Sentences with phrase «poormichelle wie»

The Washington, DC, participants included Laura Van Wie McGrory and Jeffrey Harris from Alliance to Save Energy and Ola Göransson from the Embassy of Sweden.
It shows the relationship wie have with Basketball Australia too.
Wie, if I can chime in on Elecs beliefs, since I feel mind are very similar, you asked him if he could really believe what he believes, and I think it's safe to say he gave you a very honest answer.
Wie, I apologize if you took that post the wrong way, but I couldn't have been any calmer.
Thanks Gavin and thank you Wie for reminding me to keep my mind open.
In the world of reality, on the other hand, where it is a question of the individual man, there is this little tiny transition from having understood to doing; it is not always cito citissime [as quickly as possible], not geschwind wie der Wind [fast as the wind], if I may speak German for lack of philosophic terms.
Historical methodology shifted accordrngly from a primary concern for recording the past «wie es cigentlich gewesen», i.e. cataloguing with objective detachment facts in sequence and with proper casual relationships.
The problem comes into focus with the Enlightenment and the rise of the historical sciences, for here we have the establishment of the concept of history in what we may call its «modern sense», i.e. as «what actually happened», the «wie es eigentlich gewesen ist».
The6» 1» Wie towered over Fujikawa.
Wie shot rounds of 78 and 76 and missed the cut by 14shots.
Compared to the amazing performance of Tadd Fujikawa, another befuddling MC by Michelle Wie was simply old news
MANY OF the Sony Open spectators came to follow oneHawaiian teenage golf prodigy, Michelle Wie, and ended up mesmerized byanother, Tadd Fujikawa.
The fieldat the Waialae Country Club was filled with kids, not only the teenagers (Michelle Wie, missed cut; Tadd Fujikawa, 20th) but also the fresh Q schoolgraduates, the Nationwide upgraders, the various conditionals.
At the other end of the results sheet sat «poorMichelle Wie
(Fujikawa, taking Wie's old spot.)
Stephen Marino, thequintessential pink - cheeked rookie with plenty of game, learned to deal with acrowd by playing his Thursday and Friday rounds with Wie — and made it to theweekend.
The poll also answers other burning questions of our time, such as which golfer his peers would want on his back in a bar fight (hint: it's not Bubba Watson), who has the «prettiest swing» on tour («Not the Americans, that's for sure,» noted one LPGA voter), whether the PGA Tour should ditch Doral because of Donald Trump's controversial positions (nope), and whether LPGA players believe Michelle Wie will win another major (not so much).
«There were no divots... greens were in perfect shape,» eventual U.S. Women's Open winner Michelle Wie said back then after playing a pre-tourney practice round.
Like Paula Creamer, MorganPressel and Michelle Wie, Lang had a chance to win the»05 Open but fellshort — tying for second with Pressel — when Birdie Kim holed a miraculous bunkershot at the 72nd green.
Michelle Wie has tried a variety of ways to get the ball in the hole on the green so her most recent effort, done with tongue firmly implanted in cheek, should come as no surprise to fans of the Big Wiesy.
That's easy: Shrink whatever it is to the size of a golf ball, and let Michelle Wie hit it.
When you spend time with the Wies, talking with them about their future and how they might still shape or avert or even avoid the incoming waves of pressure and responsibility, you get the sense that they are still a little naive about exactly what awaits them.
The Wies expect that to happen.
The Wie family is going through the first flush of global fame and has yet to experience the very real costs that attend that sort of recognition.
Much has been written and spoken about Michelle Wie's swing.
Michelle Wie has arrived at a moment when women's golf is more than ever in the shadow of the men's game, when despite the tremendous gifts of Annika Sorenstam and the wave of talented Korean golfers who have come on the scene in the past few years, the game seems increasingly an afterthought.
¬ ∂ Michelle Wie, five minutes removed from a fifth - period P.E. class, slips her 6 - foot frame into the car, pops on the head - phones from her MP3 player, rocking the Black Eyed Peas jam — Where Is the Love?
Then again, Michelle Wie has the advantage — or will it become a disadvantage?
«Sometimes I wonder what it's like to not be Michelle Wie, to not be famous and stuff like that.
Got ta love the eye rolls shared by Woods and Michelle Wie as Rory McIlroy and Jason Day — shorn of his facial hair — vie to drive the golf cart by trying to outdrive the other.
But the Wies were not prepared for what they saw Michelle doing on the golf courses of Waikiki in the next few years.
Michelle Wie, in her first visit to Golf Channel's «Morning Drive» show, said Thursday she was inclined not to tee it up again on the PGA Tour but refused to rule out a repeat of her dramatic 2004 appearance at the Sony Open.
«I never say never, but I think if there was an invitation that came into my mail right now I would probably decline, but you never know in the future,» Wie, who played with the guys when she was 14, told new Golf Central anchor Lisa Cornwell.
«I think it makes every tournament more important, even the smaller - field events,» Wie said.
As Wie got closer to the ball, her stats improved dramatically (from 53rd in putting average in 2012 to 25th in 2013) and people certainly took notice.
For those who worry about whether the position is physically painful, Wie put such concerns to rest as well.
Wie, like her Cardinal counterpart, has battled health issues for years.
Wie, playing in her tour's season - opening Pure Silk - Bahamas LPGA Classic, made her first eagle of the new year with a hole - out for a 3 on the par - 5 11th hole at the Ocean Club Golf Course on Paradise Island.
Wie's buzzword at the HSBC was «fun,» and the world's 118th - ranked player (up 61 spots since Singapore) certainly appeared to be enjoying herself after Thursday's effort.
Lewis goes off 10 minutes later with Sandra Gal and Michelle Wie, who hopes to celebrate the third anniversary of her 2014 U.S. Women's Open with her second major victory.
For Wie, who was alone at the top for much of her back nine, her second bogey of the week put her in a four - way tie for second place at 7 - under.
Wie, whose first - round 68 was her first sub-70 result since July (when she carded a 69 in the opener of the Marathon Classic and subsequently missed the cut), finished T10 at Hainan Island's Blue Bay LPGA.
So how was Wie planning to spend her hour - plus of free time?
Michelle Wie put a couple of bogeys toward the end of her first nine holes Thursday well behind her, as the 18 - hole LPGA Founders Cup co-leader of the morning wave absolutely pummeled Wildfire Golf Club in Phoenix on her inward nine.
Just couple putts didn't go in, and I forgot you hit it further when you get adrenaline going,» said Wie.
I putted well with it in Australia,» Wie said following the opening round of the tour's first U.S. tournament of the season.
With Thursday's opening round ending prematurely due to high winds and Friday's starting late to accommodate cleanup and stopped by darkness, Wie and Thompson were among the 56 players needing to finish their second rounds on Saturday morning.
Thompson finished birdie - birdie - par to take advantage of a rare dropped shot by Wie on her 17th hole (No. 8).
Wie, whose injury - plagued season includes 12 missed cuts in 23 starts, drew Anna Nordqvist and three - time 2016 tour winner Ha Na Jang for Saturday's tee time.
The popular Thompson, the fourth tour player to earn multiple Ws this season (she also prevailed at the Kingsmill Championship in May), leads a star - studded field that includes top - ranked So Yeon Ryu and defending champ In Gee Chun (but, alas, no Michelle Wie, who's recovering from an emergency appendectomy) into the final major of the season.
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