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Archive for March, 2009

Presidents Cup Standings

March 10, 2009

At Harding Park Golf Club.

San Francisco

Oct. 9-11, 2009

Through March 8

United States

1. Phil Mickelson 9,417,604

2. Tiger Woods 9,007,667

3. Kenny Perry 7,855,203

4. Steve Stricker 6,722,464

5. Justin Leonard 6,337,478

6. Anthony Kim 6,025,166

7. Stewart Cink 5,928,721

8. Zach Johnson 5,097,540

9. Dustin Johnson 4,844,277

10. Sean O’Hair 4,612,903

11. Pat Perez 4,206,091

12. Jim Furyk 4,196,724

13. D.J. Trahan 4,023,180

14. John Rollins 3,662,826

15. Brian Gay 3,625,491

International

1. Geoff Ogilvy Aus 6.33

2. Vijay Singh Fji 5.96

3. Camilo Villegas Col 4.74

4. Ernie Els SAf 4.19

5. Adam Scott Aus 3.65

6. Mike Weir Can 3.65

7. K.J. Choi Kor 3.55

8. Trevor Immelman SAf 3.03

9. Robert Allenby Aus 2.97

10. Tim Clark SAf 2.87

11. Andres Romero Arg 2.72

12. Jeev Milkha Singh Ind 2.71

13. Retief Goosen SAf 2.66

14. Rory Sabbatini SAf 2.54

15. Shingo Katayama Jpn 2.51

Get in on the action at Canbet sportsbook ( 8 - 9 Mar.)

March 8, 2009

FA CUP - LIVE ‘IN-PLAY’
English football’s most competitive knockout competition enters the quarter finals stage this weekend, bar the delayed Arsenal v Swansea fixture. With Man Utd and Chelsea still in the hunt for glory, will it be another case of Big 4 domination or is an upset on the cards?

HORSE RACING - PRE-CHELTENHAM WEEKEND
Strong programmes at Sandown and Wolverhampton this weekend are set to whet punters’ appetites for the annual Cheltenham jumps racing feast starting next week. Pick your winners at Canbet with Best Odds Guaranteed, SP+ and 25% Cashback on all UK Racing.

INTERNATIONAL CRICKET
West Indies (3.95) v England (2.85) and South Africa (2.60) v Australia (3.85) provide a global spread of Test cricket this weekend, while New Zealand (2.40) v India (1.57) top off the action with an ODI clash in Wellington. Catch better odds and more markets at Canbet sportsbook.

DAVIS CUP TENNIS
It’s the largest annual international team competition in sport, featuring 125 countries. This weekend, defending Champions and outright favourites, Spain (1.15) clashes with Serbia (5.25) in one of eight Davis Cup World Group first round ties.

Langer takes opening lead in Newport Beach

March 7, 2009

Defending champion Bernhard Langer shot a 6-under 65 to take a one-stroke lead after the first round of the Toshiba Classic on Friday.

Langer, a two-time Masters winner, was one stroke ahead of Jim Colbert, Bob Gilder and Eduardo Romero.

Mark O’Meara and Denis Watson were two shots off the lead.

“I played really well,” said Langer, who was 1 under through 11 holes and then played the next seven in 5 under. “I struck it really well. I missed a couple of putts. Otherwise I was really happy with my ball-striking.

“I’m pleased with the way it ended. It could have been a little better, but overall I’m happy.”

Langer also shot 65 in last year’s opening round. He now has played four rounds over the Newport Beach Country Club layout - all under par.

While Langer was pleased, Colbert was overjoyed. Colbert, who won the event in 1996, has 20 Champions Tour victories, but none since the 2001 SBC Senior Classic.

Colbert, who turns 68 on Monday, shot a stroke better than his age. He began the day 5-under through four holes and finished with a round that included one eagle, eight birdies, three bogeys, one double bogey and five pars.

