19th Hole

Chip Shots: Mike Whan explains Race to the CME Globe

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Mike Whan - LPGA Commissioner

Earlier this week the LPGA announced the creation of the Race to the CME Globe, a season-long points competition that will debut during the 2014 LPGA Tour season. The LPGA followed up the announcement releasing a video from Tour Commissioner Mike Whan (below) explaining how the new system will work.

Lindsey Vonn adopts homeless dog

Apparently alpine skier Lindsey Vonn isn’t only a lover of Tigers. A day after  she announced she would have to forgo the Sochi Winter Olympics because of her knee injury, she took to social media to reveal she had adopted a 9-month-old brindle boxer mix named Leo. Vonn – who is dating Tiger Woods – proclaimed her and the pup #‎bumkneebuddies, as Leo is also recovering from a bad knee he sustained by being hit by a car.

Paulina Gretzky gets into the swing of things

Paulina Gretzky took to Instagram to show off her new golf swing. The daughter of Wayne and Janet Gretzky credited fiancée and PGA TOUR star Dustin Johnson for a recent improvement in her game.

Dufner and wife say aloha

Jason Dufner and wife Amanda Boyd seem to be thoroughly enjoying the PGA TOUR’s early-year Hawaii swing. Dufner and Boyd were featured in a couple of videos on PGA TOUR’s YouTube page taking in the sights of the aloha state.

Dufner, a 5-time winner on Tour, finished 5th at the Hyundai Tournament of Champions in Maui.

Ross picks up another NGA Tour win

Former Team Canada Development Squad member Christopher Ross (Dundas, Ont.) tallied a 66 in the third and final round at Timacuan Golf Club in Sanford, Fla. to claim his second NGA Tour Winter Series title.

Ross previously won in December at the Disney Magnolia Course in Lake Buena Vista, Fla., to cap off his 2013 season.

Ross – son of former Golf Canada/ Royal Canadian Golf Association Executive Director Stephen Ross – finished the event at at 13-under par, with a total four Canadians cracking the top 10. Click here to check out the full leaderboard.

 

PGA TOUR

Hot start has Sang-Moon Bae leading Sony Open

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Sang-Moon Bae (Sam Greenwood/ Getty Images)

HONOLULU – Sang-Moon Bae got off to a great start in pristine conditions along the shores of Oahu. Chris Kirk had an ideal finish.

They were together all Thursday morning, playing in the same group at the Sony Open and taking the top two spots on the leaderboard. Bae played bogey-free for a 7-under 63. Kirk shot 29 on the back nine at Waialae, including an eagle on the last hole, for a 64.

They were among the early starters in the first full-field event of the year on the PGA Tour, and they took advantage of a gorgeous day.

Brian Stuard and Ryan Palmer shot 65, and Retief Goosen and Harris English were at 66 along with Jimmy Walker, John Daly, Hideto Tanihara, Jason Kokrak and Daniel Summerhays.

David Hearn was the leading Canadian when opening-round play concluded Thursday. Hearn is tied for 25th at 2-under par 68. Brad Fritsch opened with a 69 and is tied for 48th. Despite an eagle on the 18th hole, Mike Weir struggled to a 73 and is tied for 118th.

PGA TOUR Americas

Field for TOUR Championship of Canada set to 60 players

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(Claus Anderson/ PGA TOUR Canada)

OAKVILLE, Ont. – An elite field will compete at the TOUR Championship of Canada presented by Freedom 55 Financial in 2014, with the top 60 players on the Order of Merit through the season’s penultimate tournament gaining entry into the season-ending event.

The 12th and final event on the PGA TOUR Canada schedule will see the culmination of the race for Web.com Tour status at Sunningdale Golf and Country Club in London, Ont., with the event once again operated by Golf Canada. Only the top 60 players on the Order of Merit will be eligible, setting up an exciting race to the season’s final event.

“With the field consisting of the players most deserving of playing in our final event, the TOUR Championship of Canada presented by Freedom 55 Financial should be a thrilling finish to our season,” said PGA TOUR Canada President Jeff Monday. “The recently announced 12-event schedule allows us to make our season-ending event a marquee tournament for PGA TOUR Canada’s elite players, where every player will have something on the line in the race for Web.com Tour status.”

