Friday, March 7, 2014

McIlroy still friends with McDowell despite leaving to form own company

Rory McIlroy at the BMW PGA Championship
Getty Images
Rory McIlroy, at the BMW PGA Championship, said, ''I'm great friends with Graeme McDowell]. He's been like a big brother to me on tour."
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By 
Associated Press 

Series: European Tour
VIRGINIA WATER, England -- Rory McIlroy has dispelled any split in his relationship with longtime friend Graeme McDowell.
McDowell confirmed that McIlroy will be leaving Dublin-based Horizon Sports Management after only 18 months, though neither McIlroy nor Conor Ridge at Horizon have commented on the split.
When asked about his management Tuesday at Wentworth, McIlroy said, ''Go ask GMac. He knows more than me.''
The two U.S. Open champions from Northern Ireland will be in the same group for the opening two rounds of the BMW PGA Championship, which starts Thursday.
''I know what I said yesterday and I guess at the time I meant that but it is what it is and it's water under the bridge and away we go,'' McIlroy said. ''I spoke to Graeme yesterday afternoon, and when we got back to the hotel we had a chat. Everything's good. So there won't be any quid pro quo at the wrong time the next few days or any stuff like that.
''I'm great friends with Graeme. He's been like a big brother to me on tour,'' McIlroy said. ''I remember playing a practice rounds with him at the Dunhill Links back in 2007 when I got my card. He really showed me the ropes out here for a couple of years, and it's great to have good friends on tour and he's somebody I consider a very good friend.''
Meanwhile, McIlroy remained mum on leaving Horizon, saying only that ''I can't comment.'' Asked if it was because of his contract with Horizon, McIlroy replied, ''Could be.''
McIlroy already has had a rough year. He missed the cut in Abu Dhabi, lost in the opening round of the Match Play Championship and walked out of the second round at the Honda Classic out of frustration. His game is slowly turning around, though he has yet to win this year and has been replaced at No. 1 by Tiger Woods.
The 24-year-old McIlroy said he doesn't consider his management issues to be a distraction with the next major only three weeks away.
''Not at all,'' he said. ''Once I get on that first tee, my mind is focused on shooting the best score possible and that has not changed and that will never change.''

Thursday, December 26, 2013

Stenson selected European golfer of year

Stenson selected European golfer of year

AP - Sports
Stenson selected European golfer of year
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FILE - In this Nov. 17, 2013, file photo, Henrik Stenson from Sweden celebrates after winning the DP World Golf Championship, in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. Stenson is now in South Africa to play in the Nedbank Golf Challenge starting Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)
LONDON (AP) -- Henrik Stenson has been selected European golfer of the year after winning the money title and the U.S. PGA Tour's FedEx Cup.
The 37-year-old Stenson, who succeeded Rory McIlroy, is the first player from Sweden to win the award.
In addition to his six-shot victory in the season-ending World Tour Championship to clinch the Race to Dubai, Stenson also won the Deutsche Bank Championship and the Tour Championship in Atlanta to seal the FedEx Cup.
Another highlight was his third in the U.S. PGA Championship.
Stenson's most consistent year started at the end of last season, when he won the South African championship.
He says the latest honor reflected ''the stellar year I have had. You can call it a dream season, year of my life, whatever you want.''

