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Ames is laughing all the way to the bank!

INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP) - Stephen Ames chuckled about his mostly mediocre 18 holes of golf. He can laugh all the way to the bank.
With $650,000 at stake on No. 18, Ames coolly knocked his 7-foot birdie putt into the center of the cup Sunday to win the Skins Game. The only other hole he won was the first, a day earlier.
“That’s the nature of the Skins Game,” Ames said, his smile still as wide at it was when his rich putt dropped. “It’s always been the way you play at the Skins Game.
“You kind of let the other guys beat themselves up and then you sneak in there when you need to.”
Taking the title for the second year in a row, Ames finished with nine skins and $675,000 of the $1 million purse.
Five-time champion Fred Couples, playing in the 25-year-old tournament for the 14th time, also won nine skins, pocketing $325,000 to push his career earnings in the made-for-TV event to more than $4.2 million.
“Somebody’s going to birdie the 18th hole, probably, and Stephen did it to win a big, big, big skin,” Couples said. “If you win the right holes, you win money.”
Couples won three skins and $75,000 on the first day with a bunker shot into the hole for an eagle on No. 4, then picked up $250,000 with a 5-footer for birdie on No. 10 to begin the second day.
Masters champion Zach Johnson and Brett Wetterich, making their Skins Game debuts, were shut out.
“I certainly enjoyed the experience and playing with these three guys,” Johnson said. “It’s a very unique event. It’s nothing like I’ve ever been familiar with.
“But when all is said and done, I’m very disappointed. I came here to win some skins, and I didn’t.”
Said Wetterich: “I just feel bad for the charity I was trying to play for. I feel worse about that than anything else.”
Each player donates 20 percent of his winnings to a charity of his choice, and Wetterich had picked Big Oak Ranch. Ames’ donation will go to the Ames Foundation, and Couples’ to California wildfires victims.
Ames, whose birdie on the opening hole of the tournament was worth $25,000, finally came up with another for the really big money 17 holes later. He stuck his 9-iron from 142 yards out close enough to the pin on No. 18 to give him a good chance, then watched the other three miss their considerably longer putts.
Johnson missed from 40 feet, Couples from 20, then Wetterich’s 10-footer slid past the left edge of the hole to give Ames his chance.
He stroked the ball firmly and right on line, then, beaming, he accepted his playing partners’ congratulations.
Realizing pars don’t win skins, each of the foursome played aggressively, and frequently wound up in trouble because of it. Ames, a naturalized Canadian citizen from Trinidad & Tobago, didn’t even finish No. 15 after his drive sailed into bushes to the left of the fairway. Couples and Johnson each birdied to tie the hole.
Ames’ winning total was $590,000 in the tournament last year, when he clinched the title with a 3-footer for birdie worth $270,000. Couples finished second then, too, with $385,000.
The first six holes were worth $25,000 each, and Nos. 7-12 $50,000. The 13th through 17th carried a prize of $70,000 and No. 18 was worth $200,000.
In the Skins Game format, a player takes a skin by winning a hole. If the hole is tied by any of the players, the money carries over and all four remain in the hunt.

