Wolfley’s Neighborhood Grill to Open Sept. 7

August 31st, 2010

From wire reports

WolfleysPHOENIX – Known for his work ethic, intensity and good nature as a four-time NFL Pro Bowl selection, retired Arizona Cardinals player Ron Wolfley and his business partners are proud to announce the Grand Opening of Wolfley’s Neighborhood Grill, scheduled for September 7, 2010.

Located in north Phoenix at 21001 N. Tatum Blvd., Wolfley’s is the newest member of the Desert Ridge Marketplace community. The 4,900 sq/ft restaurant has been thoughtfully planned with a comfortable interior design, three patios, two fireplaces and will feature 22 giant LCD screens and four HD projection areas for a superior sports viewing experience.

“I’m absolutely thrilled to be opening Wolfley’s Neighborhood Grill,” said Ron, whose resume includes a 10-year NFL career and 15 years in broadcasting including time with 620 AM KTAR Radio and as radio color analyst for Arizona Cardinals games. “People who know me know I hold myself to a high professional standard while also having a lot of fun and keeping things light. It’s those same principles that will serve as the foundation for Wolfleys.”

Wolfley and his team will bring a commitment to providing an exceptional menu of All-American classics based on high quality ingredients, freshness and especially value. In fact, menu items will start as low as $2.95 and most items will be in the $8 – $12 range. The menu will feature appetizers and small bites ranging from ahi tuna and filet mignon sliders to bruschetta, golden ravioli, and mac and cheese. There will also be an assortment of soups and salads, burgers, sandwiches and pizzas, as well as entrée items ranging from rib eye and New York strip steaks to BBQ ribs, grilled salmon, jambalaya and chicken piccata. There will also be extensive and creative Kids Menu.

In this food-first endeavor, it’s critical that all parts of the menu development, recipes, procedures, presentations and service be at an optimal level. Leading Wolfley’s food program will be its culinary partner, Steve Petrie. Petrie is a highly accomplished industry veteran who for many years was the corporate development and training chef for Jillian’s (now owned by Dave and Busters). Additionally, he has worked on many independent restaurant ventures around the country under the direction of Vucurevich Simmons Advisory Group.

Operated in a professional and responsible manner, Wolfley’s will be committed to providing warm, friendly service in a comfortable and inviting environment. Enter long-time Valley restaurateur Brian Adams, Wolfley’s operating partner. With more than 15 years of industry experience, Brian will bring the same level of customer service and attention to detail as he did as an original partner of Sapporo in Scottsdale and during his many years managing within the Mastro’s Group.

At the very core of its philosophy, Wolfley’s believes in the importance of giving back to the community. As such, Wolfley’s will donate 50 cents to charity for every kid’s meal purchased, alternating between the 100 Club of Arizona and the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metropolitan Phoenix. The 100 Club is a non-profit organization that provides financial assistance to families of public safety officers and firefighters who have been seriously injured or killed in the line-of-duty. The Boys & Girls Clubs of Phoenix provides structured, comprehensive development programs for 35,502 youths in grades K – 12 at its 12 clubhouses.

Wolfley’s hours of operation will be Monday – Thursday, 11 AM – 12 midnight; Friday and Saturday, 11 AM – 1 AM; and Sunday, 9 AM – 12 midnight during the NFL season. For those NFL Sunday mornings, Wolfley’s will be serving up a tasty breakfast menu which will include omelets, breakfast burritos, French toast, pancakes and more.

PIR Avoids Changes to its 2011 NASCAR Schedule

August 10th, 2010

57215862As the 2011 NASCAR Sprint Cup schedule is unveiled, there have been some changes including some tracks hosting one race instead of two. On Tuesday, Phoenix International Raceway announced they will continue to host two annual Sprint Cup races, only with a twist.

As part of the NASCAR’s schedule realignment, Phoenix International Raceway’s SUBWAY Fresh Fit 500 will move from April to February 27 – just one week after NASCAR’s largest event, the Daytona 500. PIR will look to capitalize on the season-opening excitement of Daytona with a new Sunday day-race format, allowing fans to take in the 500 km race in Phoenix with a more traditional local start time of 1 p.m. The SUBWAY Fresh Fit 500 will be televised nationally on FOX.

Phoenix will continue to host the semi-final race in NASCAR’s playoffs – the Chase for the Sprint Cup – on November 13. The Kobalt Tools 500, a race in which fans have come to expect heavy championship implications, also starts at 1 p.m. locally and will be televised nationally on ESPN. NASCAR will conclude its season the following week at Homestead Miami Speedway in Florida.

“Phoenix will be the first and last stop NASCAR makes in the West,” Sperber said. “It’s a great privilege for us to help celebrate the excitement of a new season in February and to help crown season champions as the year winds down with the Chase in November.”

Phoenix International Raceway is one of just 13 NASCAR facilities to be awarded two Sprint Cup weekends in 2011. Past studies conducted by Arizona State University’s W.P. Carey School of Business for PIR have indicated that the economic impact of hosting two NASCAR Sprint Cup weekends annually in Phoenix exceeds $400 million.

“The State of Arizona is well aware of the tremendous economic impact that comes along with hosting a NASCAR weekend in the Valley of the Sun,” Sperber said. “The fact that Phoenix International Raceway has been confirmed to host two Sprint Cup events provides a shot-in-the-arm for our local economy at a time when it’s most needed.”

Phoenix International Raceway will release information about its 2011 NASCAR Nationwide Series, NASCAR Camping World Truck Series and NASCAR K&N Pro Series West events at a later date. NASCAR is expected to release the entire 2011 Sprint Cup Series schedule in coming weeks.

Two Arizonans Among 46 Coaches Banned for Life by USA Swimming

May 26th, 2010

USA SwimmingUSA Swimming revealed a list of 46 coaches who have received a lifetime ban or permanently resigned membership, most for sex-related offenses, including two with Arizona ties.

Charles Arabas and James Pooler, who both faced charges for sexual misconduct are the two Arizonans who were included on the list.

Arabas faced trail in 2003 on 19 felony counts of sexual abuse with female members of a high school swim team he coached in Flagstaff, Ariz. He was also worked as manager of Wall Aquatic Center at Northern Arizona University. Click this link for details of the charges: Arabas

Pooler, a former USA Swimming chair for Arizona Swimming, was suspended for sexual misconduct in August 2008.

USA Swimming has come under increasing scrutiny for its handling of sexual abuse, with some critics claiming that it covered up wrongdoing by prominent coaches and fostered an environment that allowed youth swimmers to be harmed.

The Associated Press reported that in a plan released last month, USA Swimming said it will develop comprehensive guidelines for acceptable coaching behavior; enhance the system for reporting sexual abuse to the organization and law enforcement; determine if improvements need to be made in the current system of background checks; and develop stronger ties with local clubs that are responsible for hiring coaches.

What’s in a Name? Arizona Rattlers Return

April 18th, 2010

By Ron Matejko
MVP Magazine

MVP3-3-Rattlers logoAfter a one-year absence, the Arizona Rattlers returned to action this month as a member of the new Arena Football One. Only, this team is nothing like the one most Valley fans remember as the version of the Rattlers features almost an entirely new cast.

The Rattlers return is strikingly similar to the television series Saved by the Bell. This popular Saturday morning show was a must-see for teens who became familiar with high-school aged characters such as Zack Morris, Kelly Kapowski and AC Slater. These players made up the core of the cast for numerous years, at least until they became too old for their roles and the show was eventually canceled.

The program was brought back a couple of years later, under the title Saved by the Bell: The New Class. The show kept the same title but featured a mostly new cast that lacked the familiarity and bonds that were present with the original cast.

Such is the case with the Arizona Rattlers who are a few years separated from the departures of stalwarts such as Sherdrick Bonner, Randy Gatewood and Hunkie Cooper. The new Rattlers do have Danny White as its president, but like Mr. Belding in Saved by the Bell, he was just the leader of the players.