The defining shots of the major champions

The defining shots of the major champions

AP - Sports
The putt that Adam Scott thinks about most wasn't the one that won him the Masters. The best shot Justin Rose hit at the U.S. Open didn't even stay on the green.
The majors were filled with great shots, even if they didn't produce the obvious outcome.
Scott's putt on the 18th at Augusta National ultimately got him into a playoff when Angel Cabrera answered with a great birdie of his own. Rose's 4-iron into the 18th at Merion ran off the back of the green into a collar. It was a relatively simple up-and-down from there, though such a great shot deserved better.
Every major has a signature shot. Some are easier to define than others.
And with every major champion, there is another shot that is just as pleasing to them, even if it doesn't get as much attention:
THE MASTERS
The putt that made Scott the first Australian in a green jacket was a 12-footer for birdie on the second playoff hole at No. 10. Scott, however, believes the defining moment of this Masters was the 20-foot birdie putt he made on the 18th in regulation.
Adding to the significance of the putt was his reaction. Scott, the image of GQ, transformed into WWF as he screamed with all his might, ''C'mon, Aussie!''
''No matter what I do in my career from now on, I think it's going to be the one I'm remembered for,'' Scott said. ''Even if I do happen to win other big tournaments or majors, it might not quite be everything that Augusta was.
''There's no doubt, as I look back in my career, that's going to be the one moment I'll think of first as a far as a signature moment.''
He won't forget the 6-iron, either, as good as any shot he struck all week.
On the second playoff hole, Scott had 191 yards from a hook lie in the 10th fairway. Cabrera already was on the green with a reasonable look at birdie.
''I didn't want to sling a 7-iron in there,'' Scott said. ''It wasn't the right shot. The atmosphere was heavy and I was jacked up, but I had to hold a 6-iron. Somehow, I managed to hit such a beautiful shot. If you asked me to do it right now, I couldn't. But I had it at that moment. Absolutely, it's the best shot of my life right now.''
U.S. OPEN
Rose had a one-shot lead on the 18th hole at Merion. He was 229 yards from the pin, and just 15 feet behind the plaque that commemorates Hogan's 1-iron into the 18th during his 1950 U.S. Open victory. While it was not as historic as Hogan's moment, it was the signature shot of his first major.
''It has to be the 4-iron into 18, given the poignancy of the hole, the iconic photograph we've all grown up with and the 18th hole of a major,'' Rose said. ''That was the one that put it away.''
Adding to the pressure was the wait. Luke Donald was taking a penalty drop, leaving more time for Rose to contemplate the consequences of the shot.
''I appreciated the situation I was in and relished it,'' Rose said. ''And luckily, the shot came off. I drilled it. It came off perfectly.''
He believes the 18th hole played a big role earlier in the week. Rain kept the second round from being completed on Friday, and Rose was in the last group that managed to finish without having to return Saturday morning. He watched Phil Mickelson ahead of him make birdie to share the 36-hole lead. Rose missed the fairway, hacked it out of rough and had 115 yards to a pin that was just over the false front, a shot that required close to perfection.
He delivered, hitting wedge to 7 feet.
''It was pretty dark by this time,'' he said. ''But I wanted to hit the putt. Even if I missed, the advantage was there to sleep in. It was a slippery, downhill, left-to-righter for a 69 to stay even par. From a momentum point of view, just finishing and giving myself time in bed for the rhythm of the week ... that was big.''
BRITISH OPEN
Mickelson didn't hesitate when asked for the signature shot of his British Open victory - the 3-wood on the par-5 17th that set up a two-putt birdie.
''Very simply put, there was no margin for error,'' he said. ''If I miss it a little bit to the right, it goes in a bunker and I have a very difficult par. I have to go out sideways and try to get up-and-down for par. If I miss it left, it's the worst rough on the golf course and I could lose my ball or have an unplayable lie. But if I hit it perfectly, there's a good chance I could have a two-putt birdie. And that's what happened.
''I hit it dead perfect at the time I needed it most,'' he said. ''If I made birdie, I felt like I would win.''
Mickelson's closing 66 at Muirfield is considered the best round of the year, and one of the best final rounds in any major. He made birdie on four of the last six holes. As much attention as that 3-wood receives, Lefty was equally pleased with a 5-iron into 8 feet for birdie that started his big run.
It was on the 13th hole, 190 yards and dead into a strong wind to a narrow green.
''If you miss it at all, the ball gets blown off sideways, and you saw it with just about every player behind me,'' Mickelson said. ''I hit it so solid and perfect through the wind the ball just soared. It was the prettiest shot.''
PGA CHAMPIONSHIP
Jason Dufner had a two-shot lead with three holes to play. Leads like that can disappear quickly at a major, especially with the tough, two closing holes at Oak Hill.
Jim Furyk hit his approach to 10 feet on the 16th, easily birdie range. Dufner followed with a sand wedge from 105 yards that spun back to a foot, which stands out as his signature moment at the PGA Championship (though a case could be made for the love tap he gave his wife when it was over).
''I was trying to take it a little bit past the pin on the right,'' Dufner said. ''Obviously, with a wedge in hand, I was thinking it could be a makeable birdie effort. Inside a foot is great for me because I struggle with the putter.''
Not so obvious - except to Dufner - was how he played the par-3 11th hole for the week. At 226 yards, it was the sixth-toughest hole at Oak Hill. Dufner never had a birdie putt outside 20 feet in all four rounds, and he played the hole in 1-under par for the week.
''It was one of the tougher holes, and I made it easy for me,'' he said. ''The 16th is the shot people are going to remember. The one people will forget about is to play that hole (No. 11) in 1 under and never sweat a bogey. That's a pretty good deal.''