“My goal nowadays, I hate to tell you, is just to be able to tee off on the second and third round,” Colbert said.

Langer missed a chance to pad his lead on the closing hole. He hit a 5-wood second shot to five feet on the par 5 18th, but couldn’t get the putt to drop.

“I think I read it correctly,” he said. “But I’d like to have the lead by two shots. You hit it that close, you’d like to make the putt.”

“I gave myself a lot of opportunities,” Langer said. “I just couldn’t convert. But I am happy with my game, just not making all of the putts.”

Champions-Toshiba Classic Scores

March 7, 2009

Scores Friday from the Toshiba Classic, a $1,7 million Champions Tour event at 6,584-yard, par-71 Newport Beach Country Club.

First Round

Bernhard Langer 34-31-65

Jim Colbert 32-34-66

Bob Gilder 34-32-66

Eduardo Romero 32-34-66

Mark O’Meara 31-36-67

Denis Watson 35-32-67

Tom Watson 33-35-68

Andy Bean 35-33-68

Joey Sindelar 33-35-68

Tim Simpson 33-35-68

Gene Jones 35-33-68

Bobby Wadkins 33-36-69

John Cook 34-35-69

Jim Thorpe 32-37-69

Bruce Vaughan 34-35-69

Fred Funk 34-35-69

Allen Doyle 32-37-69

Loren Roberts 34-35-69

Tom Jenkins 35-34-69

Larry Nelson 34-35-69

Jeff Sluman 36-33-69

Bruce Lietzke 35-34-69

Massy Kuramoto 34-35-69

David Eger 35-35-70

Mike McCullough 34-36-70

Mark W. Johnson 36-34-70

Jay Sigel 35-35-70

Fulton Allem 35-35-70

Keith Fergus 36-34-70

Brad Bryant 36-34-70

Morris Hatalsky 33-37-70

Tom Kite 35-35-70

John Jacobs 36-34-70

Scott Hoch 35-35-70

Fuzzy Zoeller 36-34-70

Sandy Lyle 35-35-70

Robert L. Thompson 34-36-70

Tom Wargo 35-36-71

D.A. Weibring 36-35-71

Lonnie Nielsen 38-33-71

Lee Trevino 33-38-71

Ben Crenshaw 35-36-71

Blaine McCallister 35-36-71

Joe Ozaki 37-34-71

Graham Marsh 36-36-72

Bob Murphy 35-37-72

Dan Forsman 37-35-72

Ron Streck 36-36-72

Ian Woosnam 36-36-72

Larry Mize 35-37-72

Hale Irwin 35-37-72

Bruce Fleisher 35-37-72

Nick Price 36-36-72

Wayne Levi 40-32-72

James Mason 36-36-72

Wayne Grady 36-36-72

Steve Thomas 35-37-72

Dana Quigley 38-35-73

Craig Stadler 36-37-73

Tom Purtzer 37-36-73

Don Pooley 37-36-73

John Morse 35-38-73

Javier Sanchez 37-36-73

Dave Stockton 35-39-74

John Harris 38-36-74

Mark Wiebe 38-36-74

Mark McNulty 39-35-74

Mike Goodes 37-37-74

Tom McKnight 37-37-74

Greg Hopkins 35-39-74

Vicente Fernandez 39-36-75

Ronnie Black 37-38-75

Gary McCord 38-37-75

Hubert Green 34-41-75

Gary Player 36-40-76

Hal Sutton 40-36-76

Bruce Summerhays 37-40-77

Isao Aoki 41-36-77

Ken Green 40-37-77

Ochoa to defend HSBC Champions crown in Singapore

March 5, 2009

Fresh from winning her opening tournament of the season, No 1-ranked Lorena Ochoa will defend her crown this week in Asia’s richest women’s golf tournament, the $2 million HSBC Women’s Champions in Singapore.

