Nov
02
2009
0

Ross Fisher grinds down Anthony Kim to win World Match Play Championship

John Huggan / guardian.co.uk

Ross Fisher completed one of English golf’s finer days on the links today, the rising star following up Ian Poulter’s one-shot victory at the Singapore Open by beating the American Anthony Kim 4&3 in the final of the World Match Play Championship in Spain.

Fisher, who is €750,000 (£671,000) richer after negotiating 126 hilly holes at the mountainous Finca Cortesin layout over four gruelling days, moves into fourth place on the European Tour’s Race to Dubai and has already gone a long way towards assuring himself of a Ryder Cup debut at Celtic Manor next October.

Playing the sort of relentless “fairways and greens” golf that tends to succeed in head-to-head contests – only once did Fisher drop a shot to par – the 28-year-old from Wentworth, the long-time home of this event, eventually wore down his younger opponent. All square at lunch having never been down, Fisher was soon three up. A birdie at the par-five third, an eagle at the 334-yard fourth, where both players found the putting surface with their tee-shots, and another birdie-four at the long fifth all proved too good for Kim.

The most crucial three-hole period of the match, however, had yet to come. Still two up playing the 494-yard seventh, Fisher bunkered his approach with his opponent already aboard the putting surface in regulation. Then, in what was something of a comedy of errors, Kim three-putted and Fisher, after splashing out to no more than three feet, almost did likewise.

One hole later, Kim missed from inside two feet when holing out would have reduced the deficit. Then, with his opponent all but sure of a birdie at the 352-yard ninth, Fisher holed from all of 30 feet to maintain his two-hole advantage.

Having survived unscathed that brief excursion into mild farce, Fisher took the short 10th with a par and five holes later closed out the match, in the process making himself the fourth Englishman to lift one of European golf’s most prestigious titles. Nick Faldo (1989 and 1992) was first, followed by Lee Westwood (2000) and Paul Casey (2006).

“This is a massive confidence boost for me,” said the new champion, who displayed a promising propensity for head-to-head contests when he made it to the semi-final of the World Golf Championship Accenture Match Play in February.

“I felt like I played well and did a good job of putting the pressure on him,” added Fisher. “I was relieved to get to three up though. At that point I knew I just had to finish the job off.

“I could have won every major this year if things had gone my way – I led all four at some point – so I’ve been very consistent without winning. But this is a big step up for me. Anything with the word ‘world’ in the title has to mean a great deal.”


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Jul
23
2009
0

Kim brushes aside talk of being golf’s ‘next one’

by Jeremy Sandler | Canada.com

Photograph by: Brett Gundlock, National Post

OAKVILLE, Ont. — If Anthony Kim wanted to deliver a shot that would sum up where he is in the golf world right now, he succeeded on the 16th hole of Wednesday’s pro-am event at the RBC Canadian Open at Glen Abbey.

Kim’s 12-foot birdie putt rolled up the slight incline toward the centre of the cup before stopping at the lip, leaving Kim with a tap-in for par.

Kim himself was on the cusp on the eve of his second appearance at the Canadian Open.

“He’s a dedicated kid,” tournament director Bill Paul said. “I think he’s going to be the next superstar of the PGA Tour.”

Since Tiger Woods moved from hype to legend — and since Phil Mickelson, to some eyes at least, surfaced as a worthy foil at the top of golf’s pyramid — the Tour, the television networks and golf fans have been searching for an heir apparent, someone to continue the line that ran from Woods to Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and more.

Spain’s Sergio Garcia and Australian Adam Scott were seen as the next ones for a time. But with both closing in on 30, and without a major championship between them, it appears to have been misplaced hope.

Now the 24-year-old Kim, Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy and Japan’s Ryo Ishikawa are the most touted to pick up the torch.

“You know what, I really don’t even hear it,” Kim said about being golf’s next one. “My buddies will joke around and tell me that I need to get on my game and beat them, and I’m on my own schedule.”

That was certainly the case during Kim’s hard-partying rookie season of 2007, when he had four top-10 finishes to go along with off-course habits that led fellow golfers to dub him Grey Goose, after the premium French vodka.

A heart-to-heart talk with Mark O’Meara — the PGA player of the year in 1998, when he won the British Open and the Masters, and Woods confidant, helped change Kim’s ways.

“He learned a lot from his rookie year on tour,” said Chris Armstrong, Kim’s Canadian agent. “He learned a lot from other guys on tour, what it would take to be successful. We certainly saw the results last year.”

Kim won the Wachovia Championship last year at age 22 to become the Tour’s youngest champion since Garcia in 2002. He later won the AT&T National. He also was the youngest member of the victorious U.S. Ryder Cup team, for which he delivered a key 5-and-4 win over Garcia in the first match of singles play on the final day.

That set the stage for what many thought would be a breakthrough 2009 season, but injuries have marred Kim’s year.


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Dec
21
2008
0

Anthony Finishes 7 Under – ties for 4th

AK shot a final round 73 to finish 7 under for the tournament in Tiger’s Chevron World Challenge at Sherwood Country Club, in Thousand Oaks, California. Playing in the final pairing with veteran Jim Furyk, Anthony had a day of ups and downs, holing out on the 13th for birdie and two holes later carding a double on the par 3 15th. Anthony finished on a good note, going birdie, birdie, par down the final stretch.

Kim finished 4 behind Fijian Vijay Singh, who birdied the 18th to finish 11 under—one better than runner-up Steve Stricker.

This was the final event of the PGA season. The 2009 season starts with the Mercedes-Benz Championship on January 8th at the Plantation Course at Kapalua, HI. Check out the full PGA tour schedule here.

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