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  • La Reservae Golf Club, Costa Del Sol

    A new course designed by Cabell B. Robinson, La Reserva Club De Golf had only recently opened but I would never have guessed. On arrival it was obvious the course was in perfect condition. The opening hole at La Reserva is a straight par four with well designed bunkers and an attractive green – a good, if understated opener, but on the 2nd tee, however, the front nine opens up before you and you get an idea of the challenge that lies ahead. Set out in a small valley with wonderful changes in elevation, attractive contours and great scenery, the next eight holes weave back in forth in fantastic fashion.

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  • Golf Equipment

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Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:39 PM

Lee Westwood is putting the team back together in hopes of returning to the form that saw him rise to world No. 1.

At next week’s Northwestern Mutual World Challenge, Westwood will reportedly have a familiar man on the bag – Billy Foster, the looper whom Westwood let go 18 months ago. 

In 2012, Foster suffered a knee injury and didn’t recover as quickly as he had hoped, forcing Westwood to cut ties with his longtime bagman and hire Mike Kerr as a replacement. Foster, meanwhile, eventually found work with South African Branden Grace. 

But according to a report Tuesday in the Daily Telegraph, Westwood has hired Foster back “permanently,” beginning with next week’s World Challenge.

“Everyone knows that Lee and Billy were a great partnership and it made sense that now Billy is fully fit again that the partnership reforms,” Chubby Chandler, Westwood’s manager, told the Daily Telegraph. “… They’ve had their heart-to-heart, sorted out whatever needed sorting out, and Billy will be back on Lee’s bag permanently, starting at Tiger’s event next week. Mike is a top lad, a class act, and took Lee’s decision as we knew he would.”

In the past year, Westwood has gone through myriad changes: swing coaches, short-game gurus and home bases, settling down with his family in West Palm Beach, Fla. This year of transition hasn’t translated to success on the golf course, however, as the 40-year-old is still winless and has just two top-10s in his last 13 worldwide starts.

“We saw glimpses of the real Lee Westwood at Dubai (where he tied for fifth),” Chandler said, via the Daily Telegraph, “and I’m sure that, with Billy back on the bag, it’ll all come right again.”
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:33 PM

Never one to turn down an opportunity to get creative on the golf course, Bubba Watsonrecently showed up to Pelican Hill Golf Club in Newport Beach, Calif., with a 20-degree hybrid in hand. The other 13 clubs, it seems, proved to be too much a burden.

Playing with just a single club and starting the round with only three balls in his pocket, the 2012 Masters champion made his way around the par-72, Tom Fazio layout in 81 shots,according to PGA teaching professional Tim Mitchell. 

According to Mitchell, Watson told a course staffer that he enjoys the shot-making challenge provided by playing 18 holes with just a single club, perhaps evoking memories of the physics-defying wedge approach he used to claim his green jacket last spring.

Watson's 2012 campaign led to a 69.64 scoring average, good for ninth on the PGA Tour, although he slipped to 32nd for the 2013 season. The southpaw's 2013-14 effort got off to a slow start, though, as he carded a 78 while presumably using all 14 clubs in the first round of the CIMB Classic in Malaysia. Since then, though, the 35-year-old has broken 70 in six of his seven competitive rounds on Tour, tying for eighth at the WGC-HSBC Champions earlier this month in his most recent start.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:30 PM

NAPLES, Fla. – Shanshan Feng climbed three spots to No. 4 Monday in the release of the newest Rolex Women’s World Rankings.

Feng has been on a hot late-season run with two victories in her last four LPGA starts. She won the Reignwood Classic in her native China on Oct. 6, finished second in her next start at the Sime Darby Malaysia, tied for eighth at the Mizuno Classic and won the season-ending CME Group Titleholders on Sunday.

Inbee Park extended her reign at No. 1 to 33 weeks.

Lexi Thompson moved up one spot to No. 9, her highest position in the world rankings.

