Tag Archives: golf

Great Golf Apps: Number 4

Welcome to part four of my look at the greatest Golf Apps currently available.

Now you can have a Stimpmeter — that angled track that releases a golf ball at a known velocity so that the distance it rolls on a green’s surface can be measured — at the touch of your fingers.

Using an accelerometer and complex algorithms to work out the stimp reading, iStimp can compare the speed of the greens on a new course with your home course to improve your putting, or use it to compare different greens on the course to check the consistency.

You also can store stimp readings to review at a later time. Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.

 

Great Golf Apps: Number 3

Welcome to the third part of my feature on the best apps out there for golfers.

Today I’m looking at SwingPlane, which captures video using the built in video camera on your device. You can easily analyze your swing with its playback and drawing tools, allowing you to see if your swing is on plane, check your set up angles and monitor head movement, shoulders dipping, etc.

SwingPlaneSample videos of Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els and others are included. Additional purchases of videos featuring Woods, Phil Mickelson, Rory McIlroy, Lee Westwood and others are available.

Frame by frame advance and rewind is available, as well as slow-motion playback and repeat playback. You can export videos to Facebook, Twitter or email.

Available for the iPhone at the App Store.

Donald Is World Number One After PGA Win

Luke Donald beat Lee Westwood in a play-off to win the PGA Championship at Wentworth and overtake him as the world number one.

Donald won at the first play-off hole when Westwood found the water in front of the 18th green.

Donald hit 70 to Westwood’s 68 to tie on six under, while Englishman Simon Dyson (69) was third at four under.

On climbing one spot to the top of the rankings, England’s Donald said: “Sounds pretty good, doesn’t it?”

The American-based golfer added: “It’s something I’ll be very proud of. Obviously, there’s a lot of work still to do and hopefully there’ll be much more to come, but I’ll savour this.

“It’s a lot of responsibility and I’m looking forward to the challenge of being number one and hopefully I can hold onto it for a few more weeks. I know Lee and Martin [Kaymer] will be chasing me hard.

“To come through in these circumstances in one of the biggest tournaments in the world, going head-to-head with Lee is pretty special. It doesn’t get much better.

“To win here with the top three in the world, top six out of seven, all of the Ryder Cuppers, all four major champions, and to beat them in stroke play feels pretty good.”

 

Donald Looks To Claim Number One Slot Back From Westwood

Luke Donald has another opportunity to claim the world number one slot from Lee Westwood at the World Match Play Championship in Marbella, which started earlier on today.

Westwood leads the field for the new format, with 24 players in eight groups of three and the top two progressing to the knock-out phase which will take place across the weekend.

Should Donald win, he will become the first player to win two match play titles on both sides of the Atlantic.

“I enjoy the challenge of one against one over 18 holes,” he said.

Donald beat Martin Kaymer in the final of the WGC-Accenture Match Play in February and has since been in decent form.

The Englishman has made 12 top-10 finishes in his previous 13 tournaments, surging up the world rankings to second behind Ryder Cup team-mate Lee Westwood, who goes into the tournament at the Finca Cortesin course on the back of successive titles in Indonesia and Korea.

The match play event is returning to the European Tour after a 12-month absence.

“I think my records in the Ryder Cup, Walker Cup, the Match Play this year speak for themselves,” said Donald.

Westwood is in fine form himself,  after winning the recent Ballantine’s Championship.

“We play a lot of individual stroke play and match play is a different feel and mindset. It’s certainly nice to break it up.”

World number one Westwood will be up against Dane Anders Hansen and Australian Aaron Baddeley, while Donald faces holder Ross Fisher and Ryan Moore.

You can keep up with all the latest scores by clicking here.

25 Outrageous Putts

Good morning and I hope you had a great long weekend – there was certainly plenty of stuff in the news to keep you occupied, as well as the lovely weather too!

To ease you back into the week, I’ve found this great article: it’s a slideshow of 25 of the best (and worst!) putts of all time…

You can view it by clicking on the link below – enjoy 🙂

http://bleacherreport.com/articles/686017-tiger-woods-and-the-25-most-ridiculous-putts-in-golf-history

Lee Westwood drops shots at Ballantine’s Championship

(from BBC.co.uk)

World number one Lee Westwood had a costly finish to his opening round at the Ballantine’s Championship in Icheon, South Korea.

The 38-year-old, who regained his top spot after winning the Indonesian Masters last week, dropped three strokes in his final three holes.

It resulted in a level par round of 72 and left him six shots behind first-day leader, Irishman Damien McGrane.

McGrane had four birdies on each nine to lead a group of three by one shot.

“I putted well and I had good pace on my putts which is important to me,” said 40-year-old McGrane, whose victory in the China Open in 2008 remains his only European Tour title to date.

Westwood began his first round at the Blackstone Golf Club from the 10th tee and was progressing smoothly at three under when he took four at the 238-yard par-three seventh, finding a greenside trap after being distracted mid-swing by a camera in the gallery.

Worse followed at the ninth, a 425-yard par four, when he made a six after pulling his tee shot.

