Posts tagged Round
Lott Paces Wildcats in Second Round
Apr 3rd
April 3, 2011
Liz Murphey Second Round Results (Individuals)
LEXINGTON, Ky. – Sophomore Heather Lott led the Kentucky women’s golf team on Saturday in Athens, Ga., at the Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic held at the University of Georgia Golf Course (par 72, 6,335 yards). The Wildcats, as a team, improved by four strokes from their first round score and finished at 15-over par to enter the final round in 20th place.
Lott, a native of Baton Rouge, La., birdied each of her first two holes, the par 5 17th hole and the par 5 18th hole. Lott led UK in its last tournament, the LSU Tiger Golf Classic, with a 31st-place finish.
“We got off to a better start today with some solid pars and birdies early on,” UK head coach Golda Johansson Borst said. “Unfortunately, we struggled to keep our momentum going through the whole round. Sophomore Heather Lott really stepped up for us today. She made some very important putts throughout her round to score 75. We worked hard after the round on what we needed to build our confidence back up and we will be ready to go out and play better tomorrow.”
Sophomore Ashleigh Albrecht, who led Kentucky after its first round, fired a 9-over par 81 on Saturday. Fellow sophomore Betsie Johnson improved by six strokes from her first round and recorded a 7-over par 79. Freshman Liz Breed carded her second consecutive round of 8-over par and junior Ashlee Rose finished at 11-over par for the round.
The best-ball format used at the Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic counts each team’s low score from each hole during the round, not the low four total scores of the day. All five players from each team play together, as opposed to seeded players from three or four teams playing together. The individual champion will still be determined as the player with the best relation-to-par score over the 54 holes played this weekend.
The Wildcats are scheduled to tee off on the 16th hole on Sunday at 8:30 a.m. ET.
For live results of Sunday’s final round and for all Kentucky women’s golf news go to UKathletics.com.
Liz Murphey Collegiate Classic
April 1-3, 2011
University of Georgia Golf Course (Par 72 – 6,335 yards)
Second round
Ashleigh Albrecht 75, 81 – 156 (+12)
Heather Lott 81, 75 – 156 (+12)
Liz Breed 80, 80 – 160 (+16)
Ashlee Rose 81, 83 – 164 (+20)
Betsie Johnson 85, 79 – 164 (+20)
KENTUCKY 307, 303 – 610 (+34)
From www.ukathletics.com
Men’s Golf In 13th After Grub Mart Second Round
Mar 29th
GADSDEN, Ala.–Morehead State men’s golf is in 13th place after the first round of the Grub Mart-Young Oil Intercollegiate. MSU shot a 609 (310-299) in the first 36 holes of the event, improving by 11 strokes over the round one score.
Senior Alex Misback leads the Eagles with a 146 (71-75), placing him in a tie for 24th overall. Jared Flanery is tied for 42nd with a 150 (77-73). Flanery had 14 pars and Misback had 13 to tie for the most and second most pars in rouns one competition.
Michael Brown and Tommy Carrico carded a 156 (81-75) and a 157 (81-76) respectively. Brown is tied for 66th overall and Carrico is tied for 68th. Sam Zirnheld is tied for 75th with a 159 (82-77), rounding out the Eagle top five.
Austin Peay leads the field with a 569 anchored by first-place Dustin Korte’s 136. Jacksonville State (second-571); Eastern Kentucky (third-575); Tennessee Tech (12th-596) and UT Martin (14th-611) are the other Ohio Valley Conference teams at the event.
The event is scheduled to conclude Tuesday.
From www.msueagles.com
Opportunity for all visitors to receive a free round of golf
Mar 26th
Every visitor to the National Golf Show will receive a free round of golf at the fantastic Nailcote Hall.
The midlands venue hosts the Open Par 3 Championships and annual Farmfoods British Par 3 Championship, meaning the complimentary rounds will see golfers treading the same fairways as the great Tony Jacklin, a host of former Ryder Cup players, European Tour stars and celebrities such as Sir Alex Ferguson, Jasper Carrott and Len Goodman.
To collect their free round all visitors have to do is visit Nailcote Hall on stand S24.
