Thursday, March 6, 2014

Watney ties Mickelson for lead after Day 3 at Wells Fargo Championship

Nick Watney at the Wells Fargo Championship
Getty Images
Nick Watney shares the Wells Fargo Championship lead after 54 holes, despite a double bogey on the par-3 17th hole Saturday.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Phil Mickelson and Nick Watney wound up tied for the lead Saturday in the Wells Fargo Championship, minus the separation from the rest of the field. 
Mickelson hit a shot out-of-bounds on the 15th hole and hit another shot that struck a spectator in the head, costing him three shots over the last four holes at Quail Hollow in his round of 1-over 73. Watney hit a semi-shank with a 6-iron on the par-3 17th, took double bogey and had to settle for a 71. 
It felt like a small consolation that they were tied at 8-under 208, one shot ahead of George McNeill, who had his share of trouble down the stretch for a 72. 
"I can't remember the last time I did that in a tournament, so it was a bit unsettling," Watney said about his shank. "The big picture? I'm tied for the lead, and I would have taken that on Thursday morning." 
Instead of pulling away from the pack, their mistakes in a wild final hour allowed a dozen players to get within three shots of the lead. 
One of them was Rory McIlroy, who shot 73 and missed seven putts from the 5-foot range or closer, which was no way to celebrate his 24th birthday. McIlroy ranked 82nd out of the 83 players who made the 36-hole cut in the key putting statistic, yet he still goes into the final round with a good chance for his first win of the year. 
But it's a crowded race. 
John Senden completed his round of 67 some three hours before the leaders finished. Ryan Moore was right behind him with a 68. They were among six players who were tied for fourth, two shots behind. That group included Lee Westwood, who made two birdies and two bogeys in his otherwise boring round of 72. 
"It's tough to run away on this golf course," Westwood said. "I think the greens are dictating that with a pretty good bunch. Nobody's going to get streaky and shoot a 62, I don't think. It will be a case of playing solid tomorrow and giving yourself chances and taking opportunities when you can." 
The starting time for Sunday has been moved up because of rain in the forecast, with the final round starting at 6:45 a.m. 
McIlroy didn't need to be reminded that it was his birthday. Fans serenaded or shouted to him on just about every hole. If all he wanted was to make some putts, Boy Wonder didn't get his wish. At times, it became a cruel joke. 
He stuffed his shot into just inside 3 feet on the third hole and missed the birdie, and that was just the start of it. He missed another putt inside 3 feet that gave him a double bogey on the ninth hole. Add it up and McIlroy missed seven putts from the 5-foot range, along with a 7-foot putt on the eighth. 
After all that, he's still in the mix. 
McIlroy, Westwood and more than a dozen have Mickelson and Watney to thank for that. 
Right when it looked as though it might be a two-man race, perhaps another duel like they once had at Doral, their blunders opened up Sunday for a slew of others. 
Mickelson, 11 under after his 10-foot birdie putt on the 14th hole, pulled his tee shot on the par-5 15th well right of the fairway, just above a cart path. Lefty decided to go for the green by trying to smash his "Phrankenwood" driver with a hard fade around the trees and back toward the green. 
Only it didn't fade, and instead went out-of-bounds. 
Mickelson tried it again, this time the way he imagined, and it left him just short of the green. But he failed to get up-and-down and took double bogey to fall one shot behind. If that wasn't enough, he hooked his approach from a slightly downhill lie in the fairway. The ball struck a spectator in the head and bounded down the hill toward where the old 17th tee used to be located It took Mickelson two chips to reach the green, leading to another bogey. 
Just like that, he went from one shot ahead to two shots behind -- but not for long. 
In the group ahead of him, Watney faced about a 20-minute wait on the tee at the par-3 17th. When it was his turn to hit, Watney hit a semi-shank toward a hospitality tent that left nearly 80 yards short on the 207-yard hole. His next shot barely reached the green, and he three-putted for a double bogey. 
Asked if he was more embarrassed or angry, Watney said, "A bit of both." 
"It's a tough hole, and I'm sure guys hit shots they thought were good and it just hooked a little and went in the water and made double," he said. "It just so happened that I'm playing really well and it was on TV, so that's where the embarrassment comes from. But the other thing is you like to put as much distance as you can between you and the other guys, so a bit of anger and definitely some embarrassment." 
He tugged his cap over his face on the 18th green and shouted, not willing to share exactly what he said. 
"If I have any chance of playing well tomorrow, I'm going to need to get past it and come out ready to go or else I'm going to get run over," Watney said. "I'm looking forward to tomorrow." 
McNeill was the steady one in the last few groups, which is not to suggest he didn't have his issues. He sliced his tee shot on the 15th into the middle of a large tree, leaving him no choice but to punch out sideways on a par 5 that he couldn't reach in two, anyway. He wound up reaching this green in four shots, missing a par putt from about 10 feet to drop pa shot. 
McNeill at least wound up in the final group. And he's not quite sure how he got there. 
"Phil looked like he was kind of moving ahead of everyone, and then I don't know what he did on 16, but it looked like either 15 or 16 he had kind of a mess-up," McNeill said. "Then Nick, with the shot that he hit on 17, that actually shook me up probably more than it shook him up. ... Honestly, I didn't even know until I was standing on 18 green, and then I looked and I'm like, 'Oh, wow, I'm tied for the lead.'" 
Not for long. He made bogey and fell one shot behind, still in the mix, along with so many others. 

