Robert Allenby and Boo Weekley couldn't wait to get back to PGA National, which is somewhat surprising. A year ago, each was poised to win the Honda Classic.
Robert Allenby and Boo Weekley couldn't wait to get back to PGA National, which is somewhat surprising. A year ago, each was poised to win the Honda Classic. That is, until they blew it down the stretch on Sunday. Allenby came unglued with bogeys the 15th and 16th holes in the final round, part of the three-hole setup known as the Bear Trap, a nod to course redesigner Jack
Flo, the haughty long-haired black cat, was adopted by a couple of other cats and their human. She is very happy. Boo, the little dog whose fur sticks up as if she stuck her paw in an electrical socket has been adopted by a family. Everyone loves her and she reportedly loves them.
When the time comes to separate the men from the boys, only the ultimate "mancation" will do. Perhaps a new concept to some, the mancation is quickly gaining steam among males. Complete with its own Wikipedia page, the mancation has even made its way into popular culture (Vince Vaughn's "The Break-Up", for example). For the "layperson", a mancation can be defined as a male-only holiday that
Boo Weekley still hasn't been back to the scene of the accident. When the good-ol'-boy golfer sets foot on the 18th green in Thursday's opening round of the Honda Classic, it will mark his first visit to the vicinity of that missed 39-inch putt that would have netted his first PGA Tour trophy.
Scout, Jem, Dill, Atticus and Boo Radley become honorary San Antonians this spring as the San Antonio Library features Harper Lee's American classic "To Kill a Mockingbird" in The Big Read.
SCROLL DOWN TO WATCH VIDEOS HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. - Don't ask Boo Weekley for detailed analysis on Tiger Woods' latest Sunday conquest. "I don't watch golf," Weekley said Monday. And don't ask Weekley to discuss the unwritten rules of match play versus stroke play. His inexperience showed on his first day at last week's Accenture Match Play Championship, when on the first hole he
Maybe it was the lusty mannequins in its stores, the massage oil on its shelves or the overabundance of cleavage on the glittery runway of its annual TV fashion show. But yesterday, Victoria's Secret chief executive Sharen J. Turney acknowledged that the chain had gotten "too sexy."