Double P :: The Official Blog

Friday, February 20, 2009

Perez's west coast run continues at Riviera

Pat Perez caught fire down the stretch Friday afternoon at Riviera. Sitting at -2 on the day, Perez bogeyed #14 and reeled in another par on #15 before going on a tournament-changing tear with three straight birdies.

Friday's final three holes were the difference between T4th and T24th entering the weekend. PP's five-under 66 proved to be the second lowest round of the day.

Saturday's tee time is 10:00am PT and Perez is paired with K.J. Choi and Geoff Olgivy. Tune in this weekend for the latest.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Perez & Slater: Golf Channel shoot at Pebble Beach

Check out these shots of Pat Perez and Kelly Slater playing 15 thru 18 at Pebble Beach. Cameras were rolling for an upcoming Golf Channel segment which will air late March/early April. Make sure to check out the action then!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Checking in from Pebble...

A little down time here on Wednesday night. Going at 8:10am tomorrow, which means up at 4:30am and headed to the trailer.

Back at Pebble this week and paired up with my boy Kelly (Slater). Good to be up here again. My last ProAm worked out well and ready to get out there this week and make another run.

Things have been hectic since day one out the gate. Honolulu, some rough weather and didn't see the weekend. A few days later, La Quitna, a 61 and my first Tour win.

From there, back home for a hectic FBR and a T48th finish and then back to Torrey for another Buick Invitational. Four straight, this week and two more before the Florida swing. Taking the Honda off and then Miami-bound for the World Golf Championship at Doral. I'm 60th right now in world rankings and this week, the cutoff before Tucson.

Hoping to make a run here the next few weeks before heading east. I like my chances.

Wanted to thank everyone who wrote into PGATour.com after the Hope. My agent gave me a printout of all the comments and I checked them out last night. Nice to hear all the positive feedback. I appreciate it.

Still feeling good about the win and glad to have that burden lifted. Feeling like you can win out here and knowing you can do it, they're two totally different things. A whole different mindset Sunday afternoons on the back nine when in the hunt now.

We shot a Golf Channel segment this morning with Kelly Slater and my biomechanics coach Joey Diovisalvi. It'll air in a few weeks and we had a good time out there. Played the final few holes out at Pebble and got some footage of Joey D and me in the fitness trailer, doing the daily routine. Thanks to my guy Al Pollack at Golf Channel for setting that up. I think you guys are gonna enjoy it.

The rest of this week is going to be hectic, so I'll check back in from LA next week.



P.P.

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Perez: Shot of the day on Thursday at Torrey Pines

Pat Perez fired an opening round 73, the highlight being a chip in for birdie on the par-3 sixteenth. Check it out on what PGATour.com anointed Thursday's "Shot of the Day".

PP: Buick Invitational Opening Round Photo Gallery

Pat Perez fired an opening round 73 at this year's Buick Invitational. Check out some outside the ropes shot by PatPerezGolf.com on Thursday.

Wednesday, February 04, 2009

"A Joyous Return to Torrey Pines for a Golfer Who Is No Longer Fighting Himself"

By Larry Dorman, The New York Times

SAN DIEGO - Not many players on the PGA Tour sport a boxing glove head cover on their driver. There are an odd assortment of animal head covers, like lions (John Daly, Ernie Els) and tigers (Tiger Woods) and bears (Jack Nicklaus), oh my. But a boxing glove?

Pat Perez captured the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic two weeks ago after seven winless years on the PGA Tour.

Pat Perez is the only golfer on tour who has that symbol of a hardscrabble sport jutting out of his golf bag, like a cactus in a rose garden. His choice of head covers fits him the way a linen cap fit Ben Hogan.

It is appropriate because, less than a month from his 33rd birthday, Perez has finally punched his way into the winner's club. Two weeks ago at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic, he slew all the old demons that once held him back -- self-doubt, perfectionism, a quick temper and nerves down the stretch -- and shot 33 under par to win his first tour event.

On Wednesday at Torrey Pines Golf Course, on the eve of the Buick Invitational, Perez sat in a spot not far from where he once picked up range balls while in high school and talked about what it was like to finally raise his hand in victory after seven winless years on tour.

"It was a lot of things," he said, smiling and leaning back in a wing-backed leather chair in the media tent. "It was relief, it was excitement, it was, You did it and you proved yourself."

Even though Perez has been labeled a natural since his Little League baseball and junior golf days in San Diego, days when he beat a youngster named Tiger Woods, nothing has ever come easily to him. His family was not poor, but he was no country-club kid. To be able to play and practice, he earned his way.

"I did it all," he recalled last June, after battling through a qualifier just to get a spot in the United States Open here. "I cleaned the carts, put away the carts, picked up balls, picked up balls on the outside of the range, picked up baskets, set up the balls in the ball shed. Sometimes I took money. I did it all. Any outside job I had. I was the gofer."

Back in the familiar surroundings of Torrey Pines as a tournament winner Wednesday, Perez still seemed to relish the recollections from those days when he would do anything at all just for the joy of playing golf.

"I remember when the range was over here," he said. "The range was here where the Hilton is. You had to drive over, and it was a terrible range, and go back. Yeah. We used to park - Jake, my buddy, was the starter - and we used to pull in and then just go right to the tee."

He gestured toward the opening in the tent, pointing west, and continued: "Say we're here, and go out to the tee. Then from 18 we’d go right to the car and leave. It was kind of a secret parking spot that nobody knew about. I remember what this place looked like forever."