The top five players on PGA TOUR Canada’s Order of Merit earn Web.com Tour status for the following season, with players finishing in spots sixth through 10th earning an exemption into the final stage and players finishing 11th through 20th  into the second stage of Web.com Tour Qualifying School.

DP World Tour

Jacquelin leads at Volvo Golf Champions

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Rafael Jacquelin (David Cannon/ Getty Images)

DURBAN, South Africa – Raphael Jacquelin shot a bogey-free 5-under 67 in extremely windy conditions on South Africa’s east coast to take the first-round lead at the Volvo Golf Champions on Thursday.

Jacquelin was the only player in the 36-man field not to drop a shot around Durban Country Club for a one-stroke advantage over defending champion Louis Oosthuizen.

Darren Clarke, whose last title was at the 2011 British Open, was tied for third (69) alongside Victor Dubuisson.

Race to Dubai leader Thomas Bjorn was last after a 7-over 79 which included two double bogeys on the back nine, giving last month’s big-money winner at Sun City a tough start on his return to South Africa.

Jacquelin is competing in his first tournament in around six weeks, but the Frenchman picked up shots at Nos. 6 and 8 and finished with three birdies in his last five holes to stay just ahead of Oosthuizen.

“I’m better when the conditions are difficult and I just seem to score better whether it is in the wind or in the rain, or if the course is difficult,” Jacquelin said. “I also stayed focused all day long and when you manage to save par in these conditions you are always going to have a good round. That’s the way I like to play.”

Jacquelin qualified for the $4 million tournament by winning his fourth European Tour title at last year’s Spanish Open following a European Tour record nine-hole playoff.

Oosthuizen, the 2010 British Open winner, came into the event following a frustrating 2013 marred by a nagging back complaint. However, the blustery coastal conditions played right into the hands of the South African.

“I grew up in Mossel Bay where the wind was born and then goes out to the rest of the country,” he said. “So the conditions today were very much like back home and what I have been used to most of my life … It’s just good to get the feel of playing and competing again after all the weeks off.”

Clarke and Dubuisson – the reigning Turkish Airlines Open champion – both returned 69s, with Clarke already showing the benefits of a new fitness regime.

But only 16 of the 36 players managed to break par in the testing conditions, with Denmark’s Bjorn, Spanish veteran Miguel Angel Jimenez and South Africa’s former Masters champion Charl Schwartzel all struggling.

Bjorn, who won the biggest check of his career at Sun City in his last tournament, bogeyed his first hole, added another two bogeys and two doubles and couldn’t make a birdie.

Three-time Hong Kong Open winner Jimenez also had two double bogeys in his 76 to sit joint second to last. Schwartzel had a double bogey and four bogeys in his 74 for a tie for 28th.

Amateur

Doug Lawrie named as one of the Top 50 Kids Teachers for 2013

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Doug Lawrie

U.S. Kids Golf recently named PGA of Canada member Doug Lawrie as one of the Top 50 Kids Teachers for 2013.

The PGA of Canada’s 2012 Jack McLaughlin Junior Leader of the Year Award winner was the only Canadian to be named to the list.

“The fact I’m the only Canadian on this list, which includes some of the top junior leaders in the United States, recognizes the hard work of PGA of Canada professionals like myself continue to do to grow the game,” Lawrie said.

“The work the PGA of Canada has done for junior development has only inspired me to continue to be the best coach and instructor for those I am fortunate enough to work with,” he said, adding, “I hope this internationally recognized award inspires other PGA of Canada professionals to grow this wonderful game as passionately as I have.”

Since 2004, U.S. Kids Golf has honored golf’s best teachers with the Top 50 Kids Teacher Award. Applicants complete an online survey and winners are chosen based on their contributions to junior golf, such as: time devoted to teaching young golfers; innovation, creativity and fun in their programs; communication; parental involvement; and overall effort to grow the game. Award recipients include teachers who work at public, private, resort and municipal courses.

“The award was created to help parents find the best coaching for their kids,” said Dan Van Horn, President and CEO of U.S. Kids Golf. “The mission of U.S. Kids Golf is to make the game fun for kids, and the Top 50 Kids Teacher Award is an important part of encouraging golf professionals who are key in supporting us and achieving this mission.”