With her second-place finish at CME, Gerina Piller made the biggest move of any player among the top 400 in the world, vaulting 17 spots to No. 36, making her the seventh highest ranked American behind Stacy Lewis (No. 3), Thompson (No. 9), Cristie Kerr (No. 12), Paula Creamer (No. 13), Angela Stanford (No. 16) and Lizette Salas (No. 20).
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:26 PM
NAPLES, Fla. – Stacy Lewis, Inbee Park and Moriya Jutanugarn came away with the 2013 LPGA awards that still hung in the balance going into Sunday’s final round of the CME Group Titleholders.

Stacy Lewis won the Vare Trophy for the LPGA’s low scoring average this season. She’s the first American to win the award since Beth Daniel in 1994. Lewis finished with a 69.484 scoring average. That’s the eighth lowest in LPGA history. Lewis shot 71 on Sunday at Tiburon, tying for sixth.

Inbee Park won the LPGA money title with $2,456,619 in earnings. It’s the second consecutive year Park has won the money title. She also won the Rolex Player of the Year award this year, clinching that last week at the Lorena Ochoa Invitational to become the first South Korean to win the honor.

Park shot 68 Sunday and finished fifth.

Moriya Jutanugarn won the Rolex Rookie of the Year award by the slimmest margin possible, edging Caroline Masson 480-479. Jutanugarn started the week 11 points behind Masson. She needed a finish of T-33 or better on Sunday to pass Masson and she finished T-33. Jutanugarn missed a 5-foot putt at the last hole and had to sweat out the finish to see where she ended up. Masson played the final two events with a fractured right thumb in a splint.

Jutanugarn shot 72 on Sunday.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:22 PM

Jason Day is finally back in the winner’s circle, and he’s nearing the top 10 in the world again, too. 

Day, who won the World Cup of Golf for his first title since the 2010 Byron NelsonChampionship, rose from No. 18 to No. 11 in the latest rankings, released Monday. It is his highest position in the Official World Golf Ranking since he was ranked 10th in March 2012. His career-best ranking is No. 7.

Since that victory at the Nelson, Day has racked up 25 top-10 finishes on the PGA Tour and six top-10s at majors, including three runners-up.

Thomas Bjorn also made a sizable move in the rankings, rising from No. 44 to No. 34 after his runner-up finish at Royal Melbourne. 

Much like Day, Luke Donald ended his own drought last week, defending his title at the Japan Tour’s Dunlop Phoenix. The former world No. 1, who had slipped all the way to 17th in the world, jumped up two spots, to No. 15, after his first win in 12 months. Meanwhile, the runner-up in Japan, Hyung-sung Kim, jumped from No. 82 to No. 65 in the world.

Here’s the top 10 in the world, which remains unchanged from a week ago: No. 1 Tiger Woods,Adam Scott, Henrik Stenson, Phil Mickelson, Justin Rose, Rory McIlroy, Matt Kuchar,Steve Stricker, Brandt Snedeker and Jason Dufner.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:19 PM


World Cup champion Jason Day said Sunday that he will donate a portion of his $1.5 million prize money to the victims of the devastating typhoon in the Philippines.

The Nov. 9 tragedy claimed the life of more than 5,000 people, including eight of Day’s relatives. He won the World Cup less than two weeks after learning of their deaths. 

“We will most likely set something up (for the victims) and I will definitely be giving some money and trying to raise awareness to what has really happened over there,” Day said, via the Sydney Morning Herald. 

Day’s mother and sister were at Royal Melbourne over the weekend as he captured his first title since May 2010. Team Australia – Day and Adam Scott – also won the team portion by 10 shots.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 6:29 AM
Each week on GolfChannel.com, we’ll examine which players’ stocks and trends are rising and falling in the world of golf.

RISING
J-Day (+10%): It’s incomprehensible, really, that a player this immensely talented has only two wins. Here’s hoping this emotional home victory leads to a breakout campaign in 2014.

Luke (+8%): The tidy Englishman already has his own wine label, and now he will receive another 200-pound shipment of Miyazaki beef after defending his title at the Dunlop Phoenix. Wonder what’s for dinner at the Donalds’?