And the complimentary visit could be put to good use as practice for the new series of Open Par 3 Championships taking place at Nailcote Hall, the winners of which will be rewarded with a place alongside top professionals in the Farmfoods British Par 3 Championship.
Golfers will also have the chance of winning a fantastic golf break at Nailcote Hall as a daily prize on the show’s nearest-the-pin competition.
Free golf for every visitor makes the golfing extravaganza even better value for money with advance tickets costing just £7.50 and coming with a host of exclusive promotions to redeem at the event including a £50 voucher from Your Golf Travel.com and a further 10 per cent off the Watch Hut’s show prices.
The National Golf Show takes place from April 15-17 and a strong focus on visitor participation will mean golfers are greeted by a host of opportunities to swing a club, with free tuition from fully qualified coaches and the chance to win fantastic prizes on a variety of innovative fun and games among the show’s main features.
All the latest equipment from big brands will be available to test and buy as well as the latest training aids and apparel, with the show bringing together all elements of the golfing world.
For more information or to buy tickets call 0844 581 0801 or go to www.nationalgolfshow.com.
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- Dartmouth Golf & C.C. freezes VAT for first 3 months of 2011
- Couples compiles bogey free round to lead at Riviera
From the19thholereport.com
Wie falters in second round of Kia Classic
Mar 26th
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Wie falters in second round of Kia Classic
By Ann Miller
POSTED: 03:23 p.m. HST, Mar 25, 2011
CITY OF INDUSTRY, Calif.>>Hawaii’s Michelle Wie bogeyed three of her final four holes today to fall into a tie for seventh and far back of leader Jiyai Shin halfway through the Kia Classic.
There was a 3-hour rain delay this morning at Industry Hills Golf Club. The second round is scheduled to finish tomorrow and the third round will start after the cut is made. The tournament is scheduled to finish Sunday.
Wie began the day at 5 under par and two off the lead. She started on the back nine, bogeyed the 10th and birdied the 11th. A bogey on the 15th left her 4 under at the turn.
She birdied Nos. 2 and 4 to get to 6 under and grab a share of fourth, but bogeys at Nos. 6, 7 and 9 gave her a 2-over-par 75. At 3-under 143, she had a share of seventh when she finished, with with about half the field still playing their second round at 6 p.m. local time.
Shin, ranked No. 2 in the world, finished soon after Wie and shot a 9-under 64. At 12 under for the tournament, she has a six-shot lead.
Hilo’s Kimberly Kim shot 77 and is at 6-over 152.
From www.staradvertiser.com
OU in Third Heading Into Final Round in Vegas
Mar 9th
March 8, 2011
NORMAN, Okla. – Coming off of its best round in program history Monday, the Oklahoma women’s golf team fired a second-round 292 (+4) Tuesday at the UNLV Spring Invitational at the par-72 Boulder Creek Golf Club in Boulder City, Nev., and stands in third placeamong 15 teams with a 36-hole total of 574 (-2). The Sooners trail frontrunner Pepperdine by 11 strokes and second-place BYU by nine.
Oklahoma’s 36-hole score broke the program record previously set at this past fall’s Susie Maxwell Berning Classic by one stroke.
“The girls played solid yet again,” said OU head coach Veronique Drouin. “We didn’t make as many putts as yesterday. We had plenty of opportunities for birdies but didn’t convert.”
The Sooners were led by another career-best performance by junior Brooke Collins. Collins shot a second-round 70 (-2), besting her previous career low of 71 which she set in Monday’s round. Starting in only her second tournament of the season, Collins is tied for fifth place at -3. She trails leader Kelsey Vines of BYU by five strokes, while three golfers are tied in second at -4.
“I’m excited about how I’ve been striking the ball this week and have really enjoyed playing,” said Collins. “It’s been a blessing to be back in the lineup and compete. I’m looking forward to what our team can accomplish this week and this season.”
Collins’ round featured a pair of birdies, as well as an eagle on the par-5 16th hole. It was the Sooners’ first eagle of the season and the first of Collins’ collegiate career.
Tied with Collins in fifth place is Sooner teammate Ellen Mueller, who shot a 2-over 74. The senior recorded three early bogeys before bouncing back with a birdie on the ninth hole and pars on every hole on the back nine. Mueller tied a career-best in Monday’s round when she shot a 67 (-4).
