Friday, March 7, 2014

Steve Stricker owns two-shot lead in John Deere Classic, one day away from threepeat

steve stricker
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Steve Stricker's 63 on Saturday was his best round of the year.
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By 
Associated Press 

Series: PGA Tour
Steve Stricker stood in the bunker left of the first fairway, eyed his ball in the rough on the edge of the trap, then looked at the flag 122 yards away.
If it felt like he'd been in that position before, well, that's because he had.
"I had that same stance in my pro-am," he said. "Same bunker, same exact shot. I was right in the same spot."
All he wanted to do was get the ball on the green, which he did. And then came the shot of the day, a 75-foot putt for birdie that led to an 8-under-par 63 Saturday and a two-stroke lead after three rounds of the John Deere Classic.
"I was just trying to get a two-putt and par and move on," Stricker said. "To make a put like that, you don't expect to, nor are the odds in your favor to make a putt like that. But it went in with perfect speed and it got me going."
Stricker fashioned his best round of the year while closing in on his third straight victory in the tournament. He's at 20-under 193 following a par on save on 18, where he twice hit into bunkers before drilling a 15-foot putt.
That put Stricker in a good spot because he's won the last four times he held the outright lead going into the final round. Stricker said he often hears stats like that, but insisted he doesn't remember them.
"I don't put a lot of stock in numbers past, present, whatever," he said. "I just try to go out there and do the things that I'm capable of doing. You've just got to stick to your own game and that's what I've been able to do the last four or five years."
Zimbabwean Brendon de Jonge is alone in second at 195 after matching Stricker's 63. Second-round leader Chez Reavie, who started the day two strokes up on Stricker, shot 68 and was 17 under, one ahead of Kyle Stanley (65).
With one more solid round, Stricker would join an elite group. Only 20 times previously on the tour has someone won a tournament three years in a row, a list that includes Tiger Woods, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tom Watson and Johnny Miller,
Woods has done it six times and was the most recent to accomplish the feat, winning the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in 2005, 2006 and 2007.
"I haven't really given it much thought, but it would mean a lot," Stricker said. "It's hard enough to win an event three times, let alone three in a row. So it will be tough. I've got to fight through nerves, but it would be special to be part of that list."
As he has done so often recently at TPC Deere Run, Stricker made it look easy, even after getting into immediate trouble with that opening tee shot. He took a baseball-type swing to get out of the rough and hit a line drive that stopped on the front part of the green, where the pin was in to the right and in the back.
Then he stepped up and knocked his putt in, the ball rolling uphill, topping a crest and carrying back down into the center of the cup.
Stricker raised both arms in celebration, then smiled at playing partner Jhonattan Vegas and shrugged as if to say, "When you're hot, you're hot."
"At first, I thought I hit it too hard and then it looked like it was going to be good to tap in (for par)," he said. "And then it just went right in the last couple of feet."
Stricker moved into the lead with a 14-foot birdie putt on No. 7 as Reavie made bogey at 6. When Reavie bogeyed 8, he suddenly found himself four strokes behind -- a six-shot reversal in about 90 minutes.
De Jonge, meanwhile, kept making birdies to keep Stricker from running away with the lead.
"I got off to a great start today, which was the key to set up the round," de Jonge said. "I think tomorrow's going to be more of the same. You're going to have to make a bunch of birdies. The golf course is in such good condition, the ball's going so far, that you get a lot of wedges in your hands."
Stricker birdied six of his first 10 holes before turning more humanlike down the stretch and making only two more birdies the rest of the way. But on this warm, breezy Midwestern day, no one was sharp enough to catch him, though for a few minutes at the end it looked as though his lead would drop to one.
His tee shot found a bunker left of the fairway and his second shot landed in a bunker in front of the green. He got the ball up to within 15 feet, not an easy putt by any means, but he knocked it in.
"That was a good save to kind of keep the momentum going into tomorrow," he said.
De Jonge kept himself in position for his first tour victory if Stricker should falter on Sunday. He matched Stricker's 30 on the front nine, then had his momentum blunted slightly when he bogeyed 13 after missing a 10-footer for par.
But he came back with a nifty chip from the fringe on 14 to set up a 2-foot birdie putt and capped his round with an approach from 163 yards to 11 feet for a birdie on 18.
De Jonge also was in contention going into the final round of the Transitions Championship, where he was just one stroke off the lead. But he shot a final round 73 to slip into a tie for fifth.
He seemed undaunted about facing down Stricker in the final round of this one.
"I think anybody's got a chance that's within a couple," de Jonge said. "Obviously you're going to have to play a good round of golf. But yeah, I think everybody feels like they've got a chance."
Reavie looked positively Stricker-like while shooting a 62 on Friday, but the putting stroke that made him so effective in that round deserted him. He played the front nine at 1 over before scrambling back with consecutive birdies on 13, 14 and 15.
Steve Marino had an even tougher day after starting just two off the lead. Playing with Reavie in the final twosome, Marino missed a couple of makeable birdie putts early, then had three bogeys in a four-hole stretch late in the round to finish with a 2-over 73 that left him 10 under for the tournament.

