Golf Cap Hat Pinehurst number 2 US Open 2005

US Open 2005 Golf Cap Hat Pinehurst number 2 dark navy new with tag from Pinehurst Resort retail . adjustable Nice US Open golf hat from the famous Pinehurst, NC Golf Course – #2.This hat is new … it was just used as a display. Great gift idea!ID 9012

Price: $ 5.99

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60439 Lemont, USA

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ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Loren Roberts figured he’d be lucky to force a playoff in the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open after making bogey at No. 17.”When I did that, I still thought I was still going to be a chaser,” Roberts said. “I thought there went my chance there. We’re walking to the 18th tee and I asked my caddie, ‘What’s everybody doing?’ I hadn’t seen a board.”The leaderboard said there was a three-way tie at 14 under. “That kind of pricked my ears up a little bit,” he said.


Dick’s Sporting Goods Open Leaderboard


1. Roberts (-15)
2. Funk (-14)
T-3. Levi (-13)
T-3. Forsman (-13)
T-3. Price (-13)

• Scores

Roberts responded with a birdie on the 18th hole to finish at 15-under 201 for a one-shot victory over Fred Funk on a hot, humid Sunday.Roberts pounded his final drive within 125 yards of the pin at the par-4, 419-yard closing hole at En-Joie Golf Club. He then hit a pitching wedge 7 feet left of the cup to set up his final putt. Roberts, who just turned 55, and Funk both shot 65 on Sunday.”It’s a very satisfying day for me, especially to come back from that bogey and get the win was huge,” Roberts said of his 12th victory on the Champions Tour.Local favorite Wayne Levi (69) tied for third at 13 under with Nick Price (68) and Dan Forsman (71), who bogeyed three of the final five holes to lose the lead he held for most of the day.Ken Green, who shot an impressive 2-over 74 on Saturday as he adjusts to the game wearing a prosthetic device on his lower right leg, withdrew Sunday morning because of pain and said he would not play next week in Montreal.This was Forsman’s tournament to win, but after making one bogey over the first two rounds he self-destructed at the end with three bogeys over the final five holes.”Anytime you’re leading, it’s never easy,” said Forsman, who won the Regions Charity Classic in mid-May and has seven top-10s in 12 starts this year. “It just started to unravel. You compound that with the emotional fatigue and the psychological and physiological fatigue, it’s tough.”Forsman made a pretty 8-foot putt that broke left-to-right and into the hole for birdie at No. 11 to vault into sole possession of the lead at 15 under.Moments later, Roberts holed a 25-yard chip from the rough for eagle at No. 12 to begin his surge, and followed that with birdies on the next two holes to move into contention.”You make an eagle and you follow with another birdie, that really gives you some momentum,” Roberts said. “I just kind of caught that momentum.”Forsman reached 16 under with a birdie putt from inside 2 feet at No. 12 that he nearly missed. He then made bogey at the par-3 14th hole, running a 25-foot putt to within 2 feet of the hole but missing the easy par putt.”My putting has been a little bit of an issue,” Forsman said. “I think that’s what happened down the stretch. I just wasn’t popping the putter as well.”It was the second straight bogey at 14 for Forsman, and his struggles continued at the next hole when he hit a poor drive, hit his second shot into a greenside bunker and made bogey again.Roberts birdied No. 16 to gain the lead by a shot but returned the favor at the par-3 17th hole when he drove the rough behind the green and was unable to get up and down.The five-shot lead Forsman had held over Roberts had vanished so fast, and when he went to the tee at 16 Forsman was in a three-way tie for the lead, with Price and Levi just a shot behind.Funk, who started the day five shots off the lead, had four birdies on the front nine as he took advantage of ideal scoring conditions, and his third birdie on the back side, at No. 16, left him within one shot of the lead. Funk drove the green at the par-4, but left his downhill try for eagle just short. He parred the final two holes and watched Roberts win it from the scorer’s tent.”It feels good to be in the hunt coming down the stretch. I was real pleased,” said Funk, who has five wins on the Champions Tour and eight on the PGA Tour. “There’s nothing to feel bad about, that’s for sure.”Forsman began the day with a one-shot lead over Brad Bryant and was immediately distracted on the par-4 opening hole. Lying 8 feet from the pin after two shots, Forsman had to pull away from his birdie attempt when a yellow butterfly landed on the face of his putter. When he resumed his stance, the butterfly briefly alighted on the cup before flying away, and he missed the putt.Forsman rallied with birdies at both par-5s on the front nine, lipped out a birdie try at No. 9, and made the turn tied with Price at 14 under.
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

