Thursday, December 12, 2013

Mandela first round washed out by rain again, pushed to Friday

DURBAN, South Africa -- Players will need a third day to complete the first round at the Nelson Mandela Championship after rain again disrupted the European Tour event's schedule.

After a seven-hour delay on Wednesday, only a little more than four hours' play was possible on Thursday before the Mount Edgecombe course became unplayable again because of a heavy downpour.

Englishman Daniel Brooks was still the clubhouse leader after an 8-under 62. Three Frenchmen were right behind, with Francois Camels second after a 63 while Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel were two shots off the lead.

South Africa's Oliver Bekker also moved to 6 under through 14 holes before players were called off again. More than 50 players were still to complete their first rounds.

"You just keep your head down and grind. There's nothing you can do about it," Bekker said of the weather.

He made the biggest move in the short time the players were out on Thursday, making his sixth birdie on No. 14 to move within two shots of Brooks on the par-70 layout. Sweden's Joel Sjoholm and Zimbabwe's Ryan Cairns were tied for sixth after both carded 65s in their opening rounds.

Players will return to complete their first rounds at 6 a.m. local time on Friday, with the second round to be played directly after that.

Norman's Shootout celebrating 25th year

NAPLES, Fla.  -- In the late 1980s, Greg Norman wanted to put together a golf tournament with a relaxed atmosphere and unique team format to benefit children's charities.

This is the 25th year Norman's event has been on the PGA Tour calendar. It has gone by seven names, and is now called the Franklin Templeton Shootout. It has gone from California to Florida, with the last 13 years at the Norman-designed Tiburon Golf Course at Ritz Carlton Resort. New features include a 5K run.

''Quite honestly, I never expected to go 25 years, especially in the circle silly season we slotted ourselves into,'' Norman said. ''Back in '89 starting off with four players and here we are 24 players, that's a testament to the tournament itself. ... I never anticipated making 25 years, never in my wildest dreams.''

The idea is the same. To have a fun, low-pressure event where players can bring their wives, bond with their teammates and can take part in pre-tourney festivities just before the holidays. Meanwhile, more than $12 million has been raised for children's charities.

The Shootout will start Friday with the 12, two-man teams playing modified alternate shot. The format changes to better ball on Saturday and a scramble on Sunday.

Norman is teaming with Jonas Blixt.

''He's young enough, he's strong enough, he can carry me around,'' Norman said. ''I'm always a big believer in seeing what the young talent is doing in the world.''

Nine of the top 50 players in the world ranking will compete, including No. 7 Matt Kuchar, No. 8 Steve Stricker, No. 13 Jason Dufner, No. 14 Ian Poulter, No. 15 Dustin Johnson and No. 24 Lee Westwood.

Also in the field is Kenny Perry, the Champions Tour Player of the Year and Charles Schwab Cup winner. He's the co-defending champ with Sean O'Hair.

With the purse at $3.1 million, every player is guaranteed at least $70,000 and the winners will each get $385,000.

Dufner is teaming with Johnson, and Poulter is paired with fellow English star Westwood.

Dufner won the PGA Championship this year for his first major title.

''I've been asked about (reflecting) a lot but I'm not sure what reflecting means,'' he said. ''When you live what you're doing, especially as golfers, you're trying to stay in the moment. I'm proud of what I did and how hard I worked to get there.''

Poulter, a four-time Ryder Cup player, has four, top-10 finishes this season.

Westwood has been in eight Ryder Cups. He's considered one of the best players on the tour not to have won a major and that was magnified in the 2013 British Open when he had a two-shot lead heading into the final round, only to shoot a 75 and lose to Phil Mickelson.

The label irks him.

''Every time I heard, 'I think, really?''' Westwood said. ''It's always nice to be the best player to have done something or not done it. I'll hit the next person that says it.

''Those are some amazing stats they keep putting up on the Golf Channel. Sixteen top 10s without winning a major, most majors ever played without winning a major, most top threes without winning a major. I've got all those categories completely.''

Westwood smiled.

But he made his point. No one asked him a follow-up question.

''He's got more than enough game, he knows it, and I'm sure he gets frustrated with all you guys saying he hasn't won one yet,'' Poulter said.

Tiger Woods' half-brother accused of making threat

PHOENIX -- The half-brother of golf star Tiger Woods was arrested Thursday in Phoenix for allegedly making a false bomb threat at the government building where he works.

Phoenix police said 58-year-old Earl Dennison Woods Jr. is accused of calling in the threat at the Department of Economic Security building about 8:30 a.m. Thursday.

Police say they were called after DES employees alerted building security.

More than 100 people were evacuated from the building before Woods came forward and told police the phone call was meant as a joke and he didn't expect his co-workers to take it seriously.

Police said Woods has been booked on suspicion of attempting to terrify, intimidate, threaten or harass others. They say Woods is apologetic and cooperating with the investigation. It's unclear if he has a lawyer.

Woods' daughter, Cheyenne Woods, is a professional golfer.

Perry aiming for title defence

Veteran American Kenny Perry has set his sights on defending the Franklin Templeton Shootout title he won last year alongside Sean O'Hair - but, whatever happens at this weekend's event, the pair plan to have fun.


Perry last year became the oldest winner of the tournament when, at the age of 52, he teamed up with O'Hair to edge out Charles Howell and Rory Sabbatini by one shot - courtesy of a burst of five birdies over the final six holes.

The duo form part of a strong 24-man field at Tiburon Golf Club in Naples, Florida, and Perry - who turned professional the year O'Hair was born - expects an exciting weekend.

"I'm a pretty straight driver and if I can just get it in the fairway and turn him loose, we're going to have a great week no matter what," the 53-year-old said on www.pgatour.com.

"Win, lose, whatever, it doesn't matter. We both like old cars, we talk hot rods and we just have a great time. We complement each other very well and it's just fun, whatever.

"We're going to stick the needle in all these other young teams and smile at them and hopefully we can beat them."

O'Hair has fond memories of the 2012 triumph and would love more of the same over the next three days.

"I think it was probably my best memory of last year," the 32-year-old said. "We ham-and-egged it pretty good. Kenny was just rock solid and I was hitting it pretty long at the time."

