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Golf

July 18 in Sports History: Defining choke

In 1999: In one of the biggest meltdowns in sports history, Jean Van de Velde of France triple-bogeyed the final hole at the British Open, thus forcing a playoff with Paul Lawrie and Justin Leonard at Carnoustie in Scotland. Van de Velde only needed a six on 18 to win. His tee shot went left, his second shot hit the grandstand, his third went into the water (where he actually took off his shoes and rolled up his pants as if to play it out of the water), his next shot chunked into the deeper rough and he barely recovered to “force” the playoff. He never regained his composure, and Lawrie became the first Scot to win on his home turf since 1931. Down 10 shots at the beginning of the rfinal ound, his comeback was the largest in major history. Curtis Strange, covering the tournament for ABC, summed it up perfectly, saying, “this is the dumbest thing I’ve ever seen.”

Also in 1999: On a day when Don Larsen was on hand at Yankee stadium to throw out the first pitch, David Cone went out and mimicked the former Yankee World Series hero by throwing a perfect game. Cone did not allow a single base runner as the Yankees blanked the Montreal Expos 6-0. Cone only threw 88 pitches, 68 of them strikes. It was the 14th perfect game in Major League history and the second in Yankee Stadium in two years (David Wells did it in 1998).

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Golf

Natalie Gulbis almost wins her first LPGA Tour event

Is it wrong that we root for Natalie Gulbis because she’s smoking hot? On Sunday, she came oh so close to winning her first title but lost to Mi Hyun Kim in a sudden death playoff. Kim said that she was surprised by the sheer number of people rooting for Gulbis.


I understand that I’m Korean and that many Americans fans are rooting for Natalie,” Kim said. “I was happy that a few people said my name or my nickname, or ‘Go Mi Hyun Kim.’

Actually, Kim, it has nothing to do with being Korean or American, it’s because Natalie is hot as all get out. We’d root for someone from Iraq if she looked great in a short skirt… (Although perhaps that’s our male bias.)

In any case, a 2nd place showing is still good enough to avoid the Anna Kournikova tag and she will still move plenty of calendars and get plenty of modeling gigs.

Links:
[USA TODAY]: Kim beats Gulbis on third LPGA playoff hole
[FHM]: Natalie’s FHM pictorial

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Golf

June 20 in Sports History: Payne Stewarts final major win

In 1999: Payne Stewart sinks a dramatic 25-foot par putt to win the U.S Open at Pinehurst no. 2 in North Carolina. On a misty Sunday afternoon, Stewart held off Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods with a one-under 279. Stewart’s putt capped off one of the most memorable finishes in golf history. Mickelson, who had been up one with three to play, now needed to make par to force a playoff, but bogeyed the 72nd hole. Stewart leaned forward, pumped his fist in the air and kicked his right leg back in celebration as the putt disappeared into the hole for his second national golf championship. Sadly, it would turn out to be Stewart’s last hurrah, as he tragically died in a plane crash later that year. His winning moment was immortalized in a statue at Pinehurst.

In 1982 Tom Watson defeats Jack Nicklaus with a stunning birdie chip on the 17th hole at the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach. Watson, always known for coming close but not winning the U.S. Open, was tied for the lead with Nicklaus going into 17. With Nicklaus safely on the green and Watson in the rough, it looked liked the Golden Bear was in the driver’s seat for his fifth Open title. A confident Watson felt that he could make it and rolled the chip in for a birdie and a one-shot lead. He then birdied 18 to take his first and only national title by two strokes.

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Golf

June 15 in sports history: Jack Nicklaus sets a record



sweet pants

In 1980: Jack Nicklaus shot a 72 hole record-low total of 272 (since tied three times) at Baltusrol GC in New Jersey to win his fourth U.S. Open. The Golden Bear, winner of 18 majors, also set the record for the lowest under par score with at -8 (now owned by Tiger Woods at -12).

In 1901 and 1980: The highest and lowest ever total scores to win a U.S. Open golf championship in the modern era were both established on June 15.