MUNICH — David Horsey of England birdied the 18th hole to win the BMW International Open by one stroke over countryman Ross Fisher on Sunday, shooting a 5-under 67 that earned him the biggest victory of his career.The 25-year-old former Walker Cup player earned 0,000 — easily the biggest payday of his two-year professional career. Horsey finished at 18 under after starting the day tied for fifth place.

BMW International Open Leaderboard

1. Horsey (-18)
2. Fisher (-17)
T-3. Larrazabal (-16)
T-3. Cabrera Bello (-16)
T-3. Cejka (-16)
T-3. Dredge (-16)
T-3. Ferrie (-16)

• Complete scores
Fisher had an eagle on the 18th to place second, and five players tied for third at 16 under: Alex Cejka of Germany, Pablo Larrazabal and Rafael Cabrero-Bello of Spain, Kenneth Ferrie of England and Bradley Dredge of Wales.Dredge took a three-shot lead into the final round and extended it to four after a birdie on No. 1. But his round collapsed when he dropped five shots in seven holes from the 10th, finishing with a 74.Horsey went into the 18th sharing the lead with Dredge, who was on the 16th at the time. The Welshman twice hit into a hazard for a double bogey, while Horsey laid up with his second shot on the par-5 last and then sank what turned out to be a winning birdie putt from 5 feet.”Although it was on a big screen by the green, I didn’t watch what was happening to Bradley,” Horsey said. “My caddy knew, but he didn’t tell me and I didn’t ask.”I was just trying to make birdie without having taken the risk of trying to hit the green in two from 250 yards out. I didn’t want to know what was happening because I did not want to put pressure on myself. That had been my policy all through the four rounds, to just try to relax and not make mistakes.”Horsey’s previous best finishes were second places at the Malaysian Open in 2009 and the recent BMW Italian Open.For Dredge, his failure to close out victory could prove costly. He was hoping to record his third career win and move closer to securing a Ryder Cup place on home soil at Celtic Manor in October.But having lost a four-shot advantage, he now possesses the unwanted record of failing to close out victory nine times in his career when leading going into the final day.At No. 39, Fisher was the highest-ranked player in the last three playing groups and had started his final round tied for second.His hopes of victory crashed when he ran up a double bogey at the fourth and he only managed to clinch second place with a closing 70 when he sank a putt for an eagle on the final green.
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

MUNICH — Bradley Dredge of Wales had two eagles in a round for the first time in his 14-year professional career to earn a one-shot lead at the midpoint of the BMW International Open.He shot a 5-under 67 in Friday’s second round, picking up four shots at the sixth and 11th holes at the Golfclub Munchen Eichenreid.Dredge moved to 13-under for the tournament to pull ahead of Spain’s Pablo Larrazabal, who shot a 6-under 66 earlier in the day.Spain’s Ignacio Garrido and Scotland’s Peter Whiteford were tied for third at 11-under.Ernie Els missed the cut when he couldn’t make a 15-foot eagle putt on the last green.
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

MADRID, Spain — Seve Ballesteros has canceled plans to attend the British Open at St. Andrews next month.The 53-year-old Spaniard underwent life-saving surgery in 2008 after being diagnosed with a brain tumor.Ballesteros had planned to play in a four-hole event for former champions on July 14, the day before the Open starts.But he canceled the trip after undergoing his latest round of health checks at the La Paz Hospital in Madrid on Tuesday.A statement on his website Thursday says his medical team decided “he should not put himself under any undue stress or in potentially emotional situations.”

Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

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MUNICH — Bradley Dredge of Wales and Peter Whiteford of Scotland led the BMW International Open by one shot after shooting 8-under 64s in the first round Thursday.A group of four players had 65s: Ariel Canete of Argentina, Jeppe Huldahl of Sweden, Chapchair Nirat of Thailand and Phil Price of Wales.

