2014年3月5日星期三

Bill Glasson Dan Forsman lead FRed Funk by one after Round 1 at Regions Tradition

Bill Glasson at the Regions Tradition
Getty Images
Bill Glasson was in the first group teeing off Thursday at the Regions Tradition and had sole possession of the lead for about four hours.
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By 
John Zenor
Associated Press

Series: Champions Tour
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Bill Glasson swiftly polished off his round at Shoal Creek, finishing before lunchtime and leaving the rest of the Regions Tradition field chasing.
Dan Forsman didn't catch up until about four hours later Thursday when he completed a run of four straight birdies at No. 14.
Forsman and Glasson shared the first-round lead at 6-under 66 in the Regions Tradition, the second of the Champions Tour's five major championships.
Glasson and Fulton Allem were first on the course and done by 11:00 a.m., finishing up in 3 hours, 21 minutes. The solo lead held up longer than that, though Glasson might not have noticed because he said he wouldn't spend the afternoon monitoring the scoreboard.
"My philosophy is I need all the birdies to make up for the impending bogeys I'm going to make," he said. "So it doesn't do any good for me to watch. I just need to make as many birdies as I can.
"This course will get you, there's no doubt about it. It's about one of the best courses in the country."
Glasson has overcome tougher obstacles. He has undergone 25 surgeries, including back and neck fusions. This is the first time he's held at least a share of the lead since the 1997 Las Vegas Invitational, where he claimed the last of his seven PGA Tour titles.
Fred Funk was a stroke back, and Bernard Langer opened with a 68. Glasson, Forsman and Funk all had their sons working as caddies.
Forsman, who missed the cut at the Senior PGA two weeks ago, set the stage by asking son Tommy for a driver on the first tee, instead of playing it more conservatively with a 3-wood.
"A lot of times on a course like this you say, `I'm not going to play a Mickey Mouse game,'" Forsman said. "It may be futile, who knows? It worked in this case.
"That kind of set the tone that I was going to be aggressive on the course today."
His run of birdies came after a marshal found the glove he had lost on the 10th hole. Coincidence? Maybe not.
"The marshal came up to me and said, `Did you lose a glove on the fairway back there?'" said Forsman, who won the opener at Hualalai. "I said, `Oh gosh.' So I put it back on and went out and birdied the next four holes. So I guess the glove I received from my walking scorer on the 11th tee is the reason I had those four birdies, so I have to lift my cap and say thank you to him."
Glasson closed his bogey-free round with a pair of birdies in a strong rebound from a 75th-place finish last week in Iowa in the Principal Charity Classic.
"That was a miserable experience," said Glasson, who tied for 58th last year at Shoal Creek. He knocked 11 strokes off that opening-round performance.
The 20-foot birdie putt from the right side on the par-4 12th hole was especially cathartic. "I don't think I've ever parred it, let alone made a birdie," Glasson said.
He and Allem even beat most of the fans out there, finishing the round with about 20 people in the gallery, including a few wearing volunteers' polo shirts.
Defending champion Tom Lehman had an up-and-down 69. He had seven birdies but hit into the water on No. 9 for double bogey and had two bogeys.
Lehman thought some low rounds might be in the works when he saw Glasson's score.
"I looked at the board at one point and there was a 6 ... a 4, a bunch of 3s," Lehman said. "So you think the course is giving up some birdies, so be aggressive.
"When you see that, up by 3, it makes me happy that it's a four-round tournament. In the three-rounders, getting off to a fast start is really, really important."

2014年2月11日星期二

8/1 Notebook



Posted Aug 1, 2008

By Mike Duffy



Mark Clayton would like to put his third season with the Ravens behind him. The fourth could be a breakout.


Many NFL insiders consider a receiver’s third year to be special, the one where a player’s talents really blossom.

Mark Clayton would like a mulligan on his.

Following a promising start to his career after the Ravens made him the 22nd-overall selection in the 2005 draft, Clayton relapsed in his third campaign.

The wideout went from catching 67 passes for 939 yards and five touchdowns in 2006 to only 48 receptions for 531 yards last year, never finding the end zone once.

Clayton may be soft-spoken, but he is a fiery competitor despite the bright smile usually seen behind his facemask. He knows that such paltry numbers are not up to snuff for a former first-round pick.

Clayton also views his fourth season as a chance to start over and prove that 2007 was a fluke.

“The way [2007] happened is not the way that I envisioned it, but it’s just about being confident and knowing that they brought me here for a reason,” he said. “I know that I’m not here for no reason. I’m here to be great. I’m just waiting on the opportunity, and when the opportunity presents itself, I have to take advantage.”

Injuries derailed part of Clayton’s junior effort. He began the season with a painful sprained ankle in the preseason against the New York Giants, which hindered him throughout much of the year.

Then, he hurt a toe in the opener at Cincinnati, followed by an Achilles injury weeks later.

Clayton may have played in all 16 games (12 starts), but he certainly didn’t feel 100 percent.

“I think injuries deal with mental toughness,” Clayton explained. “We’re all competitors, and you get injured and you still want to play. I know I don’t like watching. That’s no fun. I’m sure any of the other guys would say the same.

“You tell yourself that you can go, and you only can’t go when you really can’t go. But if you can’t, you push through it, and that deals with mental toughness.”

The Ravens actually bumped Clayton from the first-string in offseason minicamps in favor of Demetrius Williams, but a left leg injury has kept Williams on the sideline.

Clayton hopes to make the case that he still belongs with the starters when the Ravens open their season against the Bengals Sept. 7. At the midpoint of training camp, Clayton already looks more confident, with sticky hands that have done a solid job of hauling in footballs from one of Baltimore’s three quarterbacks.