The 2013 Top 50 Kids Teachers and Master Kids Teachers will be recognized Thursday, Jan. 23, at the PGA Merchandise Show in Orlando, Fla

Touchy back prevents Oosthuizen from scheduling any golf past The Masters

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Louis Oosthuizen (Ian Walton/ Getty Images)

DURBAN, South Africa – Louis Oosthuizen’s touchy back has stymied the golfer from scheduling any golf after the Masters in April.

Problems with his lower back last year forced Oosthuizen to miss more events than he wanted to, and to withdraw after three rounds of the Byron Nelson Championship, after a first-round 75 at the U.S. Open, and most disappointingly to him, after six holes in the British Open, an event he won in 2010.

That began a layoff of almost three months until he returned for the International team at the Presidents Cup in October. He played all four of the European Tour’s season-ending events and managed a best finish of 15th in Shanghai.

While Oosthuizen is not prepared to look beyond the Masters, where he was runner-up to Bubba Watson in 2012, he has prepared a busy schedule starting with his defence this week of the Volvo Champions title on home turf at Durban Country Club. This is his first of eight tournaments in the next nine weeks, spread over Africa, the Middle East, and the United States.

“I had some injections in my lower back last October that seem to have helped,” Oosthuizen said on Wednesday.

“The good thing is I am playing pain-free and I am doing a lot of things to get it better. But the pain is definitely still there and it’s not going to go away, and it’s going to take a lot of time.

“It’s meant I’ve had to cut down my practice on the range, and while I’m taking the occasional antiinflammatory, it’s just one of those things I have to deal with.”

Oosthuizen must wish he had the constitution of Miguel Angel Jimenez or even Darre Clarke.

Jimenez returns to competition after turning 50 last Sunday and looking to again break his “oldest ever” tour record he re-set last month in capturing a third Hong Kong Open title.

“Yes, I turned 50 a few days ago and I look in the mirror and still see the same guy,” the Spaniard joked. “So I come here looking to win, win, win as that is my continuing motivation. For me, coming to play on the tour is not just to get a salary. If so, I would stay at home.”

Clarke, 14 years older than Oosthuizen at 45, has lost around 40 pounds since October in a bid to rekindle his form. He hasn’t won anything since the 2011 British Open.

“In a short time I’m already twice as strong because most people who lose weight, they lose strength, as well,” Clarke said, showing off a trimmer figure. “I’ve gone the other way. I’ve lost weight and gone twice as strong.”

19th Hole

Vibrant colours, lightweight cushioning combine in Nike Lunar Control shoe

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TORONTO – Rory McIlroy loves how lightweight his Nike Lunar Control shoes are. “They feel like you can wear them all day, they’re incredibly comfortable,” he says.

Paul Casey says “the impeccable traction with the ground” was the key to his decision to lace up in Lunar Controls week after week.

And, Kyle Stanley likes that he doesn’t have to break them in. “They’re ready to wear, right out of the box,” he says. “I wouldn’t wear anything else.”

Nike Golf athletes sport the Nike Lunar Control on Tour more than any other shoe because it offers the control and lightweight cushioning they need round after round – and now they have an expressive range of bold and confident colors to choose from.

“The shoe is designed to be in contact with the ground as much as possible and that enables me to push off the ground with more control,” Casey says. “For me, it’s always incredible how Nike creates great shoes, and then improves on them in the next generation.”

Vibrant colours such as Venom Green, Military Blue and Challenge Red pop against white and black premium full-grain leather uppers and highlight Nike’s proprietary full-length Lunarlon technology, a lightweight cushioning system that is highly responsive, resulting in a unique combination of comfort and support.

“Our Tour athletes are on their feet all day, every day – they know what they need out of a golf shoe to perform at their best,” says Lee Walker, Nike Golf Global Footwear Marketing Director. “We relied heavily on their insights to create a shoe that provides optimal control and comfort in a range of confident colors.”

In addition to Lunarlon foam cushioning, the Nike Lunar Control also features Nike Flywire, another proprietary technology, which wraps from the midfoot to the heel for targeted support and lightweight structure.

Underfoot, Nike Power Platform stabilizes the foot to provide balance, smoother weight transfer and more control at impact. Power Transfer Zone technology works in conjunction with the Power Platform to allow for constant ground contact and a smooth transfer of power throughout the swing.

