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jmarrtyr · 7 years
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I was a huge Smiths fan when I was younger and never really thought about the music in terms of the arrangements. Then, in the last two years, I started revisiting the albums and trying to figure out just what he did. I think he’s such an innovative arranger and songwriter; also, reading more into his body of work and what kind of player he is, he’s into a lot of interesting musicians. Like, when he talks about being influenced by Nile Rodgers, then you hear Chic music again, it makes a lot of sense. But he’s so distinct: there’s no one that sounds like him. You hear it right away. I was recently listening to Rank, the live album, and it’s amazing that he could take that influence from disco but there’s a punk thing, too; it’s pretty powerful.
Steve Gunn on Johnny Marr, one of his favorite guitarists.
Interview by Martin Horsfield for The Guardian.
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barb644897eck · 3 years
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Aston Villa Birmingham City: Hosts win six-goal Second City derby thriller - BBC Sport
Blues v villa score - Live: Aston Villa v Birmingham City | FA Women's Super League | BT Sport
We knew what our limitations were in the summer. Formation blues v villa score Match ends, Aston Villa 4, Birmingham City 2. Attempt missed. Omar Bogle Birmingham City header from the centre of the box misses to the right. Assisted by Charlie Lakin with a cross following a corner. Corner, Birmingham City. Conceded by Jack Grealish. Foul by Alan Hutton Aston Villa. Charlie Lakin Birmingham City wins a free kick in the defensive half. Jacques Blues v villa score Birmingham City wins a free kick on the left wing.
Maikel Kieftenbeld Birmingham City is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. Jack Grealish Aston Villa wins a free kick in the defensive half. Foul by Maikel Kieftenbeld Birmingham City. Former England international striker Frank Worthington, one of the great showmen of English football, has died aged blues v villa score after a long illness, his family announced on Tuesday Watford boosted their bid for an immediate return to the Premier League with a win against Birmingham, while their promotion rivals Brentford were held to a draw by Nottingham Forest on Saturday Leeds suffered a humiliating FA Cup exit against Crawley as the League Two side swept to a stunning win, website eighth tier Marine's hopes of causing the competition's greatest shock blues v villa score crushed in a defeat against Tottenham Emi Buendia kept Championship leaders Norwich in pole position for an immediate return to the Premier League after their victory against Barnsley on Saturday ISBN Keeping right on since Lytham: Arrow.
Sporting Mail. It was not until that the Alliance first met Aston Villa, and present-day supporters may be glad to be reminded that the encounter ended in a victory for Small Heath. Birmingham Post. Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 2 September Birmingham City: A Complete Record.
Derby: Breedon Books. Retrieved 12 November BBC News. The Guardian.
Aston Villa 4-2 Birmingham City: Hosts win six-goal Second City derby thriller
Retrieved 3 August Retrieved 10 March Sky News. Retrieved 25 September Archived from the original on 1 December Retrieved 24 April Aston Villa Football Club. Aston Villa Managers Players All articles. Unders and Academy Women. Birmingham City Football Club. Records Seasons Head-to-head Europe. Second City derby Birmingham City W. Reserves and Academy All articles.
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xxsparksxx · 7 years
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Did Henshawe die in the books? If not, why do you think they chose to do that in the show?
In the books, the men that go with Ross to rescue Dwight are: Tholly Tregirls, Drake Carne, Jacka Hoblyn, Joe Nanfan, John Bone, Tom Ellery, and Wilf Jonas.
Jacka Hoblyn we’ve met in the show - Rosina Hoblyn’s father. John Bone was Dwight’s servant in Jeremy Poldark/Warleggan - in the show he hasn’t appeared before. Wilf Jonas and Ellery are local men. Joe Nanfan is Will Nanfan’s son - Will Nanfan being involved with Trencrom’s smuggling ventures, and also, in the novel, one of the three who went to see Elizabeth to ask that they be allowed to keep the land that Francis had verbally gifted them.
The group is described like this:
…the men he invited to join him were, apart from [Tholly], men who had benefited, or seen their families benefit, from Dr Dwight Enys’s ministrations.
Men who owed Dwight something, in other words - not in the sense that they owed him a debt, or felt obliged to try to rescue him, but men who had seen Dwight’s character and his skills and were therefore more emotionally involved in the idea of his rescue. (Drake doesn’t stow away, as in the show, but he isn’t invited along until later).
In the show, we have Bone and Ellery, two men we’ve not seen before and have no attachment to (ugh why couldn’t they have got Jacka back? I’d have liked that), we have Zacky Martin, Tholly, Henshawe, and Drake. Mostly men that we’ve come to know quite well.
In the book, it’s Joe Nanfan who dies. This is important for Ross, who knows Will Nanfan well. Not as a close a friend as Zacky, Paul and, formerly, Mark - but one of the more peripheral acquaintances. Will Nanfan remembers Joshua and Grace Poldark both; he’s a connection to Ross’s land and Ross’s past. Joe Nanfan means less, but Ross will have to go back and tell his father that he’s gone.
I think they decided to put Henshawe in his place for a couple of reasons.
Firstly, the impact of his death is greater on the audience, and the effects of it are greater on Ross. It paints the mixed success of Ross’s mission more starkly than if it had been an unknown, or little known, miner. It’s a rather black and white way of doing it, and lack of subtlety isn’t a great thing, but it happens, especially in transposing books to television, and killing off Henshawe was definitely a less subtle way of making clear the cost of this mission. This was not a rousing success. Ross saved two men, more may have escaped, but he lost someone too. And the one he lost is one that we as an audience have got to know over three series, that we have liked. The impact is immediate and obvious.
Secondly, they’ve kind of raised up Zacky a bit to the same level as Henshawe. In the book, Henshawe is grass captain, and Zacky is mine captain - ie, Zacky’s more in charge down in the actual mine, while Henshawe oversees things more from above. Zacky is more miner than manager; Henshawe is more manager than miner.But both are pretty expert when it comes to mining. Henshawe is higher in class than Zacky, but not by a huge amount - he’s comfortable dealing with Ross’s class, but he isn’t one of them. Zacky is working class through and through, though he can read and write. In the show, they’ve levelled them out a bit more, and Ross is as likely to turn to either for mining advice, or for support in other ventures. And in a show that’s got an expanding cast, why keep two characters when one character could fulfil all or most of the other’s functions and plot points? In that sense, the choice, for Debbie Horsfield, was which to lose: Zacky, or Henshawe. Zacky essentially functions as the voice of the local people, hears all the gossip, relays to Ross or Demelza anything they need to know, and is an authoritative figure in Sawle and Mellin - one of them, a miner, living alongside them, but respected as a learned man and an experienced miner.
Don’t get me wrong: I love Henshawe. But we only ever see him in the context of the mines, or mine-related scenes, whereas Zacky has other functions as well. So I think that’s why they chose to kill Henshawe at this point, replacing Joe Nanfan as the one left to die in France.
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thisdaynews · 5 years
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US Open tee times: Koepka with Molinari, Woods with Rose and Spieth
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/us-open-tee-times-koepka-with-molinari-woods-with-rose-and-spieth/
US Open tee times: Koepka with Molinari, Woods with Rose and Spieth
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Brooks Koepka is a four-time major winner and has won the last two US Opens
US Open Date:13-16 JuneVenue:Pebble Beach, California Coverage:Live text commentary on BBC Sport website and commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra
World number one Brooks Koepka starts his quest to win a third successive US Open at 21:47 BST on Thursday, 13 June.
The American plays the first two rounds at Pebble Beach with Open champion Francesco Molinari and US Amateur champion Viktor Hovland from Norway.
Three-time winner Tiger Woods, who won his 15th major at the Masters in April, is playing with 2015 champion Jordan Spieth and Justin Rose, victor in 2013.
Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy is out with Jon Rahm and Marc Leishman.
McIlroy is among the favourites to add to his 2011 US Open triumph, and win a fifth major, after claiming the Canadian Open title last week.
His compatriot Graeme McDowell – who won this title when it was last played at the California course in 2010 – is grouped with American world number two Dustin Johnson, who won his solitary major at the 2016 US Open, and five-time major champion Phil Mickelson.
US Open 2019: Luke Donald qualifies
Selected first-round tee times (full list at bottom of page)
Starting on first (all times BST)
21:47– Francesco Molinari (Ita), Viktor Hovland (a) (Nor), Brooks Koepka (US)
21:58– Tony Finau (US), Jimmy Walker (US), Ian Poulter (Eng)
22:09– Jordan Spieth (US), Justin Rose (Eng), Tiger Woods (US)
Starting on 10th
15:51– Jon Rahm (Spa), Marc Leishman (Aus), Rory McIlroy (NI)
16:13– Dustin Johnson (US), Phil Mickelson (US), Graeme McDowell (NI)
16:24– Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Sergio Garcia (Spa), Tommy Fleetwood (Eng)
Five Americans to watch
Tiger Woods won his fifth Green Jacket at Augusta National in April, putting him one behind Jack Nicklaus’ Masters haul
It’s hard to look beyondKoepkawinning the third of the year’s four majors. He has won four of the past eight majors he has played in and is looking to become just the second man to win three successive US Open titles – the only other to do so is Scotland’s Willie Anderson from 1903-05.
The 29-year-old retained his US PGA Championship last month and finished runner-up at the Masters in April.
Don’t rule outWoodsthough. The 43-year-old, who is back up to fifth in the world rankings, ended an 11-year major drought by triumphing for the fifth time at Augusta National, and while he missed the cut at the US PGA in May, he won his first US Open title at Pebble Beach in 2000 – and by a record 15 shots.
The American would join Anderson, Bobby Jones, Ben Hogan, and Jack Nicklaus as a four-time winner.
Woods’ great rivalMickelsonarrives on the California coast still looking for a first US Open victory on a course where he has had much success throughout his career.
He won the Pebble Beach Pro-Am earlier this year, for a joint-record fifth time, but the course set-up will be much tougher this week and that is unlikely to suit his erratic driving game.