“The Rattlers are back and better than ever,” said White. “This will be one of the premier teams in the Arena Football One. There’s a great tradition of arena football here in Phoenix, and I look forward to helping bring that tradition back to our fans.”

The Rattlers have numerous other obstacles facing a long-term run. Like the nature of TV, which was much more competitive when Saved by the Bell returned, the Rattlers face a competitive Valley sports marketplace. Sponsorship dollars, ticket sales and media coverage are going to be tough to come by in this economic climate and in a market with many sports and entertainment choices.

The fact that the team made a late decision to give away all of its tickets for the April 17 home opener is not a good sign. The game attracted nearly 15,000 fans, obviously with hope many will return as paying customers but that just doesn’t happen.

The Rattlers are owned by a 13-person group which will help spread the financial responsibility, but none of the 13 is named Colangelo or Sarver. Without that relationship, playing home games at US Airways Center is going to be more expensive and sponsorships tougher to come by.

During the franchise’s peak years in the 1990s, the Rattlers regularly attracted well above 10,000 fans for its home games. The team drew a fraction of that the last two seasons prior to the one-year hiatus and there is no reason to believe that trend will reverse itself.

The cost-effective business model for Arena League One franchises will help the bottom line but not enough for the Rattlers to make a long-term go at it. We’ve seen many second tier or niche franchises in numerous sports come and go and the Rattlers will be no different. They may last two or three years before the inevitable happens.

The Arizona Rattlers once had a rabid fan base that gravitated toward their stars. However, those times have come and gone. Like the television show that comes back trying to regain ratings of years gone by, a change in cast will be one of the many reasons why the Rattlers have lost their bite.

A Brighter Future – Subway Fresh 600

April 10th, 2010

MVP3-2-Subway Fresh photo resizeSpring NASCAR race at PIR lengthened to ensure racing under the lights
By Ron Matejko
MVP Magazine
Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images for NASCAR

There will be a lot of new features unveiled on April 10 when NASCAR visits Phoenix International Raceway for the first evening event of the season; namely a new distance, new pit-stop schedules, new fuel cycles and a new name.

The brand new Subway Fresh Fit 600 will be the longest Sprint Cup event in track history, featuring 63 more laps (100 km). This race which was formerly known as a Subway Fresh Sit 500, is measured in kilometers, not miles, which is why the race hasn’t increased by 100 laps at the one-mile track.

“Racing is as much about strategy as it is about pure speed,” said PIR President Bryan Sperber. “This new distance ushers in a whole new race at PIR and will likely jumble the conventional wisdom about who can win at Phoenix.”

The addition of 63 laps ensures that PIR’s April race maintains its spot as the first official night race of the NASCAR Sprint Cup season again in 2010. For consistency, NASCAR moved to standard race start times in 2010 and PIR’s extra laps will make certain that the Sprint Cup race, which starts at 4:30 p.m., will run well into the night under the desert sky.

The 375-lap race will be the longest scheduled Sprint Cup event in track history, as each of PIR’s 27 Sprint Cup races dating back to 1988 were originally slated for 500k (312 laps) from green flag to checkered flag. PIR’s November NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race will maintain its distance of 312 laps – approximately 500 kilometers.

NASCAR also recently announced that the “wing” on the rear deck of Sprint Cup cars would exist no longer and a new, more traditional spoiler will debut on the rear deck of Sprint Cup cars at the Subway Fresh Fit 600.

“The wing wasn’t accepted as widely as we had hoped it would have been by competitors and fans alike,” said Robin Pemberton, Vice President of Competition for NASCAR. “After much effort we started looking and decided to go back to the spoiler.”

The spoiler’s return is just one of many changes NASCAR made to increase excitement this season. Other moves include a decision to allow drivers to self-police each other, which will lead to more aggressive driving, in addition to allowing multiple green-white-checkered finishes to ensure a race ends under a green flag.

For more information, visit www.PhoenixRaceway.com/600UndertheLights.

Ride of Your Life

April 10th, 2010

MVP3-5-Copperstate 1000-2 resized

By Ron Matejko
MVP Magazine

It’s one thing to jump in the car on a beautiful spring day in Arizona and take a ride with the family. The bar is raised exponentially on the whole experience if you have a chance to cruise around the most picturesque parts of the state in a rare vintage automobile.

The Copperstate 1000 offers that opportunity to the select few each year who participate in one of the premier car road rallies in North America. The Men’s Arts Council created the Copperstate 1000 in 1990 as a fundraiser for the Phoenix Art Museum, where the finest vintage automobiles in the world grace the scenic highways of Arizona during this annual four-day event.

The beauty of the Copperstate 1000 is the shared celebration of the automotive cultural legacy by car owners and enthusiasts who appreciate the finest working examples of vintage, sports, muscle, racing, classic and grand touring automobiles manufactured before the 1973 model year.

Collector car enthusiasts can attend the free Copperstate Field of Dreams from 8 a.m. to noon on April 11 where the cars participating in the rally meet for a public viewing before embarking on the leisurely 1,000-mile journey throughout the state of Arizona.

Get an up close look at a venerable museum of more than 70 of the finest vehicles ever produced from luxury car makers such as Aston Martin, Ferrari, Bentley and Jaguar to name just a few. The combined value of these automobiles tops $250 million dollars.

Cox Customers Can Watch the Masters Tournament in 3D

April 7th, 2010

MastersCox Communications announced that customers in Phoenix will have exclusive access to the innovative 3D coverage of the Masters Tournament from Augusta National Golf Club. Beginning Wednesday, April 7th the Masters 3D programming can be viewed on 3D television sets and will be available on Cox channel 700 at no additional cost. This event is being offered exclusively by cable providers.

“Cox is excited to offer our customers access to this innovative television event, bringing our customers the latest in video technology,” said Steve Rizley, General Manager & Sr. Vice President Cox Arizona. “The Masters in 3D is available exclusively to Cox customers in Metro Phoenix.”

Cox customers will need a 3DTV and a Cox HD or HD/DVR receiver to access the 3D programming. The TV manufacturer’s specified 3D glasses will also be required to view the content in 3D. The receiver must be connected to the 3DTV via HDMI. Those customers will then be required to tune to channel 700, and change the setting on their 3DTV to 3D format or 3D mode.

Live 3D coverage starts Wednesday, April 7, 3-5PM EST, with the Par 3 Contest and continues with the Masters Tournament Thursday, April 8 through Sunday, April 11 with two hours each day (live tournament coverage starts: Thurs & Fri: 4-6PM EST, Sat & Sun: 5-7PM EST).

Multiple 3D cameras will be placed strategically throughout the course at Augusta National, with a focus on the second nine. Viewers will be better able to depict the many subtleties and elevation changes of the course’s grounds.

In addition to the 3D channel, customers can access Masters content via the On DEMAND library on Channel 1. Content includes replays of each day’s 3D telecast, highlights, greatest moments of the Masters 1950s through the 2000s, 2009 Par-3 Contest and BBC Masters Anthology among other content.

More information can be found at www.cox.com/3D

Feel the Thunder

April 1st, 2010

MVP3-9-Phoenix Thunder3There is no more giving group of people than those who serve in the fire and police department. Each day, these people willingly put their lives on the line when called upon in the name of protecting and serving the community.

You would think a day off would be an opportunity to be selfish and take care of themselves, but for many, the extra time offers another chance to continue giving back to the community. One way is through the Phoenix Thunder, a tackle football team made up of members from the fire and police departments and paramedics.

The Thunder is more than an excuse for many ex-jocks to strap on the pads one more time, it is a non-profit organization that travels across the country to play games and raise money for local charities. Other teams are in New York, Chicago Los Angels and many other major markets. The Thunder will play six games this season which began in March.

This year, the Thunder is raising money for the Miller family. The matriarch, Kim, lost a battle with colon cancer, and her husband Deron, a Goodyear police sergeant, is raising their three children. All the money raised will go towards the children’s college education.

