Monday, January 28, 2013

Singh calls out Mickelson for long spikes


Singh calls out Mickelson for long spikes

Updated: April 8, 2005, 10:13 PM ET
By Jason Sobel | ESPN.com
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- As the plot thickens, the soap opera known as "The Big Four" just keeps getting edgier.
Phil Mickelson
APMickelson was asked to have his spikes checked twice on the 13th hole.
On a day when much of The Masters' second round was washed out due to rain, Vijay Singh and Phil Mickelsonprovided the most excitement at Augusta National.
It wasn't their golf games -- though both top players were on the leaderboard come Friday evening -- but rather a tiff during the completion of their first round that offered the day's juiciest story.
Singh, playing in the group behind Mickelson, complained to rules officials that the defending Masters champion was leaving large spike marks in the greens.
"On the 13th hole, two officials approached me at two different times," Mickelson said in a statement after his round. "They were sent by Vijay to check my spikes because he felt they were unduly damaging the greens. If that is the case, I am very apologetic and will make every effort to tap down what spike marks I may make in the future.
"However, I was extremely distracted and would have appreciated if it would have been handled differently or after the round."
Mickelson proceeded to make par on the 13th hole, then bogeyed 14 and made par on his final four holes.
While his momentum was stopped on the course, the feud certainly wasn't.
"After sitting in the locker for a while, I heard Vijay talking to other players about it and I confronted him," Mickelson said. "He expressed his concerns. I expressed my disappointment with the way it was handled. I believe everything is fine now."
Perhaps fine wouldn't best describe the relationship between Mickelson and Singh, but there are no issues as far as the tournament officials are concerned.
"There was some spike that apparently tore up some grass, and Phil was the one that got blamed," said Will Nicholson, chair of Augusta National's competition committee. "One of our officials talked to Phil to see if there was a burr on the side of one of his spikes. He very generously, as you know he would, said he would change them when he got in if there was a problem. There wasn't."
Phil Mickelson
AP"I was extremely distracted," said Mickelson, who played the final six holes in 1 over.
Singh was unavailable for comment after his round.
According to the Associated Press, Callaway Golf spokesman Larry Dorman said Mickelson changed to eight-millimeter spikes sometime before The Players Championship, which was held two weeks ago. He had been using six-millimeter spikes.
Professional golfers often use metal spikes and there is no USGA rule about how long those spikes can be.
All this could set up a fascinating weekend, where it's conceivable these two players could be paired together in the final round. Currently, Singh owns sole possession of fourth place at 4 under, while Mickelson is tied for seventh two strokes back.
This episode comes just three weeks after tour player Tom Pernice, a friend of Singh, reportedly asked that Bay Hill Invitational officials check the coefficient of restitution -- or spring-like effect -- of Woods' driver. The club was found to be well within the legal limits on tour.
Mickelson and Woods have had their public exchanges as well. Two years ago, Mickelson was quoted in Golf Magazine as saying Tiger plays with "inferior equipment," a comment Woods didn't take lightly.
"He hates that I can fly it past him now," Mickelson said. "Tiger is the only player who is good enough to overcome the equipment he's stuck with."
"I really don't worry about other players or what they think," Woods countered. "The real measuring stick on the PGA Tour is how much you win, and that is what drives me to compete at such a high level."
The two Americans were paired together at last year's Ryder Cup and lost both matches they played.
Singh is currently ranked No. 1 in the world, with Woods a close second and Mickelson in fourth.
And what of the other member of the Big Four, the one keeping his name out of the gossip pages?
That's Ernie Els, the only one to never publicly feud with his fellow elite players. After all, they don't call him the Big Easy for nothing.
Jason Sobel is ESPN.com's golf editor. He can be reached at Jason.Sobel@espn3.com

Alternate Shot: Masters on Monday?


Alternate Shot: Masters on Monday?