Ochoa, who won here last year by 11 strokes, will take on 34 of the 40 top-ranked players in the 78-woman field, including Americans Paula Creamer, Angela Stanford, Cristie Kerr, and Natalie Gulbis at the par-72, 6,547-yard Tanah Merah Country Club course.

Ochoa is also eyeing a group of young Asian stars, including world No. 2 Yani Tseng of Taiwan, after winning her 25th career title at last week’s Honda LPGA Thailand.

“It’s great that now there’s a whole new generation of players to challenge me,” said Ochoa, a 27-year-old from Mexico. “All of them are very young, and they’re not afraid.”

Ochoa started moderately last week in Thailand but improved to record a three-stroke victory over South Korea’s Hee Young Park. Creamer led by three strokes entering the final round, but shot a 73 to finish third, four strokes back.

Tseng, who at 19 years old last year was the youngest player to win the LPGA Championship, said she plans to get off to a fast start in Thursday’s opening round in her bid to knock Ochoa from her perch atop the rankings.

“My goal this year is to be world No. 1 ,” Tseng said. “I will be looking for a great start with a lot of birdies.”

Tseng joins a slew of young Korean stars - 17 of the top 50 players are from South Korea - who have begun to make a name for themselves in a women’s golf scene in transition after the retirement of Sweden’s Annika Sorenstam and the fading of other experienced stars.

“Until recently things were being dominated by a few more experienced players,” said fourth-ranked Suzann Pettersen of Norway. “Suddenly these girls have come in and shaken up the mix at the top of women’s golf.”

Local fans will be cheering on 15-year-old Joey Poh, who qualified by winning an amateur tournament last month.

McIlroy’s tour set to continue at Honda Classic

March 5, 2009

Rory McIlroy is going through his schedule, sounding remarkably unimpressed.

Honda Classic this week. CA Championship next week. A quick trip home. Back to the United States for a round at Augusta National, maybe even a practice round with Tiger Woods in there somewhere.

It’s a glitzy itinerary for just about any pro golfer. For the 19-year-old from Northern Ireland, it’s somehow no big deal.

“I just go out and play golf, talk about what I’ve been doing, and everything else takes care of itself,” McIlroy said.

He makes it all sound simple.

Golf’s latest Next Big Thing is at PGA National this week, where Sergio Garcia, Camilo Villegas and defending champion Ernie Els headline the field at the Honda. But there’s going to be plenty of eyes on the teen, who’s already No. 16 in the world rankings and gave eventual champion Geoff Ogilvy all he wanted last week at Match Play before losing 2 and 1 in the quarterfinals.

McIlroy has already won at Dubai, and with a victory this week or at Miami next week, he could become the U.S. PGA Tour’s youngest winner.

“He’s what I was 10 years ago,” Garcia said.

As almost always, the South Florida wind is blowing. The greens are even a touch quicker than last year and many are convinced that if anyone matches Els’ 6-under 274 from a year ago, he will be the guy walking away with $1,008,000 on Sunday.

McIlroy says he’s looking forward to the daunting challenge of the Jack Nicklaus design.

“I think especially with the breeze and the last few holes, it’s going to make for a pretty interesting finish as it always does,” McIlroy said. “It will be a good week, and one I’m looking forward to.”

There usually seems to be some young player on tour facing lofty expectations, and not everyone, of course, lives up to the billing.

But McIlroy is already commanding respect.

“Definitely one of the superstars of the future,” said Robert Allenby, who lives just down the road from PGA National. “He’s got a great talent. … I think he’s going to be fantastic for the tournament this week. He’ll be definitely one of the favorites to win for sure, with the way he’s been playing.”

That may be true, although it’s hard to handicap any tournament that doesn’t include Tiger Woods. And at PGA National, a few bad swings can send anyone freefalling down the leaderboard.

Slow and steady is the preferred method to win at the Honda, something Els managed last year and Mark Wilson - who’s coming off a win in Mexico last week - did the year before that.

