Monday, March 3, 2014

Fred Couples turns back the clock, excels at rainy Riviera with bogey-free day

fred couples
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Fred Couples rode his languid swing and love of Riviera right up the leaderboard on Friday.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
Fred Couples does not look like he belongs atop the leaderboard on the PGA Tour.
Except that he's at Riviera.
Despite a bad back that hurts when he stoops over a short iron, Couples navigated around his favorite tour course without a bogey Friday for a 5-under 66 that gave him a two-shot lead in the Northern Trust Open.
It helped that he knocked in an eagle putt of nearly 100 feet on his opening hole, along with a pair of 30-foot birdie putts. But even for a 51-year-old well past his prime, he was carried along by a languid swing and his love for Riviera.
"I feel like I can play this course blindfolded," Couples said.
Some of his peers couldn't believe what they saw.
"He played like he was my age," said 25-year-old Anthony Kim, who was paired with Couples and was nine shots behind. "He was loose, swinging hard. He hit some quality shots, some aggressive shots. It doesn't hurt that he's won here a couple of times. He just knows what he's doing out here."
Couples first played Riviera three years before Kim was born. He won in 1990 and 1992, back when his hair was brown, not mostly gray, and when he didn't have to get up at 4:00 a.m. to stretch out his back so he could make it to the first tee.
It was tough for others, too. The wind and rain arrived in the afternoon, making Riviera so difficult that some medium-length hitters couldn't reach the par-4 18th with a driver and a 3-wood.
Of those who didn't finish the round before it was suspended by darkness, Spencer Levin was at 6 under with three holes remaining, while Aaron Baddeley was at 5 under with four holes to play.
Couples has not been atop the leaderboard through 36 holes since 2004 at the old Buick Classic at Westchester.
The affection from the gallery hasn't changed, especially at Riviera.
From the other side of the par-5 first green, Couples rapped a putt and watched it roll some 100 feet toward the cup and drop for an eagle. The cheer was loud enough for players still on the practice range to look up.
One player jokingly said, "Couples just made a 10-footer for par."
Paul Casey, who had a 67 and was four shots back, played in the group behind Couples. Asked how it felt to trail a 51-year-old who can barely bend over to tie his shoes, Casey started laughing.
"Every time I looked ahead, he's stretching his back, his hand is on his hip," Casey said. "We all know Freddie. He looks like he doesn't care. He looks like he's in pain. He could be on any score. And the fact he's on 8 under is brilliant."
Couples was at 8-under 134 heading into what could be a soggy weekend. The rain began to fall late in the afternoon as half of the field was trying to cope with tougher conditions.
J.B. Holmes was tied for the lead until a double bogey on the last hole gave him a 69. He was at 6-under 136, along with John Senden (69).
Trevor Immelman and Stewart Cink each had a 67, perhaps the rounds of the day considering they played the final two hours in the rain and wind. They were at 5-under 137, along with Robert Allenby, whose finish showed how tough it was.
He ripped a driver and hit a full 3-iron that still wasn't enough on the 464-yard ninth hole, and he three-putted from the front of the green for a 70.
Phil Mickelson struggled with his irons on his way to a 70 that put him seven shots behind, although not terribly worried.
"I'm not pleased being in the position where I'm at, but it could be a lot worse," Mickelson said. "And I should be within striking distance if I can go out and shoot some hot round tomorrow."
That he would be trying to catch up to Couples was surprising given his age and his health. Casey, however, said course knowledge and good vibes only go so far.
"I don't care how well he knows this course, and he probably knows it as well as the members," Casey said. "It doesn't matter if you don't hit the golf ball where you need to."
Such is his affection for Riviera that Couples didn't think twice about playing this week -- even though he is the defending champion at the Champions Tour event in Naples, Fla.
"I don't think anyone is mad. Besides Augusta, it's my favorite spot," Couples said. "I don't think it's a slap in the face if they just look where I live and my schedule and how I play here. It would take two seconds to figure it out."
Couples not only has two wins at Riviera, he has four top 10s in the last decade and nearly had a chance to win two years ago until he butchered a 9-iron into the 18th with a chance to put pressure on Mickelson.
He was 49, and that figured to be his last chance to win on tour.
Yet here is again, twisting and stretching, taking left-handed baseball swings with his putter while trying to keep loose. The hardest part for Couples after his round was climbing the 100-foot hill toward the clubhouse to sign his card.
When the tour asked him to visit The Golf Channel's booth, Couples said, "Can't do it."
"I'm ready for a nap," he said.
He was up at 4:00 a.m. to stretch and get treatment on what he called a "back machine." It was still dark when he got to the practice range, and he kept to his routine in which he only hits long clubs -- the driver, 5-wood and hybrids -- because to bend over a short iron hurts. He'd rather wait until the shot counts to do that.
"I don't consider this warming up," Couples said. "I just think it's waiting for my tee time to come."
And he came out swinging, with the long eagle putt on No. 1, a 35-foot birdie putt on the ninth, a 30-footer on the 15th and a series of scary putts in the 5-foot range for pars. He has gone 32 holes without a bogey at Riviera.
For two rounds, he looks as young as ever. But that only goes so far.
He went to see "The Social Network," but only because it starred Justin Timberlake. Couples still doesn't know what Facebook is all about. Remember, it was only two years ago that he started sending text messages (he received one after his round from Tiger Woods).
As for Twitter? Uh, no.
"If I did Twitter, would I tell people that I'm heading home and then going to eat at California Pizza Kitchen? Is that what you do? Or do you actually tweet information?" he said. "Well, what information do I have for my 500,000 followers? I'm 51. I live in the desert. They all know that already.
"If you guys write well enough, they'll know that I'm in good shape going into tomorrow. I don't need to tweet anybody."

