Tiger Woods commits For The Barclays

Tiger Woods is the Legend of the golf. He has lot of prize of golf. He is playing the first FedEx Cup playoff event with hopes that it's not his last.

Woods on Thursday officially entered The Barclays, which starts Aug. 26. It's the first of four playoff events that conclude with the Tour Championship and a $10-million prize to the winner of the yearlong FedEx Cup competition.

Woods is No. 108 in the standings, and can go further down the list depending on the Wyndham Championship. Only the top 125 players are eligible for The Barclays, which is at Ridgewood Country Club in Paramus,



Tiger Woods doesn't look so invincible. Last week Rory McIlroy talked about it; that the Europeans would love to face him in the Ryder Cup.

Luke Donald, who's No. 12 on the current European Ryder Cup point list, added this in a Chicago Sun Times story to the question: Is Woods still the intimidating opponent he once was?

''Probably not. Intimidation comes with playing well, and he hasn't been playing well. Distractions off the course can affect you on the course.''



The Troubles of Tiger Woods

For Woods, those are shocking, astronomical numbers that gave rise to speculation, unthinkable a few months ago, that maybe he doesn’t even belong on the United States Ryder Cup team this fall. When the FedEx playoffs begin at the Barclays this week at Ridgewood Country Club in New Jersey, Woods will carry a rank of 108, his lowest ever.

Athletes go through bad spells all the time, and golf has provided some disquieting examples of players who dived into a slump and never pulled out. David Duval gave some signs of twitching back to life at the United States Open last year, but essentially, he has never been the same since winning the British Open in 2001. For a while, he couldn’t even get off the tee. Much the same thing happened to Ian Baker-Finch; after winning the British Open in 1991, he went into such an embarrassing downward spiral that he retired from competitive golf a few years later.

No one thinks that Woods’s collapse is permanent, but even so, we have seldom seen anything quite like it in sports. What’s startling is not so much that he has fallen, but that he has fallen so far and from such an empyrean height — from a level of skill and success that no golfer had ever attained. It’s as if one of the gods were now stumbling among us, dazed and vulnerable.

The lesson has clearly not been lost on Woods’s competitors, who are no longer intimidated by him in quite the same way — they sense he’s mortal, after all — and no longer cede him an automatic advantage.

A few experts say that Woods’s woes are all technical — that his swing is too flat, that he’s moving his head too much. A teaching professional named Don Trahan, or the Surge, as he calls himself (short for swing surgeon), recently posted an online video in which he claimed he could fix Woods’s swing in a half-hour. All Woods needs to do is widen his stance, firm up his knees and limit his backswing — swing more like Don Trahan, that is.

But most of his fellow pros seem to think that Woods’s problems are in his head, not in his mechanics, and that his game won’t return until he straightens out his personal life. Brad Faxon said as much in a recent radio interview. This is a very discouraging notion for those of us who love to play golf precisely because it’s an escape from the rest of life and who would much rather work on our short game than, say, our relationship with our boss or our spouse. But we also know that in golf as in no other sport, your mind can mess with you — especially with those insidious self-doubting thoughts that attack you midswing.

Not the least of Woods’s woes, it would seem, is that he is too much alone inside his own brain these days. He is estranged from his wife, even from some friends, and he can hardly go anywhere or see anyone without attracting a swarm of the curious and finger-pointing. He’s a prisoner inside his Florida compound. And now that he has split with his last swing coach, Hank Haney, there is no one to check or to validate the cloud of swing thoughts at once paranoid (“I’m cupping my wrist!”) or falsely hopeful (“If I just hold my spine angle!”) that invariably descend on the golfer who is doing badly.

For Woods, standing alone on the range, with nothing else to do and no one else he particularly wants to see, not wanting to pick up a paper or turn on ESPN, lest he read more speculation about what’s wrong with his game, it must seem sometimes as if he were hitting shots in the dark.

Woods’s recent history is a reminder of how very difficult golf is and of how hard it is even for the best players to sustain a winning game. It’s a reminder, too, of how much good golf depends on confidence — on feeling good about yourself, as the self-help gurus say. Good shots inspire more good ones. Bad shots, as any duffer will tell you, lead to even worse ones: the oil starts to spurt up there in your brainpan, the gears begin to screech and the guy working the levers that direct your arms, shift your weight, cock your wrists, throws up his hands in dismay.

What’s unusual about Woods is that until recently, he seems not to have had this common experience, or at least not to the degree experienced by others. His stumble might have happened even if he had not made such a mess of his marriage and his reputation — Woods is edging up on 35, after all, the age after which Jack Nicklaus won only four more majors. But for whatever reason, he is now playing a kind of golf that looks more nearly like everyone else’s, and the experience seems to have discombobulated him.

