Farmers Insurance Open Preview

Lumi

LOKI
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Farmers Insurance Open Preview



If you have never heard of the Farmers Insurance Open, you aren?t alone. The PGA recorded an eagle when it inked Farmers Insurance to be the title sponsor just last week which filled a five-month absence of a sponsor of this San Diego tournament formerly known as the Buick Invitational. Yes, the same Buick Invitational that Tiger Woods used to dominate before a busted left leg put him on the shelf last year and, well we all know what happened after that. Tiger will be missed as much as the famed cypress on the sixth hole of the North Course that was lost in a storm last month.

A different name and no Tiger doesn?t mean this event is a dud. There are not a ton of big names but there are enough to get people interested. Phil Mickelson leads this week?s list of ball strikers, who is making his 2010 season debut. With the absence of his nemesis, the PGA Tour wants nothing more than the second most popular guy in golf to have a big season so viewership won?t fall off too badly but that may be inevitable. The Mickelson fan club will still be pretty big this year.

Even though the tourney?s name has changed, the courses remain the same. Torrey Pines North and South courses are the hosts for the 42nd consecutive year and it really does not get much better than that. Torrey Pines is one of the few municipal courses on the schedule and still plays as one of the tougher stops on tour, namely the South course which is the sole course used on the weekend. The South ranked as the fifth hardest (out of 51) in difficulty while the North was 28th hardest.


Besides Mickelson, there are seven other major winners in the field this week highlighted by last year?s U.S. Open winner Lucas Glover and another fan favorite Ernie Els. With Woods not in the mix, there are only three past winners of this event: Mickelson, John Daly (who won in 2004) and defending champ Nick Watney. The fact that Woods has won here six times including four in a row from 2005-2008 is the main reason past champions are few and far between this week.

Mickelson is the odds on favorite this week at the course he basically grew up on and has played thousands of times. He will be making his 20th consecutive appearance in the tournament, which he won in 1993, 2000 and 2001. He has not had much success in recent years as his best finish over the last five seasons has been a T6 in 2008 and last year?s +2 total four-day score was the first time he has finished above par in 16 made cuts in the event. His last official PGA event was a win at The TOUR Championship last September.

Watney won in 2009 by a shot over John Rollins and two shots over Lucas Glover and Camilo Villegas as he carded a final round 68. This was Watney?s second Top 10 appearance in three years at Torrey Pines as he finished T9 in 2007 followed by a missed cut by three strokes in 2008. He has made one start this season at the season opening SBS Championship where he finished T16 and has taken the last two weeks off. It should be worth noting that last year?s win followed a T12 at the FBR the previous week so two weeks off here may be an issue.

There are only five players in the event that has finished in the money in each of the last five years: Mickelson, Charles Howell III, Charley Hoffman, Kevin Sutherland and Ryuji Imada. Also, over the last five years, 16 players have at least two top 25 finishes here but only seven have two top tens: Mickelson (2008, 2006), Howell III (2007, 2005), Bubba Watson (2009, 2007), Rollins (2009, 2006), Glover (2009, 2006), Luke Donald (2009, 2005) and Watney (2009, 2007). Some are not household names but those are the players to keep an eye on as that is where the betting value lies.
 

Lumi

LOKI
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Aug 30, 2002
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Two tales of sponsor exemptions

Two tales of sponsor exemptions

Two tales of sponsor exemptions
January 26, 2010


SAN DIEGO (AP) -David Duval went from the sixth alternate at Torrey Pines to receiving a sponsor's exemption to withdrawing from the Farmers Insurance Open, all within a span of about 24 hours.





Missing from this strange sequence of events is that Duval had already been rejected once. When the exemption was awarded to him Monday night, his West Coast schedule already was set.

``It was entirely unplanned,'' Duval said Tuesday from his home in Denver. ``I had written for an exemption and was turned down, and other things fell into place.''

The former British Open champion ran out of status last year when he failed to finish in the top 125 on the money list and didn't earn a card from Q-school. He is having to rely on sponsor exemptions and his status as a past champion, and he's having relatively good success.

Just not in San Diego.

The PGA Tour players who initially received exemptions to Torrey Pines were John Daly, Rocco Mediate and Billy Mayfair. The tournament had two extra exemptions to award Monday, and gave them to Duval and Tom Pernice Jr.

Duval missed the cut Sunday at the Bob Hope Classic, flew home with his family and then learned a spot was waiting for him in San Diego. Trouble is, he already has accepted exemptions to Los Angeles and Pebble Beach, and he's in the tournament in Mexico. To play in San Diego would have meant five straight weeks.

