Showing posts with label An Byeong-hun. Show all posts
Showing posts with label An Byeong-hun. Show all posts

Monday, 11 April 2016

Master Spieth Tastes Augusta Disaster

Spieth
Jordan Spieth Collapses at Augusta - Getty Images
Jordan Spieth hopes he "never experiences again" the collapse of form that saw him lose a five-shot lead on the final day of the Masters.

The 22-year-old, winner at Augusta last year, dropped six shots in three holes on the back nine, allowing England's Danny Willett to seize his first major.

"It's tough," said Spieth. "I just think it was a very tough 30 minutes.

"Big picture, this will hurt. We still have the confidence we are a closing team. I have no doubt of that ability."

Spieth, though wayward at times with his driver during the four days, had continued the dominance he displayed in 2015 over the opening 54 holes.

He became the first man to lead the Masters for seven straight rounds and looked set to win a third major after carding four successive birdies to open a five-shot lead with nine holes to play on seven under.

But bogeys on 10 and 11 were followed by a quadruple-bogey on the par-three 12th after both his tee shot and third effort found water.

The American later admitted he turned to his caddie Michael Greller and said: "Buddy, it feels like we are collapsing."

"I put a bad swing on it at the wrong time," added Spieth, who finished tied for second with Lee Westwood, three shots behind Willett.

"It was just a lack of discipline coming off the two bogeys instead of recognising I was still leading the Masters by a couple of shots."

Spieth's calamity came 20 years after Australia's Greg Norman lost a six-shot lead in the final round of the Masters, as Willett's compatriot Nick Faldo won the third of his Green Jackets.

The US Open champion eventually turned in a one-over-par 73 on the final day and looked visibly distraught as he presented Willett with the Green Jacket afterwards.

"I can't think of anybody who may have had a tougher ceremony to experience," the world number two told reporters.

"He just said, 'really well played,'" said Willett. "He shook my hand like the true gent he is. He's a class act to be able to hold face like that, hurting like I imagine he would be."

Spieth had to present the Green Jacket to Willett a second time in an outdoor ceremony for patrons

Former US Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger told BBC Sport: "It's gut-wrenching to watch a player lose a big lead like Spieth has today.

"He will lose a lot of sleep over this. It will stay with him for his whole life. It was almost Norman-esque. Golf can rip one man's heart out and give another man great joy."

Lee Westwood, who secured his best major finish since 2010, said: "It's a fine line between disaster and success and it happened to Jordan. Anything can happen at Augusta."

World number one Jason Day said: "Right now it's unfortunate and I'm sure he's killing himself for it. But we all do it to ourselves. Hopefully he just learns from it and gets better."

Smylie Kaufman, who played with Spieth in the final pairing, said it "just kind of stunk" to watch his fellow American's collapse.

"I was really cheering for Jordan as a buddy, and it's unfortunate what happened... just kind of a weird day for both of us," said Kaufman, who struggled to an 81 to end his first Masters on seven over.


Monday, 21 March 2016

Jason Saves Day at Bay Hill

Getty Images
Jason Day survived a rollercoaster final round to complete a wire-to-wire victory in the Arnold Palmer Invitational and move above Rory McIlroy to second in the world rankings.

Day carded five birdies and three bogeys in a closing 70 at Bay Hill to finish 17 under par, a shot ahead of American Kevin Chappell.

Sweden’s Henrik Stenson, who has now finished third, second, fifth and eighth in his last four appearances in the event, was two shots further back alongside Troy Merritt, who surged into a share of the lead with five birdies in a row from the 10th, only to double-bogey the 18th.

Day took a two-shot lead into the final round and edged further ahead by chipping in for birdie on the second after a poor tee shot came up well short of the green, only to bogey the next two holes and fall into a tie with Chappell, who had birdied the third.

A birdie on the fifth took Day back in front but Chappell, who was playing in the penultimate group, two-putted the par-five sixth for birdie and then saw Day bogey the same hole after pulling his approach into the water.

Chappell, who is yet to win on the PGA Tour, briefly moved two clear with a birdie on the eighth, but promptly bogeyed the ninth before Day’s superb approach to the same hole left him a tap-in birdie.

Stenson made it a three-way tie for the lead with a birdie on the 10th but would go on to bogey the 14th and 16th, while Chappell moved back into the lead thanks to birdies on the 13th and 16th.

However, Chappell dropped a shot on the 18th to open the door for the chasing pack and Day birdied the 17th from 12 feet before saving par from a greenside bunker on the last to claim his eighth PGA Tour title and a sixth in just over 13 months.