CA
ON
추천업소
추천업소 선택:
추천업소 그룹 리스트
  • 식품ㆍ음식점ㆍ쇼핑1
  • 부동산ㆍ건축ㆍ생활2
  • 미용ㆍ건강ㆍ의료3
  • 자동차ㆍ수리ㆍ운송4
  • 관광ㆍ하숙ㆍ스포츠5
  • 이민ㆍ유학ㆍ학교6
  • 금융ㆍ보험ㆍ모기지7
  • 컴퓨터ㆍ인터넷ㆍ전화8
  • 오락ㆍ유흥ㆍPC방9
  • 법률ㆍ회계ㆍ번역10
  • 꽃ㆍ결혼ㆍ사진11
  • 예술ㆍ광고ㆍ인쇄12
  • 도매ㆍ무역ㆍ장비13
  • 종교ㆍ언론ㆍ단체14
yunpro
멋진스윙.. 장타를 원하십니까? 오랜경력의 윤프로가 확실하게 책임지도 해드립니다. 647.291.2022
블로그 ( 오늘 방문자 수: 4,756 전체: 12,581,861 )
Watney plays role of the closer at Cadillac Championship
lucasyun

Nick Watney had 22 putts in the final round at the WGC-Cadillac Championship. (Getty Images) Watney plays role of the closer at Cadillac Championship By REX HOGGARD Senior Writer, GolfChannel.com Posted: March 13, 2011 DORAL, Fla. ?As projects go, Butch Harmon was working with two vastly different canvases as morning wore to afternoon on Sunday at Doral. With his arm draped over Nick Watney뭩 shoulder the swing sage offered only a simple pep talk that bordered on clich? 밡ick is probably playing better than anyone in the field right now,?Harmon said. 밒 just told him you just need to go play golf . . . take care of business and the business will take care of itself.? On Sunday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship business was good, a closing 67 for a two-stroke victory. Not a bad day at the office by any measure. On Wednesday, Watney went through the media rigors of a photo shoot, complete with a San Francisco Giants jersey with his name and the No. 24 on it in honor of his childhood hero the 밪ay Hey Kid,?Willie Mays. Considering his play on Sunday, it would have been more apropos had the life-long Giants fan worn the jersey of eccentric hurler Brian Wilson ?a kindred closer. Harmon뭩 omega started Sunday two strokes adrift of his alpha, Dustin Johnson, and pulled to within one stroke with back-to-back birdies to open his day and played the turn in 3 under to edge ahead of his long-hitting stablemate. Nick Watney had 22 putts in the final round at the WGC-Cadillac Championship. (Getty Images)From there the man his Tour friends call 밨ube?was nearly perfect with five pars, capped by a 25-foot momentum saving par putt at the 14th hole, and a birdie from 12 feet at the last ?a filthy fastball to sit down the side. 밫wo years ago came into my head (when he was outdueled at Doral and lost by a stroke to Phil Mickelson), and also Whistling Straits, just the letdown and disappointment of the way that I performed that day,?Watney said. 밪o I just wanted to, you know, give myself, or allow myself to play well and to execute, and I was able to do that.? Not that Watney, whose understated demeanor borders on the aloof and obscures a game that is ready for primetime, is one for theatrics or facial hair. Although his caddie Chad Reynolds is almost as wanting in the grooming department as Wilson following an ill-conceived challenge from his boss earlier this year. At Torrey Pines, Watney convinced Reynolds not to cut his hair until he finished outside the top 10. Since then Watney has finished T-6, T-5, T-6, T-9 and first. Reynolds?mane is now 4 inches long and growing. But it뭩 a hygiene hit he뭩 willing to take. It뭩 not as though Watney뭩 waltz to his third Tour title was without some adversity. On Saturday he stepped to the 18th tee tied for the lead, pulled his drive into the Blue뭩 watery abyss and stewed. 밒 told him you뭨e probably going to have the same shot again and have a chance to redeem yourself,?Reynolds said. 밆amn if he didn뭪.? Even on Sunday Harmon뭩 pep talk for the other half of his high-profile stable went straight back to last year뭩 U.S. Open. Johnson was also looking for a measure of redemption at Doral. Last year뭩 victory at the BMW Championship helped put to rest the demons of Pebble Beach and Whistling Straits, but the questions remain. 밒 was really proud of him. He came out early (Sunday) and did everything in slow-mo,?Harmon said. 밃t Pebble he looked like Carl Lewis he was so fast. But he뭩 just more relaxed now.? Although Johnson didn뭪 add to his burgeoning resume, he couldn뭪 find much fault in his play at Doral. He ranked seventh in fairways hit (a statistical anomaly for such a power player) and 11th in greens in regulation but struggled on the Blue뭩 putting surfaces. 밒 didn뭪 make any putts,?said Johnson, who carded a Sunday 71 and finished alone in second place at 14 under. 밒 drove it well, I even rolled it well, but I was just a little bit off.? The same could be said for Tiger Woods. There was progress by way a closing 66 which matched his low round of the year, Day 2 at the Dubai Desert Classic, and his lowest in an official PGA Tour event since the second round of last year뭩 Deutsche Bank Championship. 밇very tournament that I뭭e played this year I뭭e felt better coming out of it,?Woods said. 