To be a god may not be such a great thing after all. If we didn’t learn that from mythology, we know it now from seeing what use Woods made of his godly perks. But to suddenly become a mortal after being awarded locker room privileges on Olympus is surely no fun. Woods may recover his game, but that most exclusive of clubs won’t have him back.





Lauryn Hill Back To Rock The Bells: A Timeline

Lauryn Hill's is a rock star of America. In 1999, the West Orange, New Jersey native made her last debut on the charts when she released “Turn Your Lights Down Low,” which featured Bob Marley. The song reached No. 49 on the charts.
The former Fugees singer spent the majority of the 2000s not performing or recording any music or releasing many albums. The last studio album she recorded was her hugely-successful and critically-acclaimed The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill in 1998, which featured the chart topping “Doo Wop (That Thing).”
He Is making a much-heralded return to the stage — and the spotlight — at this year's Rock the Bells Tour. However, die-hard fans of the Grammy-winning singer/MC hope the appearance breaks L-Boogie's decade-long tradition of mounting rare and spotty shows.


Hill, who shot to fame as a member of the pioneering hip-hip trio the Fugees, became a critically-acclaimed media darling and the subject of arguably cultish fan worship after the breakout success of her solo debut, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Yet, in the wake of the chart-topping success of Miseducation and her then record-setting five Grammy wins in 1999, the artist began to withdraw from the world stage. Sure, she rocked the VMAs, scored a Best Dressed nod from Vogue, and continued to nab a bevy of music trophies.
However, by 2001 Hill had nearly vanished from the scene. She released the live album MTV Unplugged No. 2.0 in 2002 but since then, public sightings of Hill have been relegated to the odd festival appearance.
»Hill's solo debut, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill snagged five trophies at the 41st Annual Grammy Awards. Hill chose to perform the album cut "To Zion" with Carlos Santana instead of hit singles like "Doo Wop (That Thing)" because "that was a song that I'd never had the opportunity to perform [live]."
» David Bowie introduced Lauryn Hill at the 1999 MTV Video Music Awards. The singer and MC ripped a medley including "Lost Ones" and "Everything Is Everything."
»Hill appeared on the revamped Smokin' Grooves Tour with The Roots and onetime tourmates Outkast in 2002. She played an acoustic set and eschewed much of her hit catalog. "A lot of her diehard fans are thrown off and hope she would go back to doing one Fugees song or one song off of [The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill]," The Roots' ?uestlove said at the time. "But I've seen people crying [when she sings]."
»At a 2003 concert at the Vatican, Hill blasted the Catholic church for the institution's alleged role in widespread sexual abuse scandals involving priests. "I realize some of you may be offended by what I'm saying, but what do you say to the families who were betrayed by the people in whom they believed?" Hill reportedly said.
»Hill reunited with the Fugees for a September concert in Brooklyn thrown by comedian Dave Chappelle. The show is later featured in the documentary "Dave Chappelle's Block Party."
»Buzz about a possible Fugees reunion ramped up when Hill, Pras and Wyclef played a 2006 Grammy party concert after surprising the crowd with a set at the 2005 BET Awards.
»Hill surprised fans once again with a set at the 2006 Rock the Bells festival in California. Sporting a yellow hoodie and big hair, L-Boogie spit "Doo Wop (That Thing)," "Lost Ones" and the Fugees' "How Many Mics."
»Hill made headlines with a 2007 free show in Brooklyn. Donning garish makeup, bold jewelry and a leather fringe vest in late-summer heat, Hill scatted her way through sometimes incomprehensible versions of her songs.
» Hill co-headlined a 2010 New Zealand festival and sang "Doo Wop" dressed in a leather jacket and sun bonnet. The star was reportedly more cheerful and happy about hitting the stage than in previous shows.

Demi Lovato has brought a house

The Teen Celebrity Has Brought A House



(The above Image of the House which has brought by Demi Lovato)

Instead of receiving gifts for her 18th birthday, Disney star Demi Lovato gave a huge present to her family: a new house.
"I just bought a house," Lovato told People. "For me to give [that] to my family on my birthday, that was the best present."
Lovato said she purchased a Mediterranean style home outside of Los Angeles. She plans to keep close to her family by living in a house on the property's backyard. "It's got pretty much everything you could possibly imagine in it," she said. "It's the most beautiful, homey-feeling house. I love it."
"I learned my lesson," said. "It's not very much fun when you break up in a public relationship. So, maybe next time keep a secret. ...I'll go public when I marry someone one day."
Even though she is just 16 years old, Demi Lovato has purchased her own home! The $1.88 million dollar house is located in the Touca Lake area of Los Angeles. Oh yea and her neighbors are actor Jason Presley, and Disney Stars Ashley Tisdale, Hilary Duff and Vanessa Hudgens. Crazy!

Right down the street are the Disney Studios so it’ll be really easy for Demi to get to work every day.
Congrats Demi
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