Updated: April 8, 2005, 10:02 PM ET
ESPN.com/Golf Digest
AUGUSTA, Ga. -- If Sunday at Augusta National is like a sacred holiday, then the following statement could very well be sacrilegious: The Masters could end on Monday.
For the second straight day, heavy rain and lightning forced suspension of play well before the round was over. With a smaller field than most PGA Tour events, tournament officials will have a better chance of completing everything by Sunday evening ... but that doesn't mean it will actually happen.
ESPN.com's Jason Sobel and Golf World's Ron Sirak debate whether we'll still be watching golf from Augusta this Monday.
Will The Masters end on Monday?
YES

Well, since a Monday finish at The Masters would essentially kill the television viewing pleasures of golf fans around the world, we should treat this topic as if it's on trial.
That said, the prosecution would like to present Exhibit A to the court: the 2005 PGA Tour schedule. In case you haven't seen it, the list of cities the tour has visited reads like a Who's Who of storm warnings, flash floods and other climatic aberrations. The Nissan Open was shortened to 36 holes, the Players Championship was finished late on a Monday and the BellSouth Classic ... wait a minute, did they ever finish that thing? The point is, a precedent has been set. Mother Nature doesn't like her golf to end on Sundays.
Which brings us to Exhibit B: Hootie and the greencoats who run Augusta National. Now, don't get us wrong, we love the course and they serve up a mean pimento cheese sandwich, but at least a few hours were wasted on Friday morning. Players continued their first rounds at 9:45 a.m., rather late considering there were nearly three hours of sunlight earlier in the day. Same thing will happen Saturday, when the second round doesn't continue until 8:30 a.m. If the tournament can't end on Sunday, officials can point to these lost morning hours as reason why.
And, finally, Exhibit C: the players. There are too many good golfers near the top of the leaderboard. That makes us nervous about the dreaded "P" word; dreaded, that is, if you can't sit around watching a playoff on Monday, because that's just when this Masters may end.
Ladies and gentlemen, the prosecution rests.
– Jason Sobel
ESPN.com
NO

If you are planning on playing hooky on Monday, make a tee time. You don't have to worry about being in front of the tube to watch the conclusion of The Masters. That will happen Sunday evening, when it always does.
There are two reasons why the green-jacket ceremony won't be pushed back to the first day of the work week. Primary among those reasons is the fact that among the many quaint traditions of The Masters is the fact that it has such a small field. With only 92 competitors here, now that Billy Casper has taken his 105 and gone home, tournament officials have every opportunity to bring this rain and lightning-delayed mess to an on-time conclusion. After the cut, there will be fewer than 50 survivors compared to the more than 70 at a regular PGA Tour event.
Here's the way I'm thinking things will play out. By the end of daylight on Saturday, 45 holes will be in the record book. That means they will need to play 27 holes on Sunday. The traditional tee time for the final group on the final day is shortly before 3 p.m. If the leaders finish the third round by 1:30, there will be no problem. As long as we don't have a sudden-death playoff (and I can't even believe I've raised that possibility), Phil Mickelson will be slipping the green jacket on the new champion in the fading light of Sunday evening.
Now the other reason I think play will definitely end on time here is that I'm guessing the members of Augusta National Golf Club have a card up their sleeve we don't know about. Nothing -- neither rain nor snow nor Martha Burk -- stops this tournament. I'm thinking they have something like some giant fans hidden away they will bring out to blow the clouds away. Or maybe they've installed a dome and just haven't opted to use it yet. There still are no females in this club and Mother Nature is not going to become an honorary member this week.
We're ending on Sunday because that's the way Augusta National wants it.
– Ron Sirak
Golf World

78 players did not finish second round


78 players did not finish second round

Updated: April 8, 2005, 4:18 PM ET
Associated Press
SANTO DA SERRA, Madeira Islands -- Kyron Sullivan shot a 2-under 70 Friday to take the clubhouse lead in the rain-interrupted second round of the Madeira Island Open.
Sullivan, from Wales, had a 10-under 134 that left him atop the leaderboard, one stroke ahead of David Higgins of Ireland and Englishman Matthew Morris.
Morris, who usually plays on the second-tier Challenge Tour, was one of 78 players who failed to complete the second round Friday due to rain.

Copyright 2005 by The Associated Press