot of guys who hit the fairway and lay up, just because it's really difficult to hit it on the green with a 4- or 5-iron," Watney said. "So I think it'll add at least half a shot or three quarters of a shot to the scoring average for the tournament, just because there's going to be guys that go for it, miss it to the left and make a 6, whereas that would rarely happen before.
"I think it's a huge change for that hole," he said. "If a guy is down by one in the last group ... that's a lot more difficult these days."
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FOUR MORE YEARS: Deutsche Bank has renewed its title sponsorship of its playoff event with a four-year extension that goes through 2016.
The tournament began in 2003, with proceeds going to the Tiger Woods Foundation, and it became a central piece of the playoffs when the FedEx Cup began in 2007. It already has delivered an impressive list of winners at the TPC Boston, which includes Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Vijay Singh (twice), Steve Stricker and Adam Scott. U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson won last year.
The announcement this week means that three of the four playoff events - Barclays, Deutsche Bank and the Tour Championship - have sponsorship locked up through 2016. The BMW Championship sponsorship is through 2014.
---NO LOVE: Nick Watney got no love from his win at The Barclays - not even a text message.
Watney won the opening FedEx Cup playoff event last week to get his name into the Ryder Cup mix as a potential captain's pick, but he said Thursday he never heard from U.S. captain Davis Love III.
"I haven't spoken to Davis," Watney said. "I got a text from Freddie."
That would be Fred Couples, his captain at the Presidents Cup last fall and a vice captain for the Ryder Cup. Watney wasn't reading too much into that. He is downplaying the Ryder Cup hype that hit him after his big win, especially because no one talked to him about the Ryder Cup all year until Sunday.
Even so, the text from Couples fired him up.
"He's a vice captain, right?" Watney said, grinning.
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NICE TO MEET YOU: Tiger Woods has made a lot of new friends this year during some of his weekend pairings. He played with Tom Gillis in the Honda Classic, Thorbjorn Olesen in the British Open, Branden Grace for two rounds at Firestone, and two other new faces (for him) at The Barclays - Gary Christian and David Hearn.
"The tour is getting deeper," Woods said. "Most of the guys that I grew up playing with and know better are actually on the Champions Tour now. I know that leaderboard. I know all the guys on that leaderboard. I look at our fields, and I don't know some of these guys."
All of them have been complimentary, especially Christian last week at Bethpage. Woods wonders if they aren't hurt by playing before such large galleries for the first time.
"When played with me on the weekend rounds, they're not quite used to the amount of movement and ... well, now the new thing are the cell phones going off," he said. "It costs them a shot here and there, and that's what it's done to me in most of the tournaments I've played."

 

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