MVP Magazine recently spoke with Chuck Walton, who is the president of the Phoenix Thunder and a 17-year veteran of the Phoenix Fire Department.

WWE’s Arizona Connections

March 26th, 2010

Wrestling has a long and historic connection to Phoenix dating back to the 1940s when wrestling was a regular event at the old Madison Square Garden in downtown Phoenix. The Valley has previously hosted three WWE pay-per-views and numerous broadcasts of Monday Night Raw and Smackdown. There are a number of connections between the WWE and Arizona.
MVP7-Billy Graham1
• Hall of Famer Superstar Billy Graham (Eldridge Wayne Coleman) is a lifelong resident of Paradise Valley and was a star track athlete at Arcadia H.S.
• Superstar Shawn Michaels was born on Williams Air Force base in Chandler.
• Divas Nikki and Brie Bella (Nicole and Maria Garcia) are from Scottsdale and played soccer at Chaparral H.S.
• Former intercontinental champion Honky Tonk Man is a long-time Gilbert resident.
• Former WWE manager/superstar Armando Estrada owns and operates Baby’s Steak and Lemonade in Glendale.
• Hall of Famer Eddie Guerrero was a Scottsdale resident at the time of his passing in 2005.
• Hall of Famer million Dollar Man Ted DiBiase is from Willcox
• Former WWE superstar Sean Morley is a long-time Phoenix resident.
• Ring announcer and Scottsdale resident Justin Roberts was once involved with Phoenix-based indy promotion Impact Zone Wrestling.
• Superstar Mike Knox also paid his dues in IZW and is a Peoria resident.
• Former WWE personality, current TNA personality, Eric Bischoff is a Cave Creek resident.
• Former Fox Sports Arizona reporter Sean Mooney was an announcer for WWE (then WWF) from 1988-93.
• Play-by-play announcer Todd Grisham was a sportscaster at KOLD-TV in Tucson for five years before signing with WWE in Jan. 2004
• Former WWE superstar The Boogeyman (Marty Wright) was born in Phoenix and still lives in the Valley.
• Tucson resident Reggie Parks has made many championship belts for WWE.

Cactus League Attendance Record Becoming a Pawn

March 21st, 2010

By Ron Matejko, MVP Magazine

Cactus LeagueThe Cactus League’s single-game attendance record held firm for six years until the mark was bested on Thursday. The event seemed innocent enough when it was announced, but since then three more single-game attendance records have been announced and we are calling shenanigans.

Thursday’s game between the Chicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers at Camelback Ranch-Glendale (CBR-G) set a new record after drawing a crowd of 13,391. The previous Cactus League single-game mark of 13,366 was set March 12, 2004 at the Peoria Sports Complex when the Seattle Mariners played host to the Chicago Cubs. The new record garnered a front-page headline on azcentral.com and was recognized by other media outlets as well, bringing good exposure to the ballpark during an otherwise uneventful Cactus League season.

Then, on Friday it was announced that the cross-town rivalry game between the Chicago Cubs and Chicago White Sox at CBR-G set another new record by drawing 13,413. The announcement seemed legitimate as this rivalry is among the most intense in sports and the Cubs are by far the highest drawing Cactus League team both at home and on the road. Again, the record garnered recognition for the ballpark, which could now claim the top two highest attended games in Cactus League history.

Things started smelling fishy on Saturday when it was announced that an afternoon game at the Peoria Sports Complex between the Arizona Diamondbacks and Seattle Mariners set the third Cactus League single-game attendance mark in three days after drawing 13,444. The initial instinct was that the crew in Peoria enjoyed being able to market itself as the club that held the record entering this Cactus League season and wanted to hold that distinction again.

Securing sponsorships for the numerous Cactus League ballparks in the Valley is very competitive, especially entering this season when the ad dollars were tougher to come by. Every little edge means a lot.

However, any glow that was regained with Peoria reclaiming the record was short lived as there was still a night game to be played at CBR-G between the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres. Guess what happened? Yep. Another record was set with an announced crowd of 13,506.

This game of one-upmanship reeked of a covert competition between two ballparks that each wants to hold the single-game attendance record. The announcement seemed especially fishy since the San Diego Padres were one of the two teams involved. The Padres are a bad baseball team that usually ranks middle of the pack in attendance. A game earlier in the day between the Padres and Chicago White Sox drew less than half than the night game.

In the press release announcing the new, new, new, new record, their was a mention of the temporary mark held by their northwest neighbor in Peoria. It was also mentioned that Camelback Ranch-Glendale now held three of the top five single-game attendance marks and four of the top seven. Think that won’t be in the marketing material for next spring?

Records and numbers have long been manipulated in sports, so such a petty battle such as the attendance record comes as no surprise. The attendance record should come in to question anyway as their is no scientific way to truly determine the actual total number of fans at a game. Coyotes fans have seen for the last two years how attendance numbers are manipulated.

We will never know the truth about the numbers but if anything, this week has given sports fans a glimpse into the game behind the game.

Top 10 Cactus League Single-Game Attendance Records

No. Opponents, Site, Date, Attendance
1. San Diego Padres @ Los Angeles Dodgers, Glendale, March 20, 2010, 13,506
2. Arizona Diamondbacks @ Seattle Mariners, Peoria, March 20, 2010, 13,444
3. Chicago Cubs @ Chicago White Sox, Glendale, March 19, 2010, 13,413
4. Chicago Cubs @ Los Angeles Dodgers, Glendale, March 18, 2010, 13,391
5. Chicago Cubs @ Seattle Mariners, Peoria, March 12, 2004, 13,366
6. Chicago White Sox @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa, March 27, 2009, 13,327
7. Chicago Cubs @ Chicago White Sox, Glendale, March 21, 2009, 13,311
8. Colorado Rockies @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa , March 24, 2009, 13,289
9. Arizona Diamondbacks @ Seattle Mariners, Peoria, March 28, 2004, 13,171
10. San Diego Padres @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa, March 20, 2009, 13,162

Cubs Set Cactus League Attendance Record for 2nd Consecutive Day

March 19th, 2010

Cactus LeagueFriday’s crowd of 13,413 at Camelback Ranch-Glendale (CBR-G) for the meeting of Chicago’s crosstown rivals, the White Sox and Cubs, set the Cactus League single-game attendance record for the second consecutive day.

Yesterday’s crowd of 13,391 for the Chicago Cubs-Los Angeles Dodgers game bettered the six-year-old record of 13,366 set March 12, 2004 at the Peoria Sports Complex when the Seattle Mariners played host to the Cubs.

CBR-G, the second-year spring home of the Dodgers and White Sox, now boasts the top two and three of the top five single-game attendance figures in Cactus League history. Last year’s CBR-G inaugural season single-game high of 13,311 for the Cubs-White Sox game on March 21 ranks fifth on the all-time Cactus League single-game attendance list.

Meanwhile, the Cubs, who are currently awaiting word on financing for a new spring training facility in Mesa, now represent nine of the top 10 highest attended Cactus League games.

Top 10 Cactus League Single-Game Attendance Records
1. Chicago Cubs @ Chicago White Sox, Glendale, March 19, 2010, 13,413
2. Chicago Cubs @ Los Angeles Dodgers, Glendale, March 18, 2010, 13,391
3. Chicago Cubs @ Seattle Mariners, Peoria, March 12, 2004, 13,366
4. Chicago White Sox @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa, March 27, 2009, 13,327
5. Chicago Cubs @ Chicago White Sox, Glendale, March 21, 2009, 13,311
6. Colorado Rockies @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa , March 24, 2009, 13,289
7. Arizona Diamondbacks @ Seattle Mariners, Peoria, March 28, 2004, 13,171
8. San Diego Padres @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa, March 20, 2009, 13,162
9. Texas Rangers @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa, March 16, 2010, 13,157
10. Cleveland Indians @ Chicago Cubs, Mesa, March 29, 2009, 13,097

A-Listers Flock to Phoenix on Saturday for Celebrity Fight Night

March 19th, 2010

MVP3-5-Ali Punch on Red CarpetPhoenix has often drawn comparisons to Los Angeles for many demographic and geographic reasons. When it comes to star power, there is one night each year where the Valley may have its sister city beat and that is during the annual Celebrity Fight Night, which is scheduled for Saturday, March 20 at the JW Marriott Desert Ridge Resort & Spa.

