Running Blog: Bob Hope Chrysler Classic Round 2 PGATOUR.com Correspondent Editor's note: Brett Avery, PGATOUR.com's Fantasy Insider, is going to do a live blog direct from the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic this week. Check back frequently throughout the day for his next entry. Have a question or comment for Brett? Send it to him at brettavery@aol.com. All times are pacific. First-round blog | Caddie Blog: Get the picture, lady? ![]() George Lopez is the new tournament host of the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic. (AP)
3:47 p.m. 3:22 p.m. 2:27 p.m. 2:16 p.m. Thunderstruck, Bolton turns to his partners with a look of "how did that happen?" Gore finishes a miserable 75 with bogey, Pesci burns the edge with his par try and then Bolton, in the moment he'll savor for a long time, rolls home the natural birdie, net 2, for a 28-under total. "I was feeling like a nervous wreck because I hadn't contributed the last hole and had a shot," Bolton says. "It was an 8-iron, perfect distance. I changed my grip about a week ago so I was still uncertain about it." Bolton tied for third last year in the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am with Tim Clark as a partner. He hadn't played much in recent months, spending 14-hour days in the studio on the next project. He spent time nine days ago at Ojai C.C. with pro Rob Wiseman, who at the end of the lesson suggested ditching his baseball-style grip for a more conventional style. So far, it's working for the team. 1:53 p.m. Answer: 70. They give the same answer in Mumbai, don't they? 1:34 p.m. Joe Pesci seems the key, though, to whether they take the title or fall away. Although a player's Handicap Index is based on potential, not the misconception of asbility, as the C player his 18 shots can go a long way. Nelson, a far more proficient stick, is a 5 and needs to play his butt off to better a hot Pesci. Even more than performance, Pesci's attitude is crucial. If he gets tight and backs off the jokes there's no way the gallery can feed into the flow. And even at his abbreviated height he's an imposing presewnce because of some of the bad-guy roles in his resume. That one-putt 4 net 3 he just made at the 16th helps the entire cause. 1:27 p.m. This team is so much looser than the front nine, when pro Gore struggled through a double-bogey 5 late in the nine. Going to walk them into the clubhouse. 1:13 p.m. 1:00 p.m. The group's pro is Will MacKenzie. There's a shocker. 12:53 p.m. Learning where his ball is located, he abruptly halts. "Can I play it from over there? Am I allowed?" He asks his caddie. Gotta love those rookies. 12:43 p.m. A five-day shoot. Imagine that wrap party ... 12:21 p.m. Not the anti-Kenny G screed. The Alice Cooper gallery watch. Like those two blondes over there, wearing similar white parkas trimmed with fur. Are they also wearing ... ski pants? There, at 4 o'clock, the four women wearing tight denim and -- how to say this delicately -- figure-revealing sweaters. And the three brunettes walking toward us, two in short skirts. And all showing their best ... assets. Let's face it: Professional golf tournaments are places to see and be seen. There no shortage of women who put themselves on display. And no shortage of men willing to provide the required eyeballs. Cooper's gallery takes this to a new level. It's not just one or two women in the gallery who are giving what men of a certain vintage would call "come hither" looks. It's that there are dozens of them following the 9:33 group. OK, wise guy, perhaps they're watching the rest of the group: Mike Weir, American Idol winner Taylor Hicks and figure skater Scott Hamilton. Um, no. These women know the routine. They cluster on the right side of the tee, because that's where the contestants stand while teeing off. At the greens they gravitate to the roped corridor leading to the next tee. He signs a lot of autographs. You would too with such an ... appreciative audience. 11:48 a.m. 11:28 a.m. But the man can yell with the best of them. At the par-4 ninth he slices a drive so far off line it nearly crosses the lake and lands on the 18th fairway. "Oh, GOD!" He screams, turning heads two holes away. If nothing else he's comic relief -- and a lovely sight in slacks and shirt of pink sherbet. 11:16 a.m. Watch Eruzione for a while and it's no surprise that he receives as much credit as he does for that 1980 Olympic hockey miracle on ice. Not only does he keep everyone loose with the chatter, he's got that bulldog competitive nature so valuable in a pro-am format. The eighth is an ideal example. He hits a long drive but ends up on the downslope of a fairway bunker, awkward enough a stance to cause his second to come up short. He flips his third up to five feet, just beyond a small hump in the surface, then pours the putt home for a 4. Not surprisingly, his team is counting most of his holes on its card today. 10:34 a.m. "Right edge," Gore pronounced with unquestioned confidence. "Right edge?" A confused Nelson says. Gore nods. So Nelson hits it, the ball grazes the right edge and the gallery groans. And groans more when the ball continues rolling another 15 feet, onto the fringe. "And it's downhill," Gore quickly adds with an enormous grin. Good thing Nelson's not a pro and Gore his looper. Someone would be looking for work. Tomorrow. 