The left-hander, a six-time US Open runner-up, would become the oldest major winner were he to win on his 49th birthday on Sunday.
Dustin Johnsonhas an incredible recent record at his national championship. The 34-year-old finally won the tournament in 2016 after near misses in 2014 and 2015, when he finished joint fourth and joint second respectively, while he finished third last year.
And Johnson is in fine form in the majors this year, with second-place finishes at both the Masters and US PGA.
Rickie Fowleris widely regarded as the best player not to have won a major. He is often in the mix, only to fall away as the heat is turned up or throw in a bad run of holes.
He has 10 major top-10s including second at the 2018 Masters, putting him at the top of the list of active players never to have won a major.
Five Europeans to watch
Victory in Canada was McIlroy’s second PGA Tour victory of the season after winning the Players Championship
McIlroywill be acutely aware that the last of his four major victories came almost five years ago, at the US PGA.
Since then, he’s had nine top-10 finishes in the 18 majors he’s played in – without ever really threatening to win one.
The 30-year-old, who won the 2011 US Open, has missed the cut the last three times, but comes into this year’s tournament buoyed by his seven-shot win at last week’s Canadian Open.
Tommy Fleetwoodfinished runner-up to Koepka last year and was fourth the year before.
He missed an eight-foot putt at the last at Shinnecock Hills in 2018 that would have seen him record the first 62 in US Open history and get into a play-off. Will the 28-year-old break his major duck this weekend?
ItalianMolinari,who partnered Fleetwood so well in last year’s Ryder Cup victory, is continuing to enjoy a late blossoming in his career.
The 36-year-old followed last year’s Open Championship win with joint sixth at the US PGA.
He then went close at this year’s Masters before dunking balls in the water on the 12th and 15th holes during the final round.
It remains a surprise to many thatRosehas only one major victory to his name – the 2013 US Open.
The 38-year-old has, of course, won the 2016 Olympic title since then, but further major success has continued to elude him.
He is still ranked fourth in the world though – the top English player – and cannot be ruled out.
SpaniardRahmis yet to transfer his form on the regular PGA and European Tours – where he has six victories in the past couple of years – to the majors.
Which Rahm will turn up this week? The 24-year-old has been all-or-nothing in his last six majors, with three top 10s and three missed cuts.
The course
The par-three seventh is one of the most iconic holes in golf, with the Pacific Ocean framing the green
Pebble Beach is hosting the US Open for the sixth time. Jack Nicklaus, winner of a record 18 major titles, won the first in 1972, and was runner-up 10 years later after Tom Watson holed a chip from deep rough on the par-three 17th on his way to a two-shot victory.
Watson’s caddie had told him to knock it close but the American famously said: “Close? Hell, I’m going to sink it.” Nicklaus later called it “one of the great shots in the history of the game”.
The exact point from which Watson chipped in no longer exists because part of the 17th green and 18th tee was claimed by the sea during a huge storm later that year.
Tom Kite took the 1992 title at the age of 42, while Woods dominated in 2000.
The United States Golf Association brought forward by two years its visit to Pebble because it wanted a spectacular course to bring in the millennium.
Woods ripped up the course, setting numerous records as he led from start to finish. He was the only player to beat par and his winning score of 12 under was the lowest in the then 106-year history.
His 15-shot margin of victory was a record and it was the start of the ‘Tiger Slam’, with Woods going on to win The Open and US PGA in 2000 before adding the 2001 Masters title.
Northern Ireland’s McDowell famously celebrated with his dad on the 18th green after winning in 2010 there – the US Open always finishes on Father’s Day.
McDowell shot a three-over 74 in the final round but still overcame a three-shot deficit as leader Dustin Johnson had a triple bogey on the second and dropped two more on the next to fall away.
There are numerous iconic holes on the course. Perhaps the most notable are the par-three seventh and 17th holes which play out towards the Pacific Ocean, while the closing par-five 18th hugs the coastline.
Round one (all times BST)
American unless stated.
Starting on the first hole
14:45 – Sam Saunders, Carlos Ortiz (Mex), Marcus Fraser (Aus)
14:56 – Scott Piercy, Erik Van Rooyen (SA), Chun An Yu (a) (Tpe)
15:07 – Ryan Fox (NZ), Thorbjorn Olesen (Den), Emiliano Grillo (Arg)
15:18 – Scottie Scheffler, Matt Parziale (a), Nick Taylor (Can)
15:29 – Patton Kizzire, Jovan Rebula (a) (SA), Jason Dufner
15:40 – Li Haotong (Chn), Bubba Watson, JB Holmes
15:51 – Zach Johnson, Martin Kaymer (Ger), Ernie Els (SA)
16:02 – Kim Si-woo (Kor), Rickie Fowler, Jason Day (Aus)
16:13 – Shane Lowry (Ire), Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Gary Woodland
16:24 – Cameron Smith (Aus), Matthew Wallace (Eng), Xander Schauffele
16:35 – CT Pan (Tpe), Abraham Ancer (Mex), Brandon Wu (a)
16:46 – Chan Kim, Justin Walters (SA), Harris English
16:57 – Nick Hardy, Noah Norton (a), Andreas Halvorsen (Nor)
20:30 – Rory Sabbatini (Svk) Sam Horsfield (Eng) Roberto Castro
20:41 – Cameron Young (a), Marcus Kinhult (Swe), Brian Stuard
20:52 – Luke Guthrie, Joseph Bramlett, Charlie Danielson
21:03 – Austin Eckroat (a), Alexander Noren (Swe), Charles Howell
21:14 – Thomas Pieters (Bel), Chesson Hadley, Stewart Hagestad (a)
21:25 – Paul Casey (Eng), Patrick Cantlay, Lucas Glover
21:36 – Kiradech Aphibarnrat (Tha), Keith Mitchell, Shugo Imahira (Jpn)
21:47 – Francesco Molinari (Ita), Viktor Hovland (a) (Nor), Brooks Koepka
21:58 – Tony Finau, Jimmy Walker, Ian Poulter (Eng)
22:09 – Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose (Eng), Tiger Woods
22:20 – Daniel Berger, Matthew Jones (Aus), Kodai Ichihara (Jpn)
22:31 – Matthieu Pavon (Fra), Chandler Eaton (a), Callum Tarren (Eng)
22:42 – Eric Dietrich, Guillermo Pereira (Chn), Brett Drewitt (Aus)
Starting on the 10th hole
14:45 – Luis Gagne (a), Sepp Straka, Julian Etulain (Arg)
14:56 – Dean Burmester (SA), Bernd Wiesberger (Aut), Lee Kyoung-hoon (Kor)
15:07 – Clement Sordet (Fra), Tom Hoge, Adri Arnaus (Spa)
15:18 – Brian Davis (Eng), Kevin O’Connell (a), Billy Hurley III
15:29 – Brendon Todd, Luke Donald (Eng), Mike Weir (Can)
15:40 – Kyle Stanley, Billy Horschel, Danny Willett (Eng)
15:51 – Jon Rahm (Spa), Marc Leishman (Aus), Rory McIlroy (NI)
16:02 – Justin Thomas, Kevin Kisner, Bryson DeChambeau
16:13 – Dustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Graeme McDowell (NI)
16:24 – Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Sergio Garcia (Spa), Tommy Fleetwood (Eng)
16:35 – Jhonattan Vegas (Ven), Patrick Reed, Louis Oosthuizen (SA)
16:46 – Rob Oppenheim, Rhys Enoch (Wal), Richard Lee
16:57 – Andy Pope, Ryan Sullivan, Matthew Naumec
20:30 – Nathan Lashley, Renato Paratore (Ita), Lee Slattery (Eng)
20:41 – Joel Dahmen, Collin Morikawa, Aaron Wise
20:52 – Merrick Bremner (SA), Chip McDaniel, Cody Gribble
21:03 – Michael Thorbjornsen (a), Chez Reavie, David Toms
21:14 – Rafa Cabrera Bello (Spa), Kevin Na, Keegan Bradley
21:25 – Jim Furyk, Henrik Stenson (Swe), Brandt Snedeker
21:47 – Webb Simpson, Adam Scott (Aus), Matt Kuchar
21:58 – An Byeong-hun (Kor), Devon Bling (a), Matthew Fitzpatrick (Eng)
22:09 – Justin Harding (SA), Aaron Baddeley (Aus), Andrew Putnam
22:20 – Ollie Schniederjans, Mikumu Horikawa (Jpn), Anirban Lahiri (Ind)
22:31 – Daniel Hillier (a) (NZ), Alex Prugh, Zac Blair
22:42 – Hayden Shieh, Spencer Tibbits (a), Connor Arendell
Round two
Starting on the first hole
14:45 – Nathan Lashley, Renato Paratore (Ita), Lee Slattery (Eng)
14:56 – Joel Dahmen, Collin Morikawa, Aaron Wise
15:07 – Merrick Bremner (SA), Chip McDaniel, Cody Gribble
15:18 – Michael Thorbjornsen (a), Chez Reavie, David Toms
15:29 – Rafa Cabrera Bello (Spa), Kevin Na, Keegan Bradley
15:40 – Jim Furyk, Henrik Stenson (Swe), Brandt Snedeker
15:51 – Luke List, Lucas Bjerregaard (Den), Branden Grace (SA)
16:02 – Webb Simpson, Adam Scott (Aus), Matt Kuchar
16:13 – An Byeong-hun (Kor), Devon Bling (a), Matthew Fitzpatrick (Eng)
16:24 – Justin Harding (SA), Aaron Baddeley (Aus), Andrew Putnam
16:35 – Ollie Schniederjans, Mikumu Horikawa (Jpn), Anirban Lahiri (Ind)
16:46 – Daniel Hillier (a) (NZ), Alex Prugh, Zac Blair
16:57 – Hayden Shieh, Spencer Tibbits (a), Connor Arendell
20:30 – Luis Gagne (a), Sepp Straka, Julian Etulain (Arg)
20:41 – Dean Burmester (SA), Bernd Wiesberger (Aut), Lee Kyoung-hoon (Kor)
20:52 – Clement Sordet (Fra), Tom Hoge, Adri Arnaus (Spa)
21:03 – Brian Davis (Eng), Kevin O’Connell (a), Billy Hurley III
21:14 – Brendon Todd, Luke Donald (Eng), Mike Weir (Can)
