First Rank
Tiger Woods went a year without a victory. He won the Australian Masters in November 2009, then disappeared from golf for five months. He returned to tie for fourth at the Masters and the U.S. Open, but he also missed a cut, withdrew from the Players and didn't have another top 10 for the rest of the Tour schedule. Somehow, though, he remained No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking. He was finally passed on Nov. 1 by Lee Westwood, who had won a grand total of one tournament since ... November 2009.
Westwood reached the top by accumulating the win (the 2010 St. Jude Classic), three seconds (including the Masters and the British Open) and a string of other high finishes, but his was largely a bloodless coup. If Woods's long domination of the ranking had obscured its weaknesses, his fall made them obvious. Something needed to be done, hence the inaugural SI Golf Ranking. Each week 15 staffers from SI GOLF+, GOLF MAGAZINE and GOLF.com will vote for their top 10, awarding 10 points to their first choice and proceeding in descending order to the 10th player, who gets one point. The points will then be added and the ranking calculated.
This will produce a more responsive and yet stable picture of the game's top players. For example, Lee Westwood hasn't won since last June, yet he remains atop the OWGR. In the SI Golf Ranking, he has already been kicked to the curb. Notice has been served, fellas. No more coasting on past glory.
Fuzzy Zoeller, on Senior Skins teammate Ben Crenshaw. Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson won the four-team event at Royal Ka'anapali in Maui, Hawaii, with seven skins worth $310,000. Zoeller and Crenshaw won two skins.
Grounded
Arnold Palmer, the first golfer to own his own jet, has opted not to renew his pilot's license, which expired on Jan. 31. Palmer, 81, has held a license since 1957 and in 1976 set an around-the-world speed record—57 hours, 25 minutes and 42 seconds—that still stands.