This annual black-tie event, which supports the Muhammad Ali Parkinson Center at Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, features A-listers from sports and entertainment worthy of the red carpet they walk heading in to the event. Celebrity Fight Night is known for its high-profile live entertainment and live auction of unique sports and entertainment memorabilia. The first 15 events have raised nearly $60 million.

This year’s event will be headlined by Glenn Frey of the Eagles and emceed by country music star Reba McIntire. American Idol judge Randy Jackson will introduce featured guest Muhammad Ali, who is celebrating 50 years on the world stage.

Indycar and NASCAR driver Danica Patrick will receive the Muhammad Ali Sports Achievement Award; film producers Jerry Weintraub, will be honored with the Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Award and Forbes 400 businessman and philanthropist, Walter Scott, Jr., will be recognized with the Muhammad Ali Business Leadership Award.

For the latest news, visit www.celebrityfightnight.org.

WrestleMania Kickoff Party Tonight at Westgate

March 19th, 2010

Wrestlemania kickoff party2

The Countdown is on to WWE’s WrestleMania XXVI, and they’re kicking things off with a Smackdown-showing, Superstar-appearing, autograph-signing party to end all parties! Presented by the City of Glendale, Westgate City Center and the University of Phoenix Stadium, the free, family friendly event will give fans their first opportunity to get into full-on WrestleMania mood.

The WrestleMania Kickoff Party at Westgate takes place March 19 from 6-10 p.m. and will include Superstar and Diva appearances, autograph signings, live entertainment, prizes, face painting … even a chance to win floor-seat tickets to the March 28 WrestleMania event at University of Phoenix Stadium. And to set the scene, Westgate will be showing SmackDown on its 30-by-50-foot Plaza LED screen (the LAST televised WWE event before to the self-proclaimed Super Bowl of professional wrestling).

PBR Bull Riding Invades Glendale This Weekend

March 12th, 2010

JBMauneyCodeBlueThe Professional Bull Riders, Inc. (PBR) is making a stop in Glendale, Ariz., for the Glendale Invitational, the 11th stop on the elite 2010 Built Ford Tough Series.

The Top 40 bull riders in the world will invade Jobing.com Arena on Saturday, March 13 at 7:00 p.m. and Sunday, March 14 at 2:00 p.m. for two nights of world-class bull riding. The event will showcase the world’s best riders going head-to-head with the top bulls the PBR has to offer.

Expected to compete in Glendale are current world leader J.B. Mauney (pictured above, Mooresville, N.C.); 2010 Iron Cowboy champion and current #2 in the world Valdiron de Oliveira (Aparecida de Goiania, GO, Brazil); USA World Cup Team Member Austin Meier (Kinta, Okla.); PBR fan favorites McKennon Wimberly (Cool, Texas), Skeeter Kingsolver (Mclouth, Kans.), Jody Newberry (Ada, Okla.), and Ryan McConnel (Colgate, Okla.); and current #3 in the world, Travis Briscoe (Edgewood, N.M.).

The Glendale Invitational will consist of three rounds of competition, with the first two rounds featuring the Top 40 bull riders matched against the PBR’s rankest bulls. The scores from the two rides will be combined and the riders with the top 15 scores will advance to the Built Ford Tough Championship Round after intermission on Sunday. In the end, the cowboy with the highest total score on three bulls will be declared the winner!

For more information on the Professional Bull Riders, visit www.pbr.com.

Tiger Woods Leaves Arizona, Returns Home

March 2nd, 2010

Tiger WoodsTiger Woods is back at home after a week of family counseling in Arizona and is trying to get into a routine that includes golf and fitness, a person with knowledge of his schedule told the Associated Press Tuesday.

The person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because only Woods is authorized to release information about his schedule, said there is still no timetable for golf’s No. 1 player to return to competition.

“I do plan to return to golf one day, I just don’t know when that day will be,” Woods said during his Feb. 19 statement. “I don’t rule out that it will be this year.”

Woods said he was leaving the next day for more therapy, without saying what kind. The person who spoke to The Associated Press said he went to Arizona for a week of family and marriage counseling with his wife, Elin.

Woods originally underwent rehab at the Pine Grove Behavioral Health and addiction Clinic in Hattiesburg, Miss., but instead of returning there, the gossip site said Woods and wife surfaced in sunny Scottsdale.

Arizona is home to several well-known rehab clinics, including The Meadows in Wickenburg, where Woods was rumored to seek treatment late last year. The clinic is about an hour northwest of Phoenix, and has reportedly treated other celebrity sex addicts such as David Duchovny.

More Phoenix Open Fun at 16

February 26th, 2010

The crew from Minnesota that do their chants are the life of the 16th hole at the Phoenix Open. They were in rare form as fans, players and corporate fat cats all felt the wrath.

Not all players got into the spirit though as former ASU star Jeff Quinney didn’t give a tip of the cap despite getting love for being a local guy. Jeep Singh on the other hand got into it.

Spanking at 16th Hole

February 26th, 2010

Chug when you are chanted to or catch hell form the gallery at 16. However, some other actions will get a rise out of the boys besides chugging the drink.

Phoenix Open Fun at 16

February 26th, 2010

Some guy in a corporate box at the Phoenix Open had a fake mustache that resembled a certain video game character and the crew at the 16th hole let him know it with a funny chant.

What’s in a name? Phoenix Open Celebrates 75th Anniversary

February 25th, 2010

By Bill Huffman
Photos courtesy of The Phoenix Open/Communication Links

Contested on three different courses under three different names, the first 75 years of the Waste Management Phoenix Open have certainly lived up to its modern-day moniker of “The Greatest Show on Grass.”

There would be little argument for such a claim to fame from the millions of fans who have attended the PGA TOUR’s fifth-oldest tournament through the years. No matter whether it was the Phoenix Open (1932-2003), the FBR Open (2004-2009) or its new tournament title, the Waste Management Phoenix Open, or at places like Phoenix Country Club (1932-1986), Arizona Country Club (1955-1973) and the TPC Scottsdale (1987 and counting), the Valley’s largest annual sports attraction continues to pack them in like no other professional golf tournament in the history of the game.

Introduction
The late Bob Goldwater Sr., a.k.a. “The Father of the Phoenix Open,” was always immensely proud of what he had wrought. Even though Goldwater’s eyes would often well up with tears at some of the memories, the three-time Arizona Amateur champ never let his passion for the game get in the way of his vision for the tournament.

“It’s two different worlds, and both of them are – or were – wonderful,” he said of the tournament that has produced such champions as Walter Hagen, Byron Nelson, Ben Hogan, Jimmy Demaret, Gene Littler, Billy Casper, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Miller Barber, Johnny Miller, Ben Crenshaw, Mark Calcavecchia, Lee Janzen, Vijay Singh, Steve Jones, Tom Lehman and Phil Mickelson, to name a few.

“That much of our success in Arizona parallels the Phoenix Open, just makes the tournament that much more special to all of us who love it and cherish the Phoenix Open’s wonderful past,’’ Goldwater added.

Those two different worlds that Goldwater once referred to can be divided nicely into the “good old days” that began in 1932 and the “modern era” that began in 1987, when the tournament relocated from Phoenix Country Club to the TPC Scottsdale (see sidebar). Now in its ninth decade, after holding the first 51 tournaments in Phoenix and the past 23 in Scottsdale, the two unique periods of time are like comparing persimmon to Titanium.

Ralph Guldahl earned $600 for winning the inaugural Phoenix Open, then known as the Arizona Open, in 1932.

Ralph Guldahl earned $600 for winning the inaugural Phoenix Open, then known as the Arizona Open, in 1932.