The new colourways of the Nike Lunar Control are available now in Black/Reflect Silver-Light Crimson; White/Team Red-Challenge Red; White/Black-Venom Green; and White/Military Blue-Venom Green.

Nike Lunar Control shoes are now available in at a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $180.

LPGA Tour

LPGA launches “Race to the CME Globe”

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DAYTONA BEACH, Florida – The holiday season may be over, but the LPGA has one more surprise gift for its players, fans and sponsors. The LPGA and CME Group have announced they have joined together to create the all-new Race to the CME Globe, a season-long points competition that will debut during the 2014 LPGA Tour season.

The inaugural Race to the CME Globe will kick off the week of January 20 at the season-opening Pure Silk Bahamas LPGA Classic. Players will accumulate points at each official LPGA event from the Bahamas through the Lorena Ochoa Invitational Presented by Banamex.

The Race to the CME Globe will then come to an end Sunday at the newly renamed CME Group Tour Championship.

Two big purses and two big winner’s payouts will be on-the-line during the final day of the CME Group Tour Championship. The winner of the CME Group Tour Championship will take home a $500,000 (USD) first-place prize, while the player who has accumulated the most points in the season-long points competition will be announced as the Race to the CME Globe champion with a $1 million unofficial money payout – the largest in all of women’s golf.

“CME Group has made quite an impact on the LPGA Tour during our three years together,” said LPGA Commissioner Michael Whan. “The addition of this concept fundamentally connects every event on our Tour and promises big things in 2014 and beyond. The stakes have risen dramatically and the excitement level goes up for our players and each of our tournaments.”

All tournaments will have the same point values in the Race to the CME Globe except for the five major championships, which will carry 25 percent more value.  The winner of all official LPGA events leading up to the CME Group Tour Championship will earn 500 points and the winner of each major championship will earn 625 points. Only LPGA Tour members are eligible to earn points in the Race.

For all LPGA events with a cut, points will be awarded to LPGA members who make the cut. For all events without a cut (except for the Lorena Ochoa Invitational Presented by Banamex), points will be awarded to members who finish among the top 40 and ties. And for the Lorena Ochoa Invitational Presented by Banamex, points will be awarded to members who finish in the top 20 and ties.

The field at the $2 million CME Group Tour Championship will consist of the following: the top 72 players on the Race to the CME Globe Points Standings at the conclusion of the Lorena Ochoa Invitational Presented by Banamex, any LPGA member – not otherwise qualified – with at least one official LPGA win during the season and any non-member with at least one official LPGA win during the year.

Points will then be reset for the CME Group Tour Championship to ensure that the points race will be won at the season-ending tournament. Reset Points will give top yearly performers an advantage but not guarantee victory.

The points that a player earns at the CME Group Tour Championship will be added to her Reset Points, and the player with the highest points total will be named the winner of the Race to the CME Globe.

“I was so honored to win the LPGA money title in 2013 and now I have something even bigger to play for as I look to make it two in a row,” said Inbee Park, who is ranked No. 1 in the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings. “Nothing is guaranteed with this new system so this new Race is going to make everyone on our Tour work a little bit harder because the payoff is so big.”

Fans will also have one more exciting race to follow throughout the 2014 season with “Wounded Warrior Project® Weekends,” a season-long charity program that will be tied into the Race to the CME Globe. Each Saturday and Sunday at LPGA tournaments, CME Group will donate $1,000 to Wounded Warrior Project® for each eagle that is recorded. This amount will increase to $5,000 for each eagle during the weekend of the CME Group Tour Championship and a formal check will be presented to the Wounded Warrior Project® during the trophy ceremony at the CME Group Tour Championship.

PGA TOUR

Golf Notes: Steve Williams starts semi-retirement

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Steve Williams & Adam Scott (Matt King/ Getty Images)

HONOLULU –  For the first time since Colonial in 2011, Adam Scott will have a new caddie on the bag this week at the Sony Open.

No, Steve Williams is not ready to retire.

“He’s tired. He’s old,” Scott said of Williams, who turned 50 last week. “One week in a row is enough.”

