Tiger Woods PGA Tour - PC
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Tiger Woods PGA Tour 07 - PC
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2007 takes golf gaming to new level of realism. Experience the next generation of technology as Tiger Woods comes to life -- you'll see and feel each emotion in detail, as it's displayed onscreen in the faces and movements of the golfers. Play under pressure just like pros, and go further in your game with the enhanced career mode. Featuring 15 of the world's top players, including Tiger Woods, John Daly, Vijay Singh, Ian Poulter, Michael Campbell, and Annika Sorenstam, the most decorated golfer on the LPGA Tour New Gameface tool with deeper modifications, more apparel, equipment licenses, and specialty items Challenge up to three players in five new game modes, or play in online tournaments complete with money lists, full stat tracking, league leaders, and more Work on your game or take on a friend in Match Play, Battle Golf, 21, OneBall, and more
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Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2006 - Xbox 360
Is Tiger Woods the best golfer of all time? He's ready to settle that debate once and for all and only you can stop him. Create a golfer using the most advanced Game Face technology ever released, and battle through five classic periods of golf with Tiger Woods challenging you every step of the way. Feel the pressure and intensity of making perfect tee shots or sinking tournament-winning putts with all-time greats like Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, and Ben Hogan breathing down your neck. With new mini games, 21 licensed golfers, and 11 authentic PGA TOUR courses, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 06 challenges you to call out your rivals and prove yourself as the greatest golfer ever.
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Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and the 10 Biggest Golf Surprises
Every year in golf brings a plethora of surprise winners and losers, and 2013 was no exception. Let's take a look.
10. Graeme McDowell, PGA Tour First-Time Winner
Despite all his excellent play, his victory at the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, his heroic shots at the Ryder Cup in Wales and his new restaurant in Orlando, McDowell had yet to win a regular PGA Tour event. Last April, he found his way to a PGA Tour trophy ceremony and gained a plaid jacket at the RBC Heritage on Hilton Head Island.
Can the tartan coat at the Crown Plaza Invitational at Colonial be far behind?
9. World Golf Hall of Fame Refuses to Induct Anyone in 2014
After criticism of recent inductees by former inductees, particularly Raymond Floyd, the World Golf Hall of Fame decided to delay induction of the next class and re-evaluate the criteria for selection. That shouldn't affect the LGPA, however, as they have a point system based on victories, and it actually seems unnecessarily tough.
From the LPGA website:
LPGA Tour Hall of Fame, members of the LPGA Tour, who were active in 1998 and going forward, must meet the criteria outlined below. Entrance to the LPGA Tour Hall of Fame is limited to LPGA Tour members who meet the following criteria:
1. Must be/have been an "active" LPGA Tour member for 10 years:
2. Must have won/been awarded at least one of the following - an LPGA major championship, the Vare Trophy or Rolex Player of the Year honors; and
3. Must have accumulated a total of 27 points, which are awarded as follows - one point for each LPGA official tournament win, two points for each LPGA major tournament win and one point for each Vare Trophy or Rolex Player of the Year honor earned.
8. The New PGA Tour Schedule
After much debate, it's working.
Some players, like former U.S. Open champ Webb Simpson, took advantage of the early-season tournaments to rack up 2014 FedEx points the better to rest later on in 2014.
Recently announced is the change for 2015 to move the McGladrey Classic to an earlier fall date. That will be followed by PGA Tour-sponsored Asian events. The move may strengthen participation in the domestic fall events.
In addition to two-year exemptions, fall winners get full FedEx Cup points and Masters and, likely, Players invitations.
7. Inbee Park
Scott Halleran/Getty Images Inbee Park won three majors in 2013. That's Tiger Woods and Ben Hogan territory.Another of South Korea's star LGPA players, Park won three LPGA majors in 2013 and got almost no coverage for it. In case you forgot or weren't paying attention, they were the Kraft Nabisco Championship, LPGA Championship and the U.S. Women's Open.
Who was the last professional golfer to win three majors in a season? Tiger Woods. Before that? Ben Hogan. That's how well she played.
6. Rory McIlroy
Never has so much hype turned into so much fizzle. After winning two majors, a U.S. Open and a PGA Championship, McIlroy found romance and a new club deal, changed management companies twice and lost direction on the golf course.
If he weren't rich and famous, you could almost feel sorry for him.
Recently, McIlroy modified his driver and golf ball, changing to the VR_S Covert 2.0 Tour driver and RZN prototype ball, and he used those to beat Tiger Woods in an exhibition match in China.