He added: "I'm going to ride the stallion here. He's obviously playing pretty well and just see how it goes. I'm just looking forward to having a fun week."

Greg Norman has assembled an impressive line-up for the 25th anniversary of the event, including seven players who have won PGA Tour titles this year - Perry, Jonas Blixt, Jason Dufner, Harris English, Billy Horschel, Dustin Johnson and Matt Kuchar - and six major champions in Norman himself, Dufner, Mark Calcavecchia, Retief Goosen, Justin Leonard and Mike Weir.

England's Lee Westwood will be competing in the tournament for the first time along with five other debutants - Blixt, Goosen, English, Horschel and Graham DeLaet.

Boo Weekley withdrew earlier this week due to multiple deaths in his family during the previous week and a half. He has been replaced by Freddie Jacobson, winner of the 2011 Travelers Championship.

The competition will feature a modified alternate-shot format during the first round, a better-ball Saturday and a final-round scramble on Sunday.

Nelson Mandela Championship

The first round of the weather-hit Nelson Mandela Championship was suspended for a second time on Thursday.


Tournament organisers had been hoping to catch up after a delayed start on Wednesday but were frustrated by a waterlogged course at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club in Durban and called an early end to the day's play.

Of the players who did manage to get some play in it was Oliver Bekker who made the biggest move, the South African advancing to six under through 14 holes to join Frenchmen Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel in third place after their 64s on day one.

European Tour winner Branden Grace and Darren Fichardt were also going well at four under when the players came off.

They remained adrift of leader Daniel Brooks, however, the Englishman lighting up day one with a flawless eight-under-par 62 that put him one shot clear of Frenchman Francois Calmels.

Defending champion Scott Jamieson of Scotland was two over after 13 holes of a four-day tournament that was brought forward by a day to a Wednesday start, to avoid a clash with Sunday's funeral of former South African president Mandela.

Teenage LPGA star Lydia Ko signs with IMG

CLEVELAND -- Lydia Ko, who earned an exemption to join the LPGA Tour in October as a 16-year-old, has signed with management company IMG.


Born in South Korea and raised in New Zealand, Ko is already No. 4 in the rankings and won the Swinging Skirts World Ladies Masters last week in Taiwan in her second start as a professional.

She won the Women's Canadian Open at 15 last year to become the youngest winner in tour history and defended the title this year.

Paula Creamer and Michelle Wie are among the golfers represented by IMG.

Guy Kinnings, global head of golf at IMG, says in a statement on Thursday that Ko "is an incredibly impressive young lady and an astonishing player."

Cejka shoots 64 to take lead in Thailand

CHON BURI, Thailand -- Four-time European Tour champion Alex Cejka of Germany upstaged a star-filled field with an 8-under 64 Thursday to take a one-shot lead after the first round of the Thailand Golf Championship.


The 43-year-old Cejka rolled in his eighth birdie of the day on the 17th hole to take the sole lead from Justin Rose, who was already in the clubhouse after a bogey-free round.

With some of golf's biggest names playing in the Asian Tour event this week, few had expected Cejka to be atop the leaderboard. His last European Tour win came in 2002, and he finished 12th in Hong Kong last week.

"I hit the ball very well today," Cejka said. "The greens roll perfect. I took a couple big chances and made birdies. ... I hope my form will continue like this and we will see how it goes in the next three rounds."

The fourth-ranked Rose was tied for second with Arnond Vongvanij of Thailand after picking up three birdies on the front nine before adding four more on the back at the Amata Spring Country Club.

"I felt like I was reading the green well. My putting felt really sharp," Rose said. "But you have to stay out of the roughs on this course."

Defending champion Charl Schwartzel was in a tie for sixth with Sergio Garcia and two others after a 68. Third-ranked Henrik Stenson and former Masters champion Bubba Watson both started with a 70 to sit tied for 15th, as did Rickie Fowler.

Young Sports Personality: Trio on 2013 BBC award shortlist


A shortlist of three contenders has been announced for the 2013 BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year award.

Athlete Dina Asher-Smith, shooter Amber Hill and golfer Charley Hull are in contention for the prize.

They made the final cut, revealed on the Blue Peter television show, from a longer list of 10 candidates.

Who are the nominees?

Dina Asher-Smith (athletics)
Amber Hill (shooting)
Charley Hull (golf)

The winner, chosen by an expert panel, will be named during the 60th edition of the Sports Personality show, which is broadcast live from Leeds on Sunday.

Footballer Wayne Rooney, tennis star Andy Murray and diver Tom Daley are among previous winners on the roll of honour.

At 17, Asher-Smith became the second youngest female athlete in history to win a medal at the World Athletics Championships as Great Britain's women secured bronze in the 4x100m relay.

Aged just 15, Hill became the youngest winner of a senior World Cup in skeet shooting and finished the season ranked number one senior in Great Britain and number five in the world.

Hull, 17, joined the Ladies European Tour after turning professional this year and became the youngest golfer to appear for either Europe or the USA in the Solheim Cup.

The award is given to the outstanding young sportsperson of the year, who was aged 17 or under on 1 January 2013. The shortlist was created through a combination of nominations made directly to the BBC, and names of young sports people suggested to the Youth Sport Trust by governing bodies.

Previous winners

2012: Josef Craig - Swimming
2011: Lauren Taylor - Golf
2010: Tom Daley - Diving
2009: Tom Daley - Diving
2008: Ellie Simmonds - Swimming
2007: Tom Daley - Diving
2006: Theo Walcott - Football
2005: Harry Aikines-Aryeetey - Athletics
2004: Andy Murray - Tennis
2003: Kate Haywood - Swimming
2002: Wayne Rooney - Football
2001: Amy Spencer - Athletics

Footballer Adnan Januzaj, weightlifter Rebekah Tiler and canoeist Kimberley Woods were among those on the 10-strong contender list.

Athletes Jessica Judd and Isaac Towers also featured, alongside swimmers James Guy and Amy Marren.

Last year's winner was swimmer Josef Craig after he became Britain's youngest gold medallist at the 2012 Paralympics. Aged 15, he won the S7 400m freestyle final in a new world record.

