Check out the top 5 shots of the week from the 2017 RBC Canadian Open, featuring Charley Hoffman, Gary Woodland, Jhonattan Vegas, Matt Every, and Andres Gonzales.
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Check out the top 5 shots of the week from the 2017 RBC Canadian Open, featuring Charley Hoffman, Gary Woodland, Jhonattan Vegas, Matt Every, and Andres Gonzales.
Arnold Palmer Invitational. Matt Every Leads.
Arnold Palmer Invitational. Matt Every Leads.
Matt Every Leads the Arnold Palmer Invitational after the first round at Bay Hill in Florida
Matt / getty
Matt carded a bogey free -7 under par 65 to lead the Arnold Palmer Invitational by one shot on day 1;
“I just didn’t want to shoot myself out of the tournament with the way the weather was.”
“The putter was a little shaky. It’s always a little shaky. It was a good day for me.”
World #1 Rory…
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Afterward, the golfer opened up about his struggles in the sport to the media.
Arnold Palmer Invitational Comes Down To Crucial Putt
Does Matt Every get help from a fan to win Arnold Palmer Invitational? @PGATOUR
Matt Every Defends Bay Hill Title On Last Birdie Putt
Matt Every had a poor performance at the Valspar Championship a week before his win at Bay Hill. Placing almost dead last in the event, it was hard to believe that Every pulled out on top to defend his title at the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando.
Not only did he take home the $1.1 million purse, he did it in style, going into the 18th…
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Matt Every Clutches Second Straight Arnold Palmer Invitational Win
Congratulations to Matt Every who scored his second Arnold Palmer Invitational win in two years! Every sunk a 17 footer to get to 19-under-par and clinch the title.
Watch the video above for all the round highlights that you missed from this weekend.
The four nominees for March 2014 PGA TOUR Player of the Month presented by Avis are Matt Every, Chesson Hadley, Russell Henley and Patrick Reed. CAST YOUR VOTE http://www.pgatour.com/pom
[yeuGOLF] – Golfer 30 tuổi vô địch đầy kịch tính khi vượt qua Adam Scott dù bất lợi đến 4 gậy khi bước vào vòng cuối để lên ngôi vô địch Arnold Palmer Invitational 2014 với túi gậy của Callaway
Matt Every vô địch Arnold Palmer Invitational 2014 với cây driver Big Bertha. Ảnh: imagehunt
Matt Every là đại diện thương hiệu của Callaway nên anh dùng gậy và trang bị của hãng golf lớn nhất Mỹ này. Điều đặc biệt là anh lại tin dùng 1 cây gậy gỗ của đối thủ truyền thống của Callaway: TaylorMade, khi chọn TaylorMade Burner SuperFast khá cũ kĩ
Callaway trang bị cho Every những cây gậy định nhất hiện tại của họ với Driver Big Berther và gậy sắt Apex Pro mới nhất. Matt Every cũng chọn cây gỗ còn lại cho mình là dòng X2 Hot Pro cùng những cây gậy wedge của Mack Daddy:
Driver: Callaway Big Bertha Độ nghiêng mặt gậy: 9.0 độ Cán: Fujikura Motore Speeder VC 7.0X Độ dài cán: 44.5 inches (tipped 1.5 inches)
3 Gỗ: Callaway X2 Hot Pro Độ nghiêng mặt gậy: 15 độ Cán: Aldila Tour Blue 75X Độ dài cán: 42 7/8 inches (tipped 1.5 inches)
5 Gỗ: TaylorMade Burner SuperFast Độ nghiêng mặt gậy: 18 độ Cán: Nventix Nunchuk
Sắt: Callaway Apex Pro Độ nghiêng mặt gậy: 4-PW Cán: KBS Tour-V 125X
Wedges: Callaway Mack Daddy 2 Độ nghiêng mặt gậy: 52-12S, 56-14S và 60-8C Cán: True Temper Dynamic Gold Tour Issue S400
Putter: Odyssey White Hot Pro #9 Specs: 34 inches, 68-degree lie angle, 2.5 degrees of loft Grip: 2014 SuperStroke Flatso Ultra
Bóng: Callaway SR-3
Một số hình ảnh bộ gậy của Matt Every:
James Don, Ảnh: Golfwrx
Túi gậy của Matt Every – nhà vô địch Arnold Palmer Invitational 2014 [yeuGOLF] - Golfer 30 tuổi vô địch đầy kịch tính khi vượt qua Adam Scott dù bất lợi đến 4 gậy khi bước vào vòng cuối để lên ngôi…
Scott Collapses in Final Round; Every Wins
By Derek Clements
ADAM SCOTT may well be The Masters champion, but he has developed a most unfortunate habit of throwing away leads in the final round.
