Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Steve Marino and DA Points atop leaderboard on Day 1 at AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am

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Steve Marino birdied his last two holes for a 7-under 65 at Spyglass Hill.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
D.A. Points knew it was going to be a great week at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am when he found out Bill Murray was his amateur partner.
It got even better on Thursday.
Points found Murray's antics to be more amusing than annoying, and it showed in his play. With eight birdies on the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula, he opened with a 7-under 63 and shared the lead with Steve Marino.
Some might think he shot a 63 despite having Murray in his ear all day. Points says he shot 63 because of him.
"I know people talk about his antics, or he's a showman while he's out there, making lots of comments and talking while people are getting ready to hit shots," Points said. "To be honest, it really loosens me up and makes me between shots not be grinding so hard on what I'm doing. It helps me take a little bit of a breather between shots and joke around with him."
There was plenty to enjoy for most everyone on a glorious day on the peninsula, with only a mild breeze to accompany views that were as spectacular as ever. Beyond the weather, the conditions on three courses were as good as they have ever been. The fairways were particularly firm on the Shore Course, and the greens were fast everywhere.
The rounds took six hours, as usual, but some of that was because of the speed of the greens.
Marino had a most unusual 7-under 65 at Spyglass Hill in that he failed to birdie any of the par 5s. He still managed seven birdies, including a big drive and a wedge to inside a foot on his final hole. The green is elevated, and Marino only knew it was good when a woman began shrieking after it checked up close to the pin.
"I think your mother likes it," Mark Long, the caddie for amateur Dermot Desmond, called back to Marino.
Even more pleasing to Marino was the 9-iron he hit on the previous hole, the par-4 eighth, that took one hop and hit the pin before settling about 8 feet away. A year ago on Spyglass, he holed out with an 8-iron.
The best shot of the day belonged to Alex Cejka, who was one shot behind after a 64 on the Shore Course. He started his day by holing out a 3-wood from the fairway on the par-5 10th. The PGA Tour checked its records as far back as 1982 and could not find another player who had started a round with an albatross.
"I think it was the best start I've ever had," Cejka said in somewhat of an understatement.
It was a chilly start to the day, and he figured he would need a little extra club from 240 yards away, so he choked down on a 3-wood.
"It carried just short of the green and bounced up and took a break toward the hole," Cejka said. "There were like three or four marshals up there and they started screaming, and suddenly it was in the hole. It's the first one for me."
The group at 5 under included Gary Woodland, whose 67 was the best score at Pebble Beach.
Most of the screaming took place on the Shore Course, its second year in the rotation for the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, and already one of the favorites. That's where the celebrity rotation began the tournament, and the crowd followed.
Phil Mickelson didn't provide too many highlights, opening with a 1-over 71. Dustin Johnson, trying to become the first player since this tournament began in 1937 to win three successive years, made bogeys on two par 5s and had to settle for a 71.
For Points, there were a few trying moments. On the par-3 14th, Murray and former San Francisco 49ers tackle Harris Barton both made long birdie putts. Then it was Points' turn.
"I got up over my putt and he started talking to me about he just made a putt, and how Harris just made a putt, and how easy this should be," Points said.
He three-putted for his only bogey.
"It didn't bother me at all," he said. "I just hit two bad putts."
Nothing could stress him out on his day -- beautiful weather, a partner he always wanted. A year ago, Points was excited to be drawn with Mickelson and Rickie Fowler at Torrey Pines, and with Tiger Woods at Aronomink in the AT&T National.
This topped them all.
He grew up in Illinois, and Murray has long been one of his favorites. He thought about asking tournament officials if he could be paired with the actor, then decided against it. Imagine his surprise when someone sent a text to his wife Tuesday night that Murray would be his partner, and the phone call that followed the next morning.
"I've got this message on my phone," Points said. "He says, 'D.A., this is Bill Murray. ... I got your number from the Police Department.'"
Murray invited him to play that afternoon at Cypress Point, and Points said he played the final four holes -- some of the most beautiful of any golf course around the world -- as the sun was setting over the Pacific.
While telling the story, Points mentioned Thursday was his daughter's first birthday.
"This week so far just seems to keep getting better and better and better," he said. "I'm having a good time."
So is Murray. In the pro-am portion of the tournament, they opened with a 59.

