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TVG Network is an American digital cable network that specializes in horse racing. The company broadcasts from Los Angeles, California and is available in the United States on Dish Network and DirecTV as well as select cable companies.
TVG Network is an interactive horse racing network that combines live, televised coverage from over 100 of the World's premier racetracks and allows viewers to make wagers from home: online, by phone, mobile phone and, where available, using a set-top remote control.
In addition to live horse racing, TVG Network features professional race analysis, interviews, handicapping tips, feature stories on the superstars of horse racing--the horses--personalities and legends of racing, and programs such as "The Works," featuring daily training and workouts of horses leading up to the Breeders' Cup. TVG Network also airs America's Horse, the American Quarter Horse Association's television program, Sunday mornings.
TVG began broadcasting in 1999, and has since become the largest interactive horse racing network in America.[citation needed] In May 2006, TVG introduced new shows, including "Morning Line", "Fandicapping", ":58 Flat" and "Lady Luck," an all female panel focusing on the day's races, and Drive Time a new show covering exclusive racing from the Meadowlands. TVG personalities include Todd Schrupp, former trainers Frank Lyons, Simon Bray, Nick 'the Sarge' Hines and paddock correspondent Christina Olivares.
TVG covers over 80 tracks, with exclusive coverage of several tracks, including American tracks such as Keeneland, Del Mar Racetrack, Hollywood Park Racetrack, Meadowlands, and Monmouth Park. The network also broadcasts races from various tracks in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Japan. TVG coverage includes events such as the Japan Cup, the Blue Grass Stakes and Royal Ascot.
In late February 2007, TVG ended its longtime affiliation with Churchill Downs Incorporated.So he held down the trajectory of a 7-iron, taking a little off the shot, and once the flash of steel sent the ball into flight, Woods came bounding through the trees, almost Sergio-like. The ball pitched onto the green and finished about 45 feet short of the flagstick, and Woods would leave a little drama — 6 feet's worth — before converting the par putt for a 68.
Problem is, for all his work, Woods was not able to make up much ground. The stoic play and strong finish of Immelman — not to mention a nice little break on 15, where his third shot spun off the green but caught enough grass to keep from rolling back into the pond — left Woods looking at a Sunday in which he'll have to make up six shots.
He will need some help from the leader, as well as the weather — expected to be cool (low-to-mid 60s) and windy.
Woods may rue the many putts he left out there Saturday, especially early in the day, when his ballstriking was there to make a move but his usually trusty putter didn't allow it. It was reminiscent of his Saturday at Oakmont a year ago, where he was stellar tee-to-green but simply failed to make the most of his chances.
Beginning at the fifth at Augusta Saturday, he had four good birdie looks in a row, but nothing to show but a string of pars. Finally, by the time he got to 17, he'd seen enough, stuffing a sand wedge inside a foot.
"I could read that one," he said.
Here's the bottom line: Woods has a big gap to make up, but he knows the four players ahead of him can be caught. For all their good play this week, Immelman, Brandt Snedeker, Steve Flesch and Paul Casey own six PGA Tour titles between them.
Six wins? That's three months' work (or, say, maybe seven starts) for Woods. None of the four ahead of Woods ever has felt the high heat of being in contention Sunday at a major. And none has ever has finished better than fifth.
Sunday heat? Woods owns a permanent residence in that inferno. As crazy as it sounds, he may be less nervous Sunday at the Masters than he was when he struck his opening tee shot Thursday. That is not the case for any other player in the field.
If the lone "blemish" on Woods' loaded resume is that he has yet to win a major from behind, he might just take care of that Sunday. If anticipated winds gusting to 25-30 mph blow, anything sub-70 might do the trick. But how exactly he gets his arms into a fifth green jacket seemed of little importance as he departed The National on Saturday evening.Tiger Woods' third-round 68 is exactly what was ordered, vaulting him from a tie for 13th to fifth — and directly into the Sunday mix as he chases a fifth green jacket. The key word: chases.
Woods owns 13 major titles, but he's won them all from the front. Though he's had his chances to run others down, he never before has caught anyone on a Sunday to win a major.
This is the nature of writing about the man who will be known as the greatest player to compete at this game since Scots first swung sticks at rocks. We nitpick against the fabric of greatness. Trying to find the smallest blemish on Woods is like trying to find a speck of lint on the man's neatly pressed sweater.
Not winning a major from behind may be the tiniest of scratches (and hardly a dent) in this Woods' solid suit. Veteran PGA Tour player Paul Goydos, injecting a healthy dose of sarcasm, succinctly put this no-majors-from-behind stat in perspective earlier this season:
"It's rough when your only weakness is that you've never won a major from behind," Goydos said. "Wow. Neither have I."
Woods will start the final round six shots behind South African Trevor Immelman, a classy, stout, gritty competitor who played well after sleeping on the 36-hole lead. Immelman's play to this point has been rock solid. He may be only a crewcut and nine majors from being this generation's Gary Player.
There are others standing between Woods and Immelman, but those golfers combined don't have the major championship aplomb of the self-assured Woods, who will try to erase the second-largest final-round deficit in the great history of this little Georgia gem. Only Jack Burke Jr., who overcame an eight-shot deficit to win the jacket in 1956, has successfully climbed from such a hole.
Woods didn't shy from sprinkling cautions of doubt into the direction of his less-seasoned competitors when little-but-blustery gray skies framed the last streams of daylight on a cool Augusta afternoon.
"I've got a lot of work to do tomorrow," said Woods after his four-birdie, no-bogey performance. "And again, you've got to hang in there. It doesn't take much to make a high number out there."
Was that a collective "gulp" we just heard from those sitting ahead of him?
Woods' round was a mix of sound ballstriking and often pedestrian putting, with a dash of Houdini-esque escape thrown in as spice at the very end.
For the second consecutive day, Woods "chose" to play the rugged 465-yard finishing hole from the trees along the right side of 18. A day earlier, he'd played down 10 and got up and down from about 80 yards. This time, he faced two options: Play his second shot backward, leaving a third shot of about 210 yards or so into the par 4, or try to squeeze his ball through a window of about 4 feet.
"I had to either make a 4 or a 6, one of the two," Woods said rather matter-of-factly. "Might as well go ahead and make 4."
Might as well.
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TVG announced March 27 ... TVG's coverage includes the major stakes races on the Dubai ... races through TVG.com, Mobile.TVG.com and TVG's telephone wagering
MySpace profile for TVG with pictures, videos, personal blog, interests, ... The All American Futurity only on TVG! ( view more) TVG MOBILE (view more)
MySpace profile for TVG with pictures, videos, personal blog, interests, ... The All American Futurity only on TVG! ( view more) TVG MOBILE (view more)
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