“I’m still in contention,” he said. “On the first 15 holes I played very nicely and gave myself a lot of chances without really making any putts.”

Ian Poulter also started from the 10th and began in atrocious fashion with consecutive double bogeys.

The world number 17 also collected an eagle at the first before dropping a shot at the next in a 74.

Englishman Richard Finch, the world number 226 who carded a 64 in the final round to finish 10th at the recent China Open, shares second after a bogey-free 67.

The 33-year-old, who won the 2008 Irish Open, is a shot clear of Scotsman Richie Ramsay, who had a mixture of four birdies and two bogeys in six holes on his front nine.

Miguel Angel Jimenez missed a three foot eagle chance and returned a 70, while Ernie Els, now ranked 15th, began quietly with a 73.

Leaderboard:

http://www.europeantour.com/europeantour/season=2011/tournamentid=2011025/leaderboard/index.html?showLeaderboard=Y

My Tips For The Masters

So with The Masters starting tomorrow, a lot of golf fans will be getting ready to place their bets, and use their golfing knowledge to try and take a few quid off the bookies over the weekend!

I have placed bets on this famous tournament for the last few years (with varying results!) and these are my tips for this year.

I’ve gone for Phil Mickelson as my tip to win. He has had three top ten finishes out of eight events so far this season  and has won the tournament on three previous occasions, including last year when his winning score of -16 was one of the best Masters scores ever recorded. He will also be looking to equal the records of Arnold Palmer and Tiger Woods, who have each won the tournament on four occasions. He is the favourite at 6/1, displacing Tiger,  who has been favourite every year for as long as I can remember!

You can see some press conference coverage of both Phil and Tiger by clicking here.

I also like the look of the American, Matt Kuchar. He is having a solid enough season and is great value at 33/1.

I have also backed the following players each way – Luke Donald (25/1), Hunter Mahan (28/1), Ricky Fowler (66/1), Brandt Snedeker (125/1), and Bo Van Pelt (175/1) so if a couple of those players can finish in the top five places I’ll be very happy…

Let me know who your money is on…

(All odds quoted are from www.bet365.com)

Mickelson Seals Houston Open Title

(From bbc.co.uk)

Defending Masters champion Phil Mickelson sent a warning of intent ahead of next week’s Major with a three-shot victory at the Houston Open.

The left-hander carded a final-round, seven-under 65 to finish on -20, with US compatriot Scott Verplank and rookie Chris Kirk in joint second.

Joint overnight leader Mickelson put aside two early bogeys with five birdies on the back nine.

The victory moves Mickelson to third in the world rankings above Tiger Woods.

Houston Open Final Round Leaderboard:

  • -20: P Mickelson (US),
  • -17: S Verplank (US), C Kirk (US)
  • -13: S Stricker (US), A Baddeley (AUs)
  • -12: R Allenby (Aus), D Hearn (Can)
  • Selected others: -11:P Harrington (Ire)
  • -6: L Westwood (Eng)
  • -3: B Davis (Eng)

Please click here for the full article.

 

Tiger Lags in a Movement He Helped Create

When Tiger Woods smashes one off the tee at Bay Hill on Thursday — gets every bit of the club face on the golf ball — chances are he will not be strutting out to the longest drive in the fairway. In fact, he may not be walking to the second longest.

“I’ll be the Corey Pavin of my group,” Woods said, laughing about what it will be like to be paired with two of the game’s longest hitters, Gary Woodland, 26, and Dustin Johnson, 26, for the first two rounds of the Arnold Palmer Invitational.

“Seriously, I’ll just kind of put it out there in play and put it up on the green and try and make putts,” Woods added. “Those guys will be bombing it way out there past me.”

This is the new reality on the PGA Tour. Gone are the days when Woods could shift into overdrive and, on command, blow a tee shot past his fellow competitors. Gone are the days when Woods made seemingly every important putt he looked at. And though he had only one three-putt green at the W.G.C.-Cadillac Championship outside Miami, Woods has not putted well this year and is ranked 101st on tour.

The tournament host, Arnold Palmer, 81, said all good players reach the point where “all of a sudden, once in a while, the bounces go the wrong way or the putts rim around the cup rather than going in the cup.”

Please click here to read the full article.

LPGA’s Japanese Golfers Helping Raise Money And Hope

Ai Miyazato, Mika Miyazato (no relation) and Momoko Ueda are Japanese natives playing golf this week at the LPGA Kia Classic at the Industry Hills Golf Club in the City of Industry. They have a job to do, playing golf, and so they are trying to keep their attention focused on the course even as they check the Internet constantly for news from home about earthquakes and the tsunami.

Ai Miyazato went to high school near Sendai, the Japanese city hit hardest by the tsunami. Ueda said she was in Tokyo on a freeway. “I literally felt the ground shake,” she said. Mika Miyazato said that as she saw the tragedies unfold she wanted to do something for the country and discussed with Ai  Miyazato and Ueda what they could do.

The three helped design a special logo that is on their golf hats. It is in Japanese and Ai Miyazato said it means “Never give up.” There is also a Facebook page, and the three are asking other players to put the special logo on caps.

Please click here for the full article.