“I would like to play all my tournaments in China where I can beat Tiger,” McIlroy said about their challenge match.
5. Justin Rose
The fan favorites at the beginning of U.S. Open week were Tiger and Phil. Very few can say they picked Justin Rose to win it.
When he surprised, Rose became the third European to win the tournament since Tony Jacklin in 1970.
Rose quipped, "(Lee)Trevino says, 'Fell in love with a girl named Merion, just didn't know her last name.' I've been sort of joking about that all week."
Historically, the U.S. Open has almost always been won by players from the U.S., with the occasional South African jumping in the winner's circle. With Rose's victory, eight non-U.S. players have won the title since 2000. They are: Retief Goosen (twice), Michael Campbell, Geoff Ogilvy, Angel Cabrera, Graeme McDowell, Rory McIlroy and now Rose.
4. Adam Scott and Augusta National
The Masters has often been called a putting contest because the greens are large and undulating to the point that they instill fear in the hands of those wielding the club.
The idea that someone would win, not just with a long putter, but with a broomstick putter, seemed out of the question.
That's why Adam Scott's victory at The Masters ranks so high on the surprise scale. Coming nine months after the near-miss at the British Open, where he was ahead with four holes to go and could not finish it off, the Masters was an amazing and unexpected victory for him.
3. Phil Mickelson
No one, including Phil Mickelson, thought he could win a British Open, at least not until the last six or so years.
He hit the ball too high. He couldn't keep it under the tricky, links winds. The greens were too slow. And his putter had become balky. Never mind the damaged psyche from a sixth loss at the U.S. Open.
Then, when Mickelson won the Scottish Open, it seemed he had peaked a week too soon. However, Lefty surprised everyone, maybe even himself, when he birdied four of the last six holes at Muirfield to capture the British Open and the third leg of the career grand slam.
2. Henrik Stenson
Stenson was in the 200s in the world rankings, a free fall that started after he won the 2009 Players Championship. Then, last spring, he reunited with mental coach Torsten Hansson and began one of the most rapid and amazing returns to form that golf has seen in decades.
Stenson clawed his way up the FedEx points list and won the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup. Afterward, he announced that his goal was to become the first person to win the FedEx Cup and the Race to Dubai. It was new history of sorts, formed by the cash grabs at the end of the seasons on the PGA and European Tours.
Like Babe Ruth calling a home run in advance, Stenson proceeded to take a commanding lead in the final Race to Dubai tournament. He won the DP World Tour Championship and the Race to Dubai for both titles, setting a new standard for golfers to reach.
"To get the double double sort of, winning the Tour Championship on both the tours and the total on both tours, that's going to take some beating I guess in the future," Stenson said about his unlikely achievement.
1. Tiger Woods
Woods won five times in 2013, but none of the wins were majors. With his ability to win and contend, it is the biggest surprise of the year that with five victories, one of them was not a traditional major.
"So many of you guys here that were saying I could never win again. Got eight wins since then, so it's been good, and I'm very happy with the progress I've made," Tiger Woods insisted after playing in Turkey.
He said he's looking forward to next year's major venues, which are Augusta National, Pinehurst No. 2, Royal Liverpool and Valhalla GC. He's won at three of the four.
Kathy Bissell is a Golf Writer for Bleacher Report. Unless otherwise noted, all quotes were obtained firsthand or from official interview materials from the USGA, PGA Tour or PGA of America.
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 - Nintendo Wii
Electronic Arts Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 Wii Feel the drama of playing professional tournament golf like never before with Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10. For the first time in the history of Electronic Arts' much lauded golf simulation franchise, players can take aim atcapturing the US Open Championship on the ever-challenging Bethpage Black. Features: * Tradeyour clubs for discs in a fun, new game mode based on the family-fun sport of Disc Golf. Play from custom tee locations on all 27 courses in the game. * Wii Motion Plus Integration elevates your game with an enhanced, true-to-life golf swing that features precise draw-fade capabilities and authentic sports motion which mirrors your every move. * For the first time ever, feel the drama of playing in the US Open, one of golf's biggest?and toughest?tournaments of the year. * Replay dramatic scenarios from past PGA Tour seasons as you?re placed on the course at the precise moment before history was made only this time, you determine the outcome. * Play alongside actual PGA Tour Pros during real-world PGA tour events or swing away in daily and weekly tournaments as you fight to stay atop the leaderboard.
