Posts Tagged ‘golf trophy’

Mahan Takes Home Phonix Open Trophy

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Mahan Takes Home Phonix Open Trophy

Hunter Mahan was one of the most successful golfers on the PGA Tour in 2009. Even though he didn’t win a single tournament last year, Hunter Mahan had 6 Top 10 finishes including a runner-up finish in the AT&T National.

On Sunday, he finally took home his second PGA Tournament trophy when he beat Rickie Fowler by a single stroke, -16 to -15. Mahan’s victory in the Phoenix Open is his first after winning the Traveler’s Championship in 2007. Mahan did it by shooting a 65 third round and a 65 fourth round for a final score of 268 in the Phoenix Open.

Sunday was a masterful day for Mahan who had to rally from four strokes down in order to win the tournament. He finished the last two rounds of the tournament bogey-free and became the 8th U.S. player in his 20’s to win more than one tournament. Mahan was sort of a forgotten man in the golf sportsbook as he was going off at higher than 20 to 1 to odds to win the Phoenix Open Trophy.

Even though it ended up being Mahan’s day, the real story to come out of the Phoenix Open is 21 year old Rickie Fowler. Fowler, the balley-hooed player from Oklahoma State the same school that produced Hunter Mahan, shot a brilliant final round 68 to finish a stroke off of Mahan.

Fowler didn’t shoot anything higher than a 69 in all four rounds. Although he’s missed the cut in three tournaments in 2010, the Sony Open, Bob Hope Classic, and Northern Trust Open, he scored a 5th place finish in the Farmers Insurance Open and a 27th place finish in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro Am.

Fowler is one to watch. If he continues to improve his game, then he could end up being a solid play in the golf sportsbook to both win and beat his opponent in individual matchups.

Snedeker and Mickelson Fall Flat

Brandt Snedeker, who was leading in the Waste Management Phoenix Open after the 3rd Round, proved that sometimes the pressure can be just a bit too much.

Snedeker shot a ridiculous 78 on Sunday to finish at -7, 9 strokes off of winner Hunter Mahan. Snedeker dropped from 1st to 43rd in the tournament. He just didn’t have it on Sunday even though up until that disastrous 4th Round, he had been putting as well as anybody on the PGA Tour.

Snedeker wasn’t the only one who didn’t have it, however. Phil Mickelson, who has gone off the favorite in every single tournament that he’s entered with Tiger Woods in rehab, finished at -9. That’s better than what Snedeker did, but Snedeker was going off at higher than 20 to 1 odds in the sportsbook to win the Phoenix Open.

Mickelson was going off at +750. Mickelson hasn’t won a tournament yet in 2010. In all four of the tournament’s he’s played in, Lefty has gone off as the favorite. What he has to show for is only one Top 10 finish, an 8th in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, and a reputation as a big time underlay in the sportsbook.

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

Golf Trophy News…
Missing Trophy Found After 110 Years

Missing Golf Trophy

Missing Golf Trophy


As reported in the Otago Daily Times, a Saint Andrews golf trophy belonging to the Otago Golf Club was found after 110 years.

The trophy was established in 1893, the then-president of the club, and given out over six years after. In 1899, Andrew Todd won the trophy, but it was never engraved and never given out again. One day in 1970 Todd’s granddaughter found it in a box but kept it away for another 39 years until she rediscovered it once again, and brought it back to the golf club, once again, hoping they would recognize it.

The Otago Golf Club has many historic trophies, this being one of them. However, they are unsure as of yet if it will be added to the list of trophies that are competed for annually.

Green Jacket Trophy

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Trophy news…
Green Jacket Trophy

Tiger Woods Wins the Masters Jacket

Tiger Woods Wins the Jacket in 2002


Just as the yellow jersey award isn’t an actual trophy in the Tour de France, the green jacket for the winner of the Masters, isn’t an actual trophy, yet it can be considered one since it is awarded as a prize. The jacket can be kept by the winner for a year and then must be returned by the winner so it can be awarded again at the next tournament. Along with the jacket, the winner of the Masters is given a hefty cash prize.

The Masters Jacket has been awarded since 1949. It is the official attire worn by the Augusta National while on club grounds therefore, each tournament winner then becomes a member of the grounds for a year.

SPECIAL TO THE UNION-TRIBUNE

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Crown Trophies and AwardsTrophy News from San Clemente, California

Katie Sylvan doesn’t know how to surf. In fact, some of her success might be attributed to staying away from the sand and out of the water.

