Global Golf Post: A Masters That Became A Work Of Art

By Art Spander
For GlobalGolfPost.com


AUGUSTA, GEORGIA -- This was no Masters. This was a Masters-piece, from, yes, the man who won it, Phil Mickelson, but also from so many others, from Tiger Woods, Lee Westwood, Anthony Kim, Tom Watson, Fred Couples, and no less importantly by the old lady herself, Augusta National.

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Copyright 2010 Global Golf Post

Newsday: Kim, with changed attitude, shoots 65 to finish third

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- Anthony Kim needed a reassessment. "I looked back,'' he said of last year, "and last season, I was just complaining about everything. I felt I deserved to win, but that's not how it is.''

That's how it was. Now Kim, with a new attitude - or so he says - is approaching the heights predicted for him.

A week ago, he won the Shell Houston Open. Sunday, with a closing 65, he finished third in the Masters, four shots behind Phil Mickelson and one behind Lee Westwood.

"I hung in there without my best stuff,'' Kim said, "and I made some putts."

For two years, Kim, the 24-year-old from Southern California, had been labeled the next player to challenge Tiger Woods. But there were injuries and excuses, the latter a result of a tough childhood with a father who demanded perfection.

Suddenly, he's grown up. He stopped partying and started practicing. He learned to control a temper that caused him to get into arguments with his former golf coach at the University of Oklahoma.

"I'm comfortable with who I am out there,'' Kim said. "I've found a new identity.''

That identity and patience enabled him to produce a torrid four-hole stretch starting at the 13th, going birdie, birdie, eagle, birdie. He had two other birdies and one bogey.

"It was a very good round,'' said Kim, who started the day tied for ninth, six shots behind leader Westwood. "I just waited for something to happen. I knew I was going to make some putts out there, and so starting at 13 got the ball rolling and had only six putts in from there.''

Kim has been bothered by a torn ligament in his left thumb that might require surgery, although he is seeking an alternate method of healing.

"It's been about 15, 16 months,'' Kim said of the injury. "It's not going away. Surgery is the last resort, but it's affecting my swing, and I don't want to get into bad habits. We are trying to figure something out.''

Overnight, he figured out a great deal about his game.

"I was very frustrated Saturday, just because I felt like I'm doing the right things and I still can't find a fairway,'' he said, "so I was happy to get in at 1 over par [Saturday].

"Last night, my coach and I looked at some film. We went to a gym and threw med balls instead of hitting golf balls. I just aimed right and hoped it would hook.''

Kim has emerged as one of the tour's more appealing personalities. He's got as much in common with the hip-hop generation as he does the well-heeled golf set. He was a hit with the U.S. fans at the Ryder Cup in 2008.

Kim wears ostentatious belt buckles, usually with rhinestones surrounding the letters "AK." And his name is likely to be in lights for years to come.

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Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday: Kim and Barnes bring a California flavor

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


AUGUSTA, Ga. -- They embody California cool, Ricky Barnes in his painter's hat, Anthony Kim with his jeweled belt buckles, a couple of kids from the Golden State with golden swings, one who has lived up to expectations, another who has not.

Kim, who grew up in Los Angeles, has three wins on Tour, one of those coming Sunday at Houston. For a couple of years, he's been called the next challenger to Tiger Woods.

Barnes, from Stockton, south of Sacramento, won a U.S. Amateur in 2002 but seemed trapped on the minor-league Nationwide Tour until his breakthrough last June, when at Bethpage he led the U.S. Open and finished second, which lifted him to the regular Tour.

The 29-year-old Barnes (70) and 24-year-old Kim (70) are among the five players at 6-under-par 138, tied for third after Friday's second round of the Masters.

For Kim, in his second Masters -- he finished 20th last year -- it's not a surprise. For Barnes, also in his second -- he was 21st in '03, qualifying off the Amateur victory -- it could be considered a surprise.

"But I think my last major I played in got me ready,'' Barnes said, referring to Bethpage. "[The finish] didn't get me in the British [Open] or PGA last year. So I was looking forward to coming here and playing well. I've put myself in a good spot after the first two rounds.''

When you have the same score as Tiger Woods, it's hardly a bad spot.

Kim had a reputation as a mischievous kid at the University of Oklahoma, arguing with the coach and then after turning pro spending more time at parties than at the practice tee. But those troubles seem to have mellowed with age. Now it's a torn thumb ligament that's the trouble, something he'll have surgically repaired next week.

Before last October's Presidents Cup in San Francisco, Robert Allenby, the Australian and a member of the opposing International team, accused Kim of staying out late and having a good time before their singles match. It was a strange confrontation, but Kim eventually apologized. And won the match.

"I'm very happy with where I am right now,'' Kim said. "I've just got to get my driver straightened out. You never can hit too many fairways.''

Barnes in the past has been limited by his temper, which he has managed to keep under control recently. "I'm fiery,'' he conceded. "Don't get me wrong, but I've been working really hard on that the last two years. It's gotten me in trouble, but I know my game's good enough that if I have a bad hole, I can bounce back.''

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/kim-and-barnes-bring-a-california-flavor-1.1855211
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.