Bubba Watson misses cut at Alstom French Open, blames distracting French fans

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After two straight 74s in Paris, Bubba Watson was 16 shots behind 36-hole leader James Morrison and heading for home.
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By 
PA Sport and Associated Press 

Series: European Tour
Bubba Watson missed the cut Friday at the European Tour’s Alstom French Open, suggesting fan behavior and poor security contributed to his disappointing performance.
Watson shot a 3-over 74 in the second round for a 6-over 148 total on the Albatross Course at Le Golf National, where the 2018 Ryder Cup will be played, and was 16 shots behind 36-hole leader James Morrison.
“It’s not a normal tournament,” Watson said. “There’s cameras, there’s phones, there’s everything. There’s no security. I don’t know which holes to walk through. There’s no ropes.”
Watson has won two titles this year but this was his first appearance in Europe. He was apparently affected by the permissive culture in France that allows spectators to snap photos and record videos during play.
“I’m not used to that,” Watson said. “I’m not saying it’s bad. It’s just something I’m not used to, I’m not comfortable with. It’s very strange to me. Just very uncomfortable.”
The American lefty complained that the rules were not respected by the fans.
“Every tee says ‘no phones, no video cameras’ and on every tee there’s hundreds,” Watson said.
Tournament Director David Probyn was disappointed for Watson but hopes that he will come back, saying the player would be welcome.
“It’s a shame Bubba has felt that way,” Probyn said. “I’m absolutely sure that other players have been put off by it … but I haven’t had any other complaint this week.”
Probyn disagreed with Watson’s comments on security issues. However, he acknowledged the culture on the European Tour was different from its American counterpart.
“Every fairway is roped. We’ve got marshals on every hole,” Probyn said. “It’s probably true to say that we do not use professional security in the same way as they do on the PGA Tour.”
He also said the European Tour was trying to adapt to spectators using mobile phones and other gadgets on a daily basis.
“It’s kind of reality wherever you go,” he added. “It is then about educating people. How to use them and where to use them, and that’s something that you’ll see changing over the short to middle term.”
Watson said he came to Europe to experience a new culture.
“The reason to come over here was just to experience it,” Watson said this week before the start of the tournament. “I’ve played on the U.S. Tour the whole time and just wanted to come over here, just to experience a different culture, a different life, a different golf, a different atmosphere.”
But soon Watson felt homesick after carding a 3-over 74 in the first round.
“I miss my home,” Watson said Thursday.
Some of the most famous landmarks in the world apparently didn’t stick with him after touring Paris on Tuesday.
“I don’t know the names of all the things, the big tower, Eiffel Tower, an arch (Arc de Triomphe), whatever I rode around in a circle,” he said. “And then what’s that -- it starts with an ‘L’ -- Louvre, something like that. One of those.”
After saying it might be his last time playing in Europe, Watson said he would play the British Open in two weeks. He wasn’t sure if he would fulfill his commitment to play the Scandinavian Masters in Sweden.
“I’ll play the British Open because it’s a major, that’s the only reason,” Watson said. “I’m going to go sightseeing real quick and then probably sightsee tomorrow (and) get home as fast as possible.”
At the top of the leaderboard, Morrison of England shot a 5-under 66 Friday to take a one-shot lead.
Richard Green of Australia had a 68 to slip into second place. Mark Foster shot a bogey-free 68 to move to third, four strokes behind Morrison’s total of 132.
Along with Watson, Peter Hanson (147), Francesco Molinari (149), Pablo Larrazabal (149) and defending champion Miguel Angel Jimenez (150) were among the players who failed to make the cut.
Morrison made par on his first 10 holes before a string of five birdies in seven holes to move four strokes ahead of overnight leaders Green and Graeme Storm. Green made three consecutive birdies on his back nine to overtake Morrison, but a double bogey on the seventh hole cost him the lead.
Martin Kaymer of Germany stayed in contention with a 69 for a share of 14th place. The 2009 winner had six birdies but also dropped four shots.
Jimenez had a nightmarish round despite an eagle and a birdie, making a quadruple bogey on No. 13 and six bogeys.
Morrison leads two days after he nearly pulled out because of illness. The 26-year-old has suffered from Crohn's Disease -- an intestinal inflammation -- for the past decade and it flared up again at the start of the week.
"I almost drove home Wednesday morning, but I've had some steroids and it's calming me down," Morrison said.
"It's something I've been used to dealing with on a daily basis," he added. "I'm feeling a little bit drained, but I play better with that because I don't have expectations. I feel a bit worse for wear and just stroll through the day."
Morrison had missed his last four cuts and last July crashed out by eight shots here, but covered the front nine in a 5-under 31 to take over at the top.
Joint overnight leader Green then reached 11 under, but a double-bogey 6 on the seventh meant they swapped places again. Storm, the other player to start with a 65, came to grief with a quadruple-bogey 8 on the 18th, hitting two balls into the lake short of the green.