21:25 – Kyle Stanley, Billy Horschel, Danny Willett (Eng)
21:36 – Jon Rahm (Spa), Marc Leishman (Aus), Rory McIlroy (NI)
21:47 – Justin Thomas, Kevin Kisner, Bryson DeChambeau
21:58 – Dustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Graeme McDowell (NI)
22:09 – Hideki Matsuyama (Jpn), Sergio Garcia (Spa), Tommy Fleetwood (Eng)
22:20 – Jhonattan Vegas (Ven), Patrick Reed, Louis Oosthuizen (SA)
22:31 – Rob Oppenheim, Rhys Enoch (Wal), Richard Lee
22:42 – Andy Pope, Ryan Sullivan, Matthew Naumec
Starting on the 10th hole
14:45 – Rory Sabbatini (Svk), Sam Horsfield (Eng), Roberto Castro
14:56 – Cameron Young (a), Marcus Kinhult (Swe), Brian Stuard
15:07 – Luke Guthrie, Joseph Bramlett, Charlie Danielson
15:18 – Austin Eckroat (a), Alexander Noren (Swe), Charles Howell
15:29 – Thomas Pieters (Bel), Chesson Hadley, Stewart Hagestad (a)
15:40 – Paul Casey (Eng), Patrick Cantlay, Lucas Glover
15:51 – Kiradech Aphibarnrat (Tha), Keith Mitchell, Shugo Imahira (Jpn)
16:02 – Francesco Molinari (Ita), Viktor Hovland (a) (Nor), Brooks Koepka
16:13 – Tony Finau, Jimmy Walker, Ian Poulter (Eng)
16:24 – Jordan Spieth, Justin Rose (Eng), Tiger Woods
16:35 – Daniel Berger, Matthew Jones (Aus), Kodai Ichihara (Jpn)
16:46 – Matthieu Pavon (Fra), Chandler Eaton (a), Callum Tarren (Eng)
16:57 – Eric Dietrich, Guillermo Pereira (Chi), Brett Drewitt (Aus)
20:30 – Sam Saunders, Carlos Ortiz (Mex), Marcus Fraser (Aus)
20:41 – Scott Piercy, Erik Van Rooyen (SA), Yu Chun-An (a) (Tpe)
20:52 – Ryan Fox (NZ), Thorbjorn Olesen (Den), Emiliano Grillo (Arg)
21:03 – Scottie Scheffler, Matt Parziale (a), Nick Taylor (Can)
21:14 – Patton Kizzire, Jovan Rebula (a) (SA), Jason Dufner
21:25 – Li Haotong (Chn), Bubba Watson, JB Holmes
21:36 – Zach Johnson, Martin Kaymer (Ger), Ernie Els (SA)
21:47 – Kim Si-woo (Kor), Rickie Fowler, Jason Day (Aus)
21:58 – Shane Lowry (Ire), Tyrrell Hatton (Eng), Gary Woodland
22:09 – Cameron Smith (Aus), Matthew Wallace (Eng), Xander Schauffele
22:20 – CT Pan (Tpe), Abraham Ancer (Mex), Brandon Wu (a)
22:31 – Chan Kim, Justin Walters (SA), Harris English
22:42 – Nick Hardy, Noah Norton (a), Andreas Halvorsen (Nor)
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golfsport-news · 5 years
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Pebble Beach - U.S. Open 2019
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Der Golfplatz am 17 Miles Drive in Kalifornien lädt zu den U.S. Open 2019 ein und das wird auch wieder ein Fest für´s Auge. Der Golfcourse an der Steilküste gehört zu den schönsten auf der Welt.
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Pebble Beach schlängelt sich an der Steilküste entlang und ist damit fast immer dem Wind, der über dem Pazifik kommt, ausgesetzt. Also keine einfache Aufgabe für die Golfer, aber es wird bestimmt wieder sehr spannend. Und so ganz nebenbei präsentiert adidas seinen neuen Golfschuh in dieser tollen Umgebung. Also die U.S. Open auf diesem Golfplatz, das zieht aber auch jeden an. Das sind genau die Turniere die unserem Sport gut tun und mitten drin ist Martin Kaymer. Was will das deutsche Golfherz mehr - ach ja einen SIEG! ;-) OK wir werden trotz des tollen letzten Auftritt mal die Erwartungen an unseren deutschen Golfer etwas runter schrauben. Aber wenn er die "Sterne vom Himmel holt", dann sind wir alle so richtig glücklich und können es wahrscheinlich nicht fassen.
U.S. Open 2019
Der Pebble Beach Golf Links hat es so richtig in sich und ist ein würdiger Rahmen für dieses Turnier vom 13. Juni bis 16. Juni 2019. Und jeder Golfer wünscht sich einmal in seinem Leben diesen Platz zu spielen. Warum, das zeigt das Video von Golf Digest. https://youtu.be/6YrmRSEqOTo Ab in den Flieger und nach den U.S. Open den Platz spielen. Na gut das ganze ist nocht so günstig, aber wann hat man schon die Chance das Open Layout zu spielen. Das 4th Holiday Package mit 2 Übernachtungen und 2 Runden gibts ab kostengünstige $2.495,- und wenn man nicht genug hat gibt es für die Verlängerung 20%. War für ein Schnäppchen! ;-) Und für alle, die natürlich nur aus Termingründen nicht zuschlagen können, gibt es hier ein paar Live Cams rund um die Uhr! Pebble Beach wird aufgrund seiner Lage direkt an der Steilküste des 17-Mile Drive oft als einer der schönsten Golfplätze der Welt betrachtet. Gleichzeitig gehört das Greenfee mit 495 US-Dollar zu den höchsten der Welt. Das erste professionelle Turnier auf dem Platz waren die Monterey Pensinsula Open 1926. Das Turnier gewann Harry Cooper mit 293 Schlägen. 1929 wurde erstmals ein Major Turnier ausgetragen, die United States Amateur Championship. Das Turnier gewann Harrison R. Johnston. Weitere Austragungen der US Amateur gab es 1947, 1961 und 1999, die US Women's Amateur fand 1940 und 1948 in Pebble Beach statt. Ab 1947 wurde das Bing Crosby National Pro-Am Tournament in Pebble Beach ausgetragen, heute als AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am bekannt. Allerdings findet nur die vierte Runde ausschließlich auf den Pebble Beach Golf Links statt, die ersten drei Runden werden abwechselnd auf dem Spyglass Hill Golf Course, dem Poppy Hills Golf Course und den Pebble Beach Golf Links absolviert. Die U. S. Open wurden bisher fünfmal hier ausgetragen. Die letzten Sieger bei den U.S. Open in Pebble Beach 1982U.S. Open Tom Watson 1992U.S. Open Tom Kite 2000U.S. Open Tiger Woods 2010U.S. Open Graeme McDowell Zum Schluss gibt es hier noch die Startzeiten der ersten Runde der U.S. Open 2019 mit den Ortszeiten. Wir in Deutschland sind den Jungs immer 9 Stunden voraus! Also Martin geht um 19:51 Uhr unserer Zeit am Donnerstag auf Birdiejagd. U.S. Open - erste Runde 9:45 AM Sam Saunders Carlos Ortiz Marcus Fraser 9:45 AM* Luis Gagne (a) Sepp Straka Julian Etulain 9:56 AM Player TBD Erik Van Rooyen Chun An Yu (a) 9:56 AM* Dean Burmester Player TBD Kyounghoon Lee 10:07 AM Ryan Fox Thorbjorn Olesen Player TBD 10:07 AM* Clement Sordet Tom Hoge Adri Arnaus 10:18 AM Scottie Scheffler Matt Parziale (a) Nick Taylor 10:18 AM* Brian Davis Kevin O'Connell (a) Billy Hurley III 10:29 AM Patton Kizzire Jovan Rebula (a) Jason Dufner 10:29 AM* Brendon Todd Luke Donald Mike Weir 10:40 AM Haotong Li Bubba Watson J.B. Holmes 10:40 AM* Kyle Stanley Billy Horschel Danny Willett 10:51 AM Zach Johnson Martin Kaymer Ernie Els 10:51 AM* Jon Rahm Marc Leishman Rory McIlroy 11:02 AM Si Woo Kim Rickie Fowler Jason Day 11:02 AM* Justin Thomas Kevin Kiser Bryson Dechambeau 11:13 AM Shane Lowry Tyrrell Hatton Gary Woodland 11:13 AM* Dustin Johnson Phil Mickelson Graeme McDowell 11:24 AM Cameron Smith Matthew Wallace Xander Schauffele 11:24 AM* Hideki Matsuyama Sergio Garcia Tommy Fleetwood 11:35 AM C.T. Pan Abraham Ancer Brandon Wu (a) 11:35 AM* Jhonattan Vegas Patrick Reed Louis Oosthuizen 11:46 AM Chan Kim Justin Walters Player TBD 11:46 AM* Rob Oppenheim Rhys Enoch Richard Lee 11:57 AM Nick Hardy Noah Norton (a) Andreas Halvorsen 11:57 AM* Andy Pope Ryan Sullivan Matthew Naumec 3:30 PM Rory Sabbatini Sam Horsfield Roberto Castro 3:30 PM* Nathan Lashley Renato Paratore Lee Slattery 3:41 PM Cameron Young (a) Marcus Kinhult Brian Stuard 3:41 PM* Player TBD Collin Morikawa Aaron Wise 3:52 PM Luke Guthrie Joseph Bramlett Charlie Danielson 3:52 PM* Merrick Bremner Chip McDaniel Cody Gribble 4:03 PM Austin Eckroat (a) Alexander Noren Charles Howell III 4:03 PM* Michael Thorbjornsen (a) Chez Reavie David Toms 4:14 PM Thomas Pieters Chesson Hadley Stewart Hagestad (a) 4:14 PM* Rafa Cabrera Bello Kevin Na Keegan Bradley 4:25 PM Paul Casey Patrick Cantlay Lucas Glover 4:25 PM* Jim Furyk Henrik Stenson Brandt Snedeker 4:36 PM Kiradech Aphibarnrat Keith Mitchell Shugo Imahira 4:36 PM* Luke List Lucas Bjerregaard Branden Grace 4:47 PM Francesco Molinari Viktor Hovland (a) Brooks Koepka 4:47 PM* Webb Simpson Adam Scott Matt Kuchar 4:58 PM Tony Finau Jimmy Walker Ian Poulter 4:58 PM* Byeong Hun An Devon Bling (a) Matthew Fitzpatrick 5:09 PM Jordan Spieth Justin Rose Tiger Woods 5:09 PM* Justin Harding Aaron Baddeley Player TBD 5:20 PM Daniel Berger Matthew Jones Kodai Ichihara 5:20 PM* Ollie Schniederjans Mikumu Horikawa Anirban Lahiri 5:31 PM Matthieu Pavon Chandler Eaton (a) Callum Tarren 5:31 PM* Daniel Hillier (a) Alex Prugh Zac Blair 5:42 PM Eric Dietrich Guillermo Pereira Brett Drewitt 5:42 PM* Hayden Shieh Spencer Tibbits (a) Connor Arendell (* Denotes 10th Tee Start) Wünsche Euch, auch wenn die meisten von uns nie in Pebble Beach spielen werden, ein Schönes Spiel! Lasst die "kleine weiße Sau" fliegen! Euer Lefty Stephan Read the full article
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yachtingboat · 6 years
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Three Decades of Design: Jonny Horsfield
Three Decades of Design: Jonny Horsfield
At the end of May we introduced a new feature series called Three Decades of Design. In it, we reflect on the careers of designers who came into the industry as young hopefuls and have now become some of our most prestigious talents.