Francis Parker High School golfer Katie Sylvan outlasted 123 other golfers to win the individual title at the Lady Triton Invitational in San Clemente earlier this month. Instead of the usual trophy, she received a surfboard.

(more…)

No Trophy, But Golfer Ben Curtis Still Visits Browns Camp

Wednesday, August 13th, 2008

Golf Trohpy

Trophy News From Ohio

Before Ben Curtis played 36 holes Sunday in the final two rounds of the PGA Championship, Browns quarterback Derek Anderson fired off a message that was practically prophetic.

”I sent him a text the other night, ‘Why don’t you just bring that golf trophy right out to Berea?’ ” Anderson said.

The coveted Wanamaker Trophy went to Ireland’s Padraig Harrington, who claimed his second consecutive major. Curtis, the 2003 British Open champion from Kent State, shot 68-71 and finished 2 strokes back, tying for second at gruelling Oakland Hills.

Curtis, 31, became one of 11 men to finish in the top 10 in two majors this year. In his career, he has three victory trophies and 11 top 10s, four in majors, including a tie for seventh in the 2008 British Open.

This one brought another prize. Curtis jumped from 20th to seventh in the U.S. Ryder Cup trophy standings, earning a spot on the team for the Sept. 19-21 competition versus Europe at Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, Ky.

After the PGA, Curtis drew kudos from Ryder Cup captain Paul Azinger and analysts on the Golf Channel.

”I’ve always known I could play at this level,” Curtis said. ”To do it on that stage was awfully fulfilling career-wise.”

Originally Written by Marla Ridenour in the Akron Beacon Journal

Singh Finally Gets Name on Trophy

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Trophy News from Ohio

PHILIP REID Reports from Akron. Ohio

THIS WAS different. For a change, there was no ode to Tiger. For the first time since 2004, a name other than Tiger Woods was etched onto the Bridgestone Invitational trophy at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio. And, perhaps fittingly, his successor as champion after a drama-filled final round was Vijay Singh.

Sure, there were moments yesterday – especially when the Fijian had the belly-putter in his hand, with a succession of missed short putts putting pressure on him down the stretch – where Singh looked fallible. But, in the end, he got the job done (just about) with a final-round 68 for 270, 10-under-par, that left him with a shot to spare over runners-up Lee Westwood and Stuart Appleby.

Ironically, given his travails with the putter, Singh finished the job with a tricky three-and-a-half-footer for par on the last.

Singh – whose last trophy win on tour had come in the Bay Hill Invitational in March 2007, a gap of 17 months – had started the final round tied with Westwood and Phil Mickelson, but took control early on with a hat-trick of birdies from the second and another birdie on the sixth.

Thereafter, it proved to be a rough ride home and bogeys at the eighth, 11th and 13th (with just one birdie on the 12th, from four feet) allowed Westwood and a charging Appleby to apply pressure down the stretch.

In the end, Singh’s run of five successive pars from the 14th was enough to see him claim a first WGC golf trophy, although Westwood – more than anyone – will rue some missed birdie chances on the way home that could have given him a first win on American soil in a decade.

Coming just six weeks after he finished third in the US Open, Westwood started birdie-birdie, but hit a rocky patch mid-way through the front nine when he bogeyed the fourth and double-bogeyed the seventh before birdieing three of the next six holes.

However, a bogey on the 14th, and then a run of four pars, meant that he came up just short again.

On a day when conditions were made for good scoring, Paul Casey – in the doldrums for much of this season and lacking any consistency – finally exploded into life, returning a bogey-free 65 that was perfectly timed coming in the final tournament before Oakland Hills and a matter of weeks before Faldo must name his two picks.

Is it the start of a Casey run for the Ryder Cup?

“Well, I need it, don’t I? I’m well out of the points and below players like Sergio, (Ian) Poulter, Monty, Luke (Donald) and I don’t really want to rely on a pick. You know, this is a good start but I really need to throw in a couple of top-fives or a win or something like that to get myself on the team.

“This is an important run of events . . . but I’ve got to take it one round at a time, one shot at a time. The ultimate goal is to try and win (the PGA trophy). I mean, majors are still the ultimate thing but I’d love to be part of that Ryder Cup team. Right now, they are probably the greatest memories I’ve ever had while being on a golf course and I’d like to be part of another team. And I’ve got some playing to do for that team before we get there.”

Originally Written by Philip Reid in the Irish Times