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Tiger Woods Golf PGA TOUR
For one week each spring, golf's best players from around the world gather on the sacred grounds of Augusta National Golf Club to take part in one of the greatest traditions in sports, the Masters With expanded features surrounding the Masters Tournament, revamped swing control, new online experiences and full motion control support integration it's never been a better time to enjoy the world's #1 selling golf game. The Collector's Edition offers 5 additional golf courses, access to Augusta National's world-class Tournament Practice Facility, an exclusive Green Jacket presentation and more.
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Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 12: The Masters
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Tiger Woods PGA Tour 2006
Is Tiger Woods the best golfer of all time? He's ready to settle that debate once and for all and only you can stop him. Create a golfer using the most advanced Game Face technology ever released, and battle through five classic periods of golf with Tiger Woods challenging you every step of the way. Feel the pressure and intensity of making perfect tee shots or sinking tournament-winning putts with all-time greats like Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, and Ben Hogan breathing down your neck. With new mini games, 21 licensed golfers, and 11 authentic PGA TOUR courses, Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 06 challenges you to call out your rivals and prove yourself as the greatest golfer ever.
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Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy play their way out of this year's Open Saturday
Tiger Woods will play the final round on Sunday, but his chance to win this U.S. Open ended at 5:30 p.m. on Saturday afternoon on the par-4 12th hole. Woods pulled his tee shot left into a mound of thick clumpy rough, punched out to the fairway, then hit a pitch shot to the front of the green about 20 feet from the hole. He got the line right with his putt, but his ball stopped an inch short. He tapped in with one arm for bogey and a 7-over total, his Open effectively finished.
"I didn't make anything today," Woods said after he finished his round of 76 at 9-over for the tournament. "I just couldn't get a feel for them, some putts were slow, some were fast and I had a tough time getting my speed right." Paired with fellow million-dollar Nike pitchman Rory McIlroy for the third-straight day, Woods entered the day within four shots of the lead and started hot with a birdie on the first hole. That would be his only birdie of the day. Woods took 36 putts on Saturday and while he hit a lot of greens, he didn't give himself many great looks at birdie.
"If you leave yourself in the correct spots, you can be pretty aggressive with some putts and they're not that fast uphill into the grain," Woods said. "So if you put yourself in a correct spot you can really take a pretty good run at it and be aggressive, but if you put the ball in the wrong spots, yeah, it's tough to make putts." Woods was in those wrong spots most of the day. McIlroy fared about the same, shooting 75 that ended his hopes of another U.S. Open win as well. McIlroy is at 8-over. His game just wasn't up to the test Merion presented, McIlroy said.
"If you're not on your game 100 percent, you get on the wrong side of greens and it's just frightening because I didn't feel like I played too badly," McIlroy said. "I missed a few shots here and there and I was trying on every shot out there and I was trying to get myself back into it, but it's tough."
That was the right word to describe his and Woods' round. They still thrilled the Merion crowds who seemed to adopt McIlroy in the same way Woods has. The "Rory! Rory!" chants followed the group wherever they went. But Woods and McIlroy just couldn't make the charges that everyone was hoping for. It was left to Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño --- replacing Adam Scott as the third wheel of the star grouping -- to provide most of the cheers Saturday, including a chip in for birdie from behind the 17th green that earned a fist-bump from Woods. Castano shot 72 on Saturday and finished at 5-over, and if not for a double-bogey on 11, Castano and his upturned collar would be right in the thick of this Open.
Lindsey Vonn, dressed casually in a purple T-shirt and black shorts, joined Woods' entourage as he walked off 18 and headed to the makeshift interview area outside the scoring tent where a disappointed Woods gamely answered questions about his round. He agreed that the Merion course was as penal a U.S. Open setup as he's ever played. "Most definitely, because of the pins, I think," Woods said. "The long holes are playing really long and the short holes obviously are short, but the thing is that the pins out there, what they're giving us out there is really tough."
With four wins already in 2013 and playing on a course that looked to play to his strengths as a shot-maker and a putter, Woods was the clear favorite going into this tournament. Now five full years have passed since Woods won his last major at the 2008 U.S. Open at Torrey Pines. He talked on Saturday about missing yet another opportunity to win his 15th major.
"It certainly is frustrating," Woods said. "At Augusta I was pretty close and I had the lead at one point and I hit the flag and ended up in the water. This week I was clearing up the rounds and I'm one shot off the lead starting the last day without any three-putts. And I'm playing well enough to do it and unfortunately just haven't gotten it done."