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Flacco Under Fire



Posted Aug 24, 2008

By Denver Parler



Joe Flacco was thrown into the fire when neither Troy Smith nor Kyle Boller could play in St. Louis.


With Troy Smith scheduled to make his second consecutive preseason start Saturday night in St. Louis, the Ravens were forced to make a last-minute audible when Smith came down with a viral illness.

That opened the door for 2008 first-round draft pick Joe Flacco to step in and make his first start of the preseason. He was under center from the opening whistle to the final gun, a rarity for any player in the preseason, and completed 18 of 37 passes for 152 yards and a touchdown while playing turnover-free football.

“I prepare myself to be ready at any time,” Flacco said. “That’s what you have to do as a quarterback. It wasn’t in the plan. I didn’t really take many reps in practice this week. All of a sudden, I’m the starter, and I’m playing four quarters. So I’m going to prepare myself to be ready at all times.”

Prior to Saturday night, Flacco had seen action exclusively in the fourth quarter of the Ravens’ first two contests, completing 10 of 18 passes for 74 yards.

The signal caller’s evening got off to an inauspicious start, as he handed off to fellow rookie Ray Rice on the Ravens’ first two plays from scrimmage before his third-down pass sailed out of Derrick Mason’s reach.

Baltimore later put its first points on the board with a 22-yard Matt Stover field goal with 4:17 remaining in the first quarter. Flacco completed a 14-yard strike to Mason, who led Baltimore with six receptions for 85 yards, to set up the chip shot.

The offense received a huge assist from special teams to set up the six-play, 16-yard drive, as Tom Zbikowski got a hand on Donnie Jones’ punt from the Rams’ end zone, resulting in an 11-yard kick that gave Baltimore the ball at the St. Louis 20-yard line.

Taking advantage of those goal-to-go situations figures to be crucial to the offense’s success going forward, regardless of who takes the snaps.

“We have to score touchdowns when we get the chance, and we had one after the blocked punt,” noted offensive coordinator Cam Cameron. “That was a great opportunity and we didn’t get in. Field goals are not a bad thing, but touchdowns are the goal.

Flacco admitted the adrenaline rush that came with getting his first start may have contributed to his 4-of-13 first-half performance during which several passes were thrown above or beyond their intended targets.

“It was exciting for me, so I had to calm myself down,” Flacco said. “As the game went on, I felt like I did. I felt pretty comfortable throughout the whole game.”

Flacco appeared to find his groove as he engineered an ultra-efficient 75-yard touchdown drive to open the third quarter. He connected with Mason on all four of his pass attempts, including a perfect 15-yard drive-capping fade, as the Ravens needed just seven plays and 3:15 off the clock to march down the field.

“That drive just felt good, coming out of [halftime],” Flacco recalled. “We moved the ball pretty well.”

With the confidence boost a touchdown toss brings, Flacco continued making strides as the game progressed.

“He really did get comfortable and started getting the ball out quicker, saw some things, made some real accurate throws near the end there and had some zip on the ball,” Harbaugh observed. “You could see him growing throughout the course of the game.”

After the Mason-fueled touchdown drive, Flacco began to spread the ball around effectively. In all, nine Ravens caught at least one pass.

While the Ravens put just 10 points on the board, the most important result of Saturday’s surprise quarterback shuffle was that Flacco added a wealth of NFL-caliber game experience he was otherwise unlikely to obtain at this stage of his development.

“The whole game experience, playing four quarters in a row was pretty good for me,” said Flacco.

Harbaugh concurred: “I think he’s moving pretty quickly up the [learning] curve, and you saw it from the first quarter to the fourth quarter tonight.”

Put simply, the Ravens expected to learn something about one of their quarterbacks on Saturday, and that’s precisely what they did.