BMW International Open Leaderboard

T-1. Dredge (-8)
T-1. Whiteford (-8)
T-3. Canete (-7)
T-3. Huldahl (-7)
T-3. Nirat (-7)
T-3. Price (-7)

• Complete scores

The joint leaders played early Thursday and are likely to find the course much tougher when they start their second rounds after lunch Friday.The greens, softened by weeks of heavy rain, will become bumpy and unpredictable after being exposed to heavy player traffic.That was the view of the world No. 8 Paul Casey after he shot a 68 late on the first day.”I was maybe a little frustrated,” he said. “I gave myself so many opportunities tee to green. I was pretty strong. But we had had a lot of traffic on the greens and a couple of putts slipped by.”But the good news was that if I could play like that in the second round starting early when the greens will be fantastic, I will be able to take advantage of it.”Casey also remarked how different the conditions were in Munich, with damp fairways giving way to preferred lies, to those at Pebble Beach where he played last weekend in the U.S. Open.”These greens are very receptive and you can throw the ball very close to the hole, where at Pebble Beach it was a question of playing the ball bump and run into the greens. I was not surprised that a couple of guys coming over from the States struggled.”While U.S. Open third-placed finisher Ernie Els shot a 2-under 70, the chief victim was Sergio Garcia, who opened with a 5-over 77.The Spaniard didn’t speak to reporters after his round. He has slumped from second in the world to 36th over the last 15 months, and is worried his run of five straight Ryder Cups is about to end.”He isn’t enjoying his golf at all at the moment,” said Carlos Rodriguez, Garcia’s manager. “It is not fun for him.”Sergio has even said that if Colin Montgomerie were willing to offer him a Ryder Cup wild card he’s not sure whether he would be of any help to the European team.”
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

The windswept conditions at Pebble Beach changed the “script,” or storyboarded clothing plan, for many of the golfers at the U.S. Open. It turned into the Sweater Open, as the players had to pull on knitwear or thermal pullovers for most of the weekend. It was kind of a relief, stylewise, not to have to look at the usual endless sea of golf shirts over and over again.The winner, Graeme McDowell,  looked calm and collected the entire weekend. Perhaps it was no coincidence that he wore a classic, low-key Perry Como look, a buttoned-up cardigan sweater, all four days. Maybe he just lulled the rest of the field to sleep. You don’t see many cardigans on tour anymore. On Sunday McDowell matched his dove-gray sweater with a peach golf shirt, cream trousers, and white shoes — a sophisticated color harmony and not bad at all. (McDowell’s clothes come from Louis Copeland and Sons of Dublin; the golf shoes from Stuburt of Manchester, England).Other sartorial notables on the Pebble cliffs: Tiger Woods in totally beige mode for his Saturday breakout, when he wore fluid ecru trousers, a form-fitting tan sweater, and a white golf shirt. This was Woods at his most stylish. He looked very cool during his big charge. Ernie Els wore a similar look while struggling on Sunday. Taking a page out of the Gary Player book, numerous golfers wore all black on various days of the tournament, including Woods on Sunday (except for the red shirt); Ian Poulter on Saturday; Alex Cejka, who also wore a black knit watchcap from time to time; and Japanese teen phenom Kyo Ishigawa, who wore striking black-and-white plaid trousers Saturday. The kid has plenty of fashion snap to go along with his high-powered game. Phil Mickelson wore a black shirt for his final round, but the white striped trousers did not do him any favors. In the early rounds, one look was everywhere: a black sweater vest over short-sleeved white golf shirt and either gray or black trousers. A dozen players were turned out this way in the early going. It is not an outfit a guy is likely to wear in everyday life, but it is easy to see why it is a perfect fashion accommodation for seaside summer golf. The close-fitting vest keeps the body core warm but, paired with a short-sleeve golf shirt, allows for freedom of movement.

Al Tielemans/SI
Finally, leave it to a Frenchman, the surprising No. 2 finisher Gregory Havret, to achieve a special level of sartorial ease and elegance. The guy, ranked 391st in the world, looked extremely good throughout, especially on the final day in his mélange of gray, wearing his countryman Rene Lacoste’s signature crocodile while outplaying le Tigre — and almost everyone else.
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