The purse has grown from $2,500 in 1932 when it was known as the Arizona Open and Ralph Guldahl won a mere $600 to $6 million last year when Kenny Perry won more than $1 million also should come as no surprise. It’s kind of like the meteoric rise in attendance from 186,000 when the tournament left Phoenix Country Club in 1986 to more than 500,000 for the week at the TPC in five of the last six years.

Read a newspaper story from 1932 about the inaugural Phoenix Open.

But that is only part of the story, as a decade-by-decade breakdown of the Phoenix Open not only shows the changes in the tournament but also life in the Valley of the Sun. Among the highlights from the past are such golden nuggets as these gems, which represent four distinct periods in the 75-year history of the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

The Beginning: 1930s and ‘40s
In every way Phoenix’s one-and-only PGA TOUR event has come a long way. But it was not exactly an easy ride in the early years after Guldahl and Harry “Lighthorse” Cooper captured the first two titles and Goldwater’s brother, the late Senator Barry Goldwater, teamed up with Ky Laffoon to win the 1935 version, which had been reduced to an 18-hole pro-am. Like his younger brother, Barry Goldwater could play golf, as he contributed five shots to the winners’ total.

The tail end of the Great Depression and the early rumblings of World War II sent the tournament dark from 1936-38. It could have been worse but the ever-persistent Bob Goldwater cajoled his fellow Thunderbirds, which had been formed as a wing of the Phoenix Chamber of Commerce, to bring back the tournament in 1939. Believe it or not, not everyone was in agreement that a rebirth was in order.

“I got it going again, although some of the Thunderbirds were ticked at me for doing so,” Goldwater recalled during a 2001 interview. “Some of the ’Birds said to me, ‘OK, if you want this tournament so bad, you put it on,’ and I was the (tournament) chairman for the next 15 years.”

Golf legend Byron Nelson won the Phoenix Open in 1939 and 1945.

Golf legend Byron Nelson won the Phoenix Open in 1939 and 1945.

Even though raising the purse each year always was a challenge, Goldwater and the Thunderbirds usually got their money’s worth with a list of champions during the 1940s that read like the “Who’s Who of Golf.” After the legendary Byron Nelson beat the equally legendary Ben Hogan in ‘39, and Ed Oliver made Hogan the runner-up again in 1940, the tournament went on a three-year hiatus due to military commitments tied to World War II. During that absence, however, the Thunderbirds hosted the prestigious Western Open at Phoenix Country Club in 1941 and ‘42.

The Phoenix Open was back in business in 1944, as Harold McSpadden – he went by the colorful nickname “Jug” edged Nelson in a playoff only to have Nelson come back the following year and beat the heavily favored Sam Snead for his second win. After being a runner-up twice, Hogan broke through for back-to-back wins in 1946-47. What was slightly unusual about Hogan’s defense was that Nelson was, to everyone’s surprise, missing from the field in ‘47, as Lord Byron retired to his ranch in Texas at the early age of 34. South African great Bobby Locke was the winner in 1949 with a tournament record 268 that held up for 27 years.

Demaret closed out the decade with Phoenix Open victories in 1949-50, but Hogan was a significant storyline both times, as “Bantam” Ben burnt his thumb in ’49 then lost a playoff to Demaret the following year. It was following that playoff loss that, two days later en route to his home in west Texas, Hogan’s Cadillac collided with a Greyhound Bus on a foggy road; an accident that nearly cost Hogan his life. In fact, had Hogan not thrown himself across his wife Valerie to protect her during the crash, he would have been killed instantly as the steering wheel column punctured the driver’s seat.

The Golden Age: 1950s and ’60s
After struggling for years to make a living playing golf, the pros that followed the TOUR suddenly were beginning to earn some money. That old lifestyle of holding down a country club job in the summer and then playing tournament golf in the winter for a few bucks gave way to a full-time pursuit. As a result, the Phoenix Open’s purse jumped from $2,500 to $10,000 in 1950, a figure that would more than triple by the end of the decade.

The 1950s introduced the Golden Age of the Phoenix Open as attendance and purses dramatically increased.

The 1950s introduced the Golden Age of the Phoenix Open as attendance and purses dramatically increased.

The 1950s also represented a change for the playing conditions, as Phoenix Country Club replaced its sand greens with grass greens in 1952, the year Lloyd “the Human 1-Iron” Mangrum won the first of his back-to-back triumphs. In 1955, Littler captured the first of his three titles at Arizona Country Club, which had just been added to the tournament rotation, every other year, until 1973.

Not to be lost in that time frame was Ed Furgol’s 19-hole playoff win over Cary Middlecoff in 1954, the longest tournament ever (91 holes). Two years later, Middelcoff came back to beat a red-hot Mike Souchak with a rising amateur, Ken Venturi, finishing fourth. Two years later and following Billy Casper’s win in 1957, Venturi captured the Phoenix Open as a pro.

The 1960s belonged to Palmer, who captured the first of a record three straight Phoenix Open titles at Arizona Country Club. Len Huck, the 1963 tournament chairman for the Thunderbirds, recalled the golden era of Arnie and his impact on the tournament.

“Bob Goldwater was a big force back then, and, of course, Arnold Palmer was the player you just had to have along with Gary Player and Jack Nicklaus, and we had all three that year,” Huck noted. “I remember that we still had Calcuttas back then, when we could buy a player and your payoff was based on how he would come in, but the next year (1964) the TOUR put the kibosh on that.”

Television was getting into the golf business and everything had to look above board. Huck encountered yet other changes as the Thunderbirds’ Big Chief, including a potential player boycott the following year over who actually owned the TV rights. After huddling with the Thunderbirds and then a late-night meeting with Goldwater and Palmer, everything got worked out, although the tournament got off to a late start.

“I remember Arnold, Bob and I spent the night in a bar trying to work things out until they threw the three of us out,” Huck said with a laugh. “The next day, Arnold flexed his muscle, told the players the TV rights were an ‘unintentional oversight,’ and the tournament went on as scheduled.

“I’m not sure how Arnold did it because we didn’t get any sleep that night. But there he was on the tee the next day, rarin’ to go.”

Goldwater also recalled the revelry of the day, when the pros and members of the host clubs often spent long hours socializing. And through his many connections, as well as musical background that included a strong singing voice, he added the entertainment element to the tournament that made Wednesday’s pro-am perhaps the most popular day of tournament week.

“Those early champions were some of the greatest to ever play the game, and that was a theme that has been carried throughout the tournament’s history,” Goldwater pointed out. “We had entertainers like Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Phil Harris that started coming to the Phoenix Open every year and making it fun for everyone, and that has always been a big part of our tournament, too.”

Goldwater might have added to that list such luminaries of their day as Lawrence Welk, Tennessee Ernie Ford, golfer/Olympian Babe Zaharias and boxing champion Joe Louis also participated. Adding to that list of noted Phoenix Open champs were Jack Nicklaus in 1964 and Julius Boros in 1967. Fittingly, Littler closed out the decade with his third win in ‘69, his 14-year stretch that began in 1955 still being the longest span between victories in tournament history.

The Rise of the PGA TOUR: 1970-‘86
The PGA TOUR had taken a giant step in 1968, when the Tournament Players Division split from the PGA of America and hired Joseph Dey as commissioner. It wasn’t quite in its modern form, but TOUR golf was getting serious and that meant more money and stiffer competition. The Thunderbirds obliged by increasing the purse to $100,000 that year. Six years later, the PGA TOUR as we now know it was officially formed under Dey’s successor, Deane Beman, who took the pro game to new heights with yet more money and more exposure that was fueled by Palmer and his charismatic personality.

No victory in the 1970s was bigger than Miller Barber’s in stoking that fire. All Barber did in 1971 was shatter the tournament record of 263 set by Littler in ’69 by two shots. That 65-64-67-65 performance by “Mr. X” was at the time the second best performance in TOUR history behind Souchak’s 257 at the 1955 Texas Open. Almost as noteworthy was the $25,000 first prize that Barber earned from the record $125,000 purse.

