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Golf
Notes October 9 All signs point toward Hal Sutton being the U.S.
captain for the next Ryder Cup. A two-time Players Championship winner and former
PGA champion and an emotional leader, Sutton will be 46 when the 2004 matches
are played at Oakland Hills in the Detroit suburbs. The big question is
who will follow, and who will get squeezed out. The PGA of America tends
to pick captains who are too old to consistently compete on the PGA Tour, and
too young for the Senior PGA Tour. Likely candidates are Paul Azinger, Corey Pavin,
Tom Lehman and perhaps Mark O'Meara. Assuming Sutton is the captain for
Oakland Hills, only two Ryder Cups remain before that quartet turns 50. O'Meara
will be 49 when the '06 Ryder Cup is played in Dublin, and would seem to be the
most logical choice considering his roots and affinity for Ireland. However,
the PGA of America might not forgive O'Meara for being among the first to raise
the compensation issue. "He's the one that really started it,"
Curtis Strange said. "To be quite frank with you, I would be shocked if he
ever got to be the captain." The PGA made about $23 million from the
'99 Ryder Cup. To avoid a player revolt, the PGA agreed to let players give $200,000
to the charity of their choice. Lehman is the next oldest of that bunch,
but his career pales in comparison -- only five career victories. That
leaves Azinger and Pavin as the strongest possibilities for '06 and '08. By the
time the 2010 Ryder Cup is played in Wales, Davis Love III will be 46. LEFT
OUT BY LEFTY: With Phil Mickelson's wife expecting their third child at the end
of March, don't look for Lefty at The Players Championship -- or maybe even the
Masters. "I said earlier this year that my schedule over the next
18 months might surprise some people," Mickelson told the San Diego Union-Tribune.
"There are some tournaments that I'm going to miss, like The Players Championship,
and others that I'll be playing in that I haven't played before." Mickelson
said his appearance at Augusta National, where he has finished third the last
two years, would depend on when the baby is born. "It doesn't concern
me," he said. "If I can't play, I'm not going to worry about it."
FULL MONTY: Going 4-0-1 in the Ryder Cup has renewed hopes of 39-year-old
Colin Montgomerie that he still has a chance to win his first major championship.
"People say that my major opportunity has gone, and in down times
you tend to believe them," Montgomerie said after tying the course record
of 63 at St. Andrews during the Dunhill Links Championship. "Majors
are more difficult now because Tiger [Woods] has entered them, but in the last
few years there are players who have won one that I feel I am as good as."
LITTLE EASY:Ernie Els' hopes of winning the European Tour money list fell
apart in a span of about 12 hours. First, he took a quadruple-bogey 8 on
the 17th hole at St. Andrews during the third round of the Dunhill Links Championship.
The next morning, he withdrew from Europe's richest event because wife, Leizl,
went into labor. Els does not plan to play any more European Tour events
this year. He did get to the hospital in time for the delivery of his second child,
a son. NO SECOND-GUESSING:Tiger Woods had no problem with U.S. Captain
Curtis Strange sending him off last in a singles match that never mattered in
the Ryder Cup. He noted that the last time the matches were tied going
into the final day was at 1991 at Kiawah Island, which also was the last time
the final match decided the Ryder Cup. "The history was there, and
we all decided that this was the best lineup to put out there," Woods said.
"If their guys don't play well and they don't get that momentum, they were
going to be in a world of hurt coming down to their last few guys, and we can
go ahead and wrap it up. That's what we planned on." HALE OF A YEAR:
Hale Irwin won for the fourth time this year on the Senior PGA Tour and clinched
the points-based Charles Schwab Cup, earning a $1 million annuity. Irwin
has led the race since the seventh tournament of the year in March, and the Senior
Tour still has three tournaments left. The 57-year-old Irwin has finished
in the top five in 17 out of his 25 events this year. DIVOTS: Three of
the four LPGA Tour majors are raising their purses by $100,000 next year to $1.6
million -- the Kraft Nabisco Championship, the McDonald's LPGA Championship, and
the Weetabix Women's British Open. The U.S. Women's Open, the richest event in
women's golf at $2.9 million, has not announced its prize money for 2003. ...
Ryder Cup Captain Curtis Strange and 18-year-old Ty Tryon have been offered sponsor's
exemptions for next week's Disney Golf Classic. STAT OF THE WEEK: Annika
Sorenstam has won seven of her nine LPGA events this year by shooting in the 60s
every round. FINAL WORD: "A lot of people have criticized Curtis for
the lineup, and all I can say to them is either they don't know much about golf
or they're idiots." - Scott Hoch, on U.S. Captain Curtis Strange's lineup
for the final day at the Ryder Cup.
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