YEARENDER-Sporting breakthroughs of 2013

YEARENDER-Sporting breakthroughs of 2013

Reuters 
Dec 18 (Reuters) - The top 10 sporting breakthroughs in 2013:
1. Marc Marquez, MotoGP champion
The 20-year-old Spanish rookie became the youngest MotoGP champion when he held his nerve to finish third in the final race of the season in Valencia to pip holder Jorge Lorenzo to the title.
Six race wins, nine poles and 16 podiums made him the second rookie to win the Premier Class in motorbike racing, among a plethora of records he set.
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2. Brianna Rollins, 100 metres hurdles world champion
The American turned heads when she clocked the fourth fastest time ever for the 100 metres hurdles at the world championship trials in June, shortly after turning professional.
She showed that was no fluke by taking world championship gold in Moscow one day before her 22nd birthday, pushing holder Sally Pearson of Australia into second place.
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3. Paul George, NBA's Most Improved Player
The Indiana Pacers surprised many in the NBA by reaching the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in nine years in May with Paul George at centre stage.
Having lost forward Danny Granger to injury for the entire campaign, George stepped up and averaged a career-high 17.4 points, 7.6 rebounds and 4.1 assists per game in the 2012-13 season.
His duels with Miami's LeBron James in the Finals were a particular highlight.
George won the NBA's Most Improved Player award, was handed a first All-Star selection and has continued that sterling work at the start of an impressive 2013-14 campaign.
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4. Gibraltar becomes UEFA member
The rocky territory became UEFA's 54th member association in May and its national team held Slovakia to a creditable 0-0 draw in a November friendly.
Gibraltar had gone through a bitter 14-year court marathon against Spain's objections to their footballing ambitions.
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5. Scott ends long Australian wait for Green Jacket
Australia has produced numerous great golfers but none tasted success in the U.S. Masters at Augusta untilAdam Scott this year.
After eight runner-up finishes by his fellow countrymen, three achieved by Greg Norman, Scott finally ended the wait for a prized Green Jacket by overcomming Argentine Angel Cabrera in a playoff in April when he sunk a 15-foot putt on the second extra hole.
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6. Jose Fernandez, National League Rookie of the Year
The Cuban pitcher made an unexpected jump from the minor leagues to the Miami Marlins ballpen at the start of the season and the rookie tossed up some special numbers for a struggling team.
Fernandez posted a 12-6 record and his 2.19 earned run average was second in the National League behindLos Angeles Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw's 1.83.
The Marlins right-hander was also one of the finalists for the National League Cy Young Award.
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7. Nairo Quintana, second place at the Tour de France
The Colombian was asked by Movistar to help team leader Alejandro Valverde finish on the podium at the Tour de France in July but the young rookie was quickly promoted when his Spanish colleague fell off the pace.
The 23-year-old rode a brilliant race to finish second overall and also claim the white and polka-dot jerseys for the top young rider and the best climber.
Quintana's performance in the three-week race, during which he also won a stage, marked him out as a future winner of cycling's grandest prize.
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8. Chinese golf
Long earmarked as the production line for the next generation of major winners, the first seeds of China's development work in golf appeared in 2013.
Guan Tianling, earning praise from the great Tiger Woods among others, was the talk of Augusta in April when the 14-year-old become the youngest competitor at the U.S. Masters and made the cut to the amazement of most.
In May, 12-year-old compatriot Ye Wocheng became the youngest player to take part in a European Tour event when he competed at the Volvo China Open.
The U.S. PGA Tour announced last month they would be launching a new developmental circuit in China next year to build on the breakthroughs.
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9. Israel Folau ties Australian rugby try-scoring record
A series defeat by the British and Irish Lions, three defeats by New Zealand and two by South Africa left Australian rugby at a low ebb in 2013 but they managed to unearth an attacking gem in rugby league convert Israel Folau.
The former Australia Rules player had featured in only 14 matches for his club New South Wales Waratahs when he was handed his Wallabies debut in the first test against the Lions and he marked the occasion with two tries.
Eight more tries followed as the devastating 24-year-old runner equalled former Australia winger Lote Tuqiri's record of 10 test touchdowns in a season.
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10. Los Angeles Dodgers rookie outfielder Yasiel Puig
When Puig was promoted to the big leagues the Dodgers were last in the National League West Division with a 23-32 record, 7-1/2 games behind first place.
After his arrival the 23-year-old Cuban defector took baseball by storm and was largely credited with the team's turnaround.
With Puig in the lineup the Dodgers were 66-38 in the 104 games in which he took part and went on to win the division crown, 11 games ahead of their closest pursuers.
His arrival sparked record-breaking demand for his merchandise. (Writing by Patrick Johnston; editing by Tony Jimenez)