밇ven though the results have not been good, I뭭e felt better because it identifies some of the things I need to work on and that뭩 a good thing.? The complete package, however, remains elusive. In fact, the current version of Tiger 4.0 looks a lot like Luke Donald circa 2007, a master of the backdoor top 10. And three days paired with Mickelson didn뭪 seem to help Woods?fragile psyche. Lefty is hitting the ball well beyond his 40 years, which is to say well past Woods who showed little confidence in his driver, or either of the two putters he trotted out at Doral. Both head north to Bay Hill with more questions than answers and short on time in the run-up to Augusta National. Mickelson, who was 4 over on the weekend and tied for 55th, was long (third in the field with a 306-yard average) but wrong with his irons, hitting just 44 percent of his greens in regulation. While Woods?optimism seemed well placed considering he tied for sixth in greens in regulation and first in putts made distance. Yet as encouraging as Woods?Round 4 play and Mickelson뭩 driving was, the year뭩 second WGC belonged to Generation Next. In order those billed as the next great wave finished first (Watney), second (Johnson), eighth (Rickie Fowler) and ninth (Hunter Mahan). That Watney topped that marquee underscored how underappreciated he may be outside of the fairway ropes. He was overlooked as a potential Ryder Cup pick last year despite a tie for 18th at the PGA Championship and just two missed cuts in 24 events and his understated style keeps him out of the press room and the limelight. Quietly, almost cautiously, Watney has emerged as a bonafide superstar, albeit a reluctant one. There will be no celebration in the Watney house Sunday. He still has his NCAA bracket to fill out ?he뭩 an avid North Carolina fan ?and next week뭩 stop in Tampa looms. For the ultimate closer, it뭩 always about the next game. Watney plays role of the closer at Cadillac Championship By REX HOGGARD Senior Writer, GolfChannel.com Posted: March 13, 2011 DORAL, Fla. ?As projects go, Butch Harmon was working with two vastly different canvases as morning wore to afternoon on Sunday at Doral. With his arm draped over Nick Watney뭩 shoulder the swing sage offered only a simple pep talk that bordered on clich? 밡ick is probably playing better than anyone in the field right now,?Harmon said. 밒 just told him you just need to go play golf . . . take care of business and the business will take care of itself.? On Sunday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship business was good, a closing 67 for a two-stroke victory. Not a bad day at the office by any measure. On Wednesday, Watney went through the media rigors of a photo shoot, complete with a San Francisco Giants jersey with his name and the No. 24 on it in honor of his childhood hero the 밪ay Hey Kid,?Willie Mays. Considering his play on Sunday, it would have been more apropos had the life-long Giants fan worn the jersey of eccentric hurler Brian Wilson ?a kindred closer. Harmon뭩 omega started Sunday two strokes adrift of his alpha, Dustin Johnson, and pulled to within one stroke with back-to-back birdies to open his day and played the turn in 3 under to edge ahead of his long-hitting stablemate. Nick Watney had 22 putts in the final round at the WGC-Cadillac Championship. (Getty Images)From there the man his Tour friends call 밨ube?was nearly perfect with five pars, capped by a 25-foot momentum saving par putt at the 14th hole, and a birdie from 12 feet at the last ?a filthy fastball to sit down the side. 밫wo years ago came into my head (when he was outdueled at Doral and lost by a stroke to Phil Mickelson), and also Whistling Straits, just the letdown and disappointment of the way that I performed that day,?Watney said. 밪o I just wanted to, you know, give myself, or allow myself to play well and to execute, and I was able to do that.? Not that Watney, whose understated demeanor borders on the aloof and obscures a game that is ready for primetime, is one for theatrics or facial hair. Although his caddie Chad Reynolds is almost as wanting in the grooming department as Wilson following an ill-conceived challenge from his boss earlier this year. At Torrey Pines, Watney convinced Reynolds not to cut his hair until he finished outside the top 10. Since then Watney has finished T-6, T-5, T-6, T-9 and first. Reynolds?mane is now 4 inches long and growing. But it뭩 a hygiene hit he뭩 willing to take. It뭩 not as though Watney뭩 waltz to his third Tour title was without some adversity. On Saturday he stepped to the 18th tee tied for the lead, pulled his drive into the Blue뭩 watery abyss and stewed. 