“The one-shot-at-a-time motto is something my mom gave me when I was in junior golf and that’s what I try to do every week,” Wilson said. “And on a course like this where par is good, you’ve just got to hang in there.”

PGA National is a long par-70, with it’s lure being the “Bear’s Trap,” a span of holes 15, 16 and 17 that’s a nod to Nicklaus and has par-3’s at its beginning and end. There’s some tricky short holes, some par-4’s that are reachable only with long irons if the wind’s blowing strongly, and missing on the wrong side of many greens will just take par out of play.

By now, dealing with situations like this is old hat for McIlroy. He started really turning heads with a sensational opening round at Carnoustie two years ago, and simply doesn’t seemed fazed by all the attention on him these days, either.

Woods chased Nicklaus as a kid, now-famously taping a list of Nicklaus’ accomplishments on his bedroom wall growing up. On McIlroy’s wall, there was a copy of Woods’ scorecard from the 1997 Masters.

“Any new kid that comes out is going to be compared to Tiger because he has been the best of the last 10 or 15 years, and he might be the greatest golfer of all time by the time he finishes,” McIlroy said. “So it doesn’t bother me. You have to have someone to compare yourself against. … And if I can get anywhere close to him, I’ll be very happy.”

Prize money reduced for SAIL Open in India

March 4, 2009

Organizers have reduced the prize money for this year’s SAIL Open by 25 percent.

The schedule on the Asian Tour’s Web site confirms that the March 18-21 SAIL Open will offer $300,000 as prize money, reduced from last year’s $400,000.

The SAIL Open is jointly sanctioned by the Professional Golf Tour of India and the Asian Tour. It will be played at the Classic Golf Resort on the outskirts of the Indian capital.

The country’s premier tournament is the $1 million Indian Open, which will be played Oct. 8-11 at the Delhi Golf Club.

In recent months, the Indian Masters and the Ladies Indian Masters - both part of the European tours - were canceled due to the global economic downturn.

PGA Tour wives tee it up for charity

March 4, 2009

Bob Estes was 140 yards from the hole, standing over a pink ball and wearing a sombrero. As if that wasn’t daunting enough, his wife and three other women wearing short white skirts and knee-high Argyle socks were jumping nearby and yelling “Hole it, hole it, hole it!”

He did not hole it.

Not even close, actually, although that hardly mattered.

Tuesday was Ladies Day at PGA National, site of this week’s Honda Classic. They played the PGA Tour Wives Classic, where 37 spouses and significant others of tour pros played a nine-hole, four-woman scramble, with the husbands wearing pink-trimmed caddie bibs and being drafted to play mulligans.

By day’s end, nearly $100,000 was raised for charity.

“We’re on the road 30 to 35 weeks a year and the road becomes our home,” said Amy Wilson, the wife of 2007 Honda champion Mark Wilson and the president of the PGA Tour Wives Association. “The PGA Tour gives so much back through each tournament through charities, and we get to mirror that and help in our own way too. And through the connections we have through our husbands, we can open doors.”

Former LPGA player Angie Oberholser was the tournament director, and she spent nearly a full year organizing everything. There were gift bags for everyone and specially made hats designed by Vicky Waldorf, the wife of longtime tour pro Duffy Waldorf.

Oberholser is pregnant and said she wasn’t sure if “good-golfer Angie or pregnant Angie” would be on the first tee. Good-golfer Angie was there; she drilled her opening drive perfectly down the fairway, drawing applause from about two dozen PGA National members who showed up to watch.

“This tournament is a lot of work,” said Oberholser, who threatened to fire her caddie and husband Arron last year, but had Matt Kuchar on her bag Tuesday because her spouse is recovering from surgery. “But I really enjoyed it.”

The wives association donated more than $246,000 to charity last year, plus had members volunteer time at soup kitchens, building sites, schools, hospitals and with children’s programs.

Indeed, the fundraising side was taken extremely seriously.

The golf, not so much.