“Knowing that I’m capable, I know how to make plays,” he stated. “When the offense is flat, [I have to] do something to get everybody up and going, offensively and defensively. Just having that confidence in learning more in the offense – especially having [Derrick] Mason there with his wisdom and everything – it’s just about going out, having fun, making plays and making sure everybody else is, too.”

A new coaching staff in Baltimore brings a new offense that suits the speedy 5-foot-10 Clayton. Offensive coordinator Cam Cameron makes the unit adhere strictly to a 40-second play clock, which ups the tempo for everyone on the field.

“We’re fast-break. We are up and down,” Clayton affirmed. “It’s all about tempo and being one play ahead at all times. Whatever happened on the last one, let it go, let’s go and get in your zone as soon as possible.”

And after his touchdown drought of 2007, Clayton has one zone specifically on his mind – the end zone.

Here are some more notes and observations from Friday’s practices, the second of which was a special teams session:


Running back Allen Patrick and defensive tackle J’Vonne Parker both returned to the field after missing Thursday, but the Ravens still missed a number of other players.

The injured list includes:

Wideouts Demetrius Williams (leg) and Patrick Carter (shoulder); running backs PJ Daniels (undisclosed) and Cory Ross (undisclosed); fullback Justin Green (leg), linebackers Dan Cody (leg) and linebacker Gary Stills (undisclosed); tackles Oniel Cousins (knee), Joe Reitz (shoulder), Jared Gaither (ankle) and Adam Terry (ankle); tight ends Aaron Walker (undisclosed) and Daniel Wilcox (foot); and defensive linemenHaloti Ngata (MCL sprain), Justin Bannan (undisclosed) and Kelly Gregg (undisclosed).
The Ravens also only had two quarterbacks for much of practice, as Troy Smith was about one hour late due to a random drug test mandated by the league. Head coach John Harbaugh revealed that the reason Smith was late was because he needed extra time to provide a sample for the testers.

“There’s an issue – we’ve had this happen three or four times at camp – with the new drug testing policy that’s in place,” Harbaugh said. “It’s very strict, very stringent, and they have to get the drug test done before they can come out and practice in the morning or they can’t get it done. Sometimes it takes guys a little longer to get it done, and it took Troy a while today to get that taken care of.”
Linebacker Ray Lewis had a big day, picking off two Kyle Boller passes, including one in the end zone. No. 52 also stripped running back Ray Rice when the rookie caught a pass. Cornerback Frank Walker picked up the ball and raced the other way to the end zone.
Rice was less-than-stellar in catching punts, something he has excelled in through much of camp. Rice dropped two punts in the morning session and then another in the afternoon.
Joe Flacco got rid of the ball quickly on a day when the pocket collapsed fairly regularly. Harbaugh had previously pointed out Flacco’s need to speed up how long he holds the football. The rookie signal-caller also displayed nifty feet on a naked bootleg to the left.
The Ravens operated a no-huddle offense for the first time Friday, with Smith at the helm. Harbaugh said he was encouraged by the way his team improved throughout the day.

“That was really well orchestrated, and I thought it was handled well,” he stated. “It was interesting – we had some bad formations early, we jumped off-sides on defense a couple times early in the blitz drill, but we sorted that out as practice went on, and guys did a much better job later on in practice.”
In need of depth at running back to ease the burden on Ray Rice (who is getting most of the carries as Willis McGahee nurses a sore knee), Baltimore signed Alex Haynes, who was at Ravens camp in 2005. Cornerback Anwar Phillips was waived to clear a roster spot.

Haynes spent the last three years with the Carolina Panthers.

For Saturday: The Ravens will mark the halfway point of training camp with 8:45 a.m. and 2:45 p.m. practices. Fans, please note that linebackers, tight ends, running backs, safeties and kickers will be the only position groups to sign autographs Saturday, due to scheduled weight lifting for the other positions.

2014年1月23日星期四

遼、2イーグルで決勝R進出!順位は34位に後退/米男子



サンケイスポーツ 1月20日(月)7時0分配信


 ヒューマナ・チャレンジ第3日(18日、米カリフォルニア州ラキンタ、PGAウェスト・パーマーコースなど3コース)3コースで行われ、22位から出た石川遼(22)=CASIO=はニクラウスCを2イーグル、5バーディー、4ボギー、1ダブルボギーの3アンダー、69で回り、通算12アンダーの34位で最終日の決勝ラウンドに進んだ。3日連続63を出したパトリック・リード(23)=米国=が54ホールのツアー記録となる通算27アンダーとし、単独首位をキープ。今大会は予選3ラウンドで3コースをアマチュアとともにプレー。70位までの84人が決勝ラウンドへ進んだ。

 4、13番の2つのパー5をともに2オンのイーグル。会心のショットとパットも出る一方で、11番(パー3)では第1打をバンカーに入れるなどしてダブルボギー。他にも4ボギーと石川は乗り切れず、順位を下げた。

 「途中からショットがぶれてしまって、ちょっと納得いかない」

 予選3日間はアマも一緒に回る変則方式で、設定が甘めの大会。爆発的なスコアを出す上位陣に離された。それでも「1日4アンダーが目標なので、3日で12アンダーなら最低限のラウンドはできている」と石川。昨年はこの大会をシーズン初戦としたが予選落ち。そのまま3戦連続予選落ちなど不振に陥ったのと比べれば、悪くない。

 最終日は初日に66で回ったパーマーCでのラウンド。「パットのストロークはよくなっている。少しでも順位を上げたい」と意気込んだ。