Jerry Lewkowitz was the tournament chairman in 1971 and remembers the week well. He especially recalls the reaction he got from his fellow Thunderbirds in trying to accommodate the TOUR’s new push for bigger bucks.

“I raised (the purse) from $100,000 to $125,000 and I thought they were going to run me out of town,” Lewkowitz said with a laugh. “But everything worked out because we eventually got the best player in the field, which was Arnold Palmer.”

But it didn’t come easy, as Arnie was such a celeb in those days that initially he said he didn’t know if he could make it because of prior commitments. But Lewkowitz put on a full-court press, sent flowers to Palmer’s wife, Winnie, and Sunday night of tournament week he finally got a last-minute commitment from AP.

“I remember I was breathless, and that night we went to a Suns game,” Lewkowitz recalled. “At halftime I went up to Al McCoy and asked him to make the announcement that Palmer was coming, and he did so and everyone cheered because Arnie was that big of a deal back then.”

Johnny Miller is the last back-to-back Phoenix Open winner, taking the title in 1974 and 1975.

Johnny Miller is the last back-to-back Phoenix Open winner, taking the title in 1974 and 1975.

Another big story of the 1970s was the entrance of “the Desert Fox,” who because of Johnny Miller’s domination in Phoenix (1974-75), Tucson (1974-76) and Palm Springs (1975-76) got tagged with the nickname. It was in ‘75 that Miller won all three events and was named the PGA TOUR’s player of the year. That also was the year that Miller shot 260 at Phoenix Country Club and won by a record 14 strokes, his 61 in the second round being the second time he had posted that score in the tournament, having first accomplished the feat in 1970, when he was a rookie.

The 1980s were of lesser note, although the crowds at Phoenix Country Club, which had taken over sole possession of the tournament in 1974, were starting to build in clamoring ways. Because of its tight confines on the corner of 7th Street and Thomas Road, getting everyone on the grounds became difficult and getting everyone a vantage spot nearly impossible, said Jim Frazier, the tournament chairman in 1982.

“I remember we’d get crowds of around 25,000 on the weekends, which was difficult on a course that was so flat,” Frazier said. “If you weren’t in the first or second row, you couldn’t see, so people tended to run from one hole to the next, which created a mob-like mentality.”

If there was a name to remember from the 1980s, besides Hal Sutton who captured the last Phoenix Open ever held at Phoenix Country Club, it was Phoenix’s own Tom Purtzer, who won in 1984 when he edged Corey Pavin by a stroke. Believe it or not, it was the first time a local player had won the tournament, the best previous attempt being a runner-up finish by Phoenix’s Johnny Bulla in 1953.

The Modern Era: 1987-present
Without question the accelerated growth of the Phoenix Open and its contributions to charity are direct results of the tournament relocating to the TPC of Scottsdale in 1987. So it was somewhat appropriate that a new face won the first tournament held at the new stadium golf facility. In that regard, Paul Azinger played the pivotal role by winning the first of his 13 PGA TOUR victories at the TPC. What few people remember is that Zinger defeated the defending champ, Sutton.

The most famous hole in golf is so well known, it is simply called 16.

The most famous hole in golf is so well known, it is simply called 16.

What was especially surprising about the present holding off the past at that initial tournament at the TPC Scottsdale was that the crowds had swelled to 257,000 for the week. That was about 70,000 more fans than had ever showed up at Phoenix Country Club.

From the get-go, the TPC Scottsdale turned out to be the envy of the PGA TOUR, with crowds escalating to the point where more than 500,000 fans have attended the tournament in five of the last six gatherings. It might seem somewhat impossible to grasp, but in the 23 years that the tournament has been held at the TPC Scottsdale, the total attendance for that time frame is just shy of 10 million fans.

Along the way they have witnessed some terrific champs at the TPC starting with Mark Calcavecchia, whose lights-out style of play earned him most all of the tournament scoring records for his wins in 1989, 1992 and 2001. And while he holds the tournament record (256 in 2001) and shares the 18-hole record (60 also in ’01), one of his greatest and most little-known feats at the TPC is that in 1989 he played the island, par-5 15th hole in 6-under par for the tournament with two eagles and two birdies.

Other memorable champs from modern times include Sandy Lyle’s win in 1988, when he beat Fred Couples in a two-hole playoff after Freddie hit back-to-back tee shots into the lake at No. 18; Vijay Singh’s playoff victory over local favorite Billy Mayfair in 1995, when the Big Fijian won the first of two titles that include his win in 2003; Mickelson’s win in 1996 over Justin Leonard, a sudden-death victory that some thought dwarfed the Super Bowl that was being contested at the same time right down the road in Tempe; homeboy Steve Jones’ blowout win over Jesper Parnevik in 1997, a loss that the Swede avenged the next year when Jesper smoked his victory cigar while strolling down the 18th fairway; and J.B. Holmes’ win in 2006, when the two-time champ (he also won in 2008) became the only player in the tournament’s history to win as a rookie.

There have been other big winners since the tournament moved to Scottsdale, most notably local charities, which have received $66 million and counting, and the $200 million economic impact the tournament has on the Valley each year. But just as important from a numbers standpoint, at least as far as the Thunderbirds are concerned, is that the Waste Management Phoenix Open is 75 years young and still growing.

This story originally ran in the February issue of MVP Magazine in all of its interactive glory. MVP magazine, the first and only interactive, digital sports magazine can be read at www.mvptoday.com.

Phoenix Open Parking Tips

February 22nd, 2010

Phoenix OpenWith the 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open this week, tournament officials want to ensure that all spectators have an easy commute to-and-from the golf tournament. Officials have created a list of helpful traffic and parking tips for first-timers and seasoned tournament goers to refer to.

Parking – FREE Public Parking is available (with free shuttle access to the tournament gates)

* From the WEST, public parking is at Loop 101 and Hayden Road. Officials recommend that eastbound Loop 101 drivers exit at Hayden, and drive south to enter the parking lot on the west side of the road.

· From the EAST, parking is at WestWorld. Officials recommend that drivers exit the Loop 101 at Raintree and head east to 94th St, then north to Bell Road. Head west on Bell Road into the WestWorld parking lot.

· The FREE shuttles will operate Monday and Tuesday from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm; Wednesday through Saturday from 6:30 am to 11:00 pm; and Sunday from 6:30 am to 6 pm.

Taxis – Taxi cab service will be available just outside of the tournament and Birds Nest entrances throughout the week. Taxis will not be permitted to make roadside pickups, so patrons wishing to utilize taxi services should proceed to the designated taxi stands. Please follow the signs directing you to the taxi stands.

Stop & Drop – Patrons being dropped off at the tournament should access the “Stop and Drop” on Hayden Road just south of Bell Road by heading north on Hayden from Frank Lloyd Wright Boulevard. The “Stop and Drop” is located on the east side of the road in the right hand turn lane. Waiting in the “Stop & Drop” is prohibited. “Stop and Drop” is not available when heading south on Hayden.

Road Closures & Restrictions – To accommodate the large crowds drawn annually to the tournament and Birds Nest, several local road closures and restrictions are required. Area residents can avoid traffic congestion generated by the Waste Management Phoenix Open by using the Loop 101 Freeway instead of surface streets near the TPC Scottsdale.

The following street is closed to all traffic:

* Bell Road from Hayden Road to 82nd Street

The following street is closed to all traffic except event shuttle buses:

* 82nd Street from Bell Road to Princess Drive

The following streets are restricted to residents, resort guests and event attendees with the appropriate passes:

* Greenway-Hayden Road from Frank Lloyd Wright Boulevard to Hayden Road and Union Hills Drive
* Union Hills Drive east of Hayden Road
* East Princess Drive from approximately Scottsdale to Hayden roads
* East Bell Road from approximately Hayden Road to Loop 101
* Perimeter Drive from Bell Road to Union Hills Drive

All areas within the Perimeter Center business park are accessible from the Loop 101 Pima Freeway and Princess Drive or Bell Road.

