Snapshot: Conners at the Masters
As Corey Conners prepares to play in the Masters tomorrow, we take a closer look at a few interesting tidbits surrounding the first Major of the year, Corey and a few of his most recent successes.
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Back to the future: Shutterbugs out in force at the Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. – There are so many cameras at the Masters this week that practice rounds are beginning to resemble kids’ birthday parties back in the day.
Barred from bringing their cell phones on the course, fans adapted by going back to the future, dusting off pocket-sized digital cameras or their old 35mm bodies and lenses and re-learning how to use them.
But a quick refresher course is all they’re allowed. When play begins Thursday, fans will have to put them back on the shelves.
“Actually, the last time I had this out was Easter,” Wayne Watson said about the large black Nikon hanging around his neck.
And the time before that?
“No idea,” he said. “Probably the Easter before.”
More than a few of the fans lugging around similar equipment were, like Watson – who made the two-hour drive from Macon – experiencing Augusta National in person for the first time.
Most just planned to mosey around until something caught their fancy. Some had general targets in mind – a favorite player or two, the trio of back-nine holes reverentially dubbed “Amen Corner,” or the gigantic manual scoreboard alongside the first fairway.
Then there was the occasional experienced big-game hunter, decked out with camera bags and an array of lenses.
“I’m after Phil Mickelson,” said Kim McNeeley of nearby Aiken, South Carolina. “I got a great shot of him the last time I was here – 18 years ago.
“But there are plenty of guys more serious than I am,” she added. “I had to borrow this from a friend who just had a baby. A few minutes ago, I saw a guy actually loading film into his camera. Film. Now that’s old school.”
Stepping back in time produced more than a few comical moments.
Parked in lawn chairs behind the first tee, two pals leaned in close as one tried to figure out how to take a “selfie” with a point-and-shoot camera – never mind that the term hadn’t even been coined when the camera was originally manufactured. Behind the seventh tee, Kevin Davis of Gibson City, Illinois, recounted the preparations he went through to make sure his 4-year-old digital camera was ready to roll.
First, he had to find it – “It took me awhile to remember where I left it,” he said, finally remembering it was in a desk drawer – and then make sure it was charged.
“I’ve got a big camera, but I didn’t want to lug that around,” Davis added. “That’s usually for family events.”
But he might have had second thoughts when his twin 5-year-olds saw the camera and realized it wasn’t a phone.
“They were scratching their heads,” he recalled. “They said, `Daddy, why is it so big?'”
The fact that so many wound up opting for the big camera likely had to do with the number of serious hobbyists. While many planned to share their photos with friends on social media, a few planned to commemorate the trip with a photo album – talk about old-school – and in the case of Wes Rackley, make quality 8×10 framed prints and give them as presents.
Few people, though, seemed as comfortable carrying around all the serious gear as Brett Pavel of Atlanta. He was at Augusta National for the 20th time – “I think that’s right,” he said, “because I’ve got at least 18 shirts – and said he has a camera around his neck at least once a week.
“My wife calls it my `pacifier,'” he laughed, “because our youngest son plays competitive soccer and she says taking pictures is the only thing that keeps me from cussing and yelling at the refs and everybody else.”
One more green jacket means Mickelson can outfit a foursome
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Phil Mickelson wants another green jacket, just not for the obvious reasons.
The prestige, cold cash and silver trophy that accompany a Masters championship – the three-time winner has all that already. The reason Lefty likely wants this latest one is that, whenever the mood struck him, he could prank every playing partner in his foursome.
“I would put it in my golf bag and if it was chilly in the morning, I would pull it out. … I wouldn’t carry three around with me, but I would say, I’ve got two more if you’re cold,” he said to laughter. “But that’s just being rude.
“You’ve got to be careful who you say that stuff to,” Mickelson added quickly. “Some people can take it, some people can’t.”
Mickelson arrived here on the five-year anniversary of his last Masters win, but Augusta National was also the scene of his breakthrough in the majors. His 2004 victory ended an 0-for-42 streak in the game’s biggest tournaments, sparking wins in the PGA Championship and British Open to go along with those Masters triumphs.