We continue the series with 1988 Coventry graduate, Jonny Horsfield. The British designer has gone from strength to strength since launching his own studio H2 Yacht Design in 1994. We retrace his journey to that point and ask him what the future holds for the design studio.  
Was your design course what you expected it to be and what were the highlights?
It was but we were all there because we wanted to become car designers and it was a lot of fun. I spent three years designing cars and other vehicles as it was a transport design course that included a placement year. It was a great time in life and I’ve been lucky enough to make design my career.
My passion for cars has always been strong and from the age of 16 I wanted to become a car designer. Before the internet (and still to this day), I read car magazines ferociously and saw Coventry in a magazine, as it was talking about certain designers and where they had been and so on. I saw this while at boarding school and it was the only course that existed at the time – most people were planning to go into the city, join the army or do something else sensible. So the careers masters had no idea what I was talking about when I brought this up but they were supportive. That said, I think it might have been to do with them having one less person to worry about because they could see regardless of what it was, at least I knew what I wanted to do. So I built a portfolio of designs and sketches, which included cars and went for an interview at Coventry, and it was a success!
Back in the day it was very much an art-based course and about the ability to draw and sketch using squeaky markers and pencils – it is a skill that is in danger of being lost today. I currently employ two Coventry graduates and hope to employ another soon, and though they can still sketch, they tend to resort to their computer skills so early in the design process, which is a shame.
When and what made you dedicate your career to the design of superyachts?
I realised quite early on that I had the ability to convey ideas that I had on paper, which is something that not many people can do. I wasn’t good at other subjects such as English and Maths but I knew I could draw and visualise things I wanted to design, and so I quickly came to the conclusion that this is what I wanted to do full time. 
During my course, my workplace led to me dabbling in product design for a company for three or four months. So when I left university I got a job with another product design company but I hated it and so when I heard about a job opportunity working for Martin Francis in the south of France. One of the guys from my year was Mark Smith who had just got a job with Martin, so I made my way down and secured a job and joined the team.
What was your first major project after graduating?
It was when I joined Martin Francis. The team were working on Eco (renamed Zeus) and I was set to work on the mast. There were some stand out refit projects too – it was just fantastic to be able to work on such amazing projects. Martin was great and gave us a lot of responsibility straight out of the box. I made some great friends while working for Martin including Espen Øino and Mark Smith ­– we were a good little team and I learned a lot. I spent a year there before returning to London, which is where my girlfriend was and so I managed to get a position with Don Starkey doing exteriors. In fact it was during my time with Don that I learned how to do interiors.
Over the past few years, has there been a yacht by another design studio that has really caught your eye, and if so why?
Tim Heywood has designed some fantastic iconic yachts, especially early on in his career. It is easy to think of more modern day projects that grab your attention but I really like Pelorus – it is a yacht that I admire more than any other. She is beautiful and elegant and she really changed the market and took yacht design to a subtle new level. If you look at the boat now, she really is timeless and is a project that could have easily been built today. There hasn’t been a lot of design progress in some ways but when you look at certain older projects like her, you can really see where modern styling has come from. I think Pelorus influenced so many designers directly and indirectly, and hence why she looks so relevant today because so many other yachts are in the same genre. She set the benchmark and also the framework for modern yacht design.
When you look at Eco on the other hand, there isn’t much on that boat that anyone has taken on board or used again. She is a fantastic yacht and a one-of-a-kind, whereas Pelorus had a major effect on everybody and there aren’t many yachts today where you can’t see a little bit of Pelorus in it or at least see the influence.
Of the projects you have worked on, which one are you most proud of?
Eco was a very special project and one I was proud to be a part of – it was a great design by Martin and I was fortunate to play a tiny part. When thinking about projects that have come from my studio, Al Lusail (Project Jupiter) is the highlight of my career so far. It was everything I was hoping to achieve in that I created a large superyacht that was built in Germany and it had a fantastic budget. The project came about because the client had been toying with building a yacht for a long time and had seen a number of concepts but they didn’t go anywhere. Then the client saw a 90m project called Mars, which was being built at Fincantieri Yachts but sadly the client pulled out of the project. However, a brochure was made by the yard in the hopes of finding a new client and it caught the eye of my client and they thought it was really radical. We started designing something similar to that but as the project went on it morphed and grew, as is often the case. When it came to the build the owner emphasised how the shipyard was not to change the design in any way as they liked it so much. This was fantastic as the exterior design became the priority, which was a rare experience. It was a pleasure to work on and deliver for the client.
Which of the projects you’ve worked on do you wish you could go back to and work on again?
I would love to have finished the Mars project – it would have been so good to have had it built. Looking at the projects that were built, it is hard to say. There are always things that I wish I would have done differently but that is often more to do with the overall learning process – you learn from each project you work on. There are always new techniques and technology to make things better or to realise ideas that were once not possible and so on.
What are the main challenges for a superyacht design studio in the market today?
You have to be flexible and I think we are quite lucky because we don’t really have a house style. My whole focus is to try and approach each project differently and to deliver exactly what the client wants, and create something unique for them. It is not about me and I don’t try to put my identity on to the yacht, it is about the client. We are not pigeonholed into one particular area or style and can work for varying clients and meet their style and preference. Being this way means I can jump from an Al Lusail to a Ulysses type of project and it doesn’t seem to impact my reputation or appeal, in fact it broadens my range. This in turn means, as the market demand changes so can I.
Among the projects underway at H2 Yacht Design is the 182m research vessel called REV, with an exterior design by Espen Øino and interior by Horsfield and his team. It is a project that came off the back of Ulysses, which inspired the client to go forward with a project of a similar type. “It is a different way of building a yacht,” says Horsfield as the interview draws to a conclusion. “We are talking to cruise ship outfitting companies for the interior and you have to think in a different way if you want to deliver a good quality interior within the set budget while making the most of it.”
Project Mars
Al Lusail
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junker-town · 7 years
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Arnold Palmer Invitational 2018: Tiger Woods' tee time, plus full pairings for Sunday
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A loaded leaderboard takes Bay Hill for a final round of the API that’s full of potential.
The Arnold Palmer Invitational has about as good a leaderboard as it could have hoped for at the start of the week. It’s a loaded set inside the top 10 and 15. It’s a mix of young studs, accomplished veterans, and the greatest moneymaker in the history of the game.
Tiger Woods is back with a late afternoon tee time on Sunday at Bay Hill. It’s been five years since Tiger played this event, but it did not take him long to make an impact and take up residence on the fist page of the leaderboard. That’s where he has been really since his first few holes in the opening round on Thursday morning, when he quickly got to 3-under. He’s not exactly threatened the lead on the weekend, but he’s been right around the top 10 throughout.
A ninth career win is not completely out of the question for Tiger. He’s five shots off the lead, but a low mid-60s number is absolutely capable of putting pressure on the leaders a few groups behind him. Woods did not rule it out on Saturday evening, saying he needed to “shoot a low one” and hope for help. The first order of business is actually doing his part and going out and posting his own number.
Tiger will tee off with Bud Cauley at right at 1:30 p.m. ET on Sunday. Cauley is a younger pup, but he’s still got a few years on Tour under his belt. He’s also friends with and one-time roommates with Justin Thomas. So it’s likely the former Alabama product has at least played a friendly game or two down in South Florida with Tiger. Nonetheless, this is an entirely different environment. Tiger in the hunt on Sunday at a PGA Tour event will draw a massive crowd and definitely a handful of idiots that can make it tough to be his playing partner.
Tiger obviously completely changes the dynamic of a tee sheet. There are Tiger tournaments, and then there’s everything else. But beyond the Big Cat, this is a loaded tee sheet at the very bottom. We’ve got Rory McIlroy, Rickie Fowler, Bryson DeChambeau, Henrik Stenson, Jason Day, and Justin Rose, among others. It’s just a stacked first page of the leaderboard with so much potential for the final round on Sunday at Bay Hill.