The shortlist was compiled from the nominations of a panel of judges including Olympic triathletes Alistair and Jonathan Brownlee, 2001 Young Sports Personality winner Amy Spencer, BBC Radio 1's Tina Daheley, Blue Peter and MOTD Kickabout presenter Radzi Chinyanganya and Blue Peter Sport Champion Daniel Allen.

This year's Sports Personality of the Year awards night will take place on Sunday, 15 December and will be presented by Gary Lineker, Clare Balding and Gabby Logan in front of an expected 12,000 crowd at the First Direct Arena in Leeds.

In addition to the Young Sports Personality prize, there will be awards for:

Sports Personality of the Year

Team of the Year

Coach of the Year

Overseas Sports Personality

Sports Personality Diamond Award

Helen Rollason Award

Sports Unsung Hero

Charley Hull: Top Europe rookie plans dual-tour schedule for 2014

Northamptonshire's Charley Hull will divide her time between the Europe and USA in 2014 after a successful debut professional season.


Hull, 17, took the Ladies European Tour Rookie of the Year award by holding off England's Holly Clyburn, 22, at the season-ending Dubai Ladies Masters, where she tied for eighth place.

"I didn't go to LPGA Qualifying School, but I've got six or seven invites.

"It'll be half and half on each Tour. I don't want to go straight to America."

She continued: "I'm already in a few of the majors, but I don't want to ruin my childhood - I still want to see my mates."

Hull had five runner-up finishes this year, winning almost 136,000 euros in prize money to pip fellow debut professional Clyburn by 19,844 euros in the Ladies European Tour Order of Merit.

Hull and Clyburn finished sixth and seventh respectively, with the title claimed by Norway's Suzann Pettersen, 32, who won 518,448 euros.

The 17-year-old also shone in Europe's Solheim Cup triumph over the USA in Colorado, beating 27-year-old Paula Creamer 5&4 in the final days singles.

She has also been nominated for the BBC's Young Sports Personality of the Year award.

"It's been a really good season and to win Rookie of the Year tops it all off," she added.

"It's an honour to be nominated for Young Sports Personality. That event should be a lot of fun.

"Next year, I just want to get that [first tournament] win and then I'll be super happy."

First round of Nelson Mandela Championship suspended again after more heavy rain

The first round of the weather-hit Nelson Mandela Championship was suspended for a second time on Thursday.


Tournament organisers had been hoping to catch up after a delayed start on Wednesday but were frustrated by a waterlogged course at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club in Durban and, after more heavy deluges of rain, called an early end to the day's proceedings.

Of the players who did manage to get some play in it was Oliver Bekker who made the biggest move, the South African advancing to six-under through 14 holes to join Frenchmen Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel in third place after their 64s on day one.

European Tour winner Branden Grace and Darren Fichardt were also going well at four-under when the players came off.

First round leaderboard

(GB & Ire unless stated)

-8 D Brooks (18 holes)
-7 F Calmels (Fra) (18)
-6 E Dubois (Fra) (18)
-6 R Wattel (Fra) (18)
-6 O Bekker (SA) (14)

They remained adrift of leader Daniel Brooks, however, the Englishman lighting up day one with a flawless eight-under-par 62 that put him one shot clear of Frenchman Francois Calmels.
Grind

Bekker told the European Tour's website: "You just keep your head down and grind. There's nothing you can do about (the weather).

"If you can get past the mental battle and accept that it's the same for everyone, then I think you've already beaten half of the field.

"I'm actually happy with the delay, to be honest. The weather is brutal out there at the moment and I've got a couple of tough holes coming up.

"The forecast for (Friday) and Saturday is pretty good, so if it clears up we could get a few good rounds in."

Defending champion Scott Jamieson of Scotland was two over after 13 holes of a four-day tournament that was brought forward by a day to a Wednesday start, to avoid a clash with Sunday's funeral of former South African president Mandela.

Cejka and early riser Rose enjoy strong starts in Thailand

Journeyman Alex Cejka celebrated his first wedding anniversary with a one-shot lead over world number four Justin Rose after the opening round of the Thailand Golf Championship on Thursday.

Germany's Cejka, winless since 2002, reeled off eight birdies for an unblemished card at the Amata Spring Country Club on the outskirts of Bangkok to lead Rose and local hope Arnond Vongvanij.

"Nice to shoot a good score on a good day," the 43-year-old said after carding an eight-under-par 64 on his first wedding anniversary with wife Alyssa.

Reluctant early riser Rose, who won his first major at the U.S. Open in June, missed only one green in regulation and nailed seven birdies en route to a near-flawless 65.

"It was an early alarm call this morning at 4.30. Didn't enjoy that part but once I got out here to the golf course it was a perfect morning for golf, nice and cool to start with," the Englishman said.

"Our group all birdied the 10th hole and I felt like we got off to a really nice start. It was a perfect morning to play golf, and the type of morning you wanted to capitalise on."

Charl Schwartzel began his title defence with a 68, three-putting his last hole on the ninth for one of the two bogeys of the day.

"I felt like I hit the ball pretty decent. Just the putting let me down," the South African said.

Spaniard Sergio Garcia also carded 68 while world number three Henrik Stenson of Sweden, 2012 Masters champion Bubba Watson, and fellow American Rickie Fowler opened with matching 70s.

Arnond, calling on his knowledge of his home course, needed only 23 putts in his stellar round in the $1 million full-field Asian Tour tournament.

Brooks keeps lead as rain interrupts Mandela Championship

Englishman Daniel Brooks retained his slender lead at the Nelson Mandela Championship without playing a shot as persistent rain forced another suspension in Durban on Thursday.

Brooks, who has never finished in the top 10 on the European Tour, carded an eight-under 62 in the first round on Wednesday to establish a one-shot advantage over Frenchman Francois Calmels.

In the four hours of play possible on Thursday, South African Oliver Bekker advanced to six under through 14 holes to join French pair Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel in third before a saturated course brought a halt to the day's proceedings.

"You just keep your head down and grind. There's nothing you can do about (the weather)," Bekker told the European Tour's website.

"If you can get past the mental battle and accept that it's the same for everyone, then I think you've already beaten half of the field.