Spectators heading to the tournament are requested to carpool when possible to reduce congestion. Waste Management Phoenix Open parking locations and travel directions are available at: www.wmphoenixopen.com

Several options are available to residents and visitors seeking up-to-the-minute traffic and parking conditions. They include:

* The “511” information phone line operated by the Arizona Department of Transportation
* The City of Scottsdale’s 312-CITY (2489) information hotline phone line
* The City of Scottsdale’s Web site at www.ScottsdaleAZ.gov. Simply click on the special events link under the “hot topics” area for information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open and other upcoming special events in Scottsdale.

The Waste Management Phoenix Open will be played February 22 – 28, 2010, at the TPC Scottsdale. For more information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit wmphoenixopen.com.

Woman Killed Sunday at NHRA Race at Firebird Raceway

February 21st, 2010

A woman was killed Sunday at the NHRA Arizona Nationals when she was struck by debris from an accident involving Top Fuel driver Antron Brown at Firebird Raceway in Chandler on Sunday. The Gila River Police Department confirmed that an adult female was killed at the Firebird International Raceway during the NHRA races, but they did not release her name.

Brown was racing Troy Buff when Brown’s left rear tire separated from the car and he lost control. The car crossed the center lane and hit the retaining wall as the tire bounded off the track surface.

USA Today reported the woman was a member of a Nostalgia Funny Car team.

The NHRA said Brown was uninjured in the accident.

“We’re racers and we race and I’m ok,” Brown said in a statement released by his team, Don Schumacher Racing. “It all happened so quickly and I want to thank the NHRA Safety Safari for being there so quickly to help get me out of the car and also the track medical team for tending to me so quickly.”

The release said Brown went to Chandler Regional Hospital for further observation.

NHRA officials are investigating the incident.

Sam Saunders, Grandson of Arnold Palmer, Receives Final Phoenix Open Sponsor Exemption

February 18th, 2010

Saunders and Palmer2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open Tournament Chairman David Rauch announced today that Sam Saunders, grandson of legendary golfer Arnold Palmer, has received the eighth and final sponsor exemption for the 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Billy Mayfair, Rickie Fowler, Jonathan Kaye, Rocco Mediate, Alvaro Quiros, Joe Ogilvie and Chris DiMarco received the other sponsor exemptions.

“Sam was a great amateur golfer who is now looking to get his professional career going and we are excited to give him an opportunity,” Rauch said. “And adding Arnold Palmer’s grandson to the field of our 75th anniversary tournament is terrific. Arnie is one of this tournament’s greatest ambassadors and an Honorary Thunderbird.”

The 22-year-old Saunders turned pro last spring after his junior year at Clemson University, and has played in two PGA TOUR events in 2010 on sponsor exemptions, the Bob Hope Classic and the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am , where he finished T-70.

Saunders was a medalist at the 2005 U.S. Junior Amateur, and he won the Florida State High School Golf Championship as a junior at Trinity Prep High School in Winter Park, Fla., where he was a four-time, first-team all-state player.

The Waste Management Phoenix Open will be played February 22 – 28, 2010, at the TPC Scottsdale. For more information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit wmphoenixopen.com.

Chris DiMarco Awarded Phoenix Open Exemption

February 15th, 2010

Phoenix Open2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open Tournament Chairman David Rauch announced today that Chris DiMarco will receive a sponsor exemption for the 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open scheduled, to be played February 22 – 28 at the TPC Scottsdale.

“We’re excited to have Chris return for his 12th consecutive Phoenix Open,” Rauch said. “He’s had great success here and has been a terrific former champion ever since winning here in 2002. Chris is ready to return to the top of the game and we’re excited to help him get there.”

DiMarco has played in 13 total FBR/Phoenix Open tournaments dating back to 1995 and has one win, three top-ten and five top-20 finishes. He currently ranks fifth on the All-time Phoenix Open Money List with $1,672,315 in earnings. At the 2009 FBR Open, DiMarco tied for 32nd and won $35,000.

DiMarco has three PGA TOUR career victories, including the 2000 SEI Pennsylvania Classic, the 2001 Buick Challenge and the 2002 Phoenix Open. In 2009, he made 19 of 29 cuts, had four top-25 finishes, but did not have any top-10 finishes – his fewest top-10s and top-25s since the 1996 season. His best finish of the 2009 season was a T13 at the Northern Trust Open. He finished 2009 at 135th on the PGA TOUR Money List.

Billy Mayfair, Rickie Fowler, Jonathan Kaye, Rocco Mediate, Alvaro Quiros and Joe Ogilvie have all already received sponsor exemptions. The Thunderbirds have one exemption remaining as Robert Karlsson, who previously received the sixth sponsor exemption, has decided not to play in the Waste Management Phoenix Open.

The Waste Management Phoenix Open will be played February 22 – 28, 2010, at the TPC Scottsdale. For more information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit wmphoenixopen.com.

Exclusive First Look at Wrestlemania 26

February 14th, 2010

WrestleMania_XXVIThe WWE web site is offering an exclusive first look at the set up for Wrestlemania 26 when it comes to University of Phoenix Stadium on March 29.

An interactive map shows a number of features that will make up the elaborate set for the event which apparently will be held with an outdoors feel as the roof will be open.

Wrestling fans can also pick up WWE Magazine’s 2010 Wrestlemania Almanac Special Issue when it hits newsstands on Tuesday.

WrestleMania Interactive Map

Ogilvie Receives Sponsor Exemption to Phoenix Open

February 11th, 2010

Phoenix Open2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open Tournament Chairman David Rauch announced Thursday Joe Ogilvie will receive a sponsor exemption for the 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Billy Mayfair, Rickie Fowler, Jonathan Kaye, Rocco Mediate and Alvaro Quiros have all already received sponsor exemptions.

“Joe is a great guy who’s had success on the PGA TOUR,” Rauch said. “We hope he can use the Waste Management Phoenix Open as a launching point for a great 2010 season.”

Ogilvie has played in seven FBR/Phoenix Opens, making three cuts during his 14-year career. His highest finish is a T-12 in 2006. At the 2009 FBR Open, Ogilvie tied for 60th and earned $13,080. His career earnings in Phoenix are $154,765.

A graduate of Duke University, Ogilvie turned professional in 1996. His resume includes four Nationwide Tour victories and one PGA TOUR victory at the 2007 US Bank Championship in Milwaukee. A resident of Austin, Texas, Ogilvie played in 29 events during the 2009 season and finished 132nd on the PGA TOUR Money List. So far in 2010, he has played in three events with his best finish coming at the Bob Hope Classic, T26.

The Waste Management Phoenix Open will be played February 22 – 28, 2010, at the TPC Scottsdale. For more information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit wmphoenixopen.com.

Kim, Love III, Poulter and Yang Committ to Phoenix Open

February 11th, 2010

Phoenix OpenPGA TOUR stars Anthony Kim and Davis Love III, along with European Tour star Ian Poulter and defending PGA Championship winner Y.E. Yang are among the latest players to commit to play in the 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open, which will be played Feb. 22-28 at the TPC Scottsdale.

To date, 18 of the top-30 and 97 of the top-125 money leaders from the 2009 season have committed. A field of 144 players will vie for the $6 million purse, the $1,080,000 first place check and highly-coveted FedEx Cup points.

Steve Stricker (No. 2), Phil Mickelson (No. 3) and Martin Kaymer (No. 6) are the highest ranked players on the Official World Golf Ranking currently in the field. Other top-ranked players who have committed include Ian Poulter (11th), Kenny Perry (13th), Robert Allenby (15th), Sean O’Hair (16th), 2009 U.S. Open winner Lucas Glover (22nd), Zach Johnson (23rd), Camilo Villegas (25th), Anthony Kim (27th) , Y.E. Yang (28th), Alvaro Quiros (29th), Hunter Mahan (32nd) and Nick Watney (33rd).