Team Leaderboard | Player Leaderboard | Live Stats | Boulder Creek Golf Club
Freshman Chirapat “Ja” Jao-Javanil shot a 76 (+4) to finish the day in 13th place out of 85 individuals. The Thailand native shot a career-low 68 (-4) in Monday’s round and sits at an even 144 through two rounds.
Anne-Catherine Tanguay, who began the day in 39th place, shot an even-par 72 to climb up the leaderboard to 21st with an overall score of 148 (+4). Freshman Emily Collins stands in 44th place with a 154 (+10).
The Sooners are coming off of the lowest round in program history. Monday’s 282 (-6) broke the previous record by five strokes. Drouin hopes the team continues to break records and finish strong in the final round.
“We still have 18 holes left,” said Drouin. “We will have plenty of opportunities that I’m certain we’ll take advantage of as we look to end the tournament on a solid note. Anything can happen.”
First-place Pepperdine shot 10 under par in the second round and has four golfers in the field’s top eight. The Sooners will be paired with the Waves and BYU in Wednesday’s final round, which tees off at 10:50 a.m. CT. Live stats will be available at Golfstat.com.
Round 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Out 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 In Total Par 5 3 4 4 4 4 4 3 5 36 4 4 3 5 4 4 5 3 4 36 72 C. Jao-Javanil 5 2 6 4 4 5 4 3 5 38 4 4 3 5 5 5 5 3 4 38 76 E. Mueller 5 3 5 5 4 4 4 4 4 38 4 4 3 5 4 4 5 3 4 36 74 E. Collins 6 3 4 5 4 5 5 4 5 41 4 4 3 6 4 4 4 3 4 36 77 B. Collins 5 3 4 4 4 5 3 2 5 35 4 4 3 5 4 4 3 4 4 35 70 A. Tanguay 5 3 4 4 4 3 4 4 5 36 4 4 3 5 4 5 4 3 4 36 72
From www.soonersports.com
Peters Leads EMU Women’s Golf into First Place After Round One
Mar 5th
Click Here for Complete Results.
Click Here for Live Scoring.
RIO VERDE, Ariz. (EMUEagles.com) – Eastern Michigan University senior Darby Peters (Lake Orion, Mich.-Lake Orion) equalled a season-low with a two-under par 70 in the opening round of the Ninth Annual Rio Verde Invitational at Rio Verde Country Club Friday, March 4. The Lake Orion, Mich. native is tied with the University of Michigan’s Yugene Lee, two strokes ahead of the University of Akron’s and teammates Robyn Scott (Auckland, New Zealand-Westlake Girls-Texas Tech Univ.) and Sarah Johnson (Wixom, Mich.-Walled Lake Central).
In the team standings, Eastern Michigan recorded a score of 294 for a commanding six-stroke lead for first place heading into the second round of play Saturday. The opening round total is three strokes better than any of the Eagles’ 19 rounds in 2009, bettering a 297 in the second round of the Challenge at Onion Creek, Nov. 1-2, 2010.
The Michigan Wolverines are in second place with a 300 on the par 72, 6,255-yard White Wing Golf Course, while Penn State recorded a 306 to end the day in third. Northern Arizona (309) and Cincinnati (312) rounded out the top five of the 17-team tournament.
Redshirt freshman Alyssa Kwon (Richmond Hills, Ontario-Richmond Hills) and freshman Usanee Laopattananont (Bangplee, Thailand-Thai Christian School) rounded out the EMU lineup with an 80 for 41st place.
Round two of the Rio Verde Invitational will begin at 8 a.m. Daily updates can be found at EMUEagles.com and the Rio Verde can be tracked with live statistics at Golfstat.com
Eastern Michigan Individual Results:
Pl. Player Scores
t-1. Darby Peters 70
t-3. Robyn Scott 72
t-3. Sarah Johnson 72
t-41. Alyssa Kwon 80
t-41. Usanee Laopattananont 80
Team Scores:
Pl. Team Scores
1. Eastern Michigan 294
2. Michigan 300
3. Penn State 306
4. Northern Arizona 309
5. Cincinnati 312
6. Toledo 313
7. Missouri State 314
8. Western Michigan 315
t-9. Akron 316
t-9. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi 316
11. Southern Illinois 318
12. No. 49 Ark.-Little Rock 319
t-13. Ball State 323
t-13. Bradley 323
15. Xavier 326
16. Bowling Green 337
17. Ohio 344
From www.emueagles.com
Golf: Spencer Levin Leads US PGA Tour Honda Classic 2011 After 1st Round
Mar 4th
Golf: Spencer Levin Leads US PGA Tour Honda Classic 2011 After 1st Round
PGA Tour Logo
American golfer, Spencer Levin, is holding a one shot lead after shooting 67 in the opening round of the US PGA Tour Honda Classic 2011 at Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, on Thursday 3rd March 2011.
