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Golf Capsules: Snedeker, Weekley win Skills Challenge

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PALM BEACH, Fla. — Brandt Snedeker and Boo Weekley won the Golf Skills Challenge in a playoff at The Breakers on Monday.

In the final of the worse-ball portion of the contest, Snedeker and Weekly initially tied finalists J.B. Holmes and Kenny Perry at par, forcing a playoff on the 305-yard, par-4, 14th hole.

Snedeker and Weekly, who split $314,000 in total prize money, gained an edge when Holmes' drive landed next door on the 15th tee. Holmes put them into further trouble by hitting into a trap 46 feet from the hole.

"He hits it so long it's kind of hard for him to gear down," Weekly said. "When J.D. hit it left I figured he'd kind of hit a 4-iron or 3-iron and lay back a little bit.

"It was a tough shot from over there."

The champions sank a three-foot putt to win $200,000 for the reverse scramble portion of the event. Holmes made a six-foot putt for par, but Perry's putt skimmed past the hole, ending it.

"I thought it was awesome," Snedeker said of the format. "It put a lot more pressure on you when you realize you could let your partner down besides yourself. That makes it much harder."

Snedecker and Weekley set themselves apart from the rest of the field by winning three of the first six skills challenges — the bunker shot, chip shot and trouble shot.

The other three were the long drive, mid-iron, and short iron.

In the worse-ball semifinals, also played on the 14th, Snedecker and Weekly faced Fred Couples and Hunter Mahan.

The other semifinal had Holmes and Perry against Fred Funk and Nick Price.

Viking Classic begins Thursday

MADISON, Miss. — Will MacKenzie shot 19 under par for 72 holes to win last year's Viking Classic.

The scores might not be as low for this year's PGA Tour event that begins Thursday at Annandale Golf Club, tournament director Randy Watkins predicts.

Rain during what are usually dry months in Mississippi - September and October - has left the fairways soft and made the rough long and thick at Annandale. Combine that with still-firm Bermuda greens and you get more challenging conditions, said Watkins and Stephen Christopher, Annandale's longtime head pro.

"I think the winning score is going up," Watkins said. "It won't be 19. I'm thinking closer to 13, where Chad (Campbell) won it."

Campbell shot 13-under to win in 2007, the first year after Annandale had replaced its softer bentgrass greens with firmer Bermuda greens that make it more difficult to place approach shots close to the hole.

The par-72 Annandale course can be stretched to 7,400 yards long. Christopher said barring more rain that could really make the course a quagmire, he doesn't expect Tour officials to take it easy on the players.

"I don't get a lot of feel that they're going to have much sympathy," said Christopher. "So couple that with the fact you're not going to get much roll off the tee (in the fairways), soft approaches (in front of greens) and firm greens with pretty good rough, I think you're going to have a tough scenario for more of the players.

"A few guys will play well and putt well and shoot 14- or 15-under, but overall, it will be tougher."

Brad Fabel, a former PGA Tour player who now works as a Tour official, spent last week at Annandale, overseeing tournament preparation. Christopher said the Tour is always "tweaking" the course setup.

This year, he said, fans will notice fairways mowed a bit narrower.

"Brad says that anytime he can get the players really thinking, then the course is going to be more challenging. He feels the more he can get the players thinking, the more exciting the event's going to be for fans."

Pro-Ams and practice rounds are scheduled for through Wednesday. The tournament runs Thursday-Sunday, with players chasing a $648,000 first-place check from a $3.6 million purse.

MacKenzie is scheduled to return in defense of his title.

Nine former major winners are committed, including David Toms, the 2001 PGA Championship winner. Toms (14th, $3 million) is the highest ranked on this year's money list entered.

Two others high on the money list scheduled to play are Matt Kuchar (25th) and Heath Slocum (35th). Other well-known players coming include Campbell, John Daly, Chris DiMarco, David Duval, Steve Elkington, Charles Howell III, Lee Janzen, Jeff Maggert and Rocco Mediate.

Another player committed is Troy Matteson, the fourth-year Tour player who won in a playoff on Sunday in the Frys.com Open in Scottsdale, Ariz.

One of the young pros who lost in the playoff to Matteson, Rickie Fowler, 20, is coming to the Viking. By finishing in the top 10 at Scottsdale, Fowler received a temporary tour membership that allows him to play in the Viking Classic. If he doesn't win, Fowler would likely have to go to the final stage of Q-school.

The other player in the playoff, Jamie Lovemark, 21, also earned a spot in the Viking. But he said Sunday he's headed to the first stage of Q-school next week at Pinehurst, N.C.

Watkins calls it the best field ever for the event, which is in its 43rd year overall and 15th at Annandale.

"There's a lot of ways to define a field," Watkins said. "But I think we've got exactly what I thought we'd get, the best field we've had, top to bottom. It's a great mix of veterans players, major champions and young guys."

-- Rusty Hampton, The Clarion-Ledger via The Associated Press


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