Tiger Woods Is Lost In The Crowd At Merion
From 12 feet above the first hole, facing a downhill putt that would curl left to right in a hurry, Tiger Woods announced that this U.S. Open had, at last, started. No major really starts until Tiger's name is on the board. The sensational birdie make moved him within four shots of the lead, behind only three players. He had 35 more holes to play.
Five hours later, an amateur named Michael Kim, 19 years old, made four birdies in six holes and found himself looking at a leader board -- not to see where he stood against par, not to see how close he was to the leaders. "I just thought it was super cool to see my name on that big leader board," he said, his name there alongside "Schwartzel, Mickelson, Donald, all those guys."
It's a recurring theme in Tiger's quest for full golfing redemption. He is stuck at 14 major championships, five short of achieving the 19 majors necessary to realize his dream of breaking Jack Nicklaus' record of 18. Woods hasn't won a major since the 2008 U.S. Open, first set back by leg and knee injuries, then by failures in his personal life, and now, it seems, by asking more of himself on major weekends than, at age 37, he can produce.
There's enough in him to win any tournament anywhere, anytime. He is fit, he is strong, he is committed to the idea of Being Tiger Again. He has rebuilt his game and may have rebuilt his personal life with a relationship with the Olympic downhill skier, Lindsey Vonn. Even this year, Woods has won four times on the PGA Tour.
Still, 19 majors have come and gone since Woods won one. In the spring of his greatness, a decade and more ago, Woods shared the rarified air with no one. He was so dominant that no one else could win a championship unless, in an odd turn of fate, Tiger lost it. Now, in the chill of fall's coming in his career, Tiger has allowed a platoon of challengers to form -- 18 different players have won the last 19 majors. The Schwartzels, Mickelsons, McIlroys, McDowells, all those guys.
Woods is a smart man. He knows what's happening. He knows that every great athlete comes to a period when desire exceeds possibility. But who could say such a thing out loud? They all have become great by proving the implausible possible. No way would Tiger Woods, of all people, admit that he no longer can do what he once did.
Instead, he speaks in euphemisms, as in a brief meeting with reporters after his six-over-par 76 in Saturday's third round ended his chances here. He is behind 30 players. He is 10 shots behind the leader, Phil Mickelson. He didn't call himself disappointed. "Frustrating," he said. He didn't say he is failing when once he succeeded, on weekends at majors. "I'm playing well enough to do it," he said, "and, unfortunately, just haven't got it done."
He said he was close at the Masters in April -- until "I hit that flag and ended up in the water." Yes, a bad break -- made worse by a brain cramp and an illegal drop costing him a two-shot penalty. In today's round, on the fifth fairway, his drive came to rest in a divot that he said cost him a bogey that "really turned my round around."
These are minor events once forgotten in the glow of brilliant play. On this day, he even hit a shot that a weekend hacker might recognize. From the fringe at the sixth green, no more than 30 feet from the hole, he thought to pop up a lob wedge and let the ball roll to the hole. We've seen him do it a hundred times. But this time, "I had to throw it up there and so I had to try and shallow it out and I did it too much." The ball didn't fly a foot, took one bounce, and rolled sideways downhill, winding up, embarrassingly, behind where it started.
Mostly, though, he putted so poorly that a reporter asked, "Do you have a feeling for why you are not putting as well as you did five, six, seven years ago?" Woods, staring at the man, unblinking: "I think I was leading the Tour the last couple weeks. I don't know what you're talking about."
A minute or two later, he admitted, yes, he hadn't putted well. "I just didn't make anything today. I just couldn't get a feel for them. Some putts were slow, some were fast, and I had a tough time getting my speed right. . . I just didn't make the putts I needed to make. . . The first two days, I had like three three-putts and I was four shots off the lead, and I missed a boatload of putts within 10 feet. So I really wasn't that far off." And after that, I imagine, he went home and began to think about a weekend in July, a weekend at the British Open, one more weekend to get it done.
Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 12: The Masters [Download]
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Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 12: The Masters [Download]
The perfect gift for the golf fanatic in everyone’s life, this 100-minute volume traces the heritage, courses and players of the greatest game. Featuring the world’s best players, including Jack Nicklaus, Ben Hogan and Arnold Palmer.
Price: $19.99
Golf History for Woods Is All About Results
Instead of marveling at the swing, Tiger Woods thought more about the results. "That was to get into a playoff," Woods said Tuesday, sounding more like a golf historian than the No. 1 player in the game. "Got about 40 feet and still had some work to do. It's a great photo. But it would have been an all right photo if he didn't win. He still had to go out and win it the next day."