Williams called it the start of his semi-retirement. He has talked about cutting back on his schedule in the next year or two, though it would seem peculiar to come all the way to Hawaii just for one week.

The caddie failed to mention that the New Zealand Super Saloon Championship is next week, followed by the New Zealand Saloon Championships.

“He’s chomping at the bit to have a go,” Scott said. “He’s earned it. I’ll let him drive one week, as long as he comes back.”

That won’t be until the Honda Classic. For the Sony Open, the Masters champion will have a friend on the bag.

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AUSTIN NOT READY FOR CHAMPIONS TOUR: Woody Austin didn’t make it to the PGA Tour until he was 30, and only then after a decade of playing mini-tours, working as a bank teller and even stocking shelves in a drug store. At least he gets to go out on his terms.

After more than two years of not having full status, the 49-year-old Austin appeared out of nowhere in Mississippi last summer and won the Sanderson Farms Championship. That got him back to Kapalua, which meant the world to him.

“Especially when you’re about to turn 50 and have status,” he said.

Austin turns 50 in three weeks, though he has no plans to play on the Champions Tour except for any major he gets in. Kapalua was just a start. Austin is most looking forward to the courses he was kept from playing when he lost his card – Bay Hill, Hilton Head, Colonial, Memorial.

“I don’t plan on being one of those half guys,” he said of splitting time on two tours. “If I don’t get in the FedEx Cup (playoffs) and have six weeks off, then I’ll go play some on the Champions Tour. But I want to play out here.”

Austin lost his card in 2010 when he missed four cuts in his last seven events and finished at No. 129 on the money list. He got into only 18 tournaments the following year on conditional status, and only seven events in 2012 as a past champion.

His hallmark was ball-striking, and when that began to desert him, he was never very good with the putter (except for bashing it against his head, one of his more infamous moments) to atone for that. So what happened in Mississippi?

“That was the old me,” he said. “I knocked the flag over. That’s me. That’s what I do. This game now is only a putting contest. That’s all it is. Technology has brought everyone into a small bowl.”

Austin said he was most disappointed that in his two years needing some help, he received only one sponsor exemption. The Greenbrier Classic found room for him – he missed the cut two weeks before winning – and Austin said he will never miss the tournament again.

He is exempt through the end of the 2014-15 season.
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WORLD 100: Golf Digest has expanded its “Top 100” list to include courses worldwide, only that didn’t change anything at the top.

Pine Valley claimed the No. 1 ranking in the inaugural “World 100 Greatest Courses” list that appears in the February issues available in print next week. The magazine had the top three courses in America (Pine Valley, Cypress Point, Augusta National), with Royal County Down in Northern Ireland at No. 4.

Shinnecock Hills was at No. 5.

The ranking was determined by 846 people from the magazine’s U.S. Course Ranking panel, from panelists that work with Golf Digest’s 27 international editions and other selected golfers. Forty courses from the top 100 were in America. Golf Digest said America has 46 per cent of all the world’s golf courses.

Rounding out the top 10 were Royal Dornoch in Scotland, St. Andrews, Muirfield, Royal Melbourne and Oakmont.

Canadian courses making the list were: Hamilton Golf and Country Club (98); The National Golf Club (61); Cabot Links (42) and St. George’s Golf and Country Club (30).
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AN ISLAND ON AN ISLAND: Hawaii residents can get sensitive when they hear tourists mention the mainland as “back in the U.S.”

Callaway Golf is the latest culprit.

In a press release announcing that it signed two-time PGA Tour winner Harris English to its tour staff, Callaway included a comment from English that was said “shortly before leaving the U.S. for Hawaii.”

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DIVOTS: One fan of the Dallas Cowboys had reasons beyond football to feel badly for quarterback Tony Romo’s back surgery on Dec. 27. Jordan Spieth has to find a new partner for the AT&T Pebble Beach national Pro-Am. One possibility is country singer Jake Owen, who played last year with former U.S. Amateur champion Kelly Kraft. … Former PGA champion Rich Beem is the latest to have a weekly show on SiriusXM. Beem made his debut Monday and will host the show from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. each Monday … Chesson Hadley has signed with International Sports Management, making him the first American client with PGA Tour status to sign with Chubby Chandler’s group.