YEARENDER-Sporting comebacks of 2013

YEARENDER-Sporting comebacks of 2013

Reuters 
Dec 18 (Reuters) - Great sporting comebacks of 2013
1. Oracle Team USA's comeback to win the America's Cup
Few challenges can have seemed as hopeless as that facing Larry Ellison's Team USA when trailing Emirates Team New Zealand 8-1 in the best-of-17 series in San Francisco Bay in September.
The Jimmy Spithill-skippered Team USA kept their heads, however, and after replacing their tactician with Olympic champion Ben Ainslie, displayed vastly improved tacking and teamwork to ride a huge wave of momentum into a winner-takes-all showdown.
Team USA duly crushed the Dean Barker-skippered Team New Zealand in the decider to retain the trophy they won three years before and reinvigorate a once-troubled regatta.
2. Rafa Nadal's brilliant comeback season
Diagnosed with a tear in his patella tendon and inflammation in his left knee, Spaniard Nadal was unable to defend his Olympic title last year and missed the second half of 2012.
A stomach flu delayed his comeback further and saw him miss the year's first grand slam at the Australian Open, but after a low-profile re-entry at a tournament in Chile in February, Nadal won an astonishing 10 titles, including an eighth French Open crown and the U.S. Open.
The Mallorcan also re-captured the world number one ranking from Novak Djokovic and though the 13-times grand slam champion was pummelled by the Serb in the season-ending ATP World Tour Finals, he finished the year with the top ranking for the third time in his career.
3. All Blacks comeback win over Ireland to complete perfect rugby season
A shining season by a world champion rugby team attained mythical status when New Zealand came back from the brink to defeat Ireland 24-22 in the final test of the year in November to complete the first perfect season of the professional era.
New Zealand trailed 19-0 after 18 minutes and 22-7 at halftime, but came storming home to win in the most dramatic of circumstances and courtesy of two of their stand-in men.
A stoppage time try to replacement back Ryan Crotty left Aaron Cruden, who had replaced the injured Dan Carter at flyhalf, with the conversion kick to seal the win.
The kick sailed wide but agonisingly for the Irish, they were penalised for rushing out too quickly at the kicker, allowing Cruden to coolly slot it on the second attempt and secure the All Blacks their 14th win from 14 for the year.
4. Adam Scott shrugs off British Open disappointment to win U.S. Masters
Pundits had consigned Australia's Adam Scott to a life on the psychiatrist's couch after he blew the biggest chance to win his maiden major at the British Open at Lytham last year, when he gave up a four-stroke lead with four holes to play to gift Ernie Els the trophy.
Long regarded an unfulfilled talent, Scott shrugged off the meltdown and told his critics that the disappointment only confirmed that he had it in him to win majors.
When presented with his next chance at Augusta in April, Scott sunk a 25-foot birdie putt to force his way into a playoff with Argentine Angel Cabrera and closed out an emotional victory, the first by an Australian at Augusta, with a 15-foot putt on the second extra hole.
5. Miami Heat's comeback to beat San Antonio in NBA finals
The reigning NBA champions trailed 3-2 in the best-of-seven finals series and were five points down and 20 seconds away from giving up their title during game six on their home court in June.
Officials had started roping off the court for the trophy presentation and spectators were leaving in their droves when the Heat's Ray Allen made a three-pointer with five seconds on the clock to tie the game 95-95 and put it into overtime.