Steve Marino has big lead at Pebble Beach with second straight 7-under round

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Steve Marino closed hs round on Friday with three birdies on his final four holes.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
Steve Marino is too busy soaking in the scenery and atmosphere at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am to get worked up over his four-shot lead going into the weekend.
Marino made only one mistake -- with his conversation and his clubs -- on the par-5 14th for his only bogey of the tournament. He followed with three birdies over the last four holes for a 7-under 66 and a comfortable lead.
"This tournament is kind of strange," said Marino, who was at 13-under 141. "You play a different course every day. You're playing with amateur partners. It's a little more low key and laid back."
That's just the way Marino likes it, and it shows. He has the low round of the tournament on both courses he has played, having opened with a 65 at Spyglass Hill.
D.A. Points doesn't have that luxury, not with Bill Murray as his amateur partner. Points struggled from the start at Spyglass Hill and was slipping down the leaderboard until running off four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn. He salvaged a 70 and was four shots behind at 9 under par.
Points worried for a moment that Murray started to feel the pressure -- they opened the pro-am portion tied for the lead -- and perhaps tried to tone down his antics.
"Bill was struggling a little today, so he was maybe down on himself," Points said. "We still had a great time."
Next up for the celebrity rotation is Pebble Beach on Saturday, when the show is as much about the amateurs as the pros. Points says he plays his best when there are plenty of distractions, although he's not about to wish for more than he can handle.
"I'm not going to feed the beast," he said.
Keegan Bradley had an impressive gallery of his own. He is the nephew of LPGA Hall of Famer Pat Bradley, who followed him along Spyglass as the rookie shot a 69 to finish at 8 under par. Bradley was born in 1986, the year his famous aunt won three of four majors.
"Pat and I have a lot of similarities in our game, in our approach to the game, our work ethic," he said. "I look up to her in a lot of different ways, and that's one of the ways. I try to emulate her toughness and work ethic."
The large group at 7 under par included Padraig Harrington, who played with Marino; Hunter Mahan, Nick Watney and Sam Saunders, whose grandfather is among the owners of Pebble Beach -- Arnold Palmer.
Even with a four-shot lead, Marino won't know until Sunday how he really stands because of the three courses in the rotation. Still ahead of him is the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula, where Points opened with a 63. The fairways are running fast at the Shore, and some players have said the greens are a little bumpy.
That didn't stop David Duval on Friday. After opening with a birdie-free 77 at Pebble, he followed that with a 65 at Monterey Peninsula.
Dustin Johnson, trying to become the first player to win three straight times at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, is more interested in making the cut. He had a 1 under at Spyglass Hill and was two shots below the projected playing cut -- not to mention 13 shots behind Marino.
Phil Mickelson did a much better job with a 68 at Spyglass, moving him to 3 under for the tournament.
Marino, though, looks tough to beat at the moment.
He knocked in a 15-foot birdie putt on the 13th, then made a mental error. After he and Harrington hit their tee shots on the 14th, they started reminiscing about the U.S. Open last summer, when the 14th was one of the toughest holes at Pebble Beach.
"It was silly," Harrington said. "We were talking about how tough this was at the U.S. Open, and that we both had made four pars and could have sold that to half the field. And then we both made a mess of it."
Marino was in the right rough after his second shot, still a good angle at the flag. But his wedge ran up the ledge of the steep bunker and turned left instead of right, tumbling into the sand. He did well to blast out to 12 feet and narrowly missed the par putt.
Harrington hit a fat shot with his sand wedge and plugged into the bunker. He hit a beautiful shot, running up the side of the bunker to see how it turned out just as it ran off the back of the green and down the slope. He had to scramble for a bogey on his way to a 68, a round he felt was much better than his score.
The Irishman made pars the rest of the way. Marino poured it on.
He stuffed his next shot into 5 feet for birdie, rolled in a 20-foot putt up the slope on the 16th and finished with a bunker shot to 15 feet and one last birdie.
Along the way, Marino soaked up spectacular views of yet another sunny, mild day along the Pacific.
He is the only American in an otherwise all-Irish group that features businessmen J.P. McManus and Dermot Desmond. Marino still isn't sure how he got invited to the McManus charity pro-am event last year -- an event so popular that even Tiger Woods made the trip -- but calls it one of the best weeks of the year.
"I think he had a good time," Desmond said. "He seems to be Irish. He's always smiling, and at the same time he has a fantastic golf game. He's got a great temperament. Even when he bogeyed the 14th, he didn't get irritated. He just said, 'I have to get that one back.' And he got it back."

