Widgets for Webmasters
By Steve Keating 2 hours, 12 minutes ago TORONTO (Reuters) - After battling punishing conditions at the British Open, Canadians Mike Weir and Stephen Ames face another daunting challenge in trying to end a 54-year drought for home players at the Canadian Open. No Canadian has claimed the national championship since Pat Fletcher in 1954, leaving Weir, Ames and 17 other Canadian contenders trying to wrestle the title away from back-to-back winner Jim Furyk at the Glen Abbey golf course starting on Thursday. Weir, the 2003 Masters champion, came tantalizingly close to ending the dry spell the last time the Canadian Open was staged on the par 71, 7,273-yard Jack Nicklaus designed layout in 2004 but came up just short after losing to Fiji's Vijay Singh in a playoff. "I remember (in 2004) that everybody was very excited," Weir told... [read full story]
|
Full Coverage
|
|
By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS The stage was set for Mike Weir to stake his claim on another piece of history. He was three shots clear of the Canadian Open field as the final round began on a brilliant day at Glen...
By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS The stage was set for Mike Weir to stake his claim on another piece of history. He was three shots clear of the Canadian Open field as the final round began on a brilliant day at Glen...
Canadian Open's return to Glen Abbey provides reminder of Weir's close call By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS The stage was set for Mike Weir to stake his claim on another piece of history. He was three shots clear of the...
By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS The stage was set for Mike Weir to stake his claim on another piece of history. He was three shots clear of the Canadian Open field as the final round began on a brilliant day at Glen...
By Steve Keating TORONTO (Reuters) - After battling punishing conditions at the British Open, Canadians Mike Weir and Stephen Ames face another daunting challenge in trying to end a 54-year drought for home players at the...
Call it a curse? Wait continues for another homegrown champ at Canadian Open By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS OAKVILLE, Ont. - Somebody carrying a Canadian passport is bound to win the country's national golf championship...
By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS OAKVILLE, Ont. - Somebody carrying a Canadian passport is bound to win the country's national golf championship eventually. That leaves Mike Weir, Stephen Ames and 17 other Canadians to...
By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS OAKVILLE, Ont. - Somebody carrying a Canadian passport is bound to win the country's national golf championship eventually. That leaves Mike Weir, Stephen Ames and 17 other Canadians to...
By: Chris Johnston, THE CANADIAN PRESS OAKVILLE, Ont. - Somebody carrying a Canadian passport is bound to win the country's national golf championship eventually. That leaves Mike Weir, Stephen Ames and 17 other Canadians to...
As the PGA Tour's Canadian Open makes its first trip back to Glen Abbey Golf Club for this first time since Vijay Singh's win in a playoff in 2004, our experts weigh in on who they expect to end the week holding the trophy.
Jim Furyk, Stephen Ames, Vijay Singh, Jack Nicklaus, Mike Weir, Kenny Perry, Retief Goosen, Anthony Kim, Steve Keating, Golf, FDX, Wachovia, AT&T