Adam Scott (+6%): He will rue the opening 75 at the World Cup, but it’s a testament to his form that he still had a chance to win come Sunday. With his sights on the Scotty Slam, don’t bet against him.

Royal Melbourne (+4%): The Alister Mackenzie design showed its major chops by hosting back-to-back world-class events on the Aussie Swing. Regardless of what Ted Bishop might say, this gem deserves the first international PGA.

Rory (+2%): Hey, a weekend of good news for the beleaguered former world No. 1! He met Will Ferrell and saw the “Anchorman” premiere in Australia, then “amicably” settled his lawsuit with Oakley. Maybe a better-late-than-never win at Royal Sydney is next.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 6:16 AM
Just ten months to the 40th Anniversary edition of The Ryder Cup and Jack Nicklaus sets the scene in The 2014 European Tour Yearbook out this week with an exclusive hole-by-hole guide to the PGA Centenary Course at Gleneagles in Scotland where Europe will seek to retain the golden chalice against the United States.
Nicklaus, whose record of winning 18 professional Major Championships from the 1962 US Open to the 1986 Masters Tournament represents 25 years of unparalleled sporting supremacy, designed the PGA Centenary Course which has recently been enhanced through a collective effort by his company and Gleneagles to produce a spectacular setting for the players in Perthshire from September 26-28, 2014.
And Nicklaus provides his insight and interpretation of that challenge in the 26th edition of The European Tour Yearbook – a 224 page full colour hardback Official Publication available now from shop.europeantour.com at the exceptional price of £20.00 including postage and packing.
Nicklaus signed in 1988 a contract with Gleneagles to build the course – his first design in Scotland – then in 2011/2012 modernised and re-invigorated the layout with one objective being to fashion memorable holes for the fantastic match play contest that is The Ryder Cup.
Europe will be seeking to win The Ryder Cup for an eighth time in ten meetings following the “Miracle at Medinah” and Paul McGinley and Tom Watson, the captains of Europe and the United States respectively, are both profiled in the new Yearbook which is illustrated throughout by iconic photography by Getty Images.
The 2014 European Tour Yearbook brings back to life all the drama and glory of another spectacular golfing year worldwide with chapters on the Major Championships, vividly recalling Justin Rose’s historic US Open triumph at Merion in addition to those by Adam Scott (Masters Tournament), Phil Mickelson (The 142nd Open Championship) and Jason Dufner (US PGA Championship), through to Henrik Stenson’s stunning coronation as The European Tour’s Number One golfer.
Stenson, whose triumphant resurgence is captured in a riveting profile, completed a unique “Double-Double” by following his success in the US PGA TOUR Championship/FedEx Cup by winning the DP World Tour Championship, Dubai to secure The Race to Dubai on which Major Champions Ernie Els, Graeme McDowell, Louis Oosthuizen, Charl Schwartzel and Tiger Woods all enjoyed memorable triumphs.
The 2014 European Tour Yearbook, which also devotes chapters to Matteo Manassero becoming the youngest winner of the BMW PGA Championship, José María Olazábal leading Continental Europe to a famous victory in the Seve Trophy by Golf+ in addition to the European Challenge Tour and European Senior Tour, makes the ideal Christmas gift for the golfing enthusiast and is available now from shop.europeantour.com
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:57 AM
Lee Westwood is putting the team back together in hopes of returning to the form that saw him rise to world No. 1.
At next week’s Northwestern Mutual World Challenge, Westwood will reportedly have a familiar man on the bag – Billy Foster, the looper whom Westwood let go 18 months ago. 
In 2012, Foster suffered a knee injury and didn’t recover as quickly as he had hoped, forcing Westwood to cut ties with his longtime bagman and hire Mike Kerr as a replacement. Foster, meanwhile, eventually found work with South African Branden Grace. 
But according to a report Tuesday in the Daily Telegraph, Westwood has hired Foster back “permanently,” beginning with next week’s World Challenge.
“Everyone knows that Lee and Billy were a great partnership and it made sense that now Billy is fully fit again that the partnership reforms,” Chubby Chandler, Westwood’s manager, told the Daily Telegraph. “… They’ve had their heart-to-heart, sorted out whatever needed sorting out, and Billy will be back on Lee’s bag permanently, starting at Tiger’s event next week. Mike is a top lad, a class act, and took Lee’s decision as we knew he would.”
In the past year, Westwood has gone through myriad changes: swing coaches, short-game gurus and home bases, settling down with his family in West Palm Beach, Fla. This year of transition hasn’t translated to success on the golf course, however, as the 40-year-old is still winless and has just two top-10s in his last 13 worldwide starts.
“We saw glimpses of the real Lee Westwood at Dubai (where he tied for fifth),” Chandler said, via the Daily Telegraph, “and I’m sure that, with Billy back on the bag, it’ll all come right again.” 
 