밒 told him you뭨e probably going to have the same shot again and have a chance to redeem yourself,?Reynolds said. 밆amn if he didn뭪.? Even on Sunday Harmon뭩 pep talk for the other half of his high-profile stable went straight back to last year뭩 U.S. Open. Johnson was also looking for a measure of redemption at Doral. Last year뭩 victory at the BMW Championship helped put to rest the demons of Pebble Beach and Whistling Straits, but the questions remain. 밒 was really proud of him. He came out early (Sunday) and did everything in slow-mo,?Harmon said. 밃t Pebble he looked like Carl Lewis he was so fast. But he뭩 just more relaxed now.? Although Johnson didn뭪 add to his burgeoning resume, he couldn뭪 find much fault in his play at Doral. He ranked seventh in fairways hit (a statistical anomaly for such a power player) and 11th in greens in regulation but struggled on the Blue뭩 putting surfaces. 밒 didn뭪 make any putts,?said Johnson, who carded a Sunday 71 and finished alone in second place at 14 under. 밒 drove it well, I even rolled it well, but I was just a little bit off.? The same could be said for Tiger Woods. There was progress by way a closing 66 which matched his low round of the year, Day 2 at the Dubai Desert Classic, and his lowest in an official PGA Tour event since the second round of last year뭩 Deutsche Bank Championship. 밇very tournament that I뭭e played this year I뭭e felt better coming out of it,?Woods said. 밇ven though the results have not been good, I뭭e felt better because it identifies some of the things I need to work on and that뭩 a good thing.? The complete package, however, remains elusive. In fact, the current version of Tiger 4.0 looks a lot like Luke Donald circa 2007, a master of the backdoor top 10. And three days paired with Mickelson didn뭪 seem to help Woods?fragile psyche. Lefty is hitting the ball well beyond his 40 years, which is to say well past Woods who showed little confidence in his driver, or either of the two putters he trotted out at Doral. Both head north to Bay Hill with more questions than answers and short on time in the run-up to Augusta National. Mickelson, who was 4 over on the weekend and tied for 55th, was long (third in the field with a 306-yard average) but wrong with his irons, hitting just 44 percent of his greens in regulation. While Woods?optimism seemed well placed considering he tied for sixth in greens in regulation and first in putts made distance. Yet as encouraging as Woods?Round 4 play and Mickelson뭩 driving was, the year뭩 second WGC belonged to Generation Next. In order those billed as the next great wave finished first (Watney), second (Johnson), eighth (Rickie Fowler) and ninth (Hunter Mahan). That Watney topped that marquee underscored how underappreciated he may be outside of the fairway ropes. He was overlooked as a potential Ryder Cup pick last year despite a tie for 18th at the PGA Championship and just two missed cuts in 24 events and his understated style keeps him out of the press room and the limelight. Quietly, almost cautiously, Watney has emerged as a bonafide superstar, albeit a reluctant one. There will be no celebration in the Watney house Sunday. He still has his NCAA bracket to fill out ?he뭩 an avid North Carolina fan ?and next week뭩 stop in Tampa looms. For the ultimate closer, it뭩 always about the next game. Watney plays role of the closer at Cadillac Championship By REX HOGGARD Senior Writer, GolfChannel.com Posted: March 13, 2011 DORAL, Fla. ?As projects go, Butch Harmon was working with two vastly different canvases as morning wore to afternoon on Sunday at Doral. With his arm draped over Nick Watney뭩 shoulder the swing sage offered only a simple pep talk that bordered on clich? 밡ick is probably playing better than anyone in the field right now,?Harmon said. 밒 just told him you just need to go play golf . . . take care of business and the business will take care of itself.? On Sunday at the WGC-Cadillac Championship business was good, a closing 67 for a two-stroke victory. Not a bad day at the office by any measure. On Wednesday, Watney went through the media rigors of a photo shoot, complete with a San Francisco Giants jersey with his name and the No. 24 on it in honor of his childhood hero the 밪ay Hey Kid,?Willie Mays. Considering his play on Sunday, it would have been more apropos had the life-long Giants fan worn the jersey of eccentric hurler Brian Wilson ?a kindred closer. Harmon뭩 omega started Sunday two strokes adrift of his alpha, Dustin Johnson, and pulled to within one stroke with back-to-back birdies to open his day and played the turn in 3 under to edge ahead of his long-hitting stablemate. Nick Watney had 22 putts in the final round at the WGC-Cadillac Championship. (Getty Images)From there the man his Tour friends call 밨ube?was nearly perfect with five pars, capped by a 25-foot momentum saving par putt at the 14th hole, and a birdie from 12 feet at the last ?a filthy fastball to sit down the side. 