$ = R 7.64
£ = R 12.05
€ = R 10.14
Oil = $ 118.08
Gold = $ 1731.03
Last Update:
07:29 10 Feb 12
AFP
Woods back in business
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 12:00
Two years after pulling together the first PGA National on short
notice, top-ranked Tiger Woods is back in the shadow of the US
capital for his least-heralded golf role - tournament host.
Woods will be the main attraction and his foundation the chief
organizers when the six million-dollar National, a key tuneup event
two weeks before the British Open, tees off Thursday at
Congressional Country Club.
Don't imagine that 14-time major champion Woods, who missed last
year's event due to left knee surgery, is not hungry to swipe the
one million-dollar top prize from his 119 invited rivals just
because he's hosting the party.
"Last year I was on the couch wanting to be here," Woods said in
an April promotional appearance. "I can't wait to get out there.
I'm looking forward to playing and hopefully winning."
Woods joins legends Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus in hosting a
PGA event two weeks before a major and could complete a mini-slam
of sorts by capturing his own tournament this year over the US
Independence Day weekend.
Woods won the Arnold Palmer Invitational in March, taking his
first title since returning from an eight-month layoff ahead of a
shared sixth-place finish at the Masters.
In early June, Woods won the Nicklaus-hosted Memorial ahead of a
sixth-place effort at the US Open.
Woods, whose late father Earl was a member of the Green Berets,
will honor the US military all week. Proceeds benefit the Tiger
Woods Foundation, which has had an impact on more than 10 million
youth since being founded in 1996.
Tough economic times have hit several PGA events but sponsor
tents and solid support for Woods are seen all across the
7,255-yard par-70 course, which will play host to the 2011 US Open.
"The financial climate, it makes things a little more
interesting," Woods said. "But we have gotten just a tremendous
amount of support."
The National will move to suburban Philadelphia in 2010 and 2011
so Congressional can prepare for and host the 2011 US Open, but the
tournament will return to Congressional from 2012 to at least 2014.
"We want to come back and play at Congressional as long as
Congressional wants us," Woods said. "It's a very historic golf
course and one that players love. If you have a great course the
players will come."
New US Open champion Lucas Glover will play his third week in a
row at Tiger's event with plans to start next week in Illinois and
the following week in the British Open at Turnberry.
"I'm going to keep those commitments. I feel that's the right
thing to to do," Glover said. "Just because I won a golf tournament
doesn't change anything. I'm going to honor that commitment.
"I've got to use it as a springboard. I don't want to fizzle out
after one big win. I want to use that as motivation to keep getting
better and back in that situation."
Defending champion Anthony Kim shared second in the
season-opener at Hawaii but has not cracked the top-10 since. The
US standout of Korean descent has shown signs of improvement with a
share of 11th last week at Hartford.
"This year has been very frustrating," Kim said. "Definitely was
looking for far bigger and better things this year and it hasn't
turned out that way. But I'm getting back into good shape."
Kim has struggled with shoulder, ankle and thumb injuries this
season.
"The biggest thing was the fact that I wasn't completely healthy
and I'm almost there. I've gotten over all those little injuries so
now it's just time to work on my swing a little bit more, and start
making a couple more putts."
Others in the field include England's Paul Casey, three-time
major winner Vijay Singh of Fiji, 2003 Masters champion Mike Weir
of Canada, 2003 US Open winner Jim Furyk, 2009 US Open co-runner-up
Ricky Barnes, New Zealand teen standout Danny Lee and 2009 US
college champion Matt Hill of Canada.