Showing posts with label Love3d. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Love3d. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 February 2016

Tiger Woods Can't Hurry Love


US Ryder Cup captain Davis Love III believes Tiger Woods can play in this year's match with Europe, but his injuries have been "underestimated".

Woods, 40, has not played competitively since August and has had three back operations in the last 18 months.

On Tuesday he tweeted a clip of himself hitting a ball into a virtual screen and wrote: "Progressing nicely."

Love said: "If he can play 10 or 12 tournaments in a row, I think he can get his game back and make our team."

Woods, who has spent a record 683 weeks as world number one, is now ranked 445th and his agent Mark Steinberg recently denied reports that the 14-time major winner had suffered a setback with his rehabilitation.

A winner of 79 PGA Tour events, Woods is one of Love's vice-captains for the Ryder Cup at Hazeltine as the US attempt to halt a run of three successive defeats, and has targeted becoming the first playing vice-captain in the history of the event.

"Tiger is very adamant he can handle both roles," Love told BBC World News. "I think Tiger will work hard enough, if his body will allow it.

"If he keeps stopping and starting - and the injuries keep piling up - it's going to be tough for him, but he's very determined. We've seen that."

Woods played only 11 events in 2015, carding his worst round as a professional with a 13-over-par 85 at the Memorial Tournament in June.

He missed the cut at The Open and PGA Championship but, in his final event before injury, he posted rounds of 64 and 65 in finishing in a tie for 10th at the Wyndham Championship.

"We've underestimated his injuries," Love said. "He has really been held down the last few years, but he can play.

"Get him out there on the golf course and he still wants to do it. He just needs a full season, like any athlete, to get himself straightened out."

The Ryder Cup runs from 30 September to 2 October.


Friday, 28 September 2012

Ryder Cup All Love and Fair Play

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The 39th edition of the Ryder Cup was officially launched in a formal ceremony with pledges of sportsmanship and fair play, and a moving tribute to the late Seve Ballesteros at Medinah Country Club on Thursday.

U.S. captain Davis Love and Team Europe captain Jose Maria Olazabal introduced their players and underlined the importance of playing in a spirit of friendship, while making plain their fervent desire to win the three-day event that begins on Friday.

Musical performances, processions, flag-waving, a fighter-jet flyover above the grounds outside Chicago, and the appearance of Michael Phelps and Justin Timberlake at the presentation gave a rousing kick-off to the biennial competition.

The tributes to Ballesteros, who died last year after a battle with cancer, began with Phil Weaver, chairman of the European Professional Golf Association, and provided an emotional underlining to the ceremony.

"Seve Ballesteros became the heartbeat of that team," Weaver said about the resurgence of interest in the Cup after the Great Britain and Ireland squad was expanded to Europe to end U.S. domination of the event.

"He spoke from the heart and played with his heart. He triggered a golfing explosion throughout the whole of Europe. The Ryder Cup lost a dynamic talent, a true genius and a great friend."

Olazabal, who was mentored by fellow-Spaniard Ballesteros and teamed up with him to become the most successful partnership in the Ryder Cup, wiped away tears after Weaver's remarks.

Olazabal saluted the passion of Chicago-area fans, but said he expected them to "honour the tradition of courtesy and sportsmanship that is the bedrock of the Ryder Cup."

He then took a moment to reflect on Ballesteros. "He was a special man. I believe Seve reflected the core of Ryder Cup values. More than anything, I learned from him what true passion is all about. Seve, we miss you."

It was not all sentiment and Olazabal made it clear his goal was to retain the gold trophy Europe won two years ago at Celtic Manor in Wales.

"We have every intention of taking it back home with us," he said. "(But) we will leave Medinah as friends."

Love echoed the same message. "These matches are not life and death. Golf has to be played with a certain spirit of graciousness or it's not golf at all.

"We will start these matches in a spirit of friendship and we will end them the same way," Love said about what he vowed would be "an honest, fair and intense competition."

Source: Reuters


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Tuesday, 25 September 2012

Ryder Cup Blue for Seve Sunday


Europe's players are set to pay tribute to the late Seve Ballesteros by dressing in his image for the singles at this week's Ryder Cup.

Ballesteros, who died in May last year after a long battle with cancer, captained Europe to victory in his native Spain in 1997 after playing in the biennial contest eight times, forming an amazingly successful partnership with current skipper Jose Maria Olazabal.

Although Olazabal would not confirm that the plan is for his team to wear the navy jumper and trousers and white shirt so associated with Ballesteros, he has already consulted United States captain Davis Love on the issue.

'I talked to Davis Love about that and he was very understanding of it and I will say no more at the moment,' Olazabal said. 'Seve is going to be there in our team in some way or form.