"I'm actually happy with the delay, to be honest. The weather is brutal out there at the moment and I've got a couple of tough holes coming up. The forecast for (Friday) and Saturday is pretty good, so if it clears up we could get a few good rounds in."

Play on Wednesday was suspended for darkness following a seven-hour delay to the start of the round at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club.

Scott Jamieson won the inaugural Nelson Mandela Championship in 2012 when rain meant the tournament was shortened to 36 holes. He will resume on Friday on two over par in his first round with five holes to play.

The start of this year's tournament was brought forward 24 hours to avoid a clash with the funeral of former South African president Nelson Mandela on Sunday.


Mandela Championship held up again

The first round of the weather-hit Nelson Mandela Championship was suspended for a second time on Thursday.


Tournament organisers had been hoping to catch up after a delayed start on Wednesday but were frustrated by a waterlogged course at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club in Durban and called an early end to the day's play.

Of the players who did manage to get some play in it was Oliver Bekker who made the biggest move, the South African advancing to six under through 14 holes to join Frenchmen Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel in third place after their 64s on day one.

European Tour winner Branden Grace and Darren Fichardt were also going well at four under when the players came off.

They remained adrift of leader Daniel Brooks, however, the Englishman lighting up day one with a flawless eight-under-par 62 that put him one shot clear of Frenchman Francois Calmels.

Defending champion Scott Jamieson of Scotland was two over after 13 holes of a four-day tournament that was brought forward by a day to a Wednesday start, to avoid a clash with Sunday's funeral of former South African president Mandela.

Northern Ireland's Michael Hoey lies three under after 12 holes of his second round. Ireland's David Higgins finished two under par after his round, while compatriots Simon Thornton ended one under par, Damien McGrane one over par, and Kevin Phelan four over par.

Tiger Woods penalty controversies, ensuing Brandel Chamblee rules drama is No. 8 golf story of 2013


Tiger Woods has had his feuds over the years (see: Sergio Garcia). The spitting contest between the world No. 1 and Golf Channel’s Brandel Chamblee may have finally come to an end but we’ll have to wait until next year to know for certain.

Tiger Woods enjoyed a five-victory, player-of-the-year 2013 season in which he regained the No. 1 spot in the world and repeatedly praised his overall performance as "pretty damn good."

On the flip side, Woods flopped in the four grand slam events and ended pitching a shutout in the majors for a fifth straight year. He was also in the spotlight, as he is wherever he is, on or off the course (and deep in Brandel Chamblee’s doghouse), for incurring four high-profile (is there any other way with Tiger?) penalties.

Chamblee, in assigning Woods an "F" for the season, as part of his year-ending report card, backed up the grade with a highlight reel of Tiger’s well-documented 2013 rules faux pas:
  • An illegal drop at the Abu Dhabi Championship, which cost Woods a weekend tee time in his first global contest of the year
  • That much-investigated improper drop at the Masters, which sparked extensive forensic scrutiny and came close to earning Tiger a DQ
  • A controversial drop at the Players Championship that had Johnny Miller in full froth
  • The removal of a twig during the BMW Championship that caused Woods’ ball to move and the golfer to refuse to concede, despite video evidence to the contrary, that his Nike One Tour D did more than "oscillate"

Is Google Glass the next product to revolutionize the game of golf?


Tech debates are as big a part of the game of golf as Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson, and the next big thing to change the game may not come from your regular cadre of equipment companies, but rather a corporate tech giant.

The constant evolution of technology in golf is perhaps the game's most difficult topic to wrangle. It's also probably the most important, as manufacturers and developers continue to put out new products that try to revolutionize the game at both the professional and recreational levels, while the regulating bodies try to keep up and keep "the game" still "the game" (its essence, and a bunch of other highfalutin ambiguous terms lobbed from the USGA and others).

The NBA Draft through Google Glass
The Verge spends 2013 NBA Draft night with No. 2 pick Victor Oladipo, who donned Glass as he took in the life-changing evening.

The biggest looming tech debate is likely on the rollback of the golf ball, which continues to fly farther and make some of the world's best courses obsolete. But a second, and perhaps more significant, potential equipment issue could be on the horizon, thanks not to your usual manufacturer, but rather Google and some developers. Although it hasn't hit stores yet, Google Glass is starting to trickle into the population and it could have a dramatic impact on how both pros and weekend hackers tee it up.

Luke Kerr-Dineen of GolfDigest recently tested out Glass in New York, hitting a few balls at the Chelsea Piers range and talking with Paul Goldstein, a developer who has created GolfSight, the first golf-related app for Glass. Our friends at The Verge have worked with the Google Glass team and the device on multiple occasions, but this was one of the first forays into how it could affect the game of golf. Kerr-Dineen called it "perfectly suited" for the game, and that could be an issue for some stodgy regulators in New Jersey.

The GolfSight app from Goldstein, in particular, could just be the start of Glass's impact on golf. Kerr-Dineen on how it can be instantly integrated into your round:

You launch the app with a phrase: "OK, Glass, let's start a round of golf." From there, it'll locate the course you're playing and give you yardages, tell you about any looming hazards, supply you flyover images of the holes and keep your score. And, like the camera, if it sits idle, it'll hibernate so it's not being annoying.

Goldstein is also working to take features to the next level, adding the capabilities to read greens and give you the right line as you set up on the putting surface. That sounds like it could be a bridge too far for some of the rules overlords, but we're still in the hypothetical stages.

More: A test and tour of Google Glass with The Verge

Range finders and other yardage tools are now ubiquitous, put in use at every level and at almost every track. They're still not used by the pros in tournament play, however, so Goldstein and Glass are probably facing an uphill battle when it comes to the game's biggest superstars using the specs at the biggest and most televised events. But it appears the next big tech leap, and subsequent debate, is coming soon and it won't be ignited by Callaway, Titleist, TaylorMade, or any of the others we're used to seeing one-up each other.

Lydia Ko wins first event as a pro, signs with IMG Golf

Lydia Ko, the youngest golfer to win an LPGA Tour event, turned pro in October, won her first tournament as a professional two months later, and chooses IMG to represent her future interests.