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PGA Tour Schedule 2008

Jan. 3-Jan. 6 - Mercedes-Benz Championship, Plantation Course at Kapalua, Kapalua, Hawaii
Jan. 10-13 - Sony Open in Hawaii, Waialae CC, Honolulu
Jan. 17-20 - Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, The Classic Club, PGA West-Palmer Private, LaQuinta and Silver Rock, Palm Springs, California
Jan. 24-27 - Buick Invitational, Torrey Pines GC (South Course, North Course) San Diego, California.
Jan. 31-3 - FBR Open, TPC Scottsdale, Scottsdale, Arizona
Feb. 7-10 - AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, Pebble Beach Golf Links, Spyglass Hill, Poppy Hills, Pebble Beach, California
Feb. 14-17 - Northern Trust Open, Riviera CC, Pacific Palisades, California
Feb. 21-24 - WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship, The Gallery at Dove Mountain, Tucson, Arizona
Feb. 21-24 - Mayakoba Golf Classic at Riviera Maya, El Camaleon GC at Mayakoba, Riviera Maya, Mexico
Feb. 28-March 2 - The Honda Classic, PGA National (Champion Course), Palm Beach Gardens, Florida
March 6-9 - PODS Championship, Innisbrook Resort & GC (Copperhead Course), Tampa Bay, Florida
March 13-16 - Arnold Palmer Invitational presented by MasterCard, Bay Hill GC and Lodge, Orlando, Florida
March 20-23 - WGC-CA Championship, Doral Golf Resort and Spa (Blue Course), Miami
March 20-23 - Puerto Rico Open presented by Banco Popular, Coco Beach G & CC, Rio Grande, Puerto Rico
March 27-30 - Zurich Classic of New Orleans, TPC Louisiana, New Orleans
April 3-6 - Shell Houston Open, Redstone GC, Houston
April 10-13 - The Masters, Augusta National GC, Augusta, Georgia
April 17-20 - Verizon Heritage, Harbour Town GL, Hilton Head, South Carolina
April 24-27 - EDS Byron Nelson Championship, TPC Four Seasons Resort, Irving, Texas
May 1-4 - Wachovia Championship, Quail Hollow Club, Charlotte, North Carolina
May 8-11 - THE PLAYERS Championship, TPC Sawgrass, Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida
May 15-18 - AT&T Classic, TPC Sugarloaf, Duluth, Georgia
May 22-25 - Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial, Colonial CC, Fort Texas, Texas
May 29-June 1 - The Memorial Tournament presented by Morgan Stanley, Muirfield Village GC, Dublin, Ohio
June 5-8 - Stanford St. Jude Championship, TPC Southwind, Memphis, Tennessee
June 12-15 - U.S. Open, Torrey Pines GC, San Diego
June 16-22 - Travelers Championship, TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, Connecticut
June 26-29 - Buick Open, Warwick Hills G and CC, Grand Blanc, Michigan
July 3-6 - AT&T National, Congressional CC (Blue Golf Course), Bethesda, Maryland
July 10-13 - John Deere Classic, TPC Deere Run, Silvis, Illinois
July 17-20 - The Open Championship, Royal Birkdale, Lancashire, England
July 17-20 - U.S. Bank Championship in Milwaukee, Brown Deer Park GC, Milwaukee
July 24-27 - RBC Canadian Open, Glen Abbey GC, Oakville, Ontario
July 31-Aug. 3 - WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, Firestone CC, Akron, Ohio
July 31-Aug. 3 - Legends Reno-Tahoe Open, Montreux G and CC, Reno, Nevada
Aug. 7-10 - PGA Championship, Oakland Hills CC, Bloomfield Township, Michigan
Aug. 14-17 - Wyndham Championship, course TBD, Greensboro, North Carolina
Aug. 21-24 - The Barclays, Westchester CC, Harrison, New York
Aug. 29-1 - Deutsche Bank Championship, TPC Boston, Norton, Massachusetts
Sept. 4-7 - BMW Championship, Bellerive CC, St. Louis
Sept. 11-14 - No tournament
Sept. 18-21 - Ryder Cup, Valhalla GC, Louisville, Kentucky
Sept. 18-21 - Viking Classic, Annandale GC, Madison, Mississippi
Sept. 25-28 - THE TOUR Championship presented by Coca-Cola, East Lake GC, Atlanta
Oct. 2-5 - Turning Stone Resort Championship, Atunyote GC at Turning Stone Resort, Verona, New York
Oct. 9-12 - Valero Texas Open, La Cantera GC, San Antonio
Oct. 16-19 - Justin Timberlake Shriners Hospitals for Children Open, TPC Summerlin, Las Vegas
Oct. 23-26 - Frys.com Open, Grayhawk GC, Scottsdale, Arizona
Oct. 30-Nov. 2 - Ginn sur Mer Classic, Ginn Hammock Beach Resort (Conservatory Course), Palm Coast, Florida
Nov. 6-9 - Children’s Miracle Network Classic presented by Wal-Mart, Walt Disney World Resort (Magnolia Course, Palm Course), Lake Buena Vista, Florida

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Dubai to host $10 million tournament starting in 2009

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — The world’s richest golf tournament, offering $10 million in prize money, will be played in Dubai beginning in 2009.

The Dubai World Championship, to be held at the Jumeirah Golf Estates, would run for five years with the option of extending it for another five years, the European Tour said Monday.

The winner of the tournament receives $1.66 million, and the Order of Merit will be renamed The Race to Dubai, with the player finishing No. 1 at the end of the season receiving $2 million.

“The Race to Dubai will bring a new dimension to the European Tour, creating great drama and theater throughout the year as all the best players in the world are given the opportunity to compete in the world’s richest tournament,” European Tour chief executive George O’Grady said.

Currently, the U.S. Tour’s Players Championship is the richest single event, offering prize money of $9 million.

The Dubai World Championship will take place at Jumeirah from Nov. 19-22, 2009, on either the Fire or Earth course. Both were designed by Greg Norman.

The announcement was made at Dubai’s Burj Al Arab, a luxurious hotel built on a man-made island in the Persian Gulf.

“This deal is yet another step in Dubai’s evolution as one of the most important golf centers anywhere in the world,” said Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem, chairman of Dubai World, the parent company of Leisurecorp.

Source : AP (Associated Press Release November 19,2007)