NIKE ADD THORBJORN OLESEN TO ITS TOUR STAFF
Nike Golf today announced the addition of PGA European Tour athlete Thorbjørn
Olesen to its Tour Staff. Entering into a multi-year agreement with
Nike Golf, Olesen will showcase the Swoosh in clubs, ball, footwear,
glove, apparel, headwear and accessories.
Labels: Golf products
POULTER TAKES EXCEPTION TO CRITICISM FROM MILLER
FROM THE GOLFWEEK WEBSITE
By ALEX MICELLI
KAPALUA, Hawaii - It's not often you have a dust-up between an
announcer and player during a round that eventually would be wiped out,
but it happened Sunday during the Hyundai Tournament of Champions at the
Plantation Course.
An event that has been riddled with weather issues finally had some
live golf to showcase Sunday, but it went from live golf to something
other than golf after about 30 minutes.
Re-enter the circus.
Before the horn blew to bring the players back to the clubhouse
because of excessive winds, Ian Poulter (pictured) took his time over a birdie putt
on the par-3 11th hole.
The 164-yard hole normally is benign, but in the 40-mph gusting winds
of Kapalua, it was far from gentle and at times nearly unplayable.
Poulter took a lot of time over his 20-foot birdie putt, just above
the hole, wind whipping his pants as he looked it over. The Europeans'
Ryder Cup hero continued to step in and out of his stance, refusing to
ground his putter until finally hitting the ball.
Johnny Miller, the often-controversial color analyst for NBC Sports'
golf coverage, commented about Poulter’s unwillingness to putt.
“You just can‘t stay over the putt that long. You've got to get in
there, line it up and hit it,” Miller said initially about Poulter’s
inaction
“He surely doesn’t have the Tom Watson attitude so far. He’s afraid he’s going to hurt himself, and that would probably set the game back 20 years.”
Miller continued: “He’s just taking way too much time. He’s being fairly dramatic here.”
Less than an hour later, after players had cleared the course,
Poulter heard differing views of Miller’s comments, which included
calling the Englishman a "drama queen," and Poulter responded via his
Twitter account.
“Johnny miller why don't you come interview me live and say that
stuff straight to my face,” Poulter tweeted after the round. “Was you
watching a different channel.”
Later in the evening, Poulter added another tweet about the commentary.
"Just watched coverage on @GolfChannel. Really sorry I took way to
long on 11th.... Just trying to win a golf tournament. Trying to do my
job"
Miller was perplexed at why Poulter would be upset with his comments.
"He was being a little overly dramatic and taking extra amounts of
time and sort of milking the shots a little bit more just to show it was
unfair to play,” Miller said. “That was his prerogative, but I thought
he was sort of overplaying the whole thing.
“It got over the edge, no doubt about it. I could see why guys would
get a little over the edge wanting not to go on any farther. I don’t
criticize anybody for that, but it seemed like Poulter … it wasn’t
anything big. I just said he was being a little dramatic, that’s all.Labels: PRO GOLF
OPENING US PGA TOUR EVENT SUNDAY PLAY ABANDONED - TUESDAY FINISH PLANNED
NEWS RELEASE
REUTERS - Mother
Nature again turned nasty at the US PGA Tour's season-opening Hyundai
Tournament of Champions in Hawaii on Sunday, forcing play to be
abandoned for a third consecutive day due to strong gusting winds.
A little more than an hour of
the already long-delayed first round was possible before officials
halted the action at the Kapalua Resort, scrapping the scores and aiming
for a Tuesday finish to an event trimmed to 54 holes.
Thirty-six
holes are planned for Monday with a two-tee start for the 30-man,
winners-only field, followed by 18 holes the following day.
"We
tried," Slugger White, the US PGA Tour's vice president of rules and
competition, told reporters.
"We were on the edge when we started out at
11:10 and we were probably okay for about 30-45 minutes.
"And
then the bottom fell out. We were having gusts out there of about 48
miles per hour. Balls were blowing off the green and we couldn't even
get a ball to come to rest on the 12th green when we stopped.
"It started off bad and got worse. We washed the round out today and we're going to try again."
As
high winds continued to batter the Hawaiian island of Maui, chaotic
scenes were the order of the day after Rickie Fowler struck the first
shot in the re-scheduled opening round when he teed off at the par-four
first.
Fellow American Matt Kuchar,
who hit the first shot on the 10th hole, had a lengthy conversation
with rules officials after his ball was twice blown off his tee before
he eventually set off.
Scott
Stallings was not quick enough to mark a one-foot putt at the 12th
before his ball was blown seven feet away. His cap followed suit soon
after.
WATCHED IN SHOCK
Fellow
American Ben Curtis reached the green in regulation at both the 10th
and 11th but completed those holes in a combined five over par. He had
watched in shock as his ball, after settling, was blown off the back of
the 11th green.
Englishman Ian
Poulter, Kuchar's playing partner, tweeted: "Well we tried to get it
done even if it took a while over shots today as the balls were moving.
No one likes penalty shots for no reason."
Before teeing off, Poulter had told Golf Channel: "This is going to be crazy golf. You've just got to suck it up."
Jason
Dufner was the early leader at one under after five holes with
compatriots Fowler and Kuchar (also after five holes) among a group of
12 players knotted at level par when play was suspended.
Plans
to play 36 holes on Sunday were swiftly dashed when the re-start of the
opening round was pushed back four hours as winds continued to gust
well above 40mph (64.4 kph) across the Plantation Course.
The
US PGA Tour's season-opening event had already been cut to 54 holes
because of unplayable conditions over the first two days, forcing
officials to prepare for a Tuesday finish.
"You just can't play in this," said White. "You can hardly walk in it, much less play golf.
"We're
going to go off in split tees tomorrow from 7.10 local (1730 GMT) and
try to play 36 holes tomorrow, finish early Tuesday morning for a
54-hole event."
Should poor weather
conditions lead to the tournament being further trimmed to 36 holes,
the eventual champion would wind up with an "unofficial win", officials
said.
The last time a US PGA Tour event was cut to 36 holes was in 2005 when Australia's Adam Scott won the rain-hit Northern Trust Open.Labels: US PGA TOUR
Copyright © Colin Farquharson
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