Miyazato Grabs Share Of Lpga Canadian Open Lead
Ai Miyazato fashioned a bogey-free round and finished it off with an eight foot birdie putt on the 18th
Defending champion Michelle Wie was two shots adrift after shooting a five under 67 at the Hillsdale Gold Club course just outside of Montreal, on Thursday.
Richdale opened with a 66 and another stroke back was Angela Stanford, Jenny Shin and South Korea's Kim Mi-hyun.
"I did have expectations coming into this season but there was the earthquake and it had a bit of affect on me on and off the golf course," said Miyazato who won five titles in 2010. "But since around June I started feeling very good about my game and I was able to win at Evian, so I'm feeling very relaxed now."
Wie rolled in a 60-foot birdie putt on the par-five fifth hole. She also closed with a 45-foot putt for birdie on her final hole.
She has two career titles with one of those coming in Winnipeg, Canada at the St. Charles event.
Miyazato fashioned a bogey-free round and finished it off with an eight foot birdie putt on the 18th.
"I had a really good feeling with my swing tempo and that's why I had so many birdie opportunities," Miyazato said. "My distance control was really good and my putting as well."
"I was driving it great, barely missed a fairway, and felt easy with my irons," said Lindberg. "But the best part was my putting. My Cleveland CG16 Wedge seems to be my sole mate. It gives me encouragement and confidence to me."
It is revealed that the driver has a hint of offset and is slightly larger for added forgiveness, much like the Tour-proven Cleveland CG14. The face features the same spin-maximizing technology featured on the CG15 Tour Zip Grooves in combination with Cleveland's breakthrough laser-milled surface roughness technology. Using the precision accuracy of a laser, each face features four perfectly calibrated texture lines milled between each groove exactly to the conforming roughness limit.
Whats more, the back of the wedge features a slight cavity back with an engineered undercut to move the center of gravity low and deep and increase the moment of intertia for added forgiveness on off-center strikes. The wider "C" shaped sole has constant width from heel to toe for improved bunker performance.
Now the driver is on hot sale atgolf clubs for sale.
Wie has changed her game to try and get into the winner's circle. She now uses a belly putter which allows her to stand more upright when she is putting.
"You know, I like my putter," she said. "Over the last couple of weeks I've been toying with different grips and different ways to do it. But it's feeling pretty good and I've got to keep working on it. Putting is something I always need to work on. Obviously, making two long putts helps the score. Hopefully, I can make a couple more of them over the next couple of days."
More related information: http://www.wholesaleclubsgolf.com/
Defending champion Michelle Wie was two shots adrift after shooting a five under 67 at the Hillsdale Gold Club course just outside of Montreal, on Thursday.
Richdale opened with a 66 and another stroke back was Angela Stanford, Jenny Shin and South Korea's Kim Mi-hyun.
"I did have expectations coming into this season but there was the earthquake and it had a bit of affect on me on and off the golf course," said Miyazato who won five titles in 2010. "But since around June I started feeling very good about my game and I was able to win at Evian, so I'm feeling very relaxed now."
Wie rolled in a 60-foot birdie putt on the par-five fifth hole. She also closed with a 45-foot putt for birdie on her final hole.
She has two career titles with one of those coming in Winnipeg, Canada at the St. Charles event.
Miyazato fashioned a bogey-free round and finished it off with an eight foot birdie putt on the 18th.
"I had a really good feeling with my swing tempo and that's why I had so many birdie opportunities," Miyazato said. "My distance control was really good and my putting as well."
"I was driving it great, barely missed a fairway, and felt easy with my irons," said Lindberg. "But the best part was my putting. My Cleveland CG16 Wedge seems to be my sole mate. It gives me encouragement and confidence to me."
It is revealed that the driver has a hint of offset and is slightly larger for added forgiveness, much like the Tour-proven Cleveland CG14. The face features the same spin-maximizing technology featured on the CG15 Tour Zip Grooves in combination with Cleveland's breakthrough laser-milled surface roughness technology. Using the precision accuracy of a laser, each face features four perfectly calibrated texture lines milled between each groove exactly to the conforming roughness limit.
Whats more, the back of the wedge features a slight cavity back with an engineered undercut to move the center of gravity low and deep and increase the moment of intertia for added forgiveness on off-center strikes. The wider "C" shaped sole has constant width from heel to toe for improved bunker performance.
Now the driver is on hot sale atgolf clubs for sale.
Wie has changed her game to try and get into the winner's circle. She now uses a belly putter which allows her to stand more upright when she is putting.
"You know, I like my putter," she said. "Over the last couple of weeks I've been toying with different grips and different ways to do it. But it's feeling pretty good and I've got to keep working on it. Putting is something I always need to work on. Obviously, making two long putts helps the score. Hopefully, I can make a couple more of them over the next couple of days."
More related information: http://www.wholesaleclubsgolf.com/