“Winning this tournament, being a part of this championship, coming here every year to compete and try to add to that, is the greatest thing,” Mickelson said. “It’s what you think about in the off season when you’re putting in the work in the gym at 5:30 in the morning. You don’t want to be there; you think about the Masters and what you’re doing it for.
“This,” he said, “is what gives us the motivation.”
Mickelson will need plenty to turn around what’s been a rough patch – relatively speaking – in his resume. In seven events this season, he’s missed two cuts and his best showing is a tie for 17th, a result he managed for the second time at last week’s Houston Open. Save a runner-up finish at last year’s PGA Championship, his 2014 results – including a missed cut here – weren’t much better.
Mickelson acknowledged some of those troubles were the result of a letdown following his stirring 2013 British Open win.
“I could say maybe I got a little lethargic,” he said. “When I started last year, I was a little hurt and my speed wasn’t where it needed to be and my back was aching and consequently it led to a terrible year.
“This year in the offseason, I had a great offseason, and I’m in the best shape that I’ve been in. I’m able to swing the club fast again and practice without any discomfort, pain. So I feel like I’ve been able to put in the work and the time to get my game back. It’s come around a little bit slower than I thought it would. I really thought I would start the year out on fire and it couldn’t have been further from that.
“But I’m excited with what’s going to happen the rest of the year. I’m excited with where I see my game going. …It’s kind of like, you have got to take baby steps.”
Mickelson said the first step along that path was to play aggressively again, “getting my focus back to make birdies, and that mental intensity that’s needed to be able to get at pins and play holes properly and make birdies.”
That attitude was on display last week in Houston, where Mickelson led the field in birdies. But he cancelled those out with a number of loose shots that led to bogeys and worse. Lefty said the premium Augusta National places on the short game – arguably his greatest strength – should enable him to save enough pars to vault him into contention this week.
“I don’t feel like (my game) needs a lot of work like it did last year. Last year I felt like there wasn’t enough time to get ready. … This time, I feel like I’ve done the work,” he added, “and just need a little bit of fine tuning the next day and a half to get ready.”
Rory McIlroy puts blinders on for shot at career grand slam
AUGUSTA, Ga. – He’s the No. 1 player in the world, winner of the last two majors and star of a poignant new Nike commercial he admits to having watched – but only once.
If this was any other Masters, Rory McIlroy would be the talk of golf and the biggest story of the week. That he’s not – at least right now – is only because a guy named Tiger Woods decided to embark on his latest comeback on the undulating greens of Augusta National.
And that’s not necessarily a bad thing as McIlroy prepares for the seventh Masters of his young career. For all his success, the biggest hole in his resume is that he has yet to win a green jacket.
“Does it give people something else to talk about? Yes,” McIlroy said. “But I’m not necessarily listening to anything that anyone is saying, so doesn’t really make a difference to me.’
That McIlroy is coming into the Masters with blinders on is little surprise. He’s got a chance to become only the sixth player to win a career Grand Slam with a win here, and he’s prepared meticulously for his attempt to conquer a course that seems made for his game but has consistently given him fits.
He did it mostly out of the tournament spotlight, working on his game the last few weeks near his Florida home.
“I just really felt like spending a couple of weeks away from this, I guess,” McIlroy said. “Just preparing at home and in private and not really having everything critiqued and analyzed and overanalyzed. So I just wanted to get away from it all, and I feel like it’s been a good thing.”
McIlroy offered a few different theories Tuesday on why the Masters is the one major he has yet to win, including trying too hard to make eagles on the reachable par-5s on Augusta National. Last year he had 9-iron in hand for his second shot on both Nos. 13 and 15 in the final round, only to come away with bogeys on his way to a tie for eighth
There were also times, though, that McIlroy thought not being aggressive enough cost him strokes because he didn’t commit totally on shots to safe parts of the green.
What’s especially frustrating to McIlroy – aside from shooting 80 in the final round in 2011 to blow a four-shot lead – is that his game seems ideally suited for both the course and conditions here.