Levin, who’s score was good enough for three under par, leads from a cluster of five players on -2 who shot 68, including Stuart Appleby (Aus), Greg Chalmers (Aus), Charl Schwartzel (SA), Kyle Stanley (USA) and Y.E. Yang (Kor).
British golfer Lee Westwood was a little off the pace, shooting a level par round of 70.
However, all of the 20 players competing have three more rounds to make it to the top of the leaderboard: there is a lot of golf left to be played in Florida before the Honda Classic 2011 winner is decided.
USPGA Tour – Honda Classic 2011, Leaderboard, Round 1PosNameNatRd 1Score1LevinUS67-32ApplebyAus68-22ChalmersAus68-22SchwartzelSA68-22StanleyUS68-22YangKor68-27KucharUS69-17OvertonUS69-19BarnesUS7009BettencourtUS7009CouchUS7009HaasUS7009LeonardUS7009O’HairUS7009PetterssonSwe7009PriceZim7009SendenAus7009ThatcherUS7009WestwoodEng70020HenryUS711
The USPGA Tour Honda Classic 2011 continues at the PGA National Champion Course, Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, United States, over four days between 3rd and 6th March 2011.
From theglobalherald.com
Lee-Bentham paces Women’s Golf in round one at Bruin Wave Invitational
Mar 1st
Feb. 28, 2011
SANTA CLARITA, Calif. — Freshman Rebecca Lee-Bentham carded a season-low 1-under-par 71 to pace the Texas Women’s Golf team in round one of the Bruin Wave Invitational at Robinson Ranch Club’s 6,282-yard Valley Course on Monday. Lee-Bentham is tied for sixth place entering Tuesday’s second round.
The Longhorns shot a collective 15-over 303 in the opening round and ended the day tied for fifth place and 22 strokes off the pace of tournament leader UCLA (281, -7).
Teeing off first for UT as the fifth player in the lineup, Lee-Bentham found four birdie opportunities on the 12th, 13th, 17th and 18th holes to make the turn at a blemish-free 4-under. Bogeys on holes one, five, seven and eight returned Lee-Bentham to even par, but a clutch fifth birdie on the ninth hole – her final of the day – resulted in Texas’ lone sub-par round of the afternoon.
Sophomores Haley Stephens and Madison Pressel are tied for 31st place at 4-over 76. Stephens’ scorecard contained three birdies, five bogeys and one double while Pressel’s reflected two birdies, four bogeys and a double bogey.
Sophomore Katelyn Sepmoree (80, +8) trails Stephens and Pressel by two strokes and is tied for 57th. Junior Nicole Vandermade is in 83rd place with an 87 (+15).
The Longhorns are scheduled to tee off tomorrow morning at 10:30 a.m. Central on the first hole. They will be paired alongside eighth-place Stanford (304, +16) and ninth-place Oklahoma State (305, +17).