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:44 AM
 
Geoff Ogilvy believes fellow Australian Adam Scott can become the world's number one golfer within the next six months.
Scott has already won the Masters and PGA on the Australasian PGA this month, ahead of this week's Australian Open at Royal Sydney.
Ogilvy believes Tiger Woods is the only man standing in the way of Scott taking top spot.
"If he has a little but of a lull and doesn't quite start like he normally does, Adam's got every chance if he can go and win a tournament or two in the first half of next year he'll get really close."
Ogilvy and Scott are part of a high quality field which also includes Rory McIlroy and World Cup winner Jason Day.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:40 AM
Na Yeon Choi finished last year by winning the LPGA Titleholders and buying a new house at Isleworth outside Orlando. She was No. 2 on the money list with nearly $2 million. She was No. 2 in the world. She was the U.S. Women's Open champion.
One year later, Choi was missing from the conversation.
Inbee Park won three straight majors and last week clinched LPGA player of the year, the first South Korean to win that award. Suzann Pettersen has challenged Park and has a chance this week to win the LPGA money list. Stacy Lewis, who rose to No. 1 earlier in the year, has a slim lead in the Vare Trophy for lowest scoring average.
As for Choi?
She gave up the lead on the back nine at St. Andrews and tied for second behind Stacy Lewis in the Women's British Open. She was runner-up in the HSBC Champions in Singapore. And those were the highlights. Choi has failed to win a tournament, has slipped to No. 6 in the world and is No. 9 on the money list.
Choi has won at least $1 million the last five years. She needs $80,000 at the Titleholders to keep that streak going.
"I think I put a lot of pressure on myself at the beginning of the season," Choi said Tuesday. "I started the season No. 2 in the world, and I really, really want to be No. 1. But I think I got too much pressure, too much to think about _ winning a tournament or about the results and lower scores."
Choi's solution is to go back to being a rookie. That means working harder and not worrying about results. As a rookie, she had no fear.
"But right now, I'm kind of scared to play, too much thinking, too much worry about," she said. "So I really want to go back to how I started golf, or when I came to the LPGA Tour, that kind of demeanor."
___
SPIETH TO SHERWOOD: Jordan Spieth's first round of the year was a pre-qualifier to get into the Monday qualifier at Torrey Pines. His last round will be at Sherwood Country Club, a last-minute alternate to the Christmas holiday bonus known as the Northwestern Mutual World Challenge hosted by Tiger Woods.
Spieth was selected as an alternate Tuesday to replace Brandt Snedeker, who is being extra cautious from a slight knee surgery from when he lost his balance on a Segway during a corporate outing in Shanghai.
The World Challenge is Dec. 5-8.
Spieth never needed that qualifier for the Farmers Insurance Open. He got in on a late sponsor's exemption, missed the cut, and then headed off to the Web.com Tour. His plans shifted to the PGA Tour in March, and the results were amazing _ enough money to secure a card, a win at the John Deere Classic to instantly get his card, No. 7 in the FedEx Cup standings and a spot in the Presidents Cup.
Sherwood will be a bonus.
___
INKSTER TO THE BOOTH: Juli Inkster's closest friends in golf have always worried about whether she could ever retire. This might be a step.
Inkster is one of three additions to the Golf Channel's cast of on-air talent for the 2014 season. The others are Karen Stupples, already a strong voice of golf for the BBC, and Paige Mackenzie.
Inkster, the 53-year-old Hall of Famer, is not giving up on golf. She will work five events for Golf Channel, starting with the Mobile Bay LPGA Classic in May.
Stupples will work at just over a dozen tournaments as an analyst and on-course reporter. Mackenzie will be the co-host on "Morning Drive" and contribute to news programming while continuing to play.
___
RULES OF THE GAME: Annika Sorenstam is one of the few players who has gone through a USGA rules seminar and taken the test, and it would seem to raise a question. If golf is their livelihood, shouldn't all tour players go through the seminar to know the rules of the sport they play?
Steve Stricker might have had the best explanation.
"We're playing for a lot of money," he said.