Hogan managed to lag the long putt to about 4 feet and quickly knocked that in for his par to join a three-way playoff, which he won the next day over Lloyd Mangrum and Tom Fazio. Of his four U.S. Open titles, that meant the most to Hogan because he proved he could win just 16 months after a horrific car accident that nearly killed him. On battered legs, Hogan had to play the 36-hole final, followed by the 18-hole playoff.
"Knowing the fact that he went through the accident and then came out here and played 36 and 18, that's awfully impressive," Woods said.
In some small way, Woods can relate.
Five years ago, Woods tried to play the U.S. Open with the ligaments shredded in his left knee and a double stress fracture in his lower left leg. The USGA published a book called 'Great Moments of the U.S. Open," and the photo it selected for the cover showed Woods arching his back and pumping his fists after making a 12-foot birdie putt on the 72nd hole at Torrey Pines to get into a playoff.
It wouldn't have been much of a photo if he missed.
Woods had to go 91 holes that week. He had to make another birdie on the 18th hole of the playoff to go extra holes before finally beating Rocco Mediate.
"I think there was a lot of people pulling for Tiger," said Rory McIlroy, who was 19 at the time, a rookie on the European Tour who failed to qualify for the U.S. Open. "He was playing on a broken leg pretty much, so I was definitely pulling for Tiger. It was probably one of the best performances golf has ever seen, if not sport in general."
Hard as it might have been to believe that day, it also was the last major Woods won.
He had one more chance at a major after his season-ending knee surgery, losing a two-shot lead to Y.E. Yang in the 2009 PGA Championship. After two darks years brought on by the collapse of his marriage and more injuries to his left leg, he had at least a share of the 36-hole lead in two majors last year, and he had an outside shot at the Masters in April going into the final round.
Majors don't come as easily as they once seemed to for Woods, though he never looked at them that way.
"It wasn't ever easy," he said. "I felt it was still difficult because the major of the majors, three of the four always rotated. It was always on a new site each and every year. Augusta was the only one you could rely on from past experiences. A lot of majors that I won were on either the first or second time I'd ever seen it."
Woods won four majors on courses he had never played — Medinah for the 1999 PGA Championship, Valhalla for the PGA Championship the following year, Bethpage Black in the 2002 U.S. Open and Royal Liverpool for the 2006 British Open.
Merion is new not only to him, but just about everyone.
It last hosted a U.S. Open in 1981, when David Graham putted for birdie on every hole and closed with a 67. Phil Mickelson, Jim Furyk and Steve Stricker played Merion, but they were all college kids at the 1989 U.S. Amateur. A few others competed in the 2005 U.S. Amateur or the 2009 Walker Cup.
But never at a U.S. Open.
"I don't remember much about it from that long ago," Stricker said. "But I remember at least that it was a great, old course with a lot of history to it, one that I enjoyed playing back in '89 and no different than today. It's a great test."
It figures to be a different test this week.
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10
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Garcia rules out Woods apology
Sergio Garcia has revealed he is not planning any peace talks with Tiger Woods following their clash at the Players Championship earlier this month. World No 1 Woods upset Garcia during the third round at Sawgrass when the Spaniard claimed he had been put off his approach shot to the second hole by crowd noise caused by the American preparing for his own shot from the trees. Woods insisted he had been told by a marshal that Garcia had already played his shot but Garcia, who bogeyed the hole, was incensed by his playing partner's actions and said at the time that the pair "don't like each other".
Woods admitted on Monday that he had no plans to apologise for his actions and Garcia said: "We have not spoken and I don't really have any plans to [contact him]. Obviously he is not going to say sorry, which I can understand coming from him. "It wasn't my fault. I am not the one who should go to him. I don't care who he is. "It doesn't matter if it is Tiger Woods or Luke Donald, who is my best friend on tour. If I have done something wrong I will go up and say, 'Sorry, I hope it is okay and that we can move on.'
"But if I am not the one who did the thing then I am not going to go up and say, 'Sorry for you doing that thing to me'. That's nonsense." Garcia said during the Players Championship that Woods is "not the nicest guy on tour". And he has told Sky Sports that other players agree with him but are not prepared to say so. "I guess I'm probably the only brave one that has the guts to say it," he said. "Most of the other guys think about it."
Asked if the other players were too scared to criticise Woods, Garcia added: "It feels like it. "It's a thin line but you have to be as true to yourself as possible. I try to be truthful, as much as I can." Garcia does not think his comments will have any impact on how he and Woods get on when they next play together. "We've never liked each other so this is not going to change anything," he said.
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