Fired by LeBron James, Heat closed out the game 103-100 to force the decider and returned to the court to seal back-to-back titles with a 95-88 win in game seven.
6. Australia take Ashes back from England
Unfancied Australia entered their home series against England in November after a tumultuous year marked by abysmal performances on the field and strife off it.
Australia had lost the first of back-to-back Ashes series 3-0 to England in August, their worst result against their traditional rivals in decades and one that followed a 4-0 drubbing in a test series away to India.
Marshalled by new coach Darren Lehmann and fired by the renaissance of seamer Mitchell Johnson, Michael Clarke's team stunned England with a 381-run victory in the series-opener in Brisbane before confirming their dominance with a 218-run win in the second test in Adelaide.
They sealed the five-test series two matches early with a 150-run victory in the third match in Perth on Tuesday, completing a stunning revival from one of their lowest ebbs in the modern era.
7. Borussia Dortmund sink Malaga in stoppage-time during Champions League quarter-finals
Trailing 2-1 in second half stoppage time in the second leg of their quarter-final in April, Dortmund refused to lie down and die, despite the exit of hundreds of their fans from their home stadium.
Last-gasp goals from Marco Reus and Felipe Santana sent the Germans through in a stunning finish that sealed their first appearance in the European competition's last four for 15 years.
The magic continued for Dortmund as they upset Real Madrid in the semi-final before their fairytale run was ended by fellow Germans Bayern Munich in the final.
8. New England Patriots win NFL overtime thriller against Broncos
The Patriots trailed the Denver Broncos, favourites to win the Super Bowl, 24-0 at halftime during the regular season game in November but came to life in the second half courtesy of quarterback Tom Brady's heroics.
Brady struck with 31 straight points to set up a dramatic overtime finish and allow Stephen Gostkowski to kick the 31-yard field goal for a thrilling 34-31 win.
9. New Zealand's McCullum fells Sri Lanka in four balls
A final-over blitz by New Zealand's Nathan McCullum elevated a rain-hit one-day international cricket match against Sri Lanka into a thrilling last-ball victory in Hambantota last month.
The bowling all-rounder and older brother of captain Brendon McCullum needed 20 runs from the last four balls to reach Sri Lanka's 198.
McCullum smashed a six and a four off the first two balls from the hapless left-arm spinner Rangana Herath, then blasted two consecutive sixes to win the match and finish unbeaten on 32 runs from his nine deliveries faced.
10. Serial comeback king Tommy Robredo inspires at Roland Garros
While Rafa Nadal took the trophy at this year's French Open, it was the achievements of a far lower-profile Spaniard that lit up the first week of the grand slam.
At 31, Robredo advanced to his fifth quarter-final at Roland Garros by mounting a record three consecutive comeback victories from two sets down.
Beginning with a a 6-7(2) 4-6 6-3 6-1 6-1 turnaround against Igor Sijsling in the second round, Robredo then upset local favourite Gael Monfils 2-6 6-7(5) 6-2 7-6(3) 6-2 in the next match before stunning eleventh seed Nicolas Almagro 6-7(5) 3-6 6-4 6-4 6-4 in the round of 16.
That made the Spaniard the first man to achieve the feat since Henri Cochet at Wimbledon in 1927.
(Writing by Ian Ransom; Editing by Justin Palmer)