There is golf, and there is tournament golf, and while they are played the same, it's different. Even the highest-rated rules officials who have scored 100 on the test have blown calls, such as Trey Holland at the 1994 U.S. Open at Oakmont involving Ernie Els.
There are 34 rules. There are more than 1,200 decisions. With so much at stake _ either money or prestige _ players would rather put a decision in the hands of the experts, whose word is final.
"We can always call one of the officials out of the woods," Stricker said.
"That's a week out of their life," Slugger White said when asked why more players don't go to a rules seminar. "If you went to a rules school and you're coming down the stretch in a tournament, they'd call every time. They don't want to make a mistake."
White is the PGA Tour's vice president of rules and competition. When he played the tour, he gave himself a 4 on a scale of 1 to 10 in his rules knowledge.
___
FIRST LADY: The PGA of America has selected Annika Sorenstam for its "First Lady of Golf Award."
The award began in 1998 and is given every other year to a woman who has made significant contributions to promoting golf. That goes beyond Sorenstam's 89 worldwide wins and 10 majors. Since retiring five years ago, she has developed a teaching academy, golf course design firm, financial-planning group, an apparel collection and a foundation geared toward teaching children a healthy lifestyle through fitness and nutrition. She also has a junior golf program.
Sorenstam, a mother of two, is the first international woman to win the award. She will be honored Jan. 22 in Orlando at the PGA Merchandise Show.
"I have been so fortunate through my life to have people who helped pave the way for me to work hard and exceed my goals on and off the course," Sorenstam said. "I truly feel like I am living a dream and want to help the next generation do the same."
___
SWANN'S WAY: Lynn Swann is the latest board director for the PGA of America.
Swann helped lead the Pittsburgh Steelers to four Super Bowl titles in the 1970s, after playing on a national championship team at Southern California. He was elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame. Swann, a member at Augusta National, joins the board Saturday at the PGA's annual meeting in San Diego. He will serve a three-year term.
"I came to the game late in life, but hope over the next three years to help the PGA bring golf to so many more people early in life," Swann said.
___
DIVOTS: Nick Price has added a tournament to his schedule, all because his son (Greg) took up golf eight months ago. They will play the PNC Father-Son Challenge for the first time on Dec. 12-15 at The Ritz-Carlton Club in Orlando. "I just want him to enjoy it," Price said. "If he enjoys it, he'll want to do it again." ... Charles Howell III, who had five top 10s a year ago, already has three in five tournaments this year. ... The Players Championship raised $7.1 million for local charities, beating last year's record $6.5 million.
___
STAT OF THE WEEK: The Official World Golf Ranking board has approved ranking points for the new PGA Tour China series next year. The winner of the China events will get six points, or the equivalent of 19th place at The Players Championship.
___
FINAL WORD: "You're witnessing the best player on the planet at the minute, for sure. I don't think there's anybody to go up against him." _ Ian Poulter on Henrik Stenson, who won three of his last seven events to claim the FedEx Cup and Race to Dubai.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:38 AM

Jason Day climbed seven spots from No. 18 to No. 11 in the latest Official World Golf Ranking following his victory at the World Cup of Golf.
It's the highest world ranking for Day since he was ranked 10th after the 2013 Transitions Championship. Day had dropped to 45th at one point early this year.
His highest world ranking ever is seventh.
Thomas Bjorn, who was runner-up to Day at Royal Melbourne, moved up 10 spots to 34th.
From other tournaments:
Luke Donald successfully defended his title at the Dunlop Phoenix. The former World No. 1 improved two spots to 15th in the world after the victory. Donald dropped out of the top 10 in the word earlier this year after holding the top spot in July 2012.
• Morten Orum Madsen's victory at the South African Open, a co-sanctioned event by the European and Sunshine tours, moved him from No. 244 to No. 121.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:34 AM
The Australian golfer Jason Day is the big mover in the latest world rankings list after his stellar performance at the World Cup in Melbourne.
 