Lydia Ko, the teen prodigy who is No. 4 in the world among women golfers, followed up her first victory as a professional by signing a contract with Tiger Woods’ (among many others) former representative, IMG Worldwide.

The 16-year-old Ko, who had two LPGA triumphs before she turned professional in October and joined the tour, won last week’s Swinging Skirts World Ladies Masters, an official event so-sanctioned by the Taiwan LPGA and Korea Ladies Professional Golf Tour.

The best female amateur in the world for more than two years, Ko became the youngest golfer to win an LPGA tournament when, at 15 years and four months, she conquered the field at the 2012 Canadian Women’s Open. She made more history when, by defending her title this year, she became the first amateur to win two tour contests.

Ko, who captured the Swinging Skirts victory in Taiwan in only her second start as a pro, expressed surprise at how quickly she entered the winner’s circle after giving up her amateur status. She did so after rebounding from a three-shot deficit halfway through the Swinging Skirts finale to earn a three-shot win over So Yeon Ryu and the $150,000 first-place prize.

"I'm really surprised," Ko told New Zealand 3News after carding a final-round 4-under 68 to get to 11-under for the week at Miramar Golf and Country Club in Taipei. "I didn't really have this coming. I think playing in the [LPGA’s season-ending CME Group Titleholders] two weeks ago definitely helped me with all the nerves."

Ko, with four professional worldwide Ws on her resume (in addition to two wins in Canada, Ko captured the 2012 Women’s New South Wales Open and 2013 ISPA Handa Women’s New Zealand Open), joins a team of golfers at IMG. While Woods left the firm with Mark Steinberg in 2011, IMG manages several LPGA and PGA players, including reigning PGA champion Jason Dufner, 2012 British open winner Ernie Els, former women’s No. 1 Yani Tseng, Paula Creamer, and Michelle Wie.

"IMG emerged as the clear choice to represent me," Ko, who was born in South Korea and raised in New Zealand, said in a statement, "in large part because of their global reach."

IMG did not disclose details of the deal.

Nelson Mandela Championship

England's Daniel Brooks carded a flawless eight-under-par 62 on Wednesday to claim the lead after a weather-delayed first round at the Nelson Mandela Championship in Durban.


The 26-year-old, who has had a largely disappointing rookie campaign this year but retained his European Tour card at Qualifying School last month, surged to the top of the pile with a burst of four birdies in five holes from the eighth.

Francois Calmels was hot on his heels thanks to a seven-under 63, with two fellow Frenchmen - Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel - also in contention after 64s and Sweden's Joel Sjoholm and Zimbabwe's Ryan Cairns joint fifth a further shot back.

"It's been a long day," said Brooks. "I was completely focused on getting to the 18th tee box when we got called in. That probably helped, in a way, because I just kept playing and the result was good."

It was a bogey-free round for him, with four birdies on the opening nine and four more on the homeward stretch on a course which was reduced to a par-70 track: The 293-metre (320-yard) par-four fifth was converted into a 130-metre (142-yard) par-three because the fairway was so waterlogged.

For Brooks, as for so many players who go so low, putting was the key.

"I pretty much holed everything I looked at, which was quite nice," he said.

"I haven't putted that great over the last couple of weeks, so to hole a few was pretty nice."

He was happy with his iron play, but not as thrilled with his driving.

"I've been hitting it nicely off the tees, but I didn't do that today," he added.

"We were lucky that we could place in the fairways, which gave us a bit of relief. The fairways weren't too bad in places, but you need to keep it out of the rough around here because it's really thick.

"It was soaking wet and you're getting no run at all. It's not too bad and they've shortened a few holes as well. If you're hitting it on the fairways it's pretty score-able."

The action had got under way seven hours later than scheduled following heavy rain on the Mount Edgecombe Country Club course.

More than half the field were unable to complete their opening rounds, with many - including defending champion Scott Jamieson of Scotland - yet to start. Play is set to resume at 0600 on Thursday (0800GMT).

Challenge Tour graduate Calmels was delighted to continue his fine form after winning in Mauritius last week.

"It was a great week for me," said the 32-year-old, who sank a 15-foot putt at the 18th to keep himself firmly in the hunt.

He added on www.europeantour.com: "I made a great last round 65 to win by one over Hennie (Otto) and that give me quite a bit of self-confidence.

"I know I'm playing well and the great round today was just perfect."

Jamieson expects tough week

Defending champion Scott Jamieson admits it would be an honour to retain his Nelson Mandela Championship title in South Africa.


The tournament takes place at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club in Durban in the same week the former president will be laid to rest after his death at the age of 95.

The event has been brought forward a day to begin on Wednesday to ensure its conclusion does not clash with Mandela's funeral on Sunday.

Jamieson, following his promotion from the Challenge Tour in 2010, won the inaugural tournament 12 months ago for his maiden European Tour victory in a rain-shortened 36-hole event.

He knows it will be a tough ask to repeat the feat but having finished in the money 20 times in 31 tournaments in 2013 he feels his game has improved.

"Off the back of last year, I can only be more confident," he told BBC Radio Scotland ahead of the final European Tour event of the calendar year.

"Every year on tour I've progressed. Last year, I got to play in two majors and a World Golf Championship event.

"It's great to have any tournament carry Nelson Mandela's name.

"Obviously being so close to his sad passing last week, it definitely adds an edge to the tournament.

"To be able to retain it would be fantastic and certainly would be an incredible honour.

"I think the competition's going to be fierce, especially, I imagine, among a lot of the South Africans.

"It's going to be a tough week, but I'm looking forward to the challenge."

South African Branden Grace hopes he and his compatriots can do justice to the memory of Mandela

"It's kind of bitter-sweet to be playing in the Nelson Mandela Championship just a week after Madiba's death," he told europeantour.com.

"It's not a happy time in South Africa, so it's nice to be able to be in a position where I can go and support the tournament. I hope that the guys come out to do justice to his name.

"He always talked about excellence and it's good to try to show that in action.

"He was such an ambassador for the country - for the whole world, as well, really - and his memory will live on forever."

Young guns ready to fire

Ben Coley previews the Nelson Mandela Championship and is backing some young Europeans to shine.