'We are going to miss him a lot. It's the first time he is not going to be with us. He was a special man.'

Team member Paul Lawrie, quoted in Bunkered magazine, had previously said: 'I don't know for sure but the word is that we're wearing navy trousers, navy sweaters and white shirts like Seve always wore in the final round of majors. I think that will be our singles outfit.

'I don't know that for certain but a few of the boys have mentioned that and I think that if that is indeed the case, there could be no more fitting a tribute to a guy like Seve than having 12 of the best players in Europe wearing his outfit on the final day of the Ryder Cup. If that's how they're going to do it, then it's absolutely bang on.'

Love added: 'Seve meant a lot to the Ryder Cup in general. He will be watching over our team as well.

'On both sides we have a lot of emotion. We've just lost Maria Floyd (the wife of former captain Ray Floyd, who died earlier this month), but that's what the Ryder Cup is about on top of all the other emotions.'

Only three members of the European team - Lawrie, Francesco Molinari and Nicolas Colsaerts - were with Olazabal on the flight from London to Chicago, with five others having played in the Tour Championship which finished in Atlanta on Sunday and the remainder all having homes in America. 

But Olazabal insisted missing out on some time for team bonding on the plane - previously a major feature of Ryder Cup week - was not a problem. 'It feels a little strange but there's no surprise,' Olazabal said. 

'I don't see that as a disadvantage to be honest. We have always been a close team and they are all going to be there by the time I get to the hotel. 

'We will have a relaxing time and we'll chat together and will create that bond. I think the most important thing is the passion that everyone brings into the team and into the game itself. 

'You have to make your players believe that you're playing for something really special, that it's a unique moment. It only happens once every two years and you let them realise that there are moments that are unique to this event, that won't happen anywhere else in any other tournament.'

Much has been made of the possible influence of the Chicago crowd at Medinah, and although both captains stressed the mutual respect between the teams, Love admitted the local fans would be 'fired up' when the contest gets under way on Friday. 

'When we travel over there it's tough on us and when they travel over here it's tough on them,' he added. 

'Chicago is an incredible sports town and they are going to be fired up. 'I think the first tee could be the loudest any of these guys have ever heard to start off a golf tournament. I expect a lot of passion. I expect if we are winning holes it's going to get pretty loud out there and that's what home-field advantage is all about. 

'As Jose-Maria said, that's what you prepare these guys (the players) for. You have to tell them, 'Hey, this is going to be something like you've never seen before'. 

'And we both know what the good cheers sound like and what the bad cheers sound like. We'll try to get them going loud in our favour.'


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Wednesday, 5 September 2012

Mahan Absence Surprises Chema

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European Ryder Cup captain Jose Maria Olazabal admits he was surprised to see US counterpart Davis Love III select Brandt Snedeker as a wildcard ahead of Hunter Mahan.

Love confirmed his 12-man line-up for this month's match at Medinah on Tuesday as he added Steve Stricker, Jim Furyk, Dustin Johnson and Snedeker as his four captain's picks.

Olazabal, who named Ian Poulter and Nicolas Colsaerts as his wildcards last month, described Love's selections as "solid picks".

However, he did concede he thought that his opposite number might opt for twice-capped Mahan over rookie Snedeker.

"They are very strong picks but then at least two of them were pretty obvious in Stricker and Jim Furyk but the other two, Dustin Johnson and Brandt Snedeker, have been playing pretty well lately," Olazabal said ahead of this week's KLM Open in Holland.

"So there is no question that they are very solid picks.

"All the American players from nine to 14 on the list were all very solid and Davis could have picked any four.

"The only question mark as I see it was Snedeker picked ahead of Mahan but then Davis has gone for form.

"But then Snedeker has pretty much been playing well from the start of the summer and all the way to the FedEx Series.

"However, Mahan has not been playing all that well, so he went for form and in that regard he has my respect."

Olazabal will be playing alongside European team members Colsaerts and Martin Kaymer for the first two rounds at Hilversumche Golf Club this week.

He did, though, laugh off suggestions that he had requested to be paired with the Belgian and the German and insisted he would be focusing on his own game, and not the Ryder Cup, at an event which he won back in 1989.

"I had nothing to do with Nicolas and Martin playing alongside me for the first two rounds," Olazabal responded with a smile.

"So I am really happy with that but then I will not be watching them all the time, as I will be focusing on my game.

"I won this event a long time ago, and very early in my career, and it would be nice to add my name to the trophy again."



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USA Finalise the Love Team


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Davis Love III became the third straight U.S. captain to pick a Ryder Cup rookie, and he's the first captain since 1997 who had to spend a pick on Jim Furyk. Love filled out his 12-man team Tuesday by selecting Furyk, Steve Stricker, Dustin Johnson and Brandt Snedeker, one of four Ryder Cup rookies who will be playing in a team competition for the first time as a pro.