In 1901: Willie Anderson fired a 331 over 72 holes to win the 1901 event in a playoff at the Myopia Hunt Club in Massachusetts. Anderson won a total of four national golf championships, including three in a row from 1903-1905. No word on whether his drinking buddies called him “Flipper.”

In 1938: Johnny Vander Meer of the Cincinnati Reds establishes perhaps the most unbreakable record in baseball as he tosses his second consecutive no-hitter. Vander Meer, who held the Boston Braves hitless four days earlier, struck out seven Brooklyn Dodgers (and walked eight) in a 6-0 Reds victory. The Reds rookie did not give up a hit for 21.2 innings. The game against the Dodgers was also the first night game in Ebbets Field history. Vander Meer, despite his early success, finished with only a 119-121 career record. (baseballalmanac.com)

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Golf

AP can’t tell the difference between Wie and Se Ri Pak



Twins!

Mistakes happen. But when you’re the biggest news source in the world, perhaps it’d be a good idea to check your copy before releasing a story that Michelle Wie beat Karrie Webb in a playoff, especially when the winner was Se Ri Pak.

Perhaps Michelle Wie has gotten to be so big in LPGA play that she must be mentioned in every headline regardless of whether she is part of the story or not. Either that or the AP has problems telling Asians apart.

In other AP news, the Miami Heat go down 0-2 to the Mavs despite LeBron James’ 23 points and 8 rebounds.

Here’s a copy of the page in case the AP figures out Wie and Pak aren’t the same person.

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Golf

Michelle Wie finally makes the cut

It ain’t the PGA tour but Michelle Wie became the first woman to make the cut in a major men’s tour in 61 years. She shot a three-under 69 in the second round to finish 5 under and 6 strokes behind the lead. Pfffft that’s it? On Tiger Woods 2005 on the Xbox, we’re usually 10 under after two rounds.

While this is great for publicity, we look forward to a day when Michelle not making the cut is news. She’s only 16 (Yes, Charlie Sheen, she’s only 16.) so she’s got plenty of time to develop her game. Perhaps we should lay off the constant coverage until she’s actually good enough to play on the PGA Tour as she aspires to.

Links:
[Reuters]: Teenager Wie makes cut at men’s event in S.Korea

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Golf

John Daly’s a big white whale


In his new book, John Daly: My Life In and Out of the Rough, Daly claims he lost between $50M and $60M during 12 years of heavy gambling. That’s about $5M a year. And we thought Darren McCarty had a gambling problem.

It’s amazing that Daly with his alcoholism and his love of food is still alive. Now we wonder why he isn’t broke. He says that after taking home $750,000 for second place in a tournament, he drove to Vegas and lost $1.65M, mostly on $5,000 slot machines. We’ve never even seen a $5,000 slot machine.

Daly says that gambling replaced his alcohol addiction but he was able to pay off gambling debts with income from PGA winnings and appearance fees. Daily claims he has taken more control of his life in the past six years. He’s only going to play the $25 slot machines and if he does well, he’ll move up to $50 or $100 machines. Famous last words.

Links:
[CBS Sportsline]: Daly: Gambling is ‘going to flat-out ruin me’

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Golf

Tiger Woods wins stockcar race in New Zealand

Tiger Woods is so good that he decided to let Stuart Appleby win the Houston Open and head down to New Zealand for the wedding of his caddy Steve Williams instead. While in NZ, he put some more gray hairs on the the head of his agent Mark Steinberg and Nike executives by jumping off New Zealand’s highest bungee jump twice and driving in a charity stockcar race.

Of course, Tiger wasn’t content to just be in the race. After a rough first race (including a couple of spin outs and being lapped), Tiger learned quickly and won the second race for his team with some aggressive driving. They lost the rubber match but Tiger proved that he can win at anything.

We’ve been obsessed with Tiger Woods lately. Partly because his wife will top our upcoming list of athlete girlfriends/wives but also because we’re completely addicted to Tiger Woods PGA Tour for the Xbox. All right, Tiger, we’re challenging you to a Flip Cup tournament. Best of 5 series. Our monthly salary vs yours. Have your people call our people.

Links:
[NZ Herald]: No put-putting for hard-driving Tiger
[TV Z]: Huntly turns it up for Tiger