Price
starts quickly, then fades Nick
Price came out today and played like the guy who won two PGA Championships this
decade. He had five birdies over the first 11 holes and moved to 11-under and
within four strokes of leader Tiger Woods. Then he faded.
Price had two straight bogeys and then a double bogey on No. 16 to finish four
shots back, in a tie for fifth. "Sixteen
was just a bad tee shot and I tried to force something out of a bad tee shot,"
Price said. Price
admitted he was watching the leaderboard to see if he could catch up.
"I figured 13-under was going
to win. When I got 11-under, I wasn't trying to stay back, I was trying to play
more aggressively," he said.
Price, 42, said veteran golfers often have as many problems mentally as they do
physically. "The
biggest thing for the older guys is the question of whether you have the desire
to do it," he said. "Most
guys have been out playing 25-plus years and it's hard to look at the suitcase
every week. That's the tough thing." NOT
THIS TIME: Winners
of the other three majors this year didn't fare well in the PGA Championship.
Masters champion Jose Maria Olazabal missed the cut. British Open winner Paul
Lawrie was 3-over and finished 14 shots behind winner Tiger Woods. And U.S. Open
champion Payne Stewart had a 7-over 295, 18 shots back. NOTHING
TO SING ABOUT: Vijay
Singh shot a final-round 72 today at the PGA Championship to finish the tournament
at 5-over 293, a disappointing showing for the defending champion.
Was he worn out from all the hoopla that surrounds a returning champion? Nope.
"I was very comfortable
with all that," Singh said. "I have no complaints. I have no excuses. I just played
badly. I took two weeks off before the tournament, and I didn't feel tired. Bad
golf makes you look tired." TIGER
SIGHTING: He's a
gallery magnet, even before he tees off. When Tiger Woods arrived at Medinah Country
Club 90 minutes before he was to start today's final round, the crowds were already
there. Several hundred
spectators jammed the sidewalk and surrounded the players' parking lot as Woods
got out of a car, collected his clubs and then slapped fives with some uniformed
employees who were wishing him luck.
The crowd broke into loud applause as Woods headed into the clubhouse to shoot
for the second major of his career. OH,
BABY: Andrew Coltart
has something more important on his mind than the Ryder Cup. Coltart's wife, Emma,
is expecting their first child on Sept. 13. "I'm
thinking about my wife and how she's doing," he said today. "I'm much more worried
about that than the Ryder Cup."
So far, his wife is feeling fine, Coltart said. The couple doesn't know if it
is having a boy or a girl. "We're
looking forward to it," he said.
Coltart was in 10th place in the European Ryder Cup standings, but teen-age phenom
Sergio Garcia, who was 12th, moved past him this week at the PGA Championship.
Coltart hopes to pick up more points in next weekend's BMW International Open,
the last tournament before the European team is announced.
Coltart shot a 1-under 71 today -- his best round of the week -- to finish at
9-over 297. CUBS
FAN: Titleist. Calloway.
Nike. Dunlop. The Chicago Cubs.
The Chicago Cubs? Yep, while most golfers wear caps or visors with their sponsors'
names, Rich Beem and his caddie were sporting Cubs' hats this week at the PGA
Championship. "Last
year, when I started playing really well on Sunday, I started wearing the Cubbies'
caps," he said. "It's lucky for me."
Beem's worn Titleist caps most of the season, but the equipment maker let him
out their deal after he won the Kemper Open. He's got a new deal with Calloway,
but it hasn't started yet. "I
didn't have anybody this week," he said. "I suppose I could have worn Calloway,
but I thought the Cubs. I'm in Chicago and I love this town."
Though Beem was born in Phoenix, went to New Mexico State and plays out of El
Paso, Texas, he has a thing for Chicago. When he was here for the Western Open
last month, he met a city resident, Jack Salerno, who showed him all around the
city. Salerno's been acting as tour guide again this week, taking him to the John
Hancock Building and other sites downtown.
Beem and his caddie, Steve Duplantis, also took in the Cubs game against the Arizona
Diamondbacks on Wednesday night. "It's
a nice place, a neat city," Beem said. "I can't wait to come back again."
OTHER
PRIORITIES: Club
pro Bruce Zabriski hasn't been playing as much golf as he'd like this summer.
The Donald's got him doing other things.
Zabriski, the lone club pro to make the cut at this year's PGA Championship, is
helping build a $40 million golf course for Donald Trump in West Palm Beach, Fla.
The course, Trump International Golf Course, opens Nov. 1. "The
worst thing is, I'm not in shape," he said. "That hurt me more than anything."
Zabriski made the cut with
a 3-over 145, but he shot a 4-over 76 today and finished at 10-over 298.
"There are so many good
playing club pros. ... But our jobs have become more time-consuming," Zabriski
said. "So our time is short to play and compete." RAIN
CHECKS: The rain
left Medinah after the first two rounds of the PGA Championship. Maybe those in
the merchandising tent wish it had stayed around for a couple of days. Thursday's
downpour during the first round sent fans looking for protection. "We
sold 475 umbrellas in two hours and another 600 a few hours later," Susan Brinkman
said. She runs the merchandise tent all all Ryder cup and PGA Championship events.
The umbrellas, like most
golf apparrel, were't cheap, selling for between $29 and $36 apiece. Other items
attracting interest Sunday were a small radio that broadcast the tournament for
$12 and a periscope for seeing over the gallery that went -- with case -- for
$58. The merchandise tent features 2,000 items and takes 14 moving vans to transport
from event to event. DIVOTS:
Joey Sindelar was unable to finish the final round today. He withdrew after completing
11 holes on a rough day. Sindelar, in his 13th PGA, was 9-over for the round and
pulled out because of a sore back. ...Hale Irwin, who stayed among the leaders
after the first two days with rounds of 70 and 69, shot a 75 today to finish at
4-over 292. Irwin, the oldest player in the tournament at age 54, faltered Saturday
with a 78. AP
|