Johnson and Snedeker, in effect, played their way onto the team the last two weeks as the only Americans to finish among the top six in the first two FedEx Cup playoff events. They were performances that were difficult for Love to ignore.

"I think we're extremely deep this time, deeper than we've ever been. ... There was a lot of guys that played a lot of really good golf," Love said. "You can analyse the numbers up and down and back and forth. It was tough to leave really anybody off."

The Ryder Cup is Sept. 28-30 at Medinah, outside Chicago. Even though Europe has dominated the competition since 1995 -- it has won six of the past eight times -- it has won on U.S. soil only twice in the last 20 years.

The Ryder Cup has never looked stronger on paper. It will feature 24 of the top 36 players in the world ranking, and the Americans have 10 players from the top 20. The U.S. could have been even stronger in the world ranking, except that Love left out Hunter Mahan, a two-time winner this year who is No. 19.

Love had Furyk and Stricker in mind all along, even consulting with them on his four captain's picks.

"I laid it out early on what I thought we needed and we stuck with it," Love said. "I need Jim Furyk. I need Steve Stricker. The team will benefit from those guys being in the locker room, being in the team room. Then, you can't argue with the golf that Brandt and Dustin have been playing. I think they matched up well, and it really did kind of lay right out there for us."

Furyk had qualified for every U.S. Ryder Cup and Presidents Cup team since making his debut at Valderrama in 1997. He might have qualified for this team except for two shots that could have cost him two wins. One was the 3-wood he hooked into the trees on the 16th hole at the U.S. Open, and the other was an approach that missed the 18th green at Firestone and led to a double-bogey.

Stricker is a great putter and good partner for Tiger Woods. This is his third Ryder Cup.

The toughest decision for Love was leaving out Mahan, whose two wins this year included the Match Play Championship when he soundly defeated Rory McIlroy in the final. Mahan made one of the key putts when the United States last won the Ryder Cup in 2008 at Valhalla, yet he also muffed a chip in the decisive match in Wales two years ago that secured Graeme McDowell getting the winning point for Europe.

Mahan, however, has not shown much life in his game over the last five months. He has only one top 10 since winning the Houston Open, and his form might best be looked at in this regard -- he was leading the Ryder Cup standings after the Masters and still didn't qualify.

"It was not really the numbers but how guys were putting and playing," Love said. "There were some guys feeling pressure to make the team. Really, since the British and the PGA, a couple of guys have stepped up and really handled that pressure well. That was a big factor, as well."

The eight Americans who qualified three weeks ago were Woods, Masters champion Bubba Watson, Jason Dufner, Keegan Bradley, U.S. Open champion Webb Simpson, Zach Johnson,Matt Kuchar and Phil Mickelson.

That makes four Americans who have never played in a Ryder Cup -- Snedeker, Dufner, Simpson and Bradley. Simpson played in the Presidents Cup last year.

Also left off the team was Rickie Fowler, who two years ago became the first PGA Tour rookie to be picked. Fowler won his last four holes in Wales to scratch out a half point that nearly proved decisive for the Americans. He won on the PGA Tour for the first time this year at Quail Hollow but struggled since then, particularly in the majors.

Nick Watney entered the Ryder Cup conversation by winning The Barclays against one of the strongest fields of the year, but he left the conversation just as quickly when he failed to get into the mix at TPC Boston. Watney has had only one good tournament this year.

Medinah is likely to favor big hitters, though Love was just as interested in good putters. Snedeker, who rallied from seven shots behind to win at Torrey Pines this year, really showed himself at the British Open by holing big putts on his way to a record-tying 64 at Royal Lytham & St. Annes for the 36-hole lead. He wound up tied for third with Woods.

Snedeker was runner-up at Bethpage Black -- a big golf course -- in The Barclays, and despite a slow start in the opening round of the Deutsche Bank Championship, he had a 65-67 weekend to finish sixth. He missed five tournaments this year, including the U.S. Open with a rib injury.

"Needless to say, it's been a couple pressure-packed weeks for me but it's all worth it," Snedeker said. "I look forward to getting to Medinah and trying to make Davis look like a genius."

Johnson missed nearly three months (including the Masters) with a back injury, yet won the St. Jude Classic in his second tournament back. He is regarded as the most talented young American, having won every year since going from college to the PGA Tour in 2008.

But his record in team competition has been spotty. In his Ryder Cup debut at Celtic Manor in 2010, he lost all three team matches -- none even reached the 18th -- playing with Mickelson and Furyk, before beating Martin Kaymer in singles. He was Woods' partner for three matches in the Presidents Cup and they won only one of them, mostly because of how Woods played.