Brendan Steele peels out to five-shot lead at Nationwide Tour Championship

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Brendan Steele took the lead thanks to birdies on six of his first seven holes on Saturday.
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PGA.com news services 

Series:
Californian Brendan Steele took a big step toward earning his 2011 PGA Tour card on Saturday by firing a 7-under-par 65 in the Nationwide Tour Championship at Daniel Island to build a five-shot lead heading into tomorrow’s final round of the 2010 season.
Steele is 14 under par for his three trips around the 7,446-yard Daniel Island Club. Fellow Californian James Hahn and 2007 U.S. Amateur champion Colt Knost are tied for second at 9 under.
Steele began the week 30th on the Nationwide Tour money list. Only the top 25 money winners will be awarded their 2011 PGA Tour cards after play on Sunday. A win would comfortably accomplish Steele’s goal of securing his card.
The 27-year-old leader got off to a scorching start with birdies on six of his first seven holes to turn in 30. He added one more birdie on the par-3 15th to join Jim Herman in posting one of only two bogey-free rounds on the day.
“It was fun today but not as much as you’d think,” Steele said. “It’s still a grind no matter what’s going on, no matter how well you’re playing. A hot start makes it a lot easier.”
Looking ahead to Sunday, Steele said, “I know what can happen with this game if you start wandering a little bit or get caught up in what’s going on. My caddie’s been doing a good job of keeping me focused and that will be the game plan tomorrow. I slept fine last night. I don’t know about tonight. I’ll try to keep the same routine. Go home and watch the World Series and get the LA Kings game going on my computer.”
Hahn improved seven shots from Friday’s disappointing 74 in Saturday’s more calm conditions. At No. 29 on the money list, he began the week one spot ahead of his good friend Steele. The 2003 University of California-Berkeley graduate could have gone really low, but missed putts of 8 feet on holes 14, 15 and 16.
“I did exactly the same thing I did yesterday,” Hahn. “The putts just went in today. It’s a fine line between shooting 5 under and 2 over. Tomorrow I’m going to go out there and try to make a lot of putts and count ‘em up in the end. I’m not going to worry about much.”
Hahn expressed a similar attitude to Steele’s about Sunday. “There are too many small stories out there in the overall story of the Tour Championship,” he said. “I am not at all relieved I'm inside the top 25 at the moment. That's when you start relaxing too much. It’ll catch up to you.”
Knost shared the halfway lead with Steele and Joe Affrunti. After a front-nine 37, the Texan battled back into contention with birdies on three of his last six holes to shoot 70.
“It’s tough,” Knost said. “You’re nervous whenever you’re in contention. There’s a lot more at stake this week.”
Affrunti wound up shooting even-par 72 to finish the day seven shots back in a tie for fourth at 9 under. Joining Affrunti are Texan Tag Ridings and Canada’s David Hearn, who made critical bogeys on 17 and 18. A lot is on the line for Affrunti, Knost and Hearn tomorrow. The trio began the week 35th, 36th and 27th, respectively, on the money list.
The final round gets underway at 7:48 a.m. tomorrow morning with the Steele and Hahn in the last group at 12:15 p.m. Golf Channel will carry the final round live from 2 to 4:30 p.m. ET.
Third-Round Notes: Steele’s five-shot lead after 54 holes is the largest in Nationwide Tour Championship history. Four players held the record previously, with David Branshaw being the most recent (2005). … Steele's five-stroke advantage matches the largest 54-hole lead on Tour this season. Three players have held five-stroke leads heading into the final round: Fran Quinn (Panama Claro Championship/won), John Riegger (Rex Hospital Open/won -- shortened to 54 holes) and Kevin Chappell (Ford Wayne Gretzky Classic/third).
Steven Bowditch aced the 12th hole from 195 yards, the ninth in the history of the Nationwide Tour Championship. It was the 25th of the year on Tour. … Leading money winner Jamie Lovemark will be hard to overtake for the top spot after recording a 70 to finish the day tied for ninth. … Lovemark’s nearest rival, Tommy Gainey, moved up the leader board early with four birdies in his first eight holes. He cooled off the rest of the way playing his last 10 holes in 3 over and is tied for 22nd.
Jhonattan Vegas had two eagles Saturday on Nos. 6 and 18. He birdied both holes the first two days and is a cumulative 8 under par on the two holes. Vegas stands 4 under par for the tournament. … Limping every step of the way and walking with a cane in between shots, Peter Tomasulo posted a 2-under-par 70 to go along with his 72-79 start. He is tied for 49th. … Steele, who has no wins on Tour, is seeking to become the 15th first-time winner this season. Three players in Tour history have made the Nationwide Tour Championship their first career win.