Just three years after winning the 1993 world junior title, eight strokes clear of Woods, Perez played on Arizona State’s N.C.A.A. championship team. He won early in 2000, his rookie season on the Nationwide Tour, and appeared well on his way to stardom on the PGA Tour during his rookie season two years later, when he had the lead during the final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach.

But it was not going to be that easy. Perez's four-stroke lead evaporated on a windy day at Pebble, and his composure melted right along with it. He slammed his driver into the ground at one point, repeatedly pounding it into the turf like a man flailing at a log with an ax. The images have followed him since, but he buried them in the desert two weeks ago.

"I don’t think people realized how tough it was that day, blowing off the ocean 50 miles an hour," he said after his win at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic. "And I hadn’t been used to that. I only played Pebble when it was perfect, and it was a completely different course. But I wasn’t really ready to be thrown in that situation where I had to hit great shots and contend with the best in the world."

Now he is. His recent marriage has had a calming effect on his on-course demeanor. His work that began last year with the swing coach Mike Abbott has flattened his swing, making his ball-striking more solid with the driver and irons. It has been a fight to get where he is. Perez wants to keep punching away so he does not go backward.

"The thing that drives me the most is to never be where I was," he said. "I think that’s why I'm so critical and hard all the time, because I always want to move forward."

"Perez trades demons for positive vibes"

Coming off his first win two weeks ago, the one-time bad boy has a new attitude, and he hopes a better public image.

By Ed Zieralski, UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

If there is one perceptible change in Pat Perez the first-time PGA Tour winner and Pat Perez the non-winner, it's that he gets it.

When Perez talks these days there are unmistakable, charismatic echoes of old-school golfers such as Fuzzy Zoeller and Lee Trevino. Mix in the influences of some of his mentors, such as Steve Elkington, Corey Pavin and Tommy Armour III, with the zaniness of his buddies from Metallica, and you get a player with massive appeal.

But most of all, he gets it, understands now the privilege of playing a silly game for millions of dollars at a time when some folks don't have two untapped credit cards to rub together.

Here is a one-time range rat at Torrey Pines returning this week to the Buick Invitational with Bob Hope Chrysler Classic hardware, a huge payday and more positive vibes than anyone could ever imagine him showing.

The one-time Prince of Bad Bogeys is even talking about making the President's Cup and Ryder Cup teams.

And, oh yes, there's his luxury room at The Lodge at Torrey Pines.

"I'll be able to afford the room now," Perez joked.

Perez's memories of Torrey are part of his golf DNA. His dad, Tony, is the first-hole starter on the South for the Buick.

Wednesday, Perez played in the Allianz Global Investors Pro-Am and thoroughly enjoyed it. He gladly took $100 from an amateur partner on a closest-to-the-flagstick bet.

"This is how you have fun with these guys, and they enjoy it," Perez said. "I love it. They talk a little smack. I talk back, and we just have a great day with it."

Perez said one member of his group played in the pro-am here last year with a tour pro and said "it was the absolute worst experience he ever had his entire life." Perez didn't identify the pro or amateur.

"The way the economy is going and everything, that reflects on the tour," Perez said. "These guys have paid a lot of money to play. They want to have a good time. They want to leave and tell everyone they had a great day, and that's our job."

There isn't a non-major tournament in the world Perez covets winning more than this one. It was his bad fortune that the South Course he grew up playing as a teenager was transformed into the U.S. Open monster the year he turned pro in 2002. So he never was able to use that local knowledge he worked so hard to get.

He has missed four of seven cuts at Torrey, and his best finish is a tie for sixth in 2005. He tied for 36th at the U.S. Open at Torrey Pines with a final-round 70, his best of the week.

"The course is set up just like the Open," Perez said. "The greens are firm. The ball is rolling. The rough is deep. I'm looking forward to it. There are a lot of holes I had trouble playing before because I hit such a big cut, and now I'm actually able to hold the fairway with it."

Perez hopes his win and new attitude not only exorcised his bad-swing demons, but also the public perception of him.

"Hopefully people see that I'm not this crazy, angry guy walking around, and they can see that I can play and that I belong out here and I'm a winner now," he said.

When asked what he thought his chances are of winning this week, he joked that they're better than Tiger Woods', but added: "I think the only reason my chances are better this year is because my game is better. My swing is better, my confidence is higher, my putting has come around."

PP: Buick Invitiational Tuesday Practice Round Pics...

Here are some photos from Tuesday's practice round at Torrey Pines (North Course). Pat Perez took in the round with Jason Gore and Scott McCarron. Check the montage below and click the tab to the bottom right of the YouTube video to watch in high quality:

Monday, February 02, 2009

Buick Invitational :: Power Rankings

PGATour.com released their Power Rankings for this week's Buick Invitational and Pat Perez was ranked third in this week's field:

"Perez has returned to earth a bit after his scoring frenzy and victory at the Bob Hope. Despite not having great professional success in the past at this event, Perez knows these courses well, having won the 1993 Junior World title at Torrey Pines."

Perez went 78-74 at last year's Buick Invitational and 76-71 in 2007. Perez last made the cut back in 2006, finishing T39th. His best run at Torrey Pines came in 2005 when a 66-69-72-71 run earned him a T6th finish.

With a new swing, new attitude and recent win under his belt, this could make for an exciting run this week in San Diego. Tune in Thursday when Perez tees off at 9:00am on the South Course. PP is paried up with Chez Reavie and Paul Goydos.
   

 

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