Johnson tied for third at The Barclays, and he was in the next-to-last group with Woods at TPC Boston. Johnson tied for fourth.

Europe completed its team last week -- McIlroy, McDowell, Kaymer, Justin Rose, Paul Lawrie,Francesco Molinari, Luke Donald, Lee Westwood, Peter Hanson and Sergio Garcia. Jose Maria Olazabal used his two captain's picks on Ian Poulter and Nicolas Colsaerts.

Europe will have only one rookie -- Colsaerts, one of the game's longest hitters.

"They're going to be tough, they are every year," Love said. "I'll tell you this: I love my team."




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Tuesday, 5 June 2012

Captain Love Earns Olympic Ticket


U.S. captain Davis Love III won't have to watch potential Ryder Cup players on television at the U.S. Open as he'll be playing alongside them.

Love qualified for the U.S. Open for the third time in the last six years with a 139 at Scioto Country Club and Ohio State's Scarlet Course.

Love, who finished tied for 16th at the Memorial on Sunday, said it never crossed his mind to just bag it and go home rather than extend an already long week by playing 36 more holes.

"No. Like last year, statistically I hit the ball well enough at the U.S. and the British to win," he said. "I definitely want to play."

The 48-year-old Love has won 20 tournaments around the world, including the 1997 PGA Championship. He continues to play well, despite fighting off injuries, family obligations and an entire generation of younger players.

He was among 16 players to qualify from the biggest of the 11 sectional qualifying sites across the country on Monday.

One of them won't even get started until Tuesday. There was so much rain in Memphis, Tenn., that no one played more than a few minutes. USGA officials hope the course is dry enough to squeeze in 36 holes.

The U.S. Open is June 14-17 at The Olympic Club in San Francisco, and the 48-year-old Love will be making his 23rd appearance in his national open. Others who qualified from Scioto and Scarlet included medalist Charlie Wi, Kevin Streelman, D.A. Points, Rod Pampling and Steve Marino, who only last week returned from a four-month break to recovery from a bad shoulder.

Love still hasn't forgotten the details from a year ago, however, when he three-putted the last hole he played at Colonial that cost him an automatic spot in the Open at Congressional. He had to go through qualifying to get in the field.

"I seem to play well in the qualifying because I don't have a scoreboard to look at," he said. "You just play."

Love has been in captain mode off and on since being selected for the matches this fall. He has been assessing potential players for the American side and has played with several. One of them, former British Open champ Ben Curtis, was in his threesome on Monday, although Curtis faded on his second 18 and failed to make the Open field.

Perhaps the biggest cheer of the day came as darkness was falling at Scioto Country Club.

On the fourth playoff hole to decide the last qualifiers, 42-year-old Youngstown, Ohio, teaching pro Dennis Miller's 20-foot putt from the fringe stopped on the lip of the cup. After the gallery of a few hundred groaned and Miller slowly started to walk to his ball, if fell -- touching off a huge celebration.

Now Miller, a third alternate whose name did not even appear on the tee sheet, will be playing in his first U.S. Open -- and will likely have to get someone to fill in for him back at the course at Mill Creek Metroparks in Youngstown.

"I can't believe what just happened," Miller said. "That was pretty incredible."

Most of the rest of the field in the qualifier in suburban Columbus, Ohio, was filled with touring pros who had just competed in the nearby Memorial.

Among those who did not qualify were two of the contenders at Jack Nicklaus' tournament.

Rory Sabbatini had the lead with four holes left on Sunday but was overtaken when Tiger Woods birdied three holes, including the 16th on an improbable 50-foot chip-in from thick grass behind the green.

Spencer Levin led going into the final round at Muirfield Village and was still atop the leaderboard with nine holes left but fell apart on the back nine with three bogeys and a double-bogey in a 75.

Sabbatini shot a 70 in his first 18 at Scarlet, but sagged to a 76 in the afternoon to fall short. Levin, who could have earned an automatic berth in the Open had he finished in the top two instead of tying for fourth at the Memorial, followed a 72 at Scioto with a 74 at Scarlet.

Levin still has a chance to make the U.S. Open if he can crack the top 60 in the world after this week.

Wi was the medalist by three strokes. He opened with a 7-under-par 65 at Scarlet and followed up with a 67 at Scioto.

"This is only my second one. It's not easy to get in," said Wi, a South Korean native who grew up in California native. His only previous appearance was at Bethpage Black three years ago. "I always flew home Sunday night because if I missed (in the qualifier) I was already home. This worked out better. I took the strategy that if I missed I'd be home for two weeks. That's probably not a good strategy."