When caddie David Duval was digging a ball out of some muck on the first tee, fellow caddie Brad Faxon jumped out of his cart to take a picture. Alli McKenzie nearly whiffed a tee shot when she learned that the par-3’s hole-in-one prize was a $500 gift card from Saks. (Not only did any of the women in her foursome hit the green, none even cleared the cart path 75 yards ahead of them.)

“I’m not listening to my caddie anymore,” Liz Estes said after that hole.

And by the fourth hole of the day, Leot Chen - with Vaughn Taylor as her caddie - showed off an unusual one-handed grip on a 40-yard pitch: Wedge in the right hand, cocktail in the left.

So it goes when the final instruction before the shotgun start reminded players that “we will have margaritas for you out there.”

“This is so much fun,” Brenda Calcavecchia said. “Everybody gets involved in it. We do events all year long, but this is kind of the big thing for us. It’s probably the biggest fundraiser we do and it’s just fun. People get so excited about it.”

Her husband, Mark Calcavecchia, has a bit of an obsession about changing putters often. She hasn’t changed hers in nearly a decade, even though she once hit a putt 100 feet past the hole - some 30 yards back up the fairway - when she had an opportunity to play Augusta National a few years back.

How’s Mark as a caddie?

“Depends on how many beers,” she said. “He sees things differently than I do. He doesn’t see the water and the sand. I see the water and the sand. And my nickname is Golden Tee, because he has to line me up. Little left, little right, right there.”

Brenda Calcavecchia took about a half-dozen swings on the driving range, slicing just about everything. She thought the dangling bracelet on her left wrist was the problem, but fortunately, the caddie delivered good advice. “Aim left and swing harder,” Mark Calcavecchia said.

There was a lot of tips like that Tuesday.

The scene couldn’t have been more laid-back. They posed for pictures on just about every hole, cheered like crazy when topped 75-yarders from the fairway happened to roll up on the greens, and more than a few freely acknowledged they didn’t know what was on their scorecard - nor did they care.

“My wife has high expectations on every shot, with a very low amount of work put into her game,” Mark Wilson said. “To see all the other players and their wives in a setting like this, and we don’t have to hit a shot, there’s no pressure on us at all. So this is so much fun.”

Love, Toms not quite yet over the hump

March 4, 2009

Davis Love III began the year with a No 77 world ranking. David Toms was at No 113 They knew they would have to play well on the West Coast to qualify for the World Golf Championships, and eventually the bigger prize of getting in the Masters.

Both made significant progress. But they’re not quite there.

Love, a runner-up at Kapalua, at least made it to the Accenture Match Play Championship, where he beat Henrik Stenson in the opening round. But his loss on the 18th hole to Justin Leonard in the next round might have proved costly.

If he had won that match, Love would have gone inside the top 50 in the rankings and qualified for the CA Championship next week at Doral. Instead, he was at No. 53. Love is playing in the Honda Classic this week, and will have one last chance to qualify for Doral, either through the top 50 in the world or top 10 in the FedEx Cup standings (he is No. 14).

Toms is in a more precarious spot.

He was a runner-up at the Sony Open and tied for fourth in Phoenix, but he narrowly missed out qualifying for Match Play. Toms went to Mexico for the Mayacoba Classic last week, and tied for sixth. That moved him up to No. 11 in the FedEx Cup standings, a mere 36 points behind Mike Weir.

Toms did not enter the Honda Classic, so he will not be eligible for Doral. He is ranked No. 64, so Toms will have only two tournaments to move into the top 50 and qualify for the Masters.

He has had Augusta National on his mind since the start of the year.

“Every time I see the Masters preview come on, it drives me crazy,” Toms said. “I’m working toward that.”

Meanwhile, Bob Hope winner Pat Perez, Buick Invitational winner Nick Watney and Charley Hoffman, a playoff loser in Phoenix, are in the top 10 in FedEx Cup standings, making them eligible for the CA Championship next week.