It's rare that we look at European Tour event in which the favourites aren't playing particularly well, but that's the case with this week's Nelson Mandela Championship.

Branden Grace reckons he's getting there and George Coetzee should be improving all the time following a mid-season injury, but there's no denying that the pair are where they are in the betting because of who they are and not what they've achieved on the course of late.

This isn't to say that neither can be considered as we move to Mount Edgecombe for the second renewal of what's now a poignant event, it's simply to underline just how weak the field is here. The top of the market includes players we wouldn't usually consider a factor but most of them deserve to be there because there's little to beat.

While this robs organisers of class and will mean that many punters concluded their year with last week's quality tournaments, it does offer the chance for less heralded players to change the path of their careers and if we can find the right one, we can make Christmas a good deal better for ourselves.

So, the task is to identify what sort of player might thrive here and it's no easy one, given that in terms of course form we've got a smattering of amateur scores and a couple of low-key events on the Sunshine Tour which, time and time again, flatter to deceive as an accurate guide.

However, thanks to the modern world of social networking we can see that Michael Hollick, who has grown up next to the course, says it's very wet and the rough is very thick. With more rain forecast, preferred lies are possible and we should certainly be looking towards those who keep it in the cut and prepared.

But that doesn't lead me away from the power hitters. After all, these will have the option of keeping the headcover on their drivers if they so wish at a course which lacks in length, and if they pull it out for some potentially reachable shorter holes and score on the par-fives they'll hold an advantage. As ever, it'll be about making the right decisions and executing the right shots at the right time - sadly there's no stat for that.

David Law, a Scottish player who went close as an amateur here, confirmed that length is in his mind an advantage whatever the weather and while water hazards play their part, off the tee this Durban layout looks to offer width. It's a good job, because if the coastal winds blow players will have enough on their hands.

Ultimately, though, we're all guessing to a certain extent so my preference is to see what type of players usually feature in these events, regardless of the venue, rather than get wrapped up in profiling the right skillset at a course I've never seen.

And here's where I found things interesting. I looked back at the events co-sanctioned by the Sunshine and European Tour, right back to 2000, to see just who wins them. The answer is, to put it in basic terms, either a very, very good South African or typically a young international player with abundant potential.

The list of champions across this event, the South Africa Open, the Joburg Open and the Alfred Dunhill includes former US Amateur champion Richie Ramsay, multiple winner Alvaro Quiros, US Open hero Justin Rose, Masters champion Adam Scott, and the usual South African suspects: Charl Schwartzel, Richard Sterne, Ernie Els, Hennie Otto, Tim Clark, et al.

It also includes the likes of Anthony Wall and Mark Foster, two Englishmen in their 20's when winning, plus fellow 20-somethings Marcel Siem, Pablo Martin and last year's Nelson Mandela winner Scott Jamieson.

Now, this information is useless unless you can contextualise it, but I believe it's possible to do so. Essentially, without going into each case individually, these events have been won by players for whom victory is a that and not much more - by that I mean they have their cards for next year already, and these events just gave them something of a free roll at victory.

In contrast, most of the Sunshine Tour regulars know that victory would change their life. They would have access to one of the world's major tours, and a platform from which to become a global player and not one confined to playing at home, if confined is the right word for earning your living on these wonderful layouts.

Therefore - and I apologise at this point for taking so long to conclude - I like the idea of chancing some non-South African players, especially those who have some sort of status locked up for the coming year.

Those with big potential should see this as a chance to win while the big names are taking a break and although it was a strange event, last year's renewal saw zero South Africans finish in the frame. More recently, the top 15 in the Alfred Dunhill included only Schwartzel and ninth-placed Warren Abery - the rest were all European.

It's with this in mind that Espen Kofstad gets my headline vote.

The Norwegian came to the attention of the golfing world by topping the 2012 Challenge Tour rankings thanks to a pair of victories, but struggled for most of his debut season at the top table as so many do.

However, Kofstad had been battling injuries and it took until July for him to recover fully. Since the mid-summer Russian Open he's played 12 events, making 10 cuts and showing something like the promise of 2012, most famously when firing an opening 64 at Celtic Manor in the Wales Open.

More recently, he finished a very decent 12th in Perth before enjoying the honour of representing his country at the World Cup. Then, last week in Hong Kong, he carded four rounds of par or better to finish 24th.

What's notable about those Perth and Hong Kong results is that both came on short, tricky layouts, so while he hits it a mile it's clear that these venues can bring out the best in him. Indeed, his first professional win came in on a fiddly little Italian layout, the type we so often compare to courses in South Africa.

A closer look at his performance in Hong Kong reveals that Kofstad ranked second for greens in regulation - the fourth time in his last eight European Tour events that he's been inside the top six - so it seems clear that he just needs to make a few more putts to really start contending, especially in this grade.

Thanks to the exploits of Henrik Stenson, Suzann Pettersen and more recently Thomas Bjorn it's been an astonishing year for Scandinavian golf and whether Kofstad draws anything from that or not, he fits the profile I'm looking at here and is worth chancing at 100/1.

Next on my list is another player starting his second season on tour, Scotland'sScott Henry.

Like Kofstad, Henry gives it a rare old bash but most of his best performances so far on tour have come at venues where you have to think before you thwack - places like Gleneagles, Le Golf National and Carton House.

His fourth on home soil at Gleneagles was particularly impressive, considering he started with a level-par 72 but ended with a stunning eagle which at the time looked like it could get him into a play-off.

Just as impressive was his reaction.

"I've now got my game where it needs to be to compete to win," he said. "I think earlier in the year, I was trying to find something that I didn't really need, trying to find extra things in my game, where actually, if I just go play, my game is definitely good enough."

Any young player making such a bold claim goes down as one to watch and the fact that Henry won the 2012 Kazakhstan Open, known as the Challenge Tour major due to its purse, also suggests he has something a little special in his arsenal.

That victory came thanks to an incredible closing birdie to get into a play-off which he then won with a par and factors like this lead me to believe that he'll be fully exempt on tour again sooner rather than later having underperformed in the Q School final.

So why this week?