Day scooped the double at Royal Melbourne as the low individual, and winner of the teams title with the world number two Adam Scott.
The 26-year-old Queenslander has jumped seven places to 11th, just behind an unchanged top 10 led by Tiger Woods, Adam Scott and Henrik Stenson.
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:27 AM
THE big boys may be out to play at the Australian Open but defending champion Peter Senior believes the Royal Sydney course will still give old dogs an equal chance to lift the trophy. Senior shocked everyone, including himself, by claiming his second Stonehaven Cup last year at the age of 53 in gloomy conditions at the Lakes.Though facing up to a stronger field this year, containing Adam Scott, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day - who all hit the ball a mile - Senior said the combination of his decades of experience, and a tight Royal Sydney course, won't preclude those with lesser ambition off the tee."The Lakes was a little different last year where distance really wasn't a factor. Royal Sydney here is similar. Those guys will be hitting a lot of irons off the tees on a lot of holes where I'll be hitting drivers," Senior said.
"Courses like this, if you can hit it straight it could bring you in a little bit more. The longer course, they've definitely got an advantage. Royal Pines the other week (for the Australian PGA), some of the clubs the boys were hitting compared to what I was hitting, you just can't compete with them and you know that. If I'm up there and around there and have a week, then I've got to have a lot of things going for me."Senior, who now competes on the Champions Trophy tour, said his years of swinging the sticks had unlocked plenty of hidden secrets around Aussie golf courses. Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar. End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar. "I've experienced where to miss and where not to miss. I've been doing it for a long time now and so have they (younger players), but you get to learn a lot of things. Anybody can shoot a good score playing well, it's shooting a good score when you're not playing so well, and you have those days. If you can make the score and that's what you get to learn in this game, the young guys have still got to learn that," Senior said."My game seems to be in pretty good shape, so I am looking forward to this week."
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:23 AM
HE'D waited three long years for a second victory but Jason Day's desire to topple Adam Scott at the Australian Open - and continue his hunt for Tiger Woods' no.1 rank - saw the beers stay on ice after his World Cup win on Sunday. Day claimed an emotional victory at Royal Melbourne after news of the death of his Filipino grandmother and seven relatives in the Typhoon Haiyan tragedy emerged a week earlier.The World Cup victory - coupled with a teams' triumph alongside Scott - served as a massive confidence boost for Day, after a maiden 2010 PGA Tour victory was followed by years of frustration playing the leaderboard bridesmaid in the world's biggest tournaments.Day's phone beeped constantly with congratulatory messages - "Warnie even texted me" - but there was no accompanying clink of champagne flutes."I had a quick dinner with my family and was in bed by 10pm," Day said yesterday. "I had to get up early and go to the gym."I didn't drink. I was realiy trying to prepare for this week, it is huge for me. I didn't want to go out and waste a day on Monday after a big night."I am only down here for a couple of weeks. One day behind in my preparation is only going to hurt my game." Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar. End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar. Though teammates last week, the motivation to beat Scott at Royal Sydney was powerful enough for Day to poop his own party.The pair - who will be grouped together on the opening two days - are rated by bookies as two of the top three picks to win (Rory McIroy splits them) but Day believes the lessons of his victory at the weekend has him well primed."Its been a long time (from) my first to the second win. I have been a very consistent player over the last few years but just haven't got over the line. (I have been) very consistent in the majors. Its been more of a learning curve. That first