The big Australian did it in the 2012 Open Championship, then repeated it at the 2013 Open. Next, he let Rory McIlroy beat him to win the Australian Open and, at the weekend, he succumbed to Matt Every at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill. In the end, he didn't even finish runner-up.
There are those who will shrug off Scott's collapse at Bay Hill as a blip, but let's not forget that he was seven shots clear after 36 holes. Let's not forget either that his scores got progressively worse. He started with a 62, followed it with a 68, then a 71 and, finally, a 76.
World number ones don't do that kind of thing, and they certainly don't do it on a regular basis. Victory at Bay Hill would have seen Scott arrive at Augusta as the best player in the world - according to the rankings at any rate. Such an elevation would sit uncomfortably with the critics who say that nobody using a broom handle putter belongs in such exalted status. And, certainly, nobody whose game can collapse in such spectacular fashion can truly be regarded as the best there is.
Scott took a three-shot lead into the final round, but that advantage was wiped out by the time he reached the turn. His 76 saw him finish 11 under par -- he was 10 under after the opening round -- two shots behind Every, who shot a final round of 70.
Scott’s playing partner Keegan Bradley had looked out of contention after dropping three shots in the first three holes and carding further bogeys on the 10th and 11th, but birdied the 12th, 16th and 17th and narrowly missed from 30ft for another on the last which would have forced a play-off.
A tearful Matt Every, who grew up nearby and used to attend the tournament as a spectator, said: "It’s really cool. I have had a lot of looks at wins and I kept telling myself maybe it’s going to come somewhere special. I still can’t believe I won."
"It’s hard, it’s tough man. You just never know if it’s going to happen. You get there [in contention] so many times and it’s nice to get it done."
Every had been seven shots behind Scott after the first round, nine adrift at halfway and four behind going into the final round, but will now get to compete alongside the defending champion by making his Masters debut at Augusta next month.
"I didn’t putt well at all today," said Scott, who took 32 putts in the final round. "I was just a little out of sorts for whatever reason. If nothing else it’s a good reminder on how much putting practice I need to do before going to the Masters and just how important it is. If I think back to last year, I made every putt that you expect to in that last round and ultimately that’s what gave me the chance to win."
Scott bogeyed the first after twice finding sand, while it was a hooked drive into the water on the third which cost him another shot. The 33-year-old steadied the ship with a chip to four feet to set up a birdie on the par-five fourth, but then bogeyed the seventh after his tee shot plugged in a greenside bunker.
Scott had held the outright lead since the early stages of his opening round on Thursday, but that was no longer the case when Every recovered from a bogey on the eighth with birdies at the ninth, 10th and 12th to take the lead. Another birdie on the 13th took Every two ahead and the 30-year-old found himself three clear of the pack when Scott bogeyed the 14th. Scott’s tee shot came up well short of the green but he elected to putt through the fringe, running his birdie attempt seven feet past the hole and missing the return.
A massive swing in momentum looked to be on the cards on the 16th when Every pushed his tee shot into the trees and failed to find the fairway with his escape shot, eventually making a bogey six. In the group behind, Scott found the green in two with a towering iron shot as Every watched, only to three-putt for par to remain two behind.
Every found a greenside bunker on the 17th but saved par after his recovery hit the pin and somehow stayed out. Scott’s challenge ended when he failed to save par from the same bunker but Bradley fired a superb approach to 10ft and holed the putt for a birdie.
A bogey from Every on the 18th left Bradley needing a birdie to force extra holes, but his long-range attempt slid just past the hole.