Thursday, 23 September 2010

Ernie Els to take well-deserved spot in Hall of Fame

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ATLANTA Ernie Els got what he deserved this week - a spot in the World Golf Hall of Fame.
There's a solid case to be made against inducting players still in the relative prime of their careers into Halls of Fame but, that aside, Els was a lock to be a first-ballot Hall of Famer. I voted for him.
He's been among the game's best players for the better part of two decades, winning three major championships, threatening in many more and collecting trophies around the globe.
Could he have won more had he spent less time hopscotching the globe and settled in one place? Probably, but he chose a jet-lagged path and he's made the most of it.
His record shows 18 PGA Tour victories, including two U.S. Opens and a British Open, as well as more than 40 other worldwide wins. Once he turned 40, the threshold for Hall membership, Els' selection was a foregone conclusion.
Els got the official word in a phone call two weeks ago but didn't tell anyone, even his family "because I knew my daughter, she wouldn't be able to keep it quiet," he said.
He broke the news to them Monday night before heading to Atlanta.
A win in Atlanta at the Tour Championship would probably lock down the player of the year award for Els, stacking it on top of his early-season wins.
"Obviously, this makes the year," Els said. "It makes you feel very good about what you've done.
"You'd like to think you could have done more and can still do more but, obviously, (I'm) very, very honored to be inducted."
Els will be enshrined May 9 along with Doug Ford, Jock Hutchison and former president George H.W. Bush.
Ford and Hutchison were selected in the veterans category while Bush was honored in the lifetime achievement category.

Adam Scott eyeing the 2010 PGA Championship News


Adam ScottAdam Scott will be heading home in December with the 2010 Australian PGA Championship firmly in his sights.
Having claimed the Stonehaven Cup in an emotional victory at the Australian Open last year, Scott will play the PGA Championship at the Hyatt Regency Coolum from December 9-12 with nothing to prove to his home state fans.
At 29, Scott had that long awaited maiden Australian tour victory firmly under his belt, but to back it up in 2010 with a win in his home state would be all the sweeter.
“I grew up on the Sunshine Coast and played my junior golf there so to come back and win an Australian title in my own backyard would be a great achievement,” Scott said this week.
“Winning the Australian Open last year was very special and it obviously put an end to people asking when I would win at home.
“But I don’t intend to stop at one win, my form has been good and I’m looking forward to coming home to Queensland.”
Now 30, Scott has already won 8 US PGA Tour events and outside of Australia a further 8 international titles in Europe, Asia and the Middle East, and has been a member of 4 President Cup Teams - 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2009.
So far this year Scott has one title to his name, the Valero Texas Open which he won in May.
His best result since has been a T5 finish in the Deutsche Bank Championship only two weeks ago.
Among those hoping to rain on Scott’s parade in Queensland will be
defending champion Robert Allenby, 2008 Champion Geoff Ogilvy and the always watchable John Daly.
The Australian PGA Championship will be the final tournament on both the PGA Tour of Australasia and OneAsia Order of Merit, with players competing for a total prize pool of AUD$1,500,000.