Well primarily because I think some very eye-catching play in Hong Kong has been completely overlooked. Henry might've finished just 47th, but he played 65 of the 72 holes at Fanling in par or better, a feat just two players in the field can boast to have outdone. His problem was that his seven errors were costly - he made four doubles - but in the main it was a very solid performance at a course which takes some getting to know.

Then, of course, we've the fact that Henry's compatriot Jamieson is the defending champion. We've seen time and time again this year that players can take inspiration from their countrymen - my excellent colleague David John has made that point successfully no fewer than four times in 2013 - and perhaps Henry can do so here. Again, he fits the profile of a young player with potential.

Another youngster who hits it a mile and could surprise is Niklas Lemke, and he is worth chancing in the hope that he begins to fulfill his undoubted promise.

Once upon a time Lemke was going to be Sweden's golfing superstar as his amateur career, which includes time spent at Arizona State, confirms. Even further back he was just about the best junior golfer on the planet and it's easy to see why given how far this athlete can hit the ball.

Of course, that's worth little when it comes to grinding out pay-cheques on an unforgiving tour but it does make him one to watch on the rare occasions (unless he wins this week) he gets a European Tour start, having just missed out on full status via the 2013 Challenge Tour.

If this venue does provide width off the tee as expected, he might just be able to build on a run of form which has seen him finish in the top 11 on six of his last 11 starts on the Challenge Tour. A couple of years ago he finished third in the Nordea Masters before starting well in the Irish Open, and told reporters that he adapts to new courses quickly. Let's hope he does that here.

Another youngster to side with is Jorge Campillo, who was also a crack amateur having achieved plenty at Indiana State before joining the paid ranks.

It's fair to say it took him a little while to find his feet but Campillo is currently on an impressive run of 17 cuts made, some achievement for a 27-year-old to whom a lot of the layouts he's playing are completely new.

With that being the case for most of the real contenders this week, this is something of a level playing field and the way he's playing at the moment I would not be at all surprised were we looking at back-to-back wins for the Spanish contingent on tour.

I certainly think that when heading to a new venue it is a major advantage to have the confidence he has at the moment and there's no reason he can't follow in the footsteps of Martin and Quiros and kick-start a promising career.

Finally in terms of outright selections, I have to add a win-only bet on Michael Hoey for the simple reason that you can get 100/1 about the most prolific winner bar Grace in this field.

Hoey withdrew from his last official start but completed all four rounds in the AfrAsia Masters last week, finishing fifth in a 30-man field, and should not be the price he is having won five times in his last 123 starts and four times in his last 68, including in Morocco. Coastal courses suit and if the wind blows he won't mind a jot.

And to round things off I'm throwing a small bet on Adam Gee to lead after round one.

Gee is a really, really good ball-striker but so far in his career he's struggled to put four rounds together, running up some big numbers on the rare occasions his long game deserts him.

That was the case last week when he shot 66-76 to miss the cut in Hong Kong having sat third after day one, and it's why, even at 250/1, I can't bring myself to side with him outright.

However, he's ended day one inside the top 10 in eight of his last 20 starts and two of his last three at this level. He also led the field after round one in Saint Omer last year, a co-sanctioned event between the Challenge and European Tour, and his fast starts have tended to come in bunches.

Gee is off early and could surprise a few.

Top-10 value with Thai veteran

Ben Coley previews the Thailand Golf Championship and fancies a local player to prove competitive without winning.



The Thailand Golf Championship, played at one of Asia's finest courses in Amata Spring, is a very difficult tournament to get to grips with.

While it should prove quite straightforward to list all possible winners without reaching double-figures, picking which one of the elite players will walk off with the title on their final appearance of 2013 is extremely difficult.

Henrik Stenson is running on fumes, he's said so himself. But he still managed to place in good company last week and he's played well here before.

Charl Schwartzel romped to an 11-shot victory here last season having previously chased home Lee Westwood in 2011, so I'd favour him over Stenson. But is he a steal at 5/1? I don't think so.

Then you've got Sergio Garcia, who was fourth last year and catches the eye having finished fourth and second in his last two starts, most recently with a final-round charge on Sunday in which he looked at his magnificent best.

But we have to remember that last year's fourth saw him finish no fewer than 13 shots adrift of Schwartzel. Thirteen shots is a heck of a long way and with Charl being the man with the recent winning form, too, I've come to the conclusion that 7/1 about Garcia isn't very generous.

Next it's Justin Rose, who played some of the best golf at Sun City last week if we forget his abject start to the event. He concedes course knowledge to those around him in the market but he'll play well, won't he?

Throw in Bubba Watson - another also-ran behind Charl last year - and his pal Rickie Fowler, here on a recommendation having finished second in Australia last time. Again, it's a second which needs putting into context because bar winner Adam Scott it was an extremely weak field.

I'd probably be quite comfortable drawing the line there. Hunter Mahan of course can't be ruled out but he was 20 shots off the lead here last year and played some uncharacteristically wayward shots last week in California, while for Bernd Wiesberger and Thongchai Jaidee I envisage one or two proving too good.

None of this is to say it's impossible to find value elsewhere but I have to believe a player can win, too, and I simply don't see one lurking anywhere. There's of course a temptation to chance Jazz Janewattananond at 125/1 in case he proves to be as good as they think he'll be, but this is probably a good year too soon. He surely can't go head-to-head with one of the favourites and win.

You could consider young Jazz - a Radiohead fan, by the way, for which he deserves great credit - in the first round leader market. He's flown the boxes several times in his fledgling career, after all. But then both Schwartzel and Westwood led from pillar to post in winning here and again, the first round leader will probably be a good deal more famous than the Thai youngster.

Indeed, maybe there's mileage in Schwartzel at 10/1. He's not been out of the top-five after any of the eight rounds he's played here and was fifth after day one in 2011 before leading the way last year. He's also been starting quickly of late and 10/1 is probably further away from his outright price than it ought to be.

But no, I can't bring myself to take 10/1 in the first-round leader market if only for fear of one bad swing or one sustained period of Mother Nature's wrath.