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Week 16 vs. New England: Friday Transcripts



Posted Dec 20, 2013






Head Coach John Harbaugh

Opening statement: “Good to see everybody. Thanks for coming. We had a good practice. We got a chance to get outside, which was nice. There was a little bit of fresh air out there. We got the field cleaned off, and it wasn’t frozen with the warm weather – so that was positive for us. Our guys enjoyed it; I know I did. Now, we’ll finish up tomorrow and be ready to play on Sunday.”

How did Joe [Flacco] progress throughout the week? (Aaron Wilson) “He looked good. I don’t know if there was a progression; it was just the same all week. [He] got through all the practices, took his reps and did well.”

Is it a little unusual to be preparing for December football and seeing temperatures in the mid-70s for the game after what you guys have dealt with weather-wise the last four weeks? (Jeff Zrebiec) “What’s the rain forecast right now?” (Reporter: “Sixty percent chance.”) “Sixty percent thunderstorms? Thunderstorms, right? Does that mean lightening? So, there could be a delay? We won’t be surprised if that happens.” (laughter)

I was here a month-and-a-half ago, and one thing you talked about that week was that this team needed to learn how to finish and that you weren’t winning close games. Now, you have been winning them. What changed? What clicked? (Aditi Kinkhabwala) “We found a way to win the close games. (laughter) It’s never one thing, right? It’s always multiple things. We still have areas that we have to get better at, in terms of finishing. We found a way to win games. Two weeks ago, I’m just glad it was an odd number and not an even number of scores at the end where we came out on top. You couldn’t write the script for the game last week, either. It seems like if you look around the league, it seems like that’s what the National Football League is right now. It’s very exciting, for everybody. We just need to continue to improve and pour all of our energy, pour all of our effort and all of our efficiency in to this game on Sunday and try to play better than they do they do and find a way to win the game. That’s what we need to do this time.”

Is it exciting? Or is it a struggle on your part? (Aditi Kinkhabwala) “Those games? Ask the fans. I don’t know.”(Reporter: “What about for you?”) “Exciting? I don’t know if exciting would be the term. That’s not the one that comes to mind.”

With Ray Rice, he’s listed on the injury report with a thigh injury. Is that related to the hip injury at all or is this a separate number? (Jamison Hensley) “You know I’m not going to get into all of that. He’s on the injury report – that’s what it is. What the injury report says it is, it is.”