PGA TOUR members have until 5 p.m. on Friday, Feb. 19, to commit to play in the Phoenix Open. Eligible players are assigned one of 34 PGA TOUR priority ranking categories based on their past performance on TOUR. The field will continue to change as players with higher priority rankings commit to play in the Open.

Other notables to commit include three-time Phoenix Open champion Mark Calcavecchia, 12-time PGA TOUR winner Justin Leonard, 12-time PGA TOUR winner David Toms, former University of Arizona golfer Rory Sabbatini, eight-time PGA TOUR winner Stuart Appleby, 2003 British Open champion Ben Curtis and 2009 Nationwide Tour Player of the Year Michael Sim.

Kenny Perry (2009), J.B. Holmes (2008, 2006), Aaron Baddeley (2007), Phil Mickelson (2005 and 1996), Jonathan Kaye (2004), Tom Lehman (2000), Rocco Mediate (1999), Jesper Parnevik (1998) and Lee Janzen (1993) join Calcavecchia as the other former FBR/Phoenix Open champions in the field thus far.

A number of local golfers also have committed including Michael Allen, Ricky Barnes, Pat Perez, Ted Purdy, Jeff Quinney, Chez Reavie and Kevin Streelman.

Additionally, five of the eight sponsor exemptions have been handed out to Billy Mayfair, Rickie Fowler, Jonathan Kaye, Rocco Mediate and Alvaro Quiros.

For more information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit wmphoenixopen.com.

Martin Kaymer Receives a Commissioner’s Foreign Exemption for Phoenix Open

February 11th, 2010

Phoenix OpenMartin Kaymer, currently ranked No. 6 on the Official World Golf Ranking, has received a Commissioner’s Foreign Exemption for the 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Kaymer’s full-time status on the European Tour requires him to play under an exemption in PGA TOUR tournaments. His high world ranking and desire to compete in the upcoming Waste Management Phoenix Open lead to PGA TOUR Commissioner Tim Finchem to grant this exemption for Kaymer.

“Martin is a tremendous talent with surprisingly strong ties to Scottsdale,” said 2010 Waste Management Phoenix Open Tournament Chairman David Rauch. “He has an apartment just down the road from the TPC Scottsdale and is a member at Whisper Rock Golf Club. We are really excited for him to make his debut here in Scottsdale and hope this will lead to more PGA TOUR appearances.”

A full-time member of the European Tour, the 25-year-old German vaulted from 14th to 6th on the Official World Golf Ranking after his win at the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship, his second victory in three years at Abu Dhabi Golf Club.

In 2007 Kaymer became the first German to win the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year award, and in just three-plus seasons he has accumulated five European Tour wins.

Kaymer finished 3rd in the 2009 European Tour Race to Dubai final standings despite missing two months after breaking three bones in his foot last summer. He currently ranks 2nd in the 2010 European Tour Race to Dubai standings.

In the United States, Kaymer has played in 19 events, with his best finish coming at last year’s PGA Championship at Hazeltine, where he finished T6.

The Waste Management Phoenix Open will be played February 22 – 28, 2010, at the TPC Scottsdale. For more information on the Waste Management Phoenix Open, visit wmphoenixopen.com.

Fiesta Bowl to Honor College Hall of Famers

January 4th, 2010

Fiesta Bowl

Celebrating the legendary careers of 18 of the best to ever grace the gridiron, The National Football Foundation & College Hall of Fame (NFF) highlighted that the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl will continue its tradition Monday of showcasing the newest class of inductees into the College Football Hall of Fame during its annual BCS match-up.

“It is a privilege for the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl to honor the newest members of the College Football Hall of Fame and all their accomplishments,” said John Junker, president & CEO of the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. “Their presence adds to our year-end celebration of college football and its rich history and pageantry.”

The Hall of Famers will participate in the pre- game festivities while being introduced on the field in front of the fans and a national audience before the 6:00 p.m. (MST) Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game on Fox Sports. The 2009-10 National Hall of Fame Salute marks the fifth year of the tradition, building on a long-standing relationship between the two organizations and utilizing the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl’s national stage to hold up greatest players and coaches in the history of the game.

“We are excited to continue our partnership with the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl in highlighting the accomplishments of the most recent class of Hall of Famers,” said NFF President & CEO Steven J. Hatchell. “The leadership of Alan Young, John Junker, and the entire Tostitos Fiesta Bowl family with this initiative allows us to further showcase the careers of the best the college gridiron has ever seen.”

2009 COLLEGE FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME CLASS

PLAYERS

* PERVIS ATKINS – HB, New Mexico State (1959-60)
* TIM BROWN – WR, Notre Dame (1984-87)
* CHUCK CECIL – DB, Arizona (1984-87)
* ED DYAS – FB, Auburn (1958-60)
* MAJOR HARRIS – QB, West Virginia (1987-89)
* GORDON HUDSON – TE, Brigham Young (1980-83)
* WILLIAM LEWIS# – C, Harvard (1892-93)
* WOODROW LOWE – LB, Alabama (1972-75)
* KEN MARGERUM – WR, Stanford (1977-80)
* STEVE McMICHAEL – DT, Texas (1976-79)
* CHRIS SPIELMAN – LB, Ohio State (1984-87)
* LARRY STATION – LB, Iowa (1982-85)
* PAT SWILLING – DE, Georgia Tech (1982-85)
* GINO TORRETTA – QB, Miami (Fla.) (1989-92)
* CURT WARNER – RB, Penn State (1979-82)
* GRANT WISTROM – DE, Nebraska (1994-97)

# Selection from the FBS Veterans Committee, deceased

COACHES

* DICK MacPHERSON – 111-73-5 (.601) – Massachusetts (1971-77), Syracuse (1981-90)
* JOHN ROBINSON – 132-77-4 (.629) – Southern California (1976-82, 1993-97), Nevada-Las Vegas (1999-2004)

Frys.com Open Raises $670,500 For Charity

October 28th, 2009

Fry’s Electronics Executive Vice President and Founder Kathy Kolder announced today that the 2009 Frys.com Open, an official event on the PGA TOUR, raised a total of $670,500 from tournament proceeds which will be distributed to a number of designated charities.

“The 2009 edition of the Frys.com Open was absolutely fantastic,” Kolder said.  “We had an exciting finish and have a great champion in Troy Matteson.  We couldn’t have asked for a better week and we are thrilled that we exceeded our charitable contribution from last year.”

The tournament raised $600,000 in 2008, and in its three year history has raised more than $1.7 million for charity.

Fry's Open logoA majority of the money has already been earmarked for specific charities.  The American Institute of Mathematics (AIM), a Palo Alto, Calif.-based organization whose chief goal is to expand the frontiers of mathematical knowledge by funding focused research projects, conferences and the development of an on-line mathematics library, will receive $305,000.  Thunderbirds Charities, the non-profit arm of The Thunderbirds, will receive $150,000; while $100,000 will be donated to Kirk Triplett’s Fore Adoption Foundation.

Other beneficiaries include the World Golf Foundation ($50,000), Helping Hands Housing Services ($25,000), the Boys and Girls Club of Scottsdale ($10,000), St. Mary’s Food Bank ($10,000) and the Southwest Section PGA Foundation ($10,000).  The remaining $10,500 will be distributed to other local Valley charities.

This was the second straight year the Frys.com Open was decided in a playoff.  Matteson set a new PGA TOUR 36-hole scoring record with consecutive 9-under 61’s in the second and third rounds, and held off young guns Rickie Fowler and Jamie Lovemark with a birdie on the second playoff hole to earn his second career PGA TOUR victory (his first win came in the 2006 Frys.com Open in Las Vegas).

The Frys.com Open is part of the PGA TOUR’s Fall Series and features a full-field (132 players), four-day tournament with a $5 million purse and $900,000 payout to the winner.  For more information go to www.frysopengolf.com.