“It’s the one that should set up the best for me just with my ball flight and being comfortable off the tee here, especially being able to turn the ball over from right to left and all that,” he said. “If I can play the way I know I can around here and just have a good week on the greens, then there’s no reason why I shouldn’t have a good chance.”
No reason indeed, even if a win in Dubai is the only time he has hoisted a trophy this year. McIlroy has played only five times so far this year, clearly pointing his game toward the Masters instead of trying to collect more hardware along the way.
“Just trying to keep my game where it is and do some quality work, not overdo it,” he said. “Just do the right amount so that when I got here yesterday for the first time, again, I was ready to play and just needed to go see the golf course. Wasn’t working on anything in my game, my swing. Wasn’t thinking about technique at all. Just all about hitting the shots I need to and thinking about how to manage my game and get it around here for the next four days.”
The preparation this year isn’t the only thing different for McIlroy. Last year he had tennis player Caroline Wozniacki, his former girlfriend, carrying his bag in the par-3 contest, while Niall Horan from the boy band One Direction will do the honors this year.
And then there’s the commercial, which uses a young actor to trace McIlroy’s beginnings in golf. He is shown with a poster of Woods in his room and chipping balls into a clothes dryer after watching Woods win a major on TV.
“I did have posters of him on my wall and I did idolize him, really,” McIlroy said. “I think if you ask a lot of golfers that are my generation, he was the benchmark. He was the inspiration for us to go out and try to be the best that we could be.”
Woods to play in Par 3 competition at the Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. – This is one competition Tiger Woods doesn’t mind losing. He’s playing in the Par 3 Tournament at the Masters.
Woods typically skips the Wednesday afternoon tradition at Augusta National. But he had a couple of reasons to play this year.
One is named Sam. The other is Charlie.
Woods said his daughter and son would be caddying for him Wednesday afternoon. Seven-year-old Sam and 6-year-old Charlie were at Augusta National on Tuesday, going onto the green at the practice area with Woods’ girlfriend, Olympic ski champion Lindsey Vonn.
“My two little ones are going to be out there with me,” Woods said about the Par 3. “It’s special. As I said, this tournament means so much to me in so many different ways.”
He looked back to 1997, when his father nearly died of heart issues at the start of the year, and then was behind the 18th green for a bear hug when Woods polished off his record-shattering victory at the Masters.
“To now have come full circle and to have a chance to have my kids out there and be able to share that with them, it’s special,” Woods said. “Charlie has seen me win a golf tournament before. Sam, actually she was there at the U.S. Open in 2008, but doesn’t remember it. It’s nice to be able to share these things with my family and it just means the world to me. They are excited, I’m excited and can’t wait to go out there.”
Winning the Par 3, however, is the last thing he wants to do.
No one has ever won the Par 3 and the Masters in the same week.
“I had an opportunity to do that once, remember that?” Woods said.
That would be the last time he played. He shot a 4-under 23 in 2004 and got into a three-way playoff with Padraig Harrington and Eduardo Romero.
“It was raining,” Woods said with a smile. “Didn’t show up for the playoff.”
Harrington wound up winning.
Woods recalls making birdie after birdie in the Par 3 and having a chance to win another year.
“And for some reason, the wind came up and I hit two balls in the water,” Woods said to laughter. “Just so happened to be that way. Just one of those weird things.”
Does that mean he’s superstitious about the legend of Par 3 winners never winning a green jacket in the same year?
“Yeah, no one’s ever done it,” he said. “I don’t want to prove it wrong, so just have a good time.”
Fire destroys Montreal-area golf ball recycling facility
The Mulligan International factory on the outskirts of Montreal was ravaged by an intense fire this past Saturday. While thankfully, the 20 or so employees of the sporting goods manufacturer and golf ball recycling plant escaped without sustaining major injuries, the same cannot be said for the four million golf balls being processed in the facility.
Thick columns of black smoke caused by the burning plastic enveloped the area and a nearby highway, forcing authorities to close off the major artery into the city. The factory, which annually recycles approximately 27 million balls, will unfortunately have to cease all operations.