BALL WARS: Just when the patent lawsuit between Acushnet and Callaway was getting closer to resolution, both companies filed another round of lawsuits against each other Tuesday that could take two more years to settle.

Acushnet, parent company of Titleist and its Pro V1, already is appealing a verdict that its previous Pro V1 model infringed on four patents owned by Callaway. Titleist says the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office has found the Callaway patents to be invalid, which will be considered in the appeal.

Meanwhile, Titleist introduced a 2009 version of the Pro V1 this year that it said was outside the patents in question.

In the latest court battle, Callaway filed another lawsuit claiming the new Pro V1s still infringe on Callaway patents. Moments earlier, Titleist filed a separate lawsuit in the same federal court in Delaware claiming Callaway has infringed on nine patents with its Tour i and Tour ix golf ball.

“It is regrettable that one of our competitors would rather compete in the courtroom than in the pro shop,” said Joe Nauman, Acushnet’s executive vice president of corporate and legal affairs. “However, we are committed to seeing these matters through to appropriate conclusions.”

Steve McCracken, chief administrative officer for Callaway, said he expects to win the latest round of lawsuits.

“As long as Titleist, or any competitor, continues to introduce products that we believe infringe our patents, we will continue to seek relief in the courts,” McCracken said.

RESHUFFLE: Webb Simpson opened his rookie season with consecutive top 10s at the Sony Open and Bob Hope Classic, and it paid off. Simpson has earned $401,894 and is 33rd in the FedEx Cup standings, moving him to the top of the priority list for Q-school and Nationwide Tour grads.

This was the first of five reshuffles during the season.

James Nitties, who tied for fourth in Phoenix, when up one spot to No. 2, followed by Scott Piercy.

Q-school winner Harrison Frazar began the year atop that priority list, but he has made only three cuts (two top 20s) and fell to No. 14 after the reshuffle. The higher players are on the list, the better chance they have of getting into tournaments.

TV BIG THREE: Three television producers from different networks ordinarily would be a crowd at any golf tournament, but there was a reason for it at the Accenture Match Play Championship.

Lance Barrow, the golf producer for CBS Sports, was at Dove Mountain for a scouting report. CBS will be televising Match Play next year because NBC Sports will be tied up with the Vancouver Winter Olympics.

The only time Barrow has been involved with this format was the HSBC Women’s World Match Play Championship two years ago.

Tommy Roy, the golf producer for NBC, orchestrated coverage for the week, even the first three days on The Golf Channel. Also at Dove Mountain was Jack Graham, the producer for the Golf Channel.

Graham formerly was the golf producer for ABC Sports, which televised the first Match Play Championship in 1999.

It is among the most difficult golf tournaments to produce early in the week because of 32 matches going on across the course. Still, Roy could think of one other event that might be even tougher - the U.S. Amateur.

“At least we know who these players are,” Roy said.

DIVOTS: Padraig Harrington missed the cut at Pebble Beach and Riviera, lost in the first round at Match Play, then apparently changed his mind. The Irishman entered the CA Championship at Doral on Tuesday, after saying he likely would take that week off. … Boo Weekley’s match play record is 4-0 against Europeans and 0-2 against Americans. … Geoff Ogilvy beat higher seeds in every round when he won the Accenture Match Play Championship three years ago. This time, he beat lower seeds in every round. … Rich Beem, relying on sponsor exemptions and his status as a past champion to get into tournaments, qualified for the Honda Classic with a tie for sixth in Mexico. Beem, however, withdrew from Honda, saying he needed a break. He has played six of the last seven weeks.

STAT OF THE WEEK: The highest-seeded player Paul Casey beat on his way to the Accenture Match Play Championship final was Ross Fisher at No. 35. It was the first time a finalist never had to play any of the top 32 seeds.

FINAL WORD: “It was kind of my Disneyland. Everything I ever wanted was here.” - Paul Casey of England on arriving in Phoenix to play golf at Arizona State. He still lives in Scottsdale.