John, was there a moment last year when you knew that Justin was an ice-water guy? Was there something that told you about his makeup? (Jim Corbett) “Probably in training camp. He came in training camp right out of the gates. He was competing for the job, never wavered throughout, and that’s what you saw. He made kicks, and every one of those kicks was a pressure kick because he was trying to establish himself and earn a job. I don’t think anything has changed.”

John, we’ve seen Joe have a lot of success moving around in the pocket – occasionally taking off and picking up yards. Do you think that’s an overlooked part of his game? He doesn’t have the reputation of being a mobile guy, but do you think he’s better in that regard? (Luke Jones) “I don’t really know what people give him credit for and what they don’t. I try not to take too much stock in that. He’s always been a mobile quarterback. You go back to the very first game against the Bengals [in 2008 on Flacco’s 38-yard TD run] … If you’re saying people don’t take stock of that, they probably haven’t been paying attention. That’s definitely a big part of his game, and it’s made a difference for us in a lot of games this year so far.”

In the past, when these two teams have played, there were always a lot of words thrown back and forth. It feels like that has changed. Everybody has been really complimentary. There are a lot of verbal bouquets being thrown around. Why do you think that has changed? Is it a sign of respect that has been earned over time? Why do you think the dynamic of the rivalry has changed a little bit, where … (Matt Vensel) “I don’t analyze it. Obviously, you guys are disappointed, so it must be an issue. You don’t have as much material to work with, I guess, right? (laughter) I don’t really have any thought on that, not really. To be honest with you, I haven’t thought too much about it.”

Could you talk about Chandler Jones a little bit? It seems like he has become one of the elite pass rushers in the league. What have you seen on film that makes him so effective? (Clifton Brown) “To me, the biggest thing about Chandler [Jones] is that he is a tremendous athlete for his length. He is really long, and he has got body control. He can get his hips in and out on the pass rush, he can move his feet, he can leverage you, he gets underneath people, and he can leverage and turn a tackle. So, there is not too much he can’t do. He is also probably, I would say, sneaky fast because he is so long, and you don’t realize how fast he is getting to the edge and getting to the top of the rush. He was a guy that we really, really liked coming out [of college]. He was in that group with Courtney [Upshaw] and those guys that year. He is better than he was last year, and he is becoming one of the top pass rushers in the league.”


Do they move him around much? (Clifton Brown) “They don’t; they don’t. They kind of have him where they have him, and he does what he does and does it really well.”


They have some young guys like Joe Vellano, who has stepped in defensive tackle. As long as you have faced New England, you’ve gone against Vince Wilfork and Jerod Mayo. How much different does their defense look without those two? (Matt Zenitz) “Well, it’s funny – the look of it isn’t that much different, surprisingly. They are doing a great job in the back end. They are really doing a great job across the board in terms of coverage. They mix their coverages. They play them all really well. [They are] very physical. They grab you, they knock you around, they try to do everything they can to disrupt routes. They play on the edge that way, which is good. And because of that, their front is getting some pressure and getting some sacks. So, it’s a complement to them. But the two tackles inside – the young guys – they are playing really well. They don’t look a lot different in there from what you are used to seeing, so that is a credit to the coaching staff and to those guys.”

Statistically, it seems like they have struggled to stop the pass recently. Is there anything you’ve seen that you feel comfortable sharing? (Matt Zenitz) “No, not really. I think that, like most productive defenses, they keep people out of the end zone. That’s what they have done. They are 10th against points. They have given up yards, but yards are not really the true measuring stick. It’s points, and they’ve done a good job with that. They don’t make a lot of mistakes, and they play good, sound football.”


John, what is your reaction to Ray Rice’s comments about possibly retiring at the age of 30? (Adam Vorce)“How old is he now?” (Reporter: “He is going to be 27 next month.”) Oh, OK. That is a long time – 30. (laughter) That is a long time from now. He won’t be 30 before Sunday, will he? (laughter) Then we’re good; we’re all right.”