sometimes can feel like a fluke," Day said."I felt like I learned so much more last week than I have over the last three years. It felt like a Major. It was physically and mentally exhausting.""It was good experience for me. Hopefully I can take what I learned last week into this week. I am really hungry to play well this week."Adding his name to the icons on the Stonehaven Cup is a "massive motivation" but bigger goals are also in Day's mind.Confident enough to proclaim he wanted Woods' no.1 rank as a little-known player in 2007, Day yesterday re-confirmed he was still aiming to sit atop the world rankings.His highest spot was seventh last year but after a slip away, Day's win in Melbourne saw him jump from 18th to 11th."If I have a good week this week I can definitely jump into the top ten," Day said."Being number one has always been the goal ever since I practically picked up the golf club. I have always wanted to get to that number one spot. Me and (coach) Colin Swatton actually had a goal when we first met, when I was 12 or 13, that we wanted to become the number one player in the world."We had a goal to be number one by the age of 22. We ended up getting to number seven at 23. So we fell short. It is still on my mind to get to that number one spot."There are a lot of tough competitors I have to get past, but if I keep working hard and putting the dedication into my game, I think thy sky is the limit, as long as I stay hungry. The biggest thing is to actually want it. You can say it as much as you like."It's so tough with Tiger being at the top. You have to be working harder than him, you have to be playing well every week."
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:17 AM
UPDATE: IN-FORM Aussie stars Adam Scott and Jason Day will go head-to-head in the same group on the opening two days of the Australian Open, starting Thursday. In a move sure to see bumper galleries, tournament organisers have paired the two marquee drawcards in a threesome also containing American PGA Tour player Kevin Streelman.Along with Rory McIlroy, Scott and Day - who combined to win the World Cup at the weekend - are rated by bookies as the top picks to win the Stonehaven Cup after both winning tournaments in the last month.Streelman is no mug either, after picking up a Tour win at the Tampa Bay Championships this year.Day outplayed Scott to claim the individual honours at Royal Melbourne and said he was excited to take on his good friend, who is aiming to complete the Australian triple-crown in Sydney after winning the Australian PGA and Masters."Scotty has had a phenomenal year this year. Winning the Masters, winning the Barclays and coming down here and winning two straight away, and playing well last week."The buzz in Australian golf right now is in a good place," Day said. Start of sidebar. Skip to end of sidebar. End of sidebar. Return to start of sidebar. "I have known Kevin for a while being in the States and Scotty and me and him go way back."I am definitely looking forward to that pairing on Thursday and Friday, and hopefully we put on a good show for the fans and hopefully get some nice weather so people can come out and watch us. I am very excited to come out and play."Day's World Cup win was an emotional one after losing his grandmother and six members of extended family in the Phillipines in Typhoon Haiyan."It was mixed emotions during the start of the week but to go out there and play the way I did in tough conditions at Royal Melbourne, with a lot of good players that were trying to catch me, was an amazing feeling," Day said."The way I handled myself I felt like I really matured in that last round. It felt great and I am really looking forward to getting some good preparation going into this event."It is one of the tournaments I have always wanted to win. It is huge to an Australian. So many great names have been through and won the trophy and to one day hopefully put my name on the trophy would be an amazing honour. This week is going to be tough, we have some good competitors heading down and anyone in any given week out here can step up and play well and win the tournament."
Posted by Unknown
No comments | 5:08 AM
HE'S the headline International act of an all-star cast at Royal Sydney, but Rory McIlroy couldn't help but feel starstruck as he made a long-awaited return Down Under on Sunday.
 