Ian Poulter powers ahead of Ross Fisher after 54 holes at Dubai World Championship

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Ian Poulter made his move on the back nine Saturday with two birdies putting him two shots ahead of his nearest challengers.
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By 
Michael Casey
Associated Press

Series:
Ian Poulter broke free from a crowded leaderboard Saturday to take a two-shot lead into the final round of the Dubai World Championship.
The Englishman was at 12 under after a third-round 69, two shots ahead of Ross Fisher of England, Thailand’s Thongchai Jaidee and Francesco Molinari of Italy, who all were at 10 under.
Poulter, who won last week’s UBS Hong Kong Open, started Saturday in a tie for the lead with Fisher, and the two were even for much of the day. Poulter made his move on the back nine with two birdies while Fisher three-putted the 15th hole and went in the water on the 18th, which forced him to settle for a bogey.
“You know, I think it was important today to go out there and play solid, bank a few birdies,” Poulter said. “I felt I dropped two silly, silly bogeys on holes that I really feel I should have taken advantage of. That was the only frustration of the day.”
Fisher, who tied the course record with a 64 in the second round, was left to rue what could have been a solid round and a chance to at least tie for the lead several times on the back nine. His best chance came on the 15th, when he hit his drive to the green on the 371-yard, par 4 hole. His first putt for eagle rolled past the hole, and he missed what should been an easy putt for birdie.
“I made it harder, I didn’t play as well as yesterday,” Fisher said. “I missed a couple of putts at key times … Hit a great drive on 15 onto the green and unfortunately didn’t capitalize there.”
Jaidee and Molinari charged up the leaderboard, with the Thai shooting a 3-under 69 while the Italian had a 4-under 68 to put themselves in contention. No. 1-ranked Lee Westwood also was in the mix, shooting a 1-under 71 to remain three shots off the pace.
Westwood won the tournament last year, shooting a course record 64 on the final Sunday on his way to an easy victory.
“Kept giving myself a lot of chances at birdies, and nothing would go in,” Westwood said. “I had to hit some good shots coming in just to make a couple of birdies in the last five holes, which has kept me in the tournament probably.”
Graeme McDowell’s hopes of winning the European Tour money title took another hit after he finished four shots behind money-leader Martin Kaymer and far down the leaderboard in a tie for 30th.
Kaymer, the reigning PGA Champion, will claim the money title and a $1.5 million bonus by finishing higher than McDowell, who can only overtake the German on the Order of Merit by winning the tournament or ending up alone in second as long as Kaymer finishes no higher than a tie for third. If McDowell is tied for second, Kaymer could afford to finish as low as sixth.
“Barring the impossible, I think Europe’s No. 1 is probably not a reality for me any more,” McDowell said. “Unless I shoot 55 tomorrow, which unless one of you boys comes and putts for me tomorrow, I don’t think will happen.
“You know he (Kaymer) is going to win the Race to Dubai tomorrow and he’s the best. He’s been one of the best players in the world this year and certainly deserves everything he has achieved.”
After failing to break par in the first two days, McDowell made three birdies on the back nine to reach 2 under for the tournament.
Kaymer effectively ended the two-man battle for the Order of Merit on Thursday, surging to a five-shot lead over McDowell after shooting a 67. The lead ballooned to eight shots Friday, when Kaymer hit a 70 for a share of fourth place.
Kaymer occasionally struggled Saturday, shooting a 1-over 73. It was an up-and-down day that ended badly with a double bogey on the 18th, when the No. 3-ranked Kaymer’s chip onto the green rolled back into the water.
“It was a very frustrating finish, very disappointing,” said Kaymer, whose chances of overtaking Westwood at the top of the rankings also appear unlikely. “I thought if I could finish with a birdie I might have a chance tomorrow … Tomorrow I will play as aggressive as possible.”
McDowell, though, never could take full advantage of Kaymer’s errors because of his poor putting.
“The big issue this week is really that I can’t hole putts and, without the putter working, it’s very difficult to get on top of the golf course,” he said. “Like I said yesterday, I feel like every time I miss a green I feel like I’m making bogeys because I’m not holing the 6- and 8-footers.”
McDowell’s fellow Northern Irelander, Rory McIlroy, shot a 6-under 66 -- the lowest round of the day -- to climb back into contention at 7 under. He made seven birdies, including three in a row after the turn.
“My iron play improved, I gave myself a lot of chances,” McIlroy said. “I was hitting a lot of greens but just not getting it close enough, and today, I birdied a few of the par 3s and played really well."