Camilo Villegas was born in 7 January 1982. He is a Colombian   professional golfer who plays on the PGA Tour and the European Tour.   Villegas was born in Medellín, Colombia, and took up golf as a child.   After several different National Junior Championships in Colombia in the   ages between 8 and 15, at 16 he became the first player in Colombian   golf history to win the Amateur's Grand Slam in the same year: The   National Junior Championship (stroke play), the National Junior   Championship (match play), the National Amateur Championship, and the   Colombian Open in the amateur category. 
Then,  in 2001, he became only  the second player to win the Colombian Open as  an amateur. His success  in Colombian golf throughout the 1990s earned  him the distinction of  "Player of the Decade" issued by the Colombian  Golf Federation. Villegas  received an athletic scholarship to attend  the University of Florida in  Gainesville, Florida, where he played for  coach Buddy Alexander's  Florida Gators men's golf team in National  Collegiate Athletics  Association (NCAA) competition from 2001 to 2004.  As a freshman in 2001,  Villegas was a member of the Gators' 2001 NCAA  championship team.  During his college golf career, he was a four-time  All-American, the  Southeastern Conference (SEC) Freshman of the Year in  2001, and SEC  Player of the Year in 2002 and 2004. Villegas graduated  from Florida  with a bachelor's degree in business administration in  2004.
Villegas  is known for his commitment to physical fitness, and says his  mentor  and inspiration is golf icon Gary Player. They have just starred   together in a new MasterCard "priceless" commercial. In the June 2006   issue of Golf Digest, he was named "the sexiest player on tour, Tiger   Woods included." He has also gained notoriety for sporting flashy dress   clothing by designer J. Lindeberg. An alumnus of the University of   Florida, Villegas frequently visits the University of Florida golf   course when he is spending time at his residence at Gainesville,   Florida. Villegas began playing on the PGA Tour in 2004 and earned his   PGA Tour card just prior to the 2006 season. He had a blistering start   to his 2006 rookie year on tour, with two second place finishes and a   third place (at The Players Championship) in his first nine events.
He  missed making the 2006 Masters Tournament in his rookie year by a   single position on the Official PGA Tour Money List (11th). However, he   made his first Masters' appearance in 2007 by finishing in the top 40  of  the Official PGA Tour Money List for 2006. He qualified for the 2008   Masters through his exceptional play during the inaugural FedEx Cup   playoff system, that included an opening round 63 (8 under par) at the   Deutsche Bank Championship and three straight top 10 finishes. 
He   entered the FedEx Cup playoffs in 52nd place and improved to 28th  place  through his play in the first three events, thus qualifying for  the  30-man field at The Tour Championship in Atlanta, Georgia, where he   finished in the top 10 for the third straight week and finished 24th  on  the FedEx Cup points list. Villegas won his second professional  event at  the Coca-Cola Tokai Classic on the Japan Golf Tour in  September 2007.  By doing so, he earned ¥24,000,000 (approximately  $208,272). He shot a  score of 282 (-2) and defeated Toyokazu Fujishima  in a playoff by  draining a 20 foot putt on the winning hole.
n  2006 Camilo signed an endorsement deal with Red Bull, and has   represented the energy drink company since then as their sole PGA Tour   golf athlete. Villegas won his third professional event at the TELUS   Skins Game in June 2008 where he defeated a field that included Greg   Norman, Colin Montgomerie, Mike Weir and "Mr. Skins", Fred Couples.   Villegas took six skins for $130,000 with a short birdie putt on the   14th hole, and then won an additional four skins for $100,000 in a   playoff, which was decided with a closest-to-the-pin shootout from 130   yards out on the 18th hole. 
Villegas  recorded a record-breaking second  round in the 2008 Open Championship.  He shot 65, which was the lowest  score for any Open Championship  second round at Royal Birkdale. He  started off with two bogeys but  ended with five consecutive birdies  which put him at 5 under for his  round. Villegas won his first PGA Tour  title in September 2008, winning  the BMW Championship by two shots over  Dudley Hart. For the last 44  holes of the tournament, Villegas did not  three putt, one-putting 27 of  those last 44 holes. This victory took him  to a career high of 18th in  the Official World Golf Rankings.
Villegas  followed his BMW Championship win with a victory in The Tour   Championship. He beat Sergio García in a playoff, having trailed by five   shots going into the final round. The win took Villegas to number  seven  in the Official World Golf Rankings and established him as the  highest  ranked golfer from South America. He finished the season 7th on  the PGA  Tour money list. In late 2008 Villegas joined the European  Tour, making  his first European Tour appearance at the 2008 HSBC  Champions, the first  tournament of the 2009 season. 
However  he will continue to play  predominately in the United States. He had no  victories in 2009 but had  five top-10 finishes and ended the season  ranked 45th on the PGA Tour  money list and in the top 30 of the  European Tour's Race to Dubai. He  has spent over 30 weeks in the top-10  of the Official World Golf  Rankings since 2008. At the 2009 Chevron  World Challenge, Villegas made a  very rare albatross (double eagle) on a  568 yard par 5, firing a 262  yard second shot into the hole. 
In  March 2010, Villegas earned his third  victory on the PGA Tour, winning  The Honda Classic by five strokes over  Anthony Kim. Villegas'  tremendous physical power allows him to drive  the ball far away from  the tee box, averaging 302.1 yards in the 2006  season. He also adapts a  homemade putting routine: while he reads a  putt, he crouches down  parallel to the ground without touching it,  extending his left leg back  while balancing with his right leg and his  putter to get a better view  of the slope of the green. He is given the  nickname "Hombre Araña"  (Spiderman) for this posture.
Villegas  was chipping up the slope to the 15th green when the ball twice  rolled  back toward him. The second time, Villegas walked over and  casually  swatted away some loose pieces of grass in front of the divot  as the  ball was still moving down the slope. That is a violation of Rule  23-1  that says, "When a ball is in motion, a loose impediment that  might  influence the movement of the ball must not be removed." The  penalty is  two shots. Villegas opened with a 72, and he was disqualified  for  signing an incorrect scorecard. White found a decision in the rules   that allowed for no penalty if the player did not realize the ball   would wind up where the loose impediment was removed. That didn't apply   in this case because the ball was clearly coming down the steep slope   toward his divot.  
   Camilo Villegas 
Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
   Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 
 Camilo Villegas 























 
No comments:
Post a Comment