Team Standings (through round one)
1. UCLA – 281 (-7)
2. Arizona – 292 (+4)
3. San Diego State – 295 (+5)
4. Pepperdine – 296 (+8)
T5. TEXAS – 303 (+15)
T5. BYU – 303 (+15)
T5. UNLV – 303 (+15)
8. Stanford – 304 (+16)
9. Oklahoma State – 305 (+17)
10. New Mexico State – 309 (+21)
11. Long Beach State – 309 (+21)
12. New Mexico – 311 (+23)
13. CSU-Northridge – 314 (+26)
14. Washington State – 319 (+31)
15. Oregon State – 321 (+33)
Top 11 Individuals (through round one)
T1. Glory Yang, UCLA – 69 (-3)
T1. Marlin Enarsson, San Diego State – 69 (-3)
T3. Stephanie Kono, UCLA – 70 (-2)
T3. Lee Lopez, UCLA – 70 (-2)
T3. Isabelle Boineau, Arizona – 70 (-2)
T6. Rebecca Lee-Bentham, TEXAS – 71 (-1)
T6. Danielle Kang, Pepperdine – 71 (-1)
T8. Therese Koelbaek, UNLV – 72 (E)
T8. Ani Gulugian, UCLA – 72 (E)
T8. Kelsey Vines, BYU – 72 (E)
T8. Simone Hoey, Long Beach State – 72 (E)
Texas Individuals (through round one)
T31. Haley Stephens – 76 (+4)
T31. Madison Pressel – 76 (+4)
T57. Katelyn Sepmoree – 80 (+8)
83. Nicole Vandermade – 87 (+15)
From www.texassports.com
Day in Review: Round 3, Accenture Match Play
Feb 26th
MARANA, Ariz. — The youngsters go home but the old guy keeps going. One reigning major champ is eliminated but the other one moves on. And the bombers set up a quarterfinal showdown. Just your average day at the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship.
BEST MATCH: The Martin Kaymer-Hunter Mahan match was a slugfest between two 20somethings. Don’t be surprised if you see a rematch or two at a Ryder Cup someday. Kaymer had seven birdies on his card; Mahan had three birdies, two more conceded, and an eagle. Neither player held more than a two-hole lead, and Kaymer stormed back by claiming three of the last four holes to win. “A fantastic match,” Kaymer said. “It was all about birdies and not making bogeys and giving holes away.”
BEST MATCH 2: Ryan Moore posted six birdies and an eagle at the par-4 15th when he drove the green. Nick Watney had nine birdies. It’s no surprise that their match was the only one that went into overtime, with Moore winning on the 19th hole with, you guessed it, a birdie. “Oh man, I’m exhausted,” Moore said afterward. “It was one of those matches, really nobody should have lost. We both played great all day long.”
BIGGEST SURPRISE: Bubba Watson’s decisive win over Geoff Ogilvy might have raised a couple of eyebrows. Miguel Angel Jimenez’s 7 and 6 domination of Ben Crane was a surprise, too, given that Crane was coming off his own trouncing of Rory McIlroy the day before. But really, who gave Y.E. Yang much of a chance against Graeme McDowell, who cruised through the first two rounds. Yang ended the match by holing out from the intermediate rough for birdie at the par-3 16th. “It feels great to win over Graeme,” Yang said.
THE OTHER GUY DIDN’T FEEL SO GREAT: McDowell said he was frustrated with his game all week, but his wins over Heath Slocum and Ross Fisher masked the problems. “When I got here, my game swing didn’t seem to be there Monday and Tuesday.” McDowell acknowledged. Still, he reached the third round for the first time in five starts in this tournament. “My best-ever performance in this tournament,” he said. “Not saying much for me.”
JUST CAN’T WATCH: Jens Beck is the manager for both Geoff Ogilvy and Bubba Watson. But when the two squared off Friday, he was nowhere in sight. “He didn’t come out today,” Watson said. “He didn’t want to watch.” Beck considered it a no-win situation because he couldn’t have a rooting interest. But he’ll back Saturday to watch Watson take on J.B. Holmes.
SPEAKING OF THE TWO BOMBERS: Watson ranks first on TOUR in driving distance. Holmes ranks third. The matchup of the big hitters that we didn’t get in the second round (Watson vs. No. 2 Dustin Johnson, who suffered a first-round upset) has been adequately replaced by this quarterfinal matchup on Saturday. “We’ll get out there and see who hits it the furthest,” Holmes said. By the way, Holmes has four of the five longest drives of the week — including a 400-yarder that he cranked out in the first round. But Watson had the longest drive on Friday, a 359-yarder at the 13th hole that led to eagle.
SPEAKING OF BUBBA: He’s played just 43 holes in the first three rounds. Only one player in tournament history has needed less holes through the first three rounds (Paul Casey’s 42 last year). Watson won eight holes against Ogilvy on Friday. In the Aussie’s stellar career at this event, he has never lost that many holes in an 18-hole match. Of course, Friday’s loss was just his fourth in 24 career matches.
