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Lee Westwood expects a special week at Pebble Beach

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PEBBLE BEACH — Lee Westwood still doesn’t know why his father took him to the golf course.

He played just about every other sport in England when he was 12, such as soccer, cricket and rugby. He used to go fishing with his father, but the fish weren’t biting, mainly because Westwood kept throwing stones into the water. So off they went to a golf course called Kilton Forest, neither of them having ever so much as swung a club.

Westwood was hooked.

“I turned pro at 19 and came on tour, and he was still a 12 handicap, so I can’t understand the reasons for that,” Westwood said. “He went to every lesson that I’ve had, drove me there and sat there and listened to it. I just got a bit better than him. Must be down to talent or something like that. I must have my mom’s talent for golf.”

Westwood was particularly sharp with his dry humor Wednesday at Pebble Beach, where it’s easy to be in a good mood when the landscape is colored with a blue sky, green grass, white surf and a blazing sun.

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He is making his first start of the year on the PGA Tour, and the 39-year-old will play with his father, John, in the AT&T; National Pro-Am.

It requires patience to get through rounds that approach six hours, with two pros and two amateurs at Pebble Beach, Spyglass Hill and Monterey Peninsula Country Club. Who better to spend the time with than the man who got it all started?

“He’s had a massive influence on me,” Westwood said. “He’s the reason, really, I’ve got so good at the game. He and my mom invested a lot of time in me when I was growing up.”

Phil Mickelson is the defending champion at Pebble Beach, finishing off Tiger Woods with a 64 on the final day, and he is coming off a four-shot win last week in the Phoenix Open for his 41st career victory on the tour. Mickelson is a four-time winner at Pebble Beach, and another victory would tie the tournament record held by Mark O’Meara.

Dustin Johnson is a two-time winner at Pebble, and it might have been three except for that untidy 82 he had in the final round of the 2010 U.S. Open. Johnson is playing this year with Wayne Gretzky, whom he knows a little better from dating the Great One’s daughter, Paulina.

Still in the tournament is Vijay Singh, another former No. 1 and Pebble champion, drawing plenty of attention for the worst reason. Singh told Sports Illustrated he used deer-antler spray, said to contain a substance that is on the banned list of the PGA Tour’s anti-doping policy.

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Singh admitted to using it in a statement, and under the policy, an admission is equal to a failed drug test. Sanctions have not been announced. The tour has yet to comment, though PGA Tour Commissioner Tim Finchem is in town this week.

Also playing is Retief Goosen, a two-time U.S. Open champion who thought his career might be over last year when he discovered he had a disk that had disintegrated. Goosen had surgery to replace the disk, returned to golf in January and is feeling better than ever.

Goosen is contemplating a full-time move to Florida, the path that Westwood already has taken. Westwood moved his family to Palm Beach County in December, in time for the kids to start school. He is a PGA Tour member again and believes less travel at his age will only help.

If nothing else, he feels more prepared this year. For a golfer from Worksop, England, living in Florida isn’t awful.

“I find it very relaxing, just the weather and getting up in the morning and not having to look out the window and just throw on a pair of shorts and a T-shirt and go,” Westwood said. “It’s almost too easy.”

But his U.S. schedule starts in a place where players warm up on the putting green with ski caps because of the February chill. That’s OK too.

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“It’s just a magical place to play golf,” Westwood said. “I’ve always said it’s my favorite place. People always ask me where I would like to play my last round of golf. If it wasn’t a golf course by a hospital, it would be Pebble Beach.”

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