``That not conducive to your golf game, mental game, anything,'' Duval said. ``I feel bad about it, but I already had been turned down once and I had to build my schedule around that.''

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LUMPY'S LAMENT: Tim Herron lost his PGA Tour card for the first time in his career, and decided not to take a one-time exemption for being among the top 50 in career money.

He's starting to regret the decision.

Herron has received only one sponsor exemption on the West Coast swing, to the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am where his partner is comedian-actor Bill Murray. He has yet to play an event this year, although it's not from a lack of effort.

Herron flew to Honolulu for a Monday qualifier and missed out. He left his Minnesota home for San Diego for another Monday qualifier, took triple bogey on his third hole, and missed out again.

``Now that I'm looking back at it, I'm not sure it was the right thing,'' Herron said. ``I've been through Monday qualifying, I'm not getting exemptions. It's a lot more difficult than I thought.''

Herron is a four-time winner on the PGA Tour, his most recent victory in 2006 at the Colonial. He is known mainly for his waistline and the nickname that comes with it - ``Lumpy'' - but concedes it's a tough year for exemptions. Among those looking for spots are John Daly, Chris DiMarco, David Duval, Billy Mayfair and Tom Pernice Jr.

Why not take his one-time exemption?

``I thought I would just regroup this year, get in better shape, reorganize a little bit,'' Herron said. ``I played 15 hard years, and I thought if I could play 20 or so tournaments, it might be good for me.''

Tugging at him is a young family - 7-year-old Carson and 4-year-old twins, Mick and P.J.

Tour officials told Herron that it was probable he would remain in the top 50 in career money after this year, although that was no guarantee. What should work in his favor is that Herron (along with players such as Pernice and Duval) went through Q-school last year.

``I was hoping there would be more exemptions. I'm very grateful to the ones who have given them to me,'' he said, citing the Honda Classic as an example. ``But there's a lot of good players in my position who deserve them, too.''

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CHARITY BOOST: In a tough year for charity, Billy Andrade and Brad Faxon had a record year in New England.

The Andrade-Faxon Charities for Children distributed more than $321,135 to 52 organizations that serve at-risk children in Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts.

Money comes from their CVS Charity Classic in the summer and from individual contributions. They have awarded more than $4 million since they created the charity in 1994.

``These grants will help meet the basic needs of our community's children,'' Faxon said. ``We try to lessen the burden of hunger and illness so kids can be kids.''

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VETERANS: Bobby Mitchell, a two-time winner on the PGA Tour, once showed up at Quail Hollow as a 60-year-old who was the 61st alternate. Because so many alternates didn't show up, he was next in line when the final group teed off.

That wouldn't happen under a new policy in the PGA Tour regulations this year.

To be eligible as an alternate as a past champion or a veteran (making 150 cuts in a career), a player must have signed up for Q-school at least one of the previous two years, made a cut on the PGA Tour or Nationwide Tour in the previous two calendar years, or played in five or more tournaments on either tour the previous year.

The change figures to help Lance Ten Broeck, the caddie for Jesper Parnevik who played in the Texas Open last year under such circumstances. He gets credit for playing the Texas Open in 2009. Plus, he played the Reno-Tahoe Open and a Champions Tour event in Minnesota in 2008.

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DIVOTS: The LPGA Tour added another tournament to its schedule with the Sybase Match Play Championship, to be played May 20-23 at Hamilton Farm Golf Club in New Jersey. The purse will be $1.5 million. ... The PGA Tour's final tally for charity in 2009 was $108 million, with the Valero Texas Open the top tournament at $8 million. ... Jennifer Song, who won the U.S. Women's Amateur and U.S. Women's Amateur Public Links last year, was among seven amateurs to receive an invitation to the Kraft Nabisco Championship on April 1-4, the first LPGA major. Others were Cydney Clanton, Jennifer Johnson, Kimberly Kim, Jessica Korda, Candace Schepperle and Alexis Thompson. ... Paul Lawrie signed an equipment deal with Wilson Golf. Lawrie last played Wilson when he won the British Open at Carnoustie in 1999. ... Four weeks into the PGA Tour season, Pat Perez is the only player to enter every event this year.

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STAT OF THE WEEK: Tim Clark has more runner-up finishes (eight) than any other active player without a PGA Tour victory. Next on the list is Brett Quigley with five.

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FINAL WORD: ``Second is a loss. I don't think I'll ever be satisfied with a second-place finish.'' - Nick Watney.
 
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