Here’s the full tee sheet for Sunday’s final round at the Arnold Palmer Invitational:
Off No. 1 tee:
8:15 a.m.: Ryan Armour
8:22 a.m.: Peter Uihlein, Russell Knox
8:31 a.m.: Alex Noren, Anirban Lahiri
8:40 a.m.: Hudson Swafford, Tyrone Van Aswegen
8:49 a.m.: James Hahn, Kevin Na
8:58 a.m.: Jimmy Walker, Haotong Li
9:07 a.m.: Beau Hossler, Tyrrell Hatton
9:16 a.m.: Paul Goydos, Ian Poulter
9:25 a.m.: Doc Redman, Davis Love III
9:34 a.m.: Kevin Tway, C.T. Pan
9:43 a.m.: Tom Hoge, David Lingmerth
9:52 a.m.: Adam Scott, Martin Laird
10:01 a.m.: Mackenzie Hughes, Lucas Glover
10:10 a.m.: Collin Morikawa, Emiliano Grillo
10:20 a.m.: Stewart Cink, Ernie Els
10:30 a.m.: Brandon Harkins, Brian Harman
10:40 a.m.: Tommy Fleetwood, Brian Gay
10:50 a.m.: Curtis Luck, Sung Kang
11 a.m.: Kevin Chappell, Marc Leishman
11:10 a.m.: Hideki Matsuyama, Aaron Wise
11:20 a.m.: Harris English, Kyle Stanley
11:30 a.m.: Kevin Streelman, Chesson Hadley
11:40 a.m.: J.B. Holmes, Luke List
11:50 a.m.: Charles Howell III, Bubba Watson
12 p.m.: Sean O’Hair, Francesco Molinari
12:10 p.m.: Billy Horschel, Keegan Bradley
12:20 p.m.: Jamie Lovemark, Zach Johnson
12:30 p.m.: Sam Horsfield, William McGirt
12:40 p.m.: Patrick Rodgers, Brian Stuard
12:50 p.m.: Austin Cook, Jason Day
1 p.m.: Sam Burns, John Huh
1:10 p.m.: Graeme McDowell, Chris Kirk
1:20 p.m.: Patrick Reed, Ollie Schniederjans
1:30 p.m.: Tiger Woods, Bud Cauley
1:40 p.m.: Byeong Hun An, Grayson Murray
1:50 p.m.: Rickie Fowler, Talor Gooch
2 p.m.: Ryan Moore, Charley Hoffman
2:10 p.m.: Rory McIlroy, Justin Rose
2:20 p.m.: Henrik Stenson, Bryson DeChambeau
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armstrongganthony · 3 years
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Aston Villa vs Birmingham H2H Stats Record & Results - Watch Live MatchStat
Aston villa blues score - Second City derby - Wikipedia
Peter Enckelman 77' og Own Goal. Geoff Horsfield 83' Goal. Robbie Savage 31'. BIR Goal 31 Mins Clinton Morrison Ast. Robbie Savage. Substitution 45 Mins 9. Dion Dublin Substitution On. Substitution 45 Mins Darius Vassell Substitution On. Substitution aston villa blues score Mins Clinton Morrison Substitution Off.
Geoff Horsfield Substitution On. Own Goal 77 Mins Peter Enckelman. Substitution aston villa blues score Mins Paul Devlin Substitution Off. Darryl Powell Substitution On. Goal 83 Mins Geoff Horsfield.
Football, England: Aston Villa live scores, results, fixtures
Substitution 87 Mins Robbie Savage Substitution Off. Bryan Hughes Substitution On. Yellow Card 89 Mins Darren Purse. Steve Staunton. Martin Grainger. The following is a list of the top goal scorers for each team in the fixture. Only click here who have scored 4 or more goals feature. Unlike, for example, the Old Firm derbythere is no shortage of players who have appeared for both clubs.
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Aston Villa Managers Players All articles. Unders and Academy Women. Birmingham City Football Club. Records Seasons Head-to-head Europe. Second City derby Birmingham City W. Reserves and Academy All articles. Football rivalries in the United Kingdom. Scode Severnside South Wales. Big Two North Belfast. Categories : Aston Villa F. Birmingham City F. Taylor E. Konsa T. Mings M. Targett B.
Engels F. Guilbert Ahmed El Mohamady K. Hause M. Cash Douglas Luiz J. McGinn H. Lansbury J. Grealish C. Nakamba A. El Ghazi Jota Peleteiro J. Ramsey Wesley O. Watkins M. Samatta K. Etheridge Z. Jeacock A. Clayton M. Colin K. Pedersen M. Roberts G. Friend H. Dean J. Cogley S. Seddon G. Bajrami R. Villz N. Gordon M. Kieftenbeld D. Crowley A. Lakin I. Bailey A. Miller R. Stirk J.
Concannon K. Aston villa blues score S. Hogan L. Jutkiewicz J. Leko A. George C. Boyd-Munce J. Bree Luton Unknown Out J.
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srbmeadia · 5 years
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Tilton Tak-With Geoff Horsfield and Martin O'Connor
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themoneybuff-blog · 5 years
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How to Watch the US Open Golf Live Stream in Australia
The US Open takes place from June 14 to 17 in Australia and golf fans can live stream all the action for free. Here's your complete guide. The world's best golfers are gearing up for the 119th edition of the US Open Championship, which takes place this year in Pebble Beach, California. The man to beat is two-time defending champion Brooks Koepka, who enters the competition as the top-ranked player in the world following his win at the PGA Championship back in May. If he pulls off another victory, he will become the second player - and first in more than a century - to win three US Open titles in a row. The US Open Championship is the third of the four major championships in golf for 2019 and will take place between June 13 and 16 at the Pebble Beach Golf Links in California. Regarded as one of the most beautiful courses in the world, the venue makes for an excellent backdrop as a host of brilliant players battle it out for the grand prize. Besides Koepka, you will be able to live stream US Open golf contenders like Tiger Woods, Dustin Johnson, Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy, and Jason Day. Regardless of who you're rooting for, you can live stream the US Open golf in Australia on your favourite device or watch it on a big screen TV. Here are all your options on how to watch the US Open golf. Are all the rounds of the US Open broadcast in Australia? Kind of. Every round will be available both live and on demand on Foxtel and Kayo Sports via the FOX SPORTS 503 channel from the halfway point. Only Kayo Sports broadcasts any golf from the first half of every round using its Featured Groups broadcast. We detail this below. Stream Kayo Sports for 14 days FREE and no lock-in contract Take Kayo Sports' Basic or Premium plan for a spin and stream over 50 sports live completely free for 14 days. Last verified 7 Feb 2019 Get deal When does the US Open golf start in Australia? Given the time difference between Australia and California, you may need to sacrifice sleep in order to watch all of the US Open tournament live. The full US Open Championship coverage begins on Foxtel and Kayo Sports (see comparison below) on Friday, June 14, at 5:00 am AEST. The coverage ends at 12:30 pm AEST. The following rounds are slightly different as per the table below. As mentioned, 5:00 am AEST is actually the halfway point of each day's play. The round itself begins at 11.45 pm (AEST) on Thursday, June 13. Thankfully, rather than completely missing all of this early morning play, Kayo Sports does follow featured groups between 11:45 pm and 5:00 am. These groups are selected to match the popularity of the players involved. If you're not an early riser, don't worry replays will be available on both platforms from 3:30 pm, or you can access specific content on demand. Start TimeSydney, Canberra, Melbourne, Brisbane, HobartDarwin, AdelaidePerthNew ZealandRounds 1 and 25:00 AM4:30 AM3:00 AM7:00 AMRounds 3 and 44:30 AM4:00 AM2:30 AM6:30 AMBroadcast Length7 hours7 hours7 hours7 hoursHow to live stream the US Open for free on Kayo Sports If you don't have a pay TV subscription, you can watch the US Open Championship online with Kayo Sports, the brilliant streaming service that broadcasts competition and events from more than 50 sports. Every round of the US Open will be live streamed from the halfway point, with replays available on-demand to watch whenever you want. In addition, the featured groups features give you a chance to watch the best players from the first half of each round play as well. Kayo Sports costs $25/month for a Basic subscription, which allows you to watch on two screens at the same time; or $35/month for a Premium subscription, which supports with three simultaneous streams. The good news: new users get a free 14-day trial, so you have two weeks to test-drive the platform and see if it's for you. Consequently, you can sign up now and watch the US Open Championship completely free. There's plenty more golf being broadcast during this period, too, which can explore on our global golf calendar. The service is compatible with computers, smartphones/tablets, Telstra TV, Android TV, Apple TV, and ChromeCast - the latter is the best way to watch Kayo on your TV. There are no contracts, so you can cancel your subscription anytime. Read our full review of Kayo Sports. US Open TV features exclusive to Kayo Also in Kayo Sports favour are a host of unique viewing features only available through this service. The include; A picture-in-picture modeSplitView (watch four channels on one screen)Key Moments timelineNetflix-style user-interfaceHide Scores optionKayo Minis (bespoke highlights packages)Featured Groups (US Open coverage following specific groups of players)Two alternate cameras for every round, which means even more comprehensive coverage that you'd expect. You can take advantage of the bonus cameras by using SplitView, which enables users to watch all three feeds at the same time.Kayo Sports US Open Round 1 Featured GroupsRahm/Leishman/McIlroyJohnson/Mickelson/McDowellMolinari/Hovland/KoepkaSpieth/Rose/WoodsGet to know Kayo with our guidesHow to watch US Open golf on Foxtel The US Open Championship airs on Fox Sports 503 in Australia, so Foxtel IQ subscribers can watch every round on their TV by adding the premium Sports Pack to their account. This will also give you access to the Foxtel GO app, which will live stream the US Open to your laptop or mobile device. The app is free with any Foxtel subscription. Unfortunately, the