밫wo years ago came into my head (when he was outdueled at Doral and lost by a stroke to Phil Mickelson), and also Whistling Straits, just the letdown and disappointment of the way that I performed that day,?Watney said. 밪o I just wanted to, you know, give myself, or allow myself to play well and to execute, and I was able to do that.? Not that Watney, whose understated demeanor borders on the aloof and obscures a game that is ready for primetime, is one for theatrics or facial hair. Although his caddie Chad Reynolds is almost as wanting in the grooming department as Wilson following an ill-conceived challenge from his boss earlier this year. At Torrey Pines, Watney convinced Reynolds not to cut his hair until he finished outside the top 10. Since then Watney has finished T-6, T-5, T-6, T-9 and first. Reynolds?mane is now 4 inches long and growing. But it뭩 a hygiene hit he뭩 willing to take. It뭩 not as though Watney뭩 waltz to his third Tour title was without some adversity. On Saturday he stepped to the 18th tee tied for the lead, pulled his drive into the Blue뭩 watery abyss and stewed. 밒 told him you뭨e probably going to have the same shot again and have a chance to redeem yourself,?Reynolds said. 밆amn if he didn뭪.? Even on Sunday Harmon뭩 pep talk for the other half of his high-profile stable went straight back to last year뭩 U.S. Open. Johnson was also looking for a measure of redemption at Doral. Last year뭩 victory at the BMW Championship helped put to rest the demons of Pebble Beach and Whistling Straits, but the questions remain. 밒 was really proud of him. He came out early (Sunday) and did everything in slow-mo,?Harmon said. 밃t Pebble he looked like Carl Lewis he was so fast. But he뭩 just more relaxed now.? Although Johnson didn뭪 add to his burgeoning resume, he couldn뭪 find much fault in his play at Doral. He ranked seventh in fairways hit (a statistical anomaly for such a power player) and 11th in greens in regulation but struggled on the Blue뭩 putting surfaces. 밒 didn뭪 make any putts,?said Johnson, who carded a Sunday 71 and finished alone in second place at 14 under. 밒 drove it well, I even rolled it well, but I was just a little bit off.? The same could be said for Tiger Woods. There was progress by way a closing 66 which matched his low round of the year, Day 2 at the Dubai Desert Classic, and his lowest in an official PGA Tour event since the second round of last year뭩 Deutsche Bank Championship. 밇very tournament that I뭭e played this year I뭭e felt better coming out of it,?Woods said. 밇ven though the results have not been good, I뭭e felt better because it identifies some of the things I need to work on and that뭩 a good thing.? The complete package, however, remains elusive. In fact, the current version of Tiger 4.0 looks a lot like Luke Donald circa 2007, a master of the backdoor top 10. And three days paired with Mickelson didn뭪 seem to help Woods?fragile psyche. Lefty is hitting the ball well beyond his 40 years, which is to say well past Woods who showed little confidence in his driver, or either of the two putters he trotted out at Doral. Both head north to Bay Hill with more questions than answers and short on time in the run-up to Augusta National. Mickelson, who was 4 over on the weekend and tied for 55th, was long (third in the field with a 306-yard average) but wrong with his irons, hitting just 44 percent of his greens in regulation. While Woods?optimism seemed well placed considering he tied for sixth in greens in regulation and first in putts made distance. Yet as encouraging as Woods?Round 4 play and Mickelson뭩 driving was, the year뭩 second WGC belonged to Generation Next. In order those billed as the next great wave finished first (Watney), second (Johnson), eighth (Rickie Fowler) and ninth (Hunter Mahan). That Watney topped that marquee underscored how underappreciated he may be outside of the fairway ropes. He was overlooked as a potential Ryder Cup pick last year despite a tie for 18th at the PGA Championship and just two missed cuts in 24 events and his understated style keeps him out of the press room and the limelight. Quietly, almost cautiously, Watney has emerged as a bonafide superstar, albeit a reluctant one. There will be no celebration in the Watney house Sunday. He still has his NCAA bracket to fill out ?he뭩 an avid North Carolina fan ?and next week뭩 stop in Tampa looms. For the ultimate closer, it뭩 always about the next game.