Global Golf Post: Raining, Snarling And Chomping

By Art Spander
For GlobalGolfPost.com

KIAWAH ISLAND, SOUTH CAROLINA — It was a great PGA Championship if you liked traffic jams, thunderstorms and alligators eating CBS microphones.

Maybe not quite as great for those waiting for Tiger Woods to win that 15th major, but as Woods himself said even before the first weather warning was posted, he's got another 10 years or so to catch Jack Nicklaus.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2012 Global Golf Post

RealClearSports: Daly: Memories, Regret and a 68

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. — The name blows out of the past on the warm wind, whipping up memories and regret.

John Daly is high on a scoreboard in a major, and we are confronted with the joy and pain — mostly pain — of a career that spun out of control. Of a career that is a curiosity.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

RealClearSports: Phil Bought a Team, So Will Tiger?

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

KIAWAH ISLAND, S.C. — Were those raindrops pounding down on the media tent, drowning out Tiger Woods' voice? Or, the way Woods rolled his eyes in bewilderment at the sound, were they coins of his realm, silver dollars, 50-cent pieces or quarters?

We had gone past Tiger’s monthly disappointments and possibilities, the same items invoked almost every time he sits down in front of the journalists and behind a microphone.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

RealClearSports: When Baseball Teams Give Up

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

It's a business. That inescapable point has been drummed into us as long as there have been professional sports. At no time, however, does the idea become as apparent as that tidy little period at the end of July, baseball's trading deadline.

Teams in contention desperately go after the player or players they believe will make them champions. Teams out of contention basically throw up their arms and throw out their stars, although nobody involved ever would concede they, well, have conceded. Even though it's obvious they have.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

RealClearSports: Five Rings of Empty Seats, Empty Heads

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

There were empty seats in London, and as the world of Twitter would have it, empty heads at NBC.

A young female swimmer from China did what an American coach said is impossible, making us wonder whether she was on something illegal or he merely was on a vindictive crusade.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

RealClearSports: Angry at Paterno - and Ourselves

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

Are we angry at our own ignorance? Or at those who made us aware of what we didn't know?

It was Hollywood stuff, a paperback novel, the descent of the man whose statue has been carted away like that of a toppled dictator, the crash of a man who virtually had wings.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

RealClearSports: Did Adam Scott Really Choke?

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England — The word was everywhere, making a bad situation worse, as if what happened to Adam Scott the final day of the British Open, the final holes of the British Open, could be worse.

Scott not only lost the Open, blew the Open, came in second to Ernie Els, but was being branded a “choke,’’ and there’s nothing more demeaning in sports, nothing more damaging.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

Global Golf Post: Amid What's Wrong, The Open Has It Right

By Art Spander
For GlobalGolfPost.com

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, ENGLAND -- Oh, woe is England. Pickpocketing and shoplifting are on the increase. "Shameful" -- that's what the headline said -- civil servants planned to strike Heathrow Airport as Olympic Games traffic reached a peak.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2012 Global Golf Post

Newsday (N.Y.): Triple bogey undoes Tiger Woods' hopes

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England -- The game plan, Tiger Woods said, was to shoot under par going out. Instead, with a triple-bogey 7 on the sixth hole after landing in one of Royal Lytham & St. Annes' steep and evil bunkers, he shot himself in the foot.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2012 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Brandt Snedeker charges to lead at British Open; Tiger Woods 4 back

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England -- Brandt Snedeker tied a British Open scoring record Friday, sat down in the media tent and true to his hang-loose character insisted, "I'm sure everybody in the room is in about as much shock as I am right now.''

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2012 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Adam Scott shoots 64, leads British Open

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England -- When the U.S. basketball team arrived for the Olympics, there was frequent use of the words "Dream Team'' in the British papers. That phrase also would be a proper description of the leader board after Thursday's first round of the 141st British Open.

Read the full story.

Copyright © 2012 Newsday. All rights reserved.


RealClearSports: Tiger Pleased - and Has a Right to Be

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England - He trails the guy, Adam Scott, who uses his former swing - and his former caddie - by three shots.

He's two strokes behind Paul Lawrie, the man no one remembers won the '99 British Open - because they can't forget who lost it, Jean Van de Velde - as well as Zach Johnson and a Belgian named Nicolas Colsaerts.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

Newsday (N.Y.): Golfers expecting rough time of it at British Open

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England -- It is a course of too many bunkers and too little room. Royal Lytham & St. Annes is squeezed between railroad tracks and brick Victorian homes, where Bobby Jones got a title, Tiger Woods got confidence and David Duval's fling with greatness reached its apogee.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2012 Newsday. All rights reserved.


RealClearSports: Tiger and the Course of History

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England - It is a place of history, not beauty, a links course next to Victorian homes instead of the coastline. Blackpool, Britain's idea of Coney Island, is up the road, and the Beatles' home, Liverpool, is some 30 miles to the south, another reminder of the area's proletarian setting.

Royal Lytham & St. Annes, where the 141st British Open starts Thursday, isn't much for aesthetics. The elegance comes from the test it provides and from the players in 10 previous Opens, Bobby Jones to David Duval, who conquered her.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

PGA.com: Americans play crucial role in Open's success

By Art Spander
Special to PGA.com

LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England – In a land of royalty, we begin with The King. Not of the nation but of the country of golf, Arnold Palmer. He believed in the Open Championship, in what could be described as a sporting manifest destiny, of Americans crossing not mountains but the sea, to accept a challenge and win a championship.

Since 1922, when Walter Hagen, also given a title that would fit in Britain, “Sir Haig," there have been 89 Opens and 40 native-born American winners. That includes the last two at this year's venue, Royal Lytham & St. Annes on the Lancashire Coast -- Tom Lehman in 1996 and David Duval in 2001.

Read the full story here.

© 2012 PGA.com, the PGA of America and Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

RealClearSports: Deng Tries to Sell Hoops to Skeptical Brits

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

LONDON – He plays the wrong game, the one, which has made him rich and famous across the ocean but is barely recognized in his home country.

“The British Olympic Giant,’’ was the title of a piece in the Sunday magazine of the Times of London. Giant in terms of height, because as everyone familiar with the NBA knows Luol Deng is 6-foot-9.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

RealClearSports: There's Crying in Tennis, Rain in London

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com

LONDON – The tears apparently have dried, but unfortunately the streets haven’t. The Sunday Times had a front-page story on something other than the overdone hopes of Andy Murray, and it was about the weather for the upcoming Olympics.

In a word, like England’s results in soccer, grim.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012