minimum cost of watching the US Open through FOxtel IQ in high-definition is $68 for the month. Alternatively, fans can also live stream the US Open golfing tournament with Foxtel Now, the service which enables you to watch Foxtel channels via the Internet. Again, you will need the premium Sports Pack, which costs an additional $29/month on top of the base Essentials Pack. So the total cost of the month will be $54/month. There's a 10-day trial available, enabling users to sign up and try the platform for free. Foxtel Now works with a variety of devices, including computers, smartphones/tablets, compatible Sony Android TVs, Telstra TV, the Foxtel Now Box, PS4, and ChromeCast/Airplay. As it loses out on price, viewing features and the featured groups bonus to Kayo Sports, Foxtel best serves Golf fans who also want to watch non-sport programing (like Game of Thrones and Selling Houses Australia). Is the US Open of free-to-air in Australia? Unfortunately, no. The only way to watch is to get either a Foxtel or Foxtel Now subscription with the Sports channel pack, or to sign up for Kayo Sports. Which Australian golfers are contesting the 2019 US Open Championship? Australia is strongly represented at the US Open in 2019, with 10 players teeing off in Round 1. Here are the names to cheer on: Jason Day (World Ranking: 16) Adam Scott (World Ranking: 17) Marc Leishman (World Ranking: 21) Cameron Smith (World Ranking: 34) Ryan Fox (World Ranking: 89) Aaron Baddeley (World Ranking: 180) Matt Jones (World Ranking: 187) Marcus Fraser (World Ranking: 467) Brett Drewitt (World Ranking: 1,017) Daniel Hillier (World Ranking: 1,905)US Open Tee Times Coverage of the tournament in Australia kicks off Friday at 5:00 am on Foxtel and Kayo Sports. Featured Groups will be broadcast on Kayo Sports during the play earlier in the day. Keep track of all the tee times as the US Open progresses, but below you'll find the times you need to know specific to Round 1. TEETIMEPLAYERS111:45 PMSam Saunders, Carlos Ortiz, Marcus Fraser1011:45 PMLuis Gagne, Sepp Straka, Julian Etulain111:56 PMScott Piercy, Erik Van Rooyen, Kevin Yu (a)1011:56 PMDean Burmester, Bernd Wiesberger, K.H. Lee112:07 AMRyan Fox, Thorbjorn Olesen, Emiliano Grillo1012:07 AMClement Sordet, Tom Hoge, Adri Arnaus112:18 AMScottie Scheffler, Matt Parziale (a), Nick Taylor1012:18 AMBrian Davis, Kevin O'Connell (a), Billy Hurley III112:29 AMPatton Kizzire, Jovan Rebula (a), Jason Dufner1012:29 AMBrendon Todd, Luke Donald, Mike Weir112:40 AMHaotong Li, Bubba Watson, J.B. Holmes1012:40 AMKyle Stanley, Billy Horschel, Danny Willett112:51 AMZach Johnson, Martin Kaymer, Ernie Els1012:51 AMJon Rahm, Marc Leishman, Rory McIlroy11:02 AMSi Woo Kim, Rickie Fowler, Jason Day101:02 AMJustin Thomas, Kevin Kisner, Bryson DeChambeau11:13 AMShane Lowry, Tyrrell Hatton, Gary Woodland101:13 AMDustin Johnson, Phil Mickelson, Graeme McDowell11:24 AMCameron Smith, Matt Wallace, Xander Schauffele101:24 AMHideki Matsuyama, Sergio Garcia, Tommy Fleetwood11:35 AMC.T. Pan, Abraham Ancer,Brandon Wu (a)101:35 AMJhonattan Vegas, Patrick Reed, Louis Oosthuizen11:46 AMChan Kim, Justin Walters, Harris English101:46 AMRob Oppenheim, Rhys Enoch, Richard Lee11:57 AMNick Hardy, Noah Norton (a), Andreas Halvorsen101:57 AMAndy Pope, Ryan Sullivan, Matthew Naumec15:30 AMRory Sabbatini, Sam Horsfield, Roberto Castro105:30 AMNate Lashley, Renato Paratore, Lee Slattery15:41 AMCameron Young (a), Marcus Kinhult, Brian Stuard105:41 AMJoel Dahmen, Collin Morikawa, Aaron Wise15:52 AMLuke Guthrie, Joseph Bramlett, Charlie Danielson105:52 AMMerrick Bremner, Chip McDaniel, Cody Gribble16:03 AMAustin Eckroat (a), Alex Noren, Charles Howell III106:03 AMMichael Thorbjornsen (a), Chez Reavie, David Toms16:14 AMThomas Pieters, Chesson Hadley, Stewart Hagestad (a)106:14 AMRafa Cabrera Bello, Kevin Na, Keegan Bradley16:25 AMPaul Casey, Patrick Cantlay, Lucas Glover106:25 AMJim Furyk, Henrik Stenson, Brandt Snedeker16:36 AMKiradech Aphibarnrat, Keith Mitchell, Shugo Imahira106:36 AMLuke List, Lucas Bjerregaard, Branden Grace16:47 AMFrancesco Molinari, Viktor Hovland (a), Brooks Koepka106:47 AMWebb Simpson, Adam Scott, Matt Kuchar16:58 AMTony Finau, Jimmy Walker, Ian Poulter106:58 AMByeong Hun An, Devon Bling (a), Matt Fitzpatrick17:09 AMJordan Spieth, Justin Rose, Tiger Woods107:09 AMJustin Harding, Aaron Baddeley, Andrew Putnam17:20 AMDaniel Berger, Matt Jones, Kodai Ichihara107:20 AMOllie Schniederjans, Mikumu Horikawa, Anirban Lahiri17:31 AMMatthieu Pavon, Chandler Eaton (a), Callum Tarren107:31 AMDaniel Hillier (a), Alex Prugh, Zac Blair17:42 AMEric Dietrich, Guillermo Pereira, Brett Drewitt107:42 AMHayden Shieh, Spencer Tibbits (a), Connor Arendell Top Image Source: Kayo Sports Latest streaming headlines https://www.finder.com.au/watch-us-open-golf-online
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londontheatre · 7 years
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John Hollingworth. Photo credit Michael Shelford
Actor and writer John Hollingworth, (Captain Henshawe in BBC’s Poldark), is currently in the cast of The Norman Conquests, a trilogy of plays by Alan Ayckbourn’s at Chichester Festival Theatre, with performances running through to 28th October 2017.
John recently took time out to tell us about his role as Captain Henshawe in Poldark and also as Tom in The Norman Conquests.
Q: Firstly, can you tell us about your journey as Captain Henshawe in BBC’s Poldark series? John: Henshawe was a dream role to play. Debbie (Horsfield – our brilliant writer) decided to build the character into a bigger presence than in the original novels. It meant that he went from being a smiling do-gooder to helping Ross on smuggling ventures to joining the ill-fated prison break in France – all out of loyalty for his friends. That was a hugely rewarding journey to go on as the character and increasingly fun to play as an actor.
Q: How tough is it to move on from an established role? John: It is tough actually. On the one hand, it’s sad to leave such a fun job with such lovely people and on the other, it’s tough to wait out for the next role that’s comparably good. I signed with a great manager in LA last year and have been going up for all sorts of jobs over there and spending a bit of time there which has been fun. I was fortunate to have a quick return to Cornwall after Poldark to film some Doc Martin and then went onto the new Thomas Vinterberg film Kursk. He’s a director I’ve always idolised and he was inspiring to work with, as was Colin Firth. So I’ve been lucky that the transition out of Poldark has been a smooth one – and that was helped by the overwhelming response to Henshawe’s exit!
Q: Your career roles include stage and screen – do you have a preference? John: I love both. I love to work, to be honest. It’s the role that’s most important and not the medium. I was lucky to train at RADA – which is a classical actor training – but my first job was a bit-part on Wuthering Heights on ITV that I filmed before I graduated. Then I got a bit-part on the film Dorian Gray and it went from there really. I’ve always been very grateful to be able to do both stage and screen. They can be quite separate communities that are reluctant to let folk cross the border between them.
Q: What is your favourite role to date, and why? John: Henshawe is incredibly special to me – both for the journey he went on and for what he’s done for my career – but I have to say I’m having a stupid amount of fun playing Tom in The Norman Conquests. I thoroughly enjoyed playing Geoffrey Church in Making Noise Quietly at the Donmar. It’s such a wonderful space to play in and to have the luxury of doing a two-hander with the peerless Susan Brown in it was unreal. I’d kill to go back there. Henshawe wins though, hands down.
John Hollingworth (Captain Henshawe) Photo credit Robert Viglasky
Q: You are at the Chichester Festival Theatre in THE NORMAN CONQUESTS A trilogy of plays by Alan Ayckbourn. What can you tell us about the plays and the characters that you play? John: I can tell you it’s a monster to perform! The three plays in the trilogy are Table Manners, Living Together and Round and Round the Garden. Each play is set in one location – the dining room, the living room and the garden respectively. The plays all take place over one long summer’s weekend – Saturday through to Monday – in a country house in Sussex. Norman tries to seduce all the women in the house over the same weekend – with hilarious results. Ayckbourn is brilliant at farce – people talking at cross purposes, mis-timed entrance and exits, slapstick encounters – but he also nails the desperation of these six people marooned in a crumbling country house with nothing to eat for a long weekend as they face up to the difficult truths of their various relationships. That’s what’s most rewarding about playing it – moments of high farce suddenly descend into rather poignant and moving moments of self-discovery.
Q: Do you have a favourite role/play? John: Well all six of us play the same characters throughout – so I’m Tom, the eccentric neighbourhood vet who’s deeply in love with Norman’s youngest sister-in-law Annie – played by the very brilliant Jemima Rooper. My favourite play is Round and Round the Garden as that’s the one that sees the biggest change in Tom’s relationship with Annie from start to finish. I won’t say more than that. Simon Higlett has designed the show in the round – a first for Chichester – and delivered us the most brilliant and life-like set to play on and this play takes place entirely in the garden and there’s something fun and freeing about that.