As you might've guessed, I don't fancy anyone strongly enough to part with serious money here. You can combine Schwartzel, Rose, Stenson and Garcia at about 4/5 if you shop around and for big-hitters that should work, or you can leave the tired Swede out and have about 11/8, but that option, while very solid, doesn't have me tempted enough.

However, 20/1 about Chawalit Plaphol finishing inside the top 10 looks pretty generous to me and I'll also take 50/1 that he finishes in the first five.

The 39-year-old Thai has plenty of experience at Amata Springs and was a gallant fourth here two years ago, and while the quality of attendee continues to improve he could still figure in the top dozen or so with a good week.

We can ignore his missed cut last year because his game was absolutely nowhere at the time - he'd missed the cut in his previous three starts too. This time around he arrives on the back of a tie for 12th in Hong Kong, which came courtesy of a momentum-building 66 to close out the event.

Plaphol has some winning form in Thailand too and he's putting superbly right now - as good as just about anyone in this field - so at the prices he's worth small interest bets to put his name in the mix.

For those interested he's 250/1 outright and 175s in the round-one leader market but, for reasons mentioned, I'm happy to ignore those this time in an event Schwartzel may well win once more.

England's Brooks Leads in Rain-Hit Durban With 62

DURBAN, South Africa — England's Daniel Brooks shot an 8 under 62 to take a one-stroke lead in the Nelson Mandela Championship on Wednesday after heavy rain disrupted the first round.

Play at the Mount Edgecombe Country Club began seven hours late after rain left many of the fairways waterlogged. More than half the field failed to complete their rounds.

Brook is being pursued by a group of French players, led by Francois Calmels with 63 and followed by Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel two strokes back. Sweden's Joel Sjoholm and Ryan Cairns of Zimbabwe share fifth place after carding 65s.

Brooks, who kept his European Tour card after last month's Qualifying School, produced eight birdies in his bogey-free round. The course was reduced to a par-70 track: The 320-yard par-4 fifth was converted into a 142-yard par-3 because of the waterlogged fairway.

Flawless Brooks takes Nelson Mandela Championship lead


England's Daniel Brooks carded a flawless eight-under-par 62 on Wednesday to claim the lead after a weather-delayed first round at the Nelson Mandela Championship in Durban.

The 26-year-old, who has had a largely disappointing rookie campaign this year but retained his European Tour card at Qualifying School last month, surged to the top of the pile with a burst of four birdies in five holes from the eighth.

Simon Thornton and David Higgins are best of the Irish on one under, while Damien McGrane is one over par in the event that started one day early due to the funeral of Nelson Mandela.

Kevin Phelan sits on level par, having only played two holes, while Michael Hoey has yet to start his first round and will be looking to complete 36 holes tomorrow.

Francois Calmels was hot on his heels of the leader thanks to a seven-under 63, with two fellow Frenchmen - Edouard Dubois and Romain Wattel - also in contention after 64s and Sweden's Joel Sjoholm and Zimbabwe's Ryan Cairns joint fifth a further shot back.

The action had got under way seven hours later than scheduled following heavy rain on the Mount Edgecombe Country Club course.

More than half the field were unable to complete their opening rounds, with many - including defending champion Scott Jamieson of Scotland - yet to start.

Play is set to resume at on Thursday at 8am (Irish time).

No. 9: Anchors away for 4 major champions after USGA/R&A approve putter ban for 2016


Adam Scott and several other major champions along with everyday professional and amateur golfers who affix long putters to their bodies will have to find more conventional ways to negotiate their flat sticks come Jan. 1, 2016.

Adam Scott made worldwide headlines when, in April, he became the first Australian to win at Augusta. The 33-year-old winner of 10 official PGA Tour events was less celebrated for becoming the first golfer to win a major with a broomstick putter shoved into his sternum.


Scott, among the players to win four of the past nine major titles with long putters, could also be the last (depending on the outcomes of the eight grand slam events in the next two years) to achieve such a feat with what will soon be a verboten putting style. Keegan Bradley began the barrage on traditionalists’ sensibilities when he captured the 2011 PGA Championship with a belly putter in his bag.

Webb Simpson and Ernie Els followed shortly thereafter, with the 28-year-old Simpson chalking up the 2012 U.S. Open and Els, the victor of three previous majors, taking advantage of Scott’s late-inning collapse to secure last year’s British Open. Scott found redemption at the 2013 Masters.

While the stroke so abhorred by so many has been legal for decades, enough was enough for the fusty USGA and R&A. With the backing of heavy-hitting supporters like Tiger Woods, and in the face of heated opposition from the PGA Tourand others, including some who threatened litigation, golf’s governing bodies announced jointly in May that a ban on anchored putting would take effect on Jan. 1, 2016.

The pronouncement came some six months after the regulators proposedthe rule, a timeframe that included a 90-day comment period during which tour commissioner Tim Finchem upstaged the finale of the WGC-Match Play Championship to proclaim his resistance to the scheme.

Claiming their decision was not in response to major wins by four practitioners of what many consider to be a loathsome putting stroke, the governors jumped through linguistic hoops to justify their ruling.

"The playing rules are definitional: individually and collectively, they reflect what the game is and how it should be played," read a segment of a 30-page document explaining the new Rule 14-b. "For example, a player may not pick up the ball and roll it into the hole. That is not because the rulemakers assessed through statistical or other empirical analysis whether players rolling the ball by hand are more successful than players using a club to strike the ball; rather, it is because rolling the ball with one's hand is simply not 'golf.'"

Scott and his major-winning brethren are not the only professionals (along with amateurs and everyday golfers) who will have to adopt conventional ways of addressing their balls on the greens. Indeed, the reigning Masters champ, who revived his career after switching in 2011 to a long putter, is a newbie to the controversial stroke compared with long-time anchorers like Tim Clark and Carl Pettersson, two of the original "Anchoring Nine" who considered suing the rules makers over the issue.

Scott joined Clark and Pettersson as three of the nine players to go public about their affiliation with a Boston attorney, whom they hired to represent them in the event of a court case. The dissidents eventually decided to forego any legal actionafter Finchem caved and changed his stance to align with that of the USGA.

Back in March, before he knew for sure what his fate would be, Scott pretty much summed it up for everyone involved.

"We’ll just have to adjust at some point," he said.

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