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INFLATION STAT OF THE WEEK: In his first 24 starts as a pro, Tiger Woods won six times (including the Masters) and earned $2,626,115. In his first 24 starts as a pro, Jordan Spieth won the John Deere Classic and has earned $4,634820.

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FINAL WORD: “We’re all there. We all feel the same pressure. We all want to win that first major.” – Brandt Snedeker on first-timers winning 15 of the last 20 majors.

Checking in with Team Canada

Practice makes perfect

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As most of us were adjusting to our post-holiday routines, the athletes of Team Canada’s Amateur Team and Development Squad were sweating it out on the golf course. With their first training camp already completed in late November, Team Canada is now working on fine-tuning the weaker areas that were exposed in the initial testing from the first camp.

Each team was training out of a different facility in the United States from Jan. 2-7 – find out what they were up to below.

Men’s Amateur Team

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The Men’s Amateur Team were training out of the high-end facilities at the Vintage Club in Indian Wells, Calif. over the weekend. The warm, beautiful conditions at the Vintage Club were a welcome surprise for Head Coach and Winnipeg native, Derek Ingram.

Derek Ingram

“David Woods and the members at the Vintage Club have been incredible hosts and we are very fortunate to train on their world class facilities” he said enthusiastically. “This is the best training camp we’ve ever had“.

Ingram was recently recognized as one of three Canadian coaches to be recognized on Golf Digest’s best teachers outside of the United States list.

 

Corey Conners

Corey Conners, who recently turned 22, took to twitter to express the beautiful scene at The Vintage Club:

Garrett Rank

Garrett Rank was one of few members unable to join the team in training as he had a special opportunity to referee the World Under-17 gold medal hockey game in Sydney, N.S. Rank, 26, has been a passionate referee for Ontario Hockey League and Junior B games for many years.

 

Men’s Development Squad

Meanwhile, the men’s Development Squad was training out of The Raven Club at Verrado in Phoenix, Ariz., a familiar facility and friend to Team Canada. Robert Ratcliffe, Head Coach of the Development Squad, is leading the new team through their second official camp.

Robert Ratcliffe

In case you didn’t know: Ratcliffe has assumed full responsibility as the Head Coach of the Development Squad moving forward. In the past, he worked beside Ingram as the assistant coach, addressing players on both the Amateur Team and Development Squad. His new role allows him to focus primarily on the Development Squad players and prepare them for a transition to the Amateur Team. He will continue to work closely with Ingram.

 

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Women’s Amateur Team

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On the women’s side, the National Team was at the Desert Princess in Cathedral City, Calif., under the direction of Head Coach, Tristan Mullally.

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Mullally is very optimistic about the year ahead as he continues to prepare his coaching plans for the individual needs of each athlete.

“ We’ve had a lot of fun out here, we’ve used every part of the facilities and they have been super in supporting us in our training” he said. “All of the girls continue to grow with their training, for instance, Anne-Catherine (Tanguay) has made some superb changes in the past six weeks and I am very excited for what’s to come in the year ahead.”

 

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Anne-Catherine Tanguay takes a moment to enjoy the scenery as well:

Tanguay, a Québec City native, will tee-it-up with her Oklahoma Sooner teammates again on Feb. 9 at the Northrop Grumman Regional Challenge in Palos Verdes Estates, Calif.

Women’s Development Squad

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Lastly, the girls of the Development Squad were training at The Lodge at Ventana in Tuscon, Ariz.

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The Head Coach of the girls Development Squad, Ann Carroll, couldn’t be more excited about the prospects for the athletes and what the future holds.

 

Did you know: Ann Carroll’s role with Team Canada has also changed for the upcoming season in very similar fashion to that of Ratcliffe. Carroll will now act as the Head Coach of the girls Development Squad but will remain to work in tandem with Mullally on the development of both teams.

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Ann Carroll and Tristan Mullally share a laugh

In case you missed it…

Brooke Henderson of Smiths Falls, Ont., ran away with the Junior Orange Bowl Championship in Coral Gables, Fla., shooting a final round 67 to win by five strokes.

Read the full story here.

Garrett Rank, an Elmira, Ont., native and member of the Men’s National Amateur Team finished T7 at the 83rd Dixie Amateur Championship at Heron Bay Golf Club in Coral Springs, Fla.

Read more here.