Video on this story, courtesy of CBC.ca:
Dollard St-Laurent leaves a golf legacy, too
Dollard St-Laurent passed away April 6 at the age of 85 in Beloeil, Quebec – a community on Montreal’s South Shore. He was rightfully acclaimed by the Montreal Canadiens and the entire National Hockey League for his fine career.
St-Laurent, a former Canadiens defenceman whose 11-year NHL career included four years with the Chicago Blackhawks, was one of the founders of the NHL players union, along with Ted Lindsay and Doug Harvey. It was a pivotal development in the sport’s history, considering the current strength of the players’ association.
Along with his contributions to hockey, St-Laurent had a significant impact on golf, the sport to which he devoted his attention after hanging up his skates.
St-Laurent was an influential captain and president at the Beloeil Golf Club and along with the former Club pro, Jean-Paul Alary, he was a firm believer in junior golf.
St-Laurent was one of the pioneers in setting up this level of play for Quebec golf prospects, along with Jack Bisseger, Luc Brien, Jean-Guy Périard, André Gagnier, André Maltais, Phil Giroux and a host of others.
“Dollard St-Laurent was an outstanding person,” said Daniel Talbot, the long-time Quebec golf pro who is a product of the junior system in Beloeil. “He never had a bad word to say about anyone and he did a lot for our sport.”
Dollard’s son, Michel, is a former Golf Québec President. He was also a past member of the Golf Canada Board of Directors and a former Golf Canada Governor.
On behalf of the entire Québec golf movement, I join René Noël, Guy Fabre, Mike DeFalco, Robbie Jackson, Bruce Heuchan, Michel Pépin, Daniel Talbot and so many others in thanking Dollard St-Laurent for the example he set and the positive influence he exerted.
Our heartfelt sympathy to Michel St-Laurent and his family.
Jason Day has hard time choosing No. 1 or Masters title
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Jason Day set two goals for his career. He wanted to get to No. 1 in the world, and he wanted to win the Masters.
But if he could only reach one goal, which does he choose?
For the only time during his engaging news conference Monday, the 27-year-old Australian looked uncomfortable.
He loves the Masters, his favourite major. He was runner-up in 2011. He had a share of the lead late on Sunday in 2013 until he missed out on the playoff between Adam Scott and Angel Cabrera, with Scott becoming the first Aussie in a green jacket.
But there’s an appeal to be No. 1 in the world, too. And four members of Augusta National in their green jackets were in the room.
“It’s tough,” Day said, leaning back and shaking his head. “This is the tournament that got me into golf. And being No. 1 has always been a lifelong goal of mine. Just to be able to say you’re No. 1, you are the best golfer on the planet, just for one day, would be the best thing ever. Knowing that you were the best in the world would be pretty neat.”
So the answer is to be No. 1 in the world? Hang on.
“But to be able to slip on a green jacket … I don’t know,” he said. “That’s a difficult one, mate. I’m dancing around the question.”
Here’s the easy solution for Day. He can’t reach No. 1 in the world this week if he were to win. But at No. 5 in the world, and healthy and determined as ever, he is among the favourites to win the Masters this week.
Old School:
Day has decided to take the 1-iron out of the bag for the Masters and use the 2-iron.
That led to one question: Who uses a 1-iron anymore?
“I was just talking to (Nick) Faldo the other day … and he was looking at my 1-iron and I said, ‘It’s not like the old days where you had a butter knife. These things are big, old thick things that you can get up in the air.’ It’s modern-day technology. It certainly has changed a lot.”
Day did not know of any other players who carried a 1-iron. Some have driving irons, but it’s not the same.
“Not with the old ‘1’ on the head,” he said. “I’ve never see another guy have that.”
How Corey Conners spent Monday at the Masters
Tiger arrives, and the guessing game begins at Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. – Tiger Woods arrived later than usual Monday for a Masters that is different from all the others he has played.
No one was sure what to expect from him.