10:23 a.m. 10:06 a.m. The amateurs can take a cart during their rounds and a handful do for a variety of reasons. Berra doesn't get around that well so he takes one at the first tee he pops up the drive, the ball tickling the fronds of a palm left of the fairway before thudding in the rough. After hitting a solid 5-wood down the fairway, and giving a polite wave to acknowledge the applause, he settles into the passenger seat. After hitting his third up near the green, Berra ambles over to pro partner Billy Andrade, flashes a smile and puts his arm around the kid. Gotta believe Rhode Island native Andrade wants to grow up to be Berra, too ... even if the guy played for the Yankees. 9:51 a.m. Was three-quarters out the practice door but stopped to see Will MacKenzie hitting balls. Call me old-fashioned, but the key message of golf instruction throughout the years is "keep your head down." And here's MacKenzie, like so many players of his generation, turning his head toward the target during the downswing. David Duval and Annika Sorenstam are two prime examples of this swing philosophy. There are hundreds of others on the men's and women's circuits around the world. What's amazing is how they can look away from the ball and make consistently solid contact while the rest of us dig the club into the ground or top the ball. Which begs the question: If so many younger pros are doing it with success, how long before golf teachers start espousing the early head turn as an advantageous component of the ideal swing? 9:41 a.m. The range at La Quinta is playing downwind today. The majority of ams, celebrity or otherwise, ramped up to the driver fairly rapidly to blast at least a few balls toward the wall and palms off in the distance. Daly, unfazed, kept to the wedges and short irons. That's a mark of diligence not enough of us show, in practice or on the course. 8:58 a.m. Each camera is connected to a processor that hums away in a plastic tub (to reduce noise). Cables run to a nearby cart, where a gas generator and editor are positioned. The editor uses a small monitor and screen to download the data, cherry pick out each swing and impact after the download and burn it to a hard drive. At most tournaments, the full swing is at 1000 fps but because the hardware isn't hard-wired to the control truck (which is across town at the Classic Club) the reduced speed must do. This afternoon they'll be back at Classic shooting the pros. 8:39 a.m. Still has the ugly tan visor, though. So why the frumpy garb Wednesday? He gives to reasons. Whatever. He's still bland man in this field. 8:26 a.m. Set the TiVo. Better yet, make some popcorn. 8:15 a.m. Fabulous. Until he hits his first wedge warmup and shows the brown leather weave belt. Somehow it doesn't make sense until Shannon Sharpe, walking past, asks him about last night. "Tequila" is in Cheadle's first sentence. Enough said. 8:08 a.m. As the saying goes, it looks good on him. 7:59 a.m. That means walking out to the practice tee, bumping into rocket scientist Burt Rutan and quizzing him on his putter. As expected, it's a homemade jobber, obviously a point of great pride. It's a carbon-fiber head, shaft balanced (most putters are face balanced) and just inside USGA specs. Takes about four days to make each -- the one he's using these days is model No. 3 -- and were it not for weights placed inside it the clubhead would blow away in the slightest breeze. And then he began the technical speak and lost me. He described the club's exceptional moment of inertia and several other measurements, principles and theories. The bottom line is that he's not planning on putting it into production. So anyone who had dreams of improving their putting the Burt Rutan way is out of luck. 5:35 a.m. Thatıs good news because the last groups on all four courses were scraping up against dusk when they completed play Wednesday. Today weıre headed out to La Quinta CC, where leader Robert Allenby made nine birdies Wednesday in shooting 63. The Desert Sun, the local newspaper, has scorecards for the low round at each course and shows the 434-yard second and 516-yard fifth as "challenging holes." Considering the celebs begin play at No. 1 today that should make for some early fun. The paper also lists all of the pro-am scores and several celebrity teams are near the top. Craig T. Nelson, Michael Bolton and Joe Pesci are tied for second at 15 under; Samuel L. Jackson, Oscar de la Hoya and host George Lopez share eighth at 14 under; and the football guys Sterling Sharpe, Marcus Allen and Jerome Bettis are among a ton of teams at 13 under. Guess that means Bettis finally got over his nervousness and began contributing. Ed Marinaroıs team is also at 13 under along with Mossimo Giannulli, Huey Lewis and Joe Kernen. Five bucks says Kernenıs in khakis again. As low as they are, these arenıt potential winning scores for a round at Bermuda Dunes. Team 41 (Todd Ziplow, Gary McLean, Dennis Frandsen) went 16 under at La Quinta yesterday and the best teams at PGA Westıs Arnold Palmer Private Course and the host Classic Club also were 15 under. So the celebs have got to start ramming home birdies and eagles to remain in contention. The BlackBerryıs charged and ready to go. Time to answer the wake-up call, hit the shower and start driving south on Washington Street. |