The former World No. 1 was flanked by Hollywood comedic royalty, with the entire crew of Anchorman II sharing his first class cabin.Fate seated McIlroy alongside the film's lead actor and highest funnyman Will Ferrell, an avid hacker who hosts his own annual golf tournament."All the crew (from the movie) were on my flight," the Northern Irishman revealed."I'm a great fan of Will Ferrell and Steve Carell, so it was a pretty cool thing to do."Will was actually sitting right across from me on the plane."
McIlroy also followed the cast to Sunday night's world premiere showing at The Entertainment Quarter, but he was back down to serious business yesterday.This weekend will mark McIlroy's first Australian Open campaign since 2006, when he was a17-year-old amateur who survived the cut on same layout in wild weather.He finished the tournament nine-over par, tied in 64th place.At the time there was no publicity, pressure or predictions that might have given an indication of what greatness would follow.Seven years later McIlroy has amassed more than $26 million in prizemoney, as well as claiming two majors (2011 US Open and 2012 PGA Championship)."I was only (a teenager) back then," McIlroy recalled."I was a little bit different. I really enjoyed Royal Sydney - it's a tough course."I'm a bit more experienced now compared to back then."Now ranked at No. 6 following a below-par year beset by sponsorship disputes and constant speculation about his relationship status with tennis glamour Caroline Wozniaki, McIlroy will need to summon his wizardry to compete with in-form Aussie duo Adam Scott and Jason Day.The local pair have won this season's three previous tournaments between them, and US Masters champion Scott is aiming to become just the second man after Robert Allenby to complete the Australian Triple Crown."Obviously Scotty is coming off a couple of great wins and Jason Day won last week," McIlroy said."They're both playing pretty well. Scotty has been one of the best players in the world for the past couple of years and Jason always seems to play well in the big ones."After checking out the Harbour Bridge and Opera House, McIlroy made a beeline for Rose Bay to prepare his game.Without a tournament win this calendar year, he's generated some quiet momentum with a T6 finish in last week's World Golf Championship in Dubai."I guess I'm a little disappointed with the way I finished, but I've had a fifth and a sixth in the last two tournaments," he said."The game feels good and it's good to be back in Australia."
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No comments | 5:03 AM
Nov 26 (Reuters) - Australian Jason Day's drought-breaking win at the World Cup of Golf on Sunday has him knocking on the door of the world's top 10 and revived his goal of one day climbing to top spot.
The 26-year-old's triumph at Royal Melbourne saw him jump to 11th from 18th in the world rankings and gave him a much-needed dose of self-belief after three years of near-misses since his maiden title at the 2010 Byron Nelson Championship.
Having outplayed compatriot and world number two Adam Scott and seventh-ranked American Matt Kuchar to take individual honours at the World Cup, Day will have another chance to measure himself this week when he clashes with Scott and world number six Rory McIlroy at the Australian Open in Sydney.
"It was surprising to jump from 18 to 11, if I have a good week this week I can definitely jump into the top 10," Day told reporters on Tuesday.
"Being number one has always been a goal since I practically picked up a golf club."
Day said he and long-time mentor and caddy Colin Swatton had even put a timeframe on his rise to the top.
"I've always wanted to get to that number one spot. Me and Colin had a goal back when we first met, when I was 12, 13 (years old), that we wanted to become the number one player in the world," he added.
"We had a goal to get there at 22, we ended up getting to number seven at 23 so we fell short but it's still on my mind to get to that number one spot."

FORMAT CHANGE
Day's World Cup win came days after learning that eight of his relatives had been killed in the Philippines by Typhoon Haiyan and he shared an emotional embrace with his mother after tapping in the final putt on the 18th at Royal Melbourne.
Having not played competitively for five weeks in the leadup, Day showed great character to fend off tenacious Dane Thomas Bjorn over the back nine on Sunday, helping Australia win the tournament's team component.
Day's team mate Scott finished third to continue his impressive form after having won the Australian PGA Championship and the Australian Masters in consecutive weeks.
Scott was thrilled to share the team trophy with Day, but was disappointed that the World Cup's format change meant they were unable to band together over four days in four-ball and foursomes against other teams as in previous editions.
Australian Open organisers have provided some compensation by grouping the Australians together with American Kevin Streelman at Royal Sydney.
Scott is bidding to become only the second player after compatriot Robert Allenby to win all three of Australia's marquee tournaments in a single season.
"Definitely looking forward to that pairing Thursday and Friday," Day said of his grouping with Scott.
"It's going to be exciting. Hopefully we put on a good show for the fans and hopefully we get some nice weather that a lot of people can come out and watch us."