Woods offered a quick glimpse that it could be just about anything. He hooked his tee shot so far left that it nearly went into the ninth fairway. And then he hit a shot to about 6 feet and rolled in the putt for birdie.
More relevant than any of his shots – including his chipping, which looked fine – was the atmosphere.
The first official day of practice at Augusta National was filled with warmth and optimism for the first major of the year. Rory McIlroy, No. 1 in the world and going for a career Grand Slam, played 18 holes with British Amateur champion Bradley Neil. Steve Stricker is playing for the first time all year. Jason Day took four hours on the back nine alone, letting groups through so he could chip and putt, the key to winning a green jacket.
And then Woods arrived.
Fans ran to the side of the practice area when his cart pulled up, with one man holding a digital camera high above his head for a picture. Fittingly, Woods headed straight for the chipping area and went through two bags of balls before heading to the first tee with Mark O’Meara.
Woods is playing for the first time since Feb. 5. He was off nearly five months when he returned at the Masters in 2010 following the scandal in his personal life, but he was No. 1 in the world back then. His last competition was a victory in the Australian Masters.
Now he is No. 111. In his last tournament this year, he walked off the course at Torrey Pines after 11 holes. Before that, he shot 82 and missed the cut in the Phoenix Open. In both events, he played 47 holes and hit chips that either didn’t reach the green from 5 yards away or went some 25 yards over the green.
That’s when he stepped away, saying his game was not acceptable and he would not return until it was.
The real test comes Thursday, when the shots count. What he showed Monday certainly looked acceptable, and it was a treat for the fans who normally would be headed home after a long day at Augusta. The first hole was packed when Woods and O’Meara teed off at 4:20 p.m., and more than 2,000 kept following him. Dozens of fans raced over from the second fairway to the fourth tee to get a good spot.
Remember, you’re not supposed run at Augusta National.
“I hope he’s happy. I hope he’s fine,” U.S. Open champion Martin Kaymer said. “I hope he will play well this week. But what would bother me a lot is all the speculation. You don’t have a choice. You will read about it somewhere. You will hear about it because you socialize with people. So mentally, it must be quite exhausting, and we know how important the mental part is in golf.”
“So it’s difficult, and some things I don’t find very fair,” he said. “You should just let him be. Let him play golf, what he likes to do.”
The last image of Woods was the best player of his generation at his worst, especially with the chipping. That led to rampant speculation – some coaches, including former swing coach Hank Haney, said he had the yips. He was said to be practicing hard at home in Florida. When he showed up at Augusta National last week to practice, one report said he shot 74. Another said he was playing better than ever at home.
The fans who stuck around the Masters got to see for themselves, at least in practice. The real show starts Thursday, and everyone is curious.
“We’re all waiting with baited breath what Tiger is bringing,” three-time champion Nick Faldo said. “He’s got to believe he’s got a bit more game than that. This is not the place. These are the toughest chipping areas, but off perfect lies, anywhere in the world. … It’s all nerve. That’s what the Masters is. It’s nerve. It’s the most nerve-wracking golf course.”
Most of the cheers late in the afternoon came from the par-3 16th, where players were skipping shots across the water and onto the green. The other cheers followed Woods, especially that shot over the pine trees and at the flag for his birdie. Woods then tossed a few balls short of the green to chip.
“Fore!” one fan jokingly said from behind the green.
He hit two at a time to where caddie Joe LaCava was standing. Woods moved around various sides of the green and chipped to different pin positions. Most of them were reasonable. Some were good.
Woods reached the par-5 second hole with ease on his second shot. He smashed a drive down the short par-4 third and hit a flip wedge that trickled a few inches by the hole.
“Golf internationally needs Tiger Woods. He does make a difference,” three-time Masters champion Gary Player said. “People say – I hear this all the time – `Well, they won’t miss Tiger Woods. There’s so many young guys that will take his place.’ There is nobody in the world today that can play like Tiger Woods at his best. Nobody yet. I’m not saying in time to come, a Rory, Jordan Spieth, Jason Day.
“As of today, there’s nobody playing like Tiger at his best.”