Q: Having seen the video clip of rehearsals – it looks like a fun ‘production’ to work on… Can you tell us about rehearsals and ‘the team’? John: It’s been ten weeks of laughing until we cry. If the audience find it anywhere near as funny as we do playing it then we’ll be fine. Our first preview of Table Manners was last night and the audience roared us through with laughter which was both hugely satisfying and a great relief.
Q: Why should everyone get along to see The Norman Conquests? John: It’s a brilliant piece of writing that’s expertly marshalled by Blanche McIntyre and been very well cast by the always excellent Charlotte Sutton. I would say that though, wouldn’t I? But I don’t mean me. Fans of Mr Selfridge will know Trystan Gravelle – who plays Norman – well; Job Lot and Miranda fans can have a right old cackle at Sarah Hadland; Jemima Rooper – who’s led everything from Lost In Austen on telly to One Man Two Guv’nors at the NT – excels as Annie; Johnnie Broadbent – who seems the most employed actor in Britain and was outstanding in My Night With Reg is Reg and Hattie Ladbury – the only actor to work in more British theatre than Johnnie – is devastating as Norman’s long-suffering wife Ruth. It’s a lovely bunch to knock about with.
Q: What next for you after Chichester? John: I’ll let you know as soon as I do!
*******
Other television credits include Da Vinci’s Demons, The Hour, Our Loved Boy, Dark Angel, Midsomer Murders, Doctor Foster, Arthur & George, Josh, Top Coppers, Our World War, Crossing Lines, Da Vinci’s Demons, Breathless, The Hour, Endeavour, London’s Burning, The Man Who Crossed Hitler, Twenty Twelve, Casualty 1909, Being Human, Wuthering Heights. For theatre his credits include Geoffrey Church in Making Noise Quietly (Donmar Warehouse), Earthquakes in London (National Theatre On Tour/Headlong), The Deep Blue Sea (West Yorkshire Playhouse), Design for Living (The Old Vic), Women, Power and Politics (Tricycle Theatre), The Power of Yes (National Theatre), Observe the Sons of Ulster Marching Towards the Somme (Hampstead Theatre). Films include Kursk, Transformers: The Last Knight, The Legend of Tarzan, Cinderella, About Time, The Dark Knight Rises, Pelican Blood and Dorian Gray.
The Norman Conquests
Creative team Blanche McIntyre – Director Simon Higlett – Designer Johanna Town – Lighting Designer Olly Fox – Music George Dennis – Sound Designer Charlotte Sutton CDG – Casting Director
Cast Trystan Gravelle – Norman Jemima Rooper – Annie Sarah Hadland – Sarah Hattie Ladbury – Ruth John Hollingworth – Tom Jonathan Broadbent – Reg
https://www.cft.org.uk/
http://ift.tt/2xkGEO5 LondonTheatre1.com
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bookclub4m · 7 years
Audio
Gardens! Plants! Growing things! Can we do it? Probably not! But we read books about it anyway. We talk about houseplants we’ve killed, the appeal of beautiful pictures of plants, and failing to grow things. Plus: Another chance to enter our contest!
You can download the podcast directly, find it on Libsyn, or get it through iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play or your favourite podcast delivery system.
In this episode
Anna Ferri | Meghan Whyte | Matthew Murray | Jessi
Books We Read (or tried to)
Lone Pine Publishing
37 Houseplants Even You Can't Kill by Mary Kate Hogan
Bunch Up!: A Step-By-Step Guide for Budding Florists by Irene Cuzzaniti, Irene Rinaldi
Public Natures: Evolutionary Infrastructures by Marion Weiss and Michael A. Manfredi
Cougar Annie’s Garden by Margaret Horsfield
Tiny World Terrariums: A Step-by-Step Guide to Easily Contained Life by Michelle Inciarrano and Katy Maslow
Terrariums Re-Imagined: Mini Worlds Made in Creative Containers by Kat Geiger
Terrarium Craft: Create 50 Magical, Miniature Worlds by Amy Bryant Aiello, Kate Bryant, and Kate Baldwin
The Fruit Hunters: A Story of Nature, Obsession, Commerce, and Adventure by Adam Leith Gollner
Genius of Place: The Life of Frederick Law Olmsted by Justin Martin
Art of the Olmsted Landscape by Bruce Kelly
Books We Mentioned
Monster Manual
Salt: A World History by Mark Kurlansky
Vanilla: The Cultural History of the World's Favorite Flavor and Fragrance by Patricia Rain
Banana: The Fate of the Fruit That Changed the World by Dan Koeppel
Secrets of Saffron: The Vagabond Life of the World's Most Seductive Spice by Pat Willard
American Pests: The Losing War on Insects from Colonial Times to DDT by James McWilliams
Bee Time: Lessons from the Hive by Mark L. Winston
Delicious in Dungeon by Ryoko Kui
Rutabaga the Adventure Chef by Eric Colossal
Blood Flag by Steve Martini
Links, Articles, and Things
Vellum (“is prepared animal skin or "membrane" used as a material for writing on”)
Hooker’s Onion
Folly  (“is a building constructed primarily for decoration, but suggesting through its appearance some other purpose, or of such extravagant appearance that it transcends the range of garden ornaments usually associated with the class of buildings to which it belongs”)
Legends of the coco de mer (Wikipedia article)
Rambutan (after more research, Matthew thinks he loaded Longan onto the truck)
Our list of potential genres for the podcast
Photos of our plant babies
Questions
Do you read books about gardening? How do you choose them?
How many houseplants have you killed?
What’s your favourite plant?
Contest
To celebrate 15,000 total downloads of our podcast we’re having a contest! Retweet one of our tweets about episode 34 or episode 35 of this podcast any time during August, 2017, and you’ll have a chance to win some books or comics!
Prizes include Moonstruck #1, Moonshine vol. 1, I Hate Fairyland vol. 2, Howtoons: Tools of Mass Construction, Fierce Kingdom by Gin Phillips, Run by Ann Patchett, and Island of the Blue Dolphin by Scott O’Dell (plus probably some other stuff).
We can neither confirm nor deny that this is extra stuff we have from ALA and other conferences. (Though all the above listed titles are unread.)
Number of prizes will depend on number of entrants.
Check out our Pinterest board and Tumblr posts for all the Gardening, plant, etc books we read, follow us on Twitter, join our Facebook Group, or send us an email!
Join us again on Tuesday, September 5th, when we’ll talk about Podcasts.
Then come back on Tuesday, September 19th, when we’ll be discussing Experimental Fiction!
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hottytoddynews · 7 years
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HottyToddy.com provides readers a roundup of the commentary and information about the Ole Miss Rebels from various publications around the Web.
Readers can check out the latest information in a single post each day throughout the year. Here at HottyToddy.com, we are doing all the leg work to find the information that people want about Ole Miss sports.
Today’s stories come from Ole Miss Sports
Ole Miss’ Hartono, Bortles Earn NCAA Individual Bids
Ole Miss women’s tennis Junior Arianne Hartono earned a bid to the NCAA Singles Championship and will team up with freshman Alexa Bortles in the NCAA Doubles Championship.
Hartono will participate in the NCAA Singles and Doubles for the second year in a row after reaching the round of 16 in singles last year and earning All-America honors.
Last week Hartono earned All-SEC First Team honors in a league that placed 12 teams in the NCAA Team Championships and 23 in the 64-player singles bracket. She owns an 18-13 overall record, 13-10 at No. 1 singles. Hartono is ranked No. 27 in the latest ITA Singles Rankings.
Hartono and Bortles made their debut on March 24 and rose up the rankings to their current spot of No. 21 with a 6-5 record at No. 1 doubles. They are one of 13 SEC teams among the 32-team doubles draw.
“It’s very exciting to once again have both a singles player as well as a doubles team in the NCAA field,” head coach Mark Beyers said. “Arianne has established herself as one of the top players in the SEC. In doubles, Arianne and Alexa picked up a few top 15 wins at the SEC tournament in order to get themselves into the NCAA’s.”
The singles and doubles championships will take place May 24-29 following the team championships in Athens, Georgia.
The Rebels earned their ninth straight NCAA bid and will face William & Mary in the first round, May 13 at 8 a.m. CT in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
For more information on Ole Miss Women’s Tennis, follow the Rebels on Twitter @OleMissWTennis, on Facebook at OleMissWTennis and on Instagram at OleMissWTennis. Also follow Coach Beyers on Twitter, @MarkBeyers.
Courtesy of Ole Miss Sports
Men’s Golf and Women’s Tennis Teams Earn NCAA APR Public Recognition
The Ole Miss women’s tennis and men’s golf team’s success isn’t limited to just the playing fields as both have been recognized for their outstanding performances in the classroom with the NCAA Public Recognition Award.
Both teams earned perfect 1,000 marks and are among 1,090 teams across the country earning perfect scores. Based on their most recent multiyear Academic Progress Rate, these teams have earned NCAA Public Recognition Awards for posting scores in the top 10 percent of their sport. The APR is an annual scorecard of academic achievement calculated for all Division I sports teams nationally.
“Many of our teams have improved their APR scores tremendously over the past five years which has led to Ole Miss posting its highest overall APR score in recorded history,” said senior associate athletic director of student-athlete development, Derek Cowherd. “Congratulations to Coach Malloy and Coach Beyers for promoting academic success on their respective teams. Posting a perfect 1000 Academic Progress Rate is evidence of their leadership and commitment to their students’ success.“
This will mark the second consecutive year and the fifth overall time women’s tennis has earned the NCAA recognition. The Rebel men’s golf team has won Ole Miss’ Chancellors Cup, awarded to the men and women’s teams with the top GPAs, each of the last two years, while former men’s golfer Forrest Gamble earned the SEC’s H. Boyd McWhorter Award in 2016, given to the top scholar athlete in the SEC.
This year, 1,203 teams are being recognized for academic performance: 746 women’s teams and 457 men’s teams or co-ed teams. The total number of teams being recognized increased by 132 from a year ago, largely as a result of an increase in perfect scores. Scores for programs in the top 10 percent ranged from 984 to a perfect 1,000, with 1,090 teams earning a perfect score.