KIDS SAY GOODBYE: The three youngest players left in the Sweet 16 — 17-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero, 22-year-old American Rickie Fowler and 23-year-old Aussie Jason Day — were eliminated Friday. “I am delighted with the way I played this week,” said Manassero about his first Accenture Match Play start. “And I’m delighted to go up to Friday.”
AS FOR THE OLD MAN: Miguel Angel Jimenez advanced to the quarterfinal for the first time in 11 years. Should the 47-year-old Spaniard win this week, he’d be the oldest Accenture Match Play champion and the oldest winner of any World Golf Championships event. “I’m 47. I’m not that young,” Jimenez said. “But if I keep playing well and give myself chances on the golf course …”
TWO HOLES TOO MUCH: Jason Day was able to close out his first two matches without having to play the 17th and 18th holes. On Friday, the Accenture Match Play rookie had to travel into uncharted territory. It was not pretty. He was 1 up on Holmes going into 17 but bogeyed the final two holes to lose the match.
FROM DAY TO NIGHT: In beating McIlroy on Thursday, Crane won eight holes and lost none. In losing to Jimenez on Friday, Crane lost eight holes and won none. In the last eight years at this event, no other player has failed to win a hole following a round in which he failed to lose a single hole.
NEVER TRAILED: J.B. Holmes and Luke Donald are the only players left who have not trailed at any point during their first three matches.
FINAL WORD: “It was good. I don’t understand the unitone … solid, one color head-to-toe. I don’t understand those outfits. I thought he had a nice-looking outfit today. A lot of San Diego Chargers were cheering for him.” — Matt Kuchar, when asked whether he was disappointed that opponent Rickie Fowler wasn’t wearing something more crazy for their match
From www.pgatour.com
Golf: Tiger Woods knocked out in 1st round by Bjorn
Feb 24th
MARANA, Ariz. — The slow road back for Tiger Woods took another detour Wednesday when he followed a clutch birdie with a shocking shot into the desert and lost to Thomas Bjorn in the first round of the Match Play Championship.
It was only the second time that Woods, the No. 3 seed, had been eliminated in the first round.
But this was stunning even to Woods.
Moments after he made an 8-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to extend the match, he hit a 3-wood so far to the right that it landed in a desert bush. It took two shots just to get it back onto the grass. After badly missing an 18-foot bogey putt, he conceded to Bjorn.
“I blew it,” Woods said.
Twice he had simple chips on the back nine and failed to convert them into birdies, losing his lead on the 13th and falling behind on the 15th. He missed a 10-foot birdie on the 17th that he figured he should make “every time.”
And then came No. 1, the first extra hole.
“It’s easy to put the ball in the fairway and I couldn’t even do that,” Woods said, so visibly upset that he was stumbling over his words.
The other top seeds didn’t have that much trouble.
Top-ranked Lee Westwood never trailed in his 3-and-2 victory over Henrik Stenson, while PGA champion Martin Kaymer had the shortest match of the opening round, a 7-and-6 win over 19-year-old Seung-yul Noh of South Korea.
Phil Mickelson, the No. 4 seed who only decided to play this World Golf Championship two weeks ago, won 6-and-5 over Brendan Jones.
Woods had some company in going home early.
The Americans had four of the top 10 seeds at Dove Mountain, and Mickelson is the only one left.
Matteo Manassero, the 17-year-old Italian, became the youngest winner in this tournament with a 2-and-1 victory over eighth-seeded Steve Stricker, while Jim Furyk (No. 10) continued his struggles in losing to Ryan Palmer, who was making his Match Play debut.
The wild first day finally ended with a record eight matches going into extra holes, and four others going the distance. Of the 32 players remaining, 13 are Americans, 13 are Europeans and two each are from Australia, South Africa and Asia.
Coming off the worst season of his career, most of that from the crisis in his personal life, Woods does not appear to be making quick progress. Through three tournaments this year, he has failed to crack the top 20.
Woods keeps talking about needing more repetition as he works on a new swing, although he is not playing more tournaments. Asked if he might add the Honda Classic, Woods replied, “Probably now is not the time to ask me right now.”
From www.rep-am.com