US PGA-Mayakoba Classic Scores

March 2, 2009

Scores Sunday in the Mayakoba Classic, a $3,6 million US PGA Tour event at 6,923-yard, par-70 El Camaleon Golf Club.

Final Round

Mark Wilson 66-64-69-68-267

J.J. Henry 66-66-69-68-269

Kevin Streelman 67-71-68-64-270

Heath Slocum 68-69-66-67-270

Kevin Na 68-62-72-70-272

Rich Beem 70-66-72-65-273

David Toms 70-67-70-66-273

Aron Price 69-70-68-66-273

Jerry Kelly 70-69-66-68-273

James Nitties 69-66-69-69-273

Jarrod Lyle 65-71-66-71-273

Briny Baird 67-66-67-73-273

Ted Purdy 69-70-68-67-274

Jose Manuel Lara 70-66-69-69-274

Brendon de Jonge 69-70-69-67-275

Glen Day 72-70-64-69-275

Corey Pavin 67-68-69-71-275

Cameron Beckman 66-69-68-72-275

Scott Verplank 67-71-65-72-275

Kevin Stadler 70-72-66-69-277

Brian Gay 68-70-71-68-277

Y.E. Yang 69-70-69-69-277

Steve Marino 70-68-69-70-277

Harrison Frazar 70-70-67-70-277

Nick O’Hern 72-70-68-67-277

Scott Piercy 66-69-69-73-277

Greg Owen 67-71-65-74-277

Joe Durant 72-67-70-69-278

Notah Begay III 68-70-71-69-278

Jason Dufner 68-69-70-71-278

Dudley Hart 67-71-72-68-278

John Merrick 68-68-70-72-278

Jason Day 68-71-72-67-278

Shigeki Maruyama 67-72-66-73-278

Gary Woodland 69-72-63-74-278

Chris Riley 65-68-69-76-278

Bo Van Pelt 63-69-67-79-278

Kent Jones 70-72-66-71-279

Jose de Jesus Rodriguez 70-69-70-70-279

Charles Howell III 68-72-69-70-279

Vaughn Taylor 69-69-72-69-279

Tim Wilkinson 70-67-69-73-279

Dean Wilson 68-71-67-73-279

Scott Sterling 67-71-68-73-279

Bill Haas 73-65-74-67-279

Jay Williamson 69-70-71-70-280

Patrick Sheehan 69-69-72-70-280

Peter Lonard 69-69-73-69-280

Tom Lehman 70-68-70-73-281

John Huston 67-70-70-74-281

Chez Reavie 70-70-69-72-281

Mark Brooks 68-74-67-72-281

Brian Davis 70-70-70-71-281

Chad Campbell 71-66-69-75-281

Tag Ridings 72-69-71-69-281

Gonzalo Fernandez 73-66-74-68-281

Billy Andrade 69-71-69-73-282

Jesper Parnevik 73-69-71-69-282

Brett Quigley 70-72-73-67-282

Chris Stroud 68-71-71-73-283

Colt Knost 75-66-72-70-283

Ricky Barnes 70-72-71-71-284

Omar Uresti 76-66-72-70-284

Greg Chalmers 67-70-78-69-284

Peter Tomasulo 69-72-69-75-285

Esteban Toledo 72-67-72-74-285

James Vargas 72-70-69-74-285

Aaron Watkins 69-71-72-73-285

Chris DiMarco 69-70-74-72-285

John Rollins 72-70-71-72-285

J.P. Hayes 66-75-73-71-285

Dicky Pride 72-68-68-78-286

Bryce Molder 72-69-73-72-286

Michael Letzig 69-70-74-74-287

David Mathis 70-71-76-71-288

Olin Browne 69-72-74-75-290

Casey Wittenberg 69-72-75-74-290

Nathan Green 72-68-79-77-296