All Division I teams’ APR scores will be released May 10. All teams must meet a certain academic threshold to qualify for the postseason and can face penalties for continued low academic performance. The APR measures eligibility, graduation and retention each term and provides a clear picture of the academic performance for each team in every sport.
The most recent APRs are based on scores from the 2012-13, 2013-14, 2014-15 and 2015-16 academic years.
The women’s tennis team earned its ninth consecutive NCAA berth under the guidance of head coach Mark Beyers and will head to Chapel Hill, NC to take on William and Mary in the first round. The men’s golf team is currently ranked No. 22 and awaits its NCAA Regional selection on Thursday.
For further academic accolades, follow @UMTrueRebel on Twitter.
Ole Miss Student-Athlete Development Mission The mission of Ole Miss’ Student-Athlete Development program is to challenge student-athletes to be lifelong learners while pursuing continuous improvement academically, relationally, socially, personally, and professionally during and beyond their careers as student-athletes.
Courtesy of Ole Miss Sports
Thornberry, Wolcott Earn All-SEC Honors
Photo by Joshua McCoy/Ole Miss Athletics.
Ole Miss sophomore Braden Thornberry earned first team All-SEC honors and senior Ben Wolcott was named to All-SEC second team by the league’s coaches, the conference office announced Wednesday.
Thornberry and Wolcott combined for six individual titles this season to help lead the No. 20 Ole Miss to four team wins and the SEC Men’s Golf Championship quarterfinals. The two All-SEC selections are tied for the second most in the SEC with (list schools). Alabama, Auburn and Georgia each had one All-SEC selection, while Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi State, Missouri and Tennessee had none.
“I am so happy for Ben and Braden to be recognized on great years,” said Rebel head coach Chris Malloy. “To have six individual wins between the two is an amazing accomplishment.”
Thornberry earned first team All-SEC honors after a stellar sophomore campaign, claiming four medalist honors this season. Ranked the sixth-best golfer in the nation according to Golfweek, Thornberry won SEC Golfer of the Week honors following his 13-stroke victory at the Ryman Hospitality Intercollegiate last month. The Olive Branch, Mississippi native carved his name in the Ole Miss record book this season with the lowest and second-lowest three round tournament scores at 198 and 199, and has the most rounds in the 60s in a season. He is among the top golfers in the nation statistically this season with the second-best stroke average in the country, and the best in the SEC, at 69.60. Thornberry leads the nation in stroke average on par 3s at 2.98, has the second-most birdies and is ninth in par-4 scoring at 3.96 this year. Most recently, he finished tied for third at the SEC Men’s Golf Championships to claim his eighth top-five finish of the year.
“Braden has had one of the best years of anyone in college golf,” said Malloy. “To do what he has done with only being in his sophomore year is amazing.”
Ranked the 67th player in the nation according to Golfweek, Wolcott earned All-SEC honors following his best year as a Rebel. The Dickson, Tennessee native finished the regular season with a 71.14 stroke average and turned in five top-five finishes this year. Wolcott carded a season-low round of 67 in the final round of the Lamkin Grips San Diego Classic in March to win his first ever collegiate tournament and followed with a career-best three round tournament score of 204 to earn consecutive medalist honors at Hootie at Bulls Bay that gave him SEC Player of the Week honors. Wolcott most recently defeated SEC runner-up Patrick Martin, of Vanderbilt, by six holes in the quarterfinals of match play.
“I am thrilled for Ben to get the recognition that he deserves,” said Malloy. “He has worked extremely hard to get to where he is and I couldn’t be any more proud of him.”
The Rebels await the announcement of NCAA Regionals pairings tomorrow at 11:00 a.m. Fans can watch the NCAA Men’s Golf Selection Show on the Golf Channel and stream live on the Golf Channel website. The Rebels will compete in one of six regional sites which include The Grove, College Grove, Tennessee, hosted by Middle Tennessee State University; Kampen Course, West Lafayette, Indiana, hosted by Purdue University; Stanford Golf Course, Stanford, California, hosted by Stanford University; University of Texas Golf Club, Austin, Texas, hosted by University of Texas at Austin; University Club, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, hosted by LSU and Aldarra Golf Club, Sammamish, Washington, hosted by University of Washington. For all Ole Miss Men’s golf news and information, follow the Rebels on Twitter at @OleMissMGolf, on Instagram at OleMissMGolf and on Facebook at http://ift.tt/2coEm4A. Fans can also follow head coach Chris Malloy on Twitter @CoachMalloy12.
FIRST TEAM ALL-SEC Alejandro Tosti, Florida Chandler Phillips, Texas A&M Sam Burns, LSU Patrick Martin, Vanderbilt Braden Thornberry, Ole Miss Matthias Schwab, Vanderbilt Greyson Sigg, Georgia Cameron Champ, Texas A&M
SECOND TEAM ALL-SEC Sam Horsfield, Florida Theo Humphrey, Vanderbilt Keenan Huskey, South Carolina Davis Riley, Alabama Luis Gagne, LSU Trace Crowe, Auburn Gordon Neale, Florida Scott Stevens, South Carolina Ben Wolcott, Ole Miss
COACH OF THE YEAR Scott Limbaugh, Vanderbilt
PLAYER OF THE YEAR Sam Burns, LSU
FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR John Augenstein, Vanderbilt
SCHOLAR-ATHLETE OF THE YEAR Euan Walker, Missouri
ALL-FRESHMAN TEAM John Augenstein, Vanderbilt Spencer Ralston, Georgia Luis Garza, Arkansas Tanapat Pichaikool, Mississippi State Andy Zhang, Florida Rory Franssen, Missouri
Courtesy of Ole Miss Sports
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junker-town · 7 years
Text
Arnold Palmer Invitational 2018: Tiger Woods' tee time, plus full pairings for Saturday
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It’s been five years since we could say Tiger had a weekend tee time at Bay Hill.
If you need a break from March Madness, which is not a thing to need a break from, then Tiger Woods will be there Saturday afternoon to provide an alternative. Tiger is back playing the weekend at the Arnold Palmer Invitational for the first time since 2013. That’s also the last time he played the event altogether. He also won that event, a record eighth victory at Bay Hill.
Tiger will tee off at 12:15 p.m. ET alongside Justin Rose. Any pairing with Tiger in it is a marquee group, but Rose is the real deal and elevates it even more. Rose has been one of the best players in the world since the final months of 2017, and he played in the final group on Sunday last week in Tampa. He’s also a veteran world-class player that should be able to handle all the chaos and mania that come with playing with Tiger on the weekend of a PGA Tour event.
Tiger was one group ahead of Rose last Sunday and he’ll need to do some serious work in the third round to have that late final round tee time this week in Orlando. But it’s still doable on a course he knows so well and has played just fine again this week. Tiger is getting back to his old ways of dominating the par-5s, even when he hits drives completely off the planet. He birdied all four on Thursday in his wild first round, and then added two more on the back nine par-5s on Friday to get back to even for the day.
The margin this Saturday is seven shots, which will be extremely difficult to make up in a day. Bryson DeChambeau and Henrik Stenson are on the lead at 11-under and they will tee off in that final pairing at 1:55 p.m. ET. The pace should be steady, right at about four hours with the Tour sending everyone off the first tee and in twosomes. Golf Channel will be live at 12:30 p.m., about one hole in to Tiger’s round, and is scheduled to wrap at 6 p.m. ET. They will, of course, stay on the air if that final pairing is still playing past 6 p.m.
Here’s the full tee sheet for Saturday’s third round at the Arnold Palmer Invitational:
Off No. 1 tee:
8 a.m.: Anirban Lahiri
8:07 a.m.: John Huh, Russell Knox
8:16 a.m.: Sung Kang, Kevin Streelman
8:25 a.m.: David Lingmerth, Peter Uihlein
8:34 a.m.: Austin Cook, Hudson Swafford
8:43 a.m.: Kevin Tway, Tommy Fleetwood
8:52 a.m.: Chesson Hadley, C.T. Pan
9:01 a.m.: Brian Gay, Ryan Armour
9:10 a.m.: Tyrone Van Aswegen, Jason Day
9:19 a.m.: Doc Redman, Beau Hossler
9:28 a.m.: Tyrrell Hatton, Collin Morikawa
9:37 a.m.: Emiliano Grillo, Davis Love III
9:46 a.m.: Paul Goydos, Keegan Bradley
9:55 a.m.: Patrick Rodgers, Sean O’Hair
10:04 a.m.: Brian Stuard, Alex Noren
10:13 a.m.: Mackenzie Hughes, Jimmy Walker
10:22 a.m.: Ian Poulter, Haotong Li
10:31 a.m.: Sam Horsfield, Brandon Harkins
10:40 a.m.: Brian Harman, Lucas Glover
10:49 a.m.: Harris English, Adam Scott
10:58 a.m.: Martin Laird, Francesco Molinari
11:07 a.m.: Kyle Stanley, Hideki Matsuyama
11:16 a.m.: Charles Howell III, Stewart Cink
11:25 a.m.: Ollie Schniederjans, James Hahn
11:35 a.m.: Graeme McDowell, Tom Hoge
11:45 a.m.: Aaron Wise, William McGirt
11:55 a.m.: Kevin Na, Jamie Lovemark
12:05 p.m.: Zach Johnson, Grayson Murray
12:15 p.m.: Justin Rose, Tiger Woods
12:25 p.m.: Kevin Chappell, Bubba Watson
12:35 p.m.: Chris Kirk, Marc Leishman
12:45 p.m.: Sam Burns, Curtis Luck
12:55 p.m.: J.B. Holmes, Bud Cauley
1:05 p.m.: Rory McIlroy, Ernie Els
1:15 p.m.: Patrick Reed, Ryan Moore
1:25 p.m.: Billy Horschel, Luke List
1:35 p.m.: Charley Hoffman, Rickie Fowler
1:45 p.m.: Talor Gooch, Byeong Hun An
1:55 p.m.: Henrik Stenson, Bryson DeChambeau
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