HONOLULU, Hawaii - The advice has been passed along for decades on the PGA Tour, and Matt Kuchar believes it has merit. Nike Air Max Tilbud . He just doesnt like it.Call it the 80-20 equation.I remember coming out and guys telling me youre going to make 80 per cent of your money in 20 per cent of your starts, Kuchar said. The idea was basically youre going to get hot a couple of times, and thats what you wait for. And it makes sense. Youre going to get hot and then peter off a little bit.Scott Stallings would be an extreme example. He won the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines last year, and that was his only finish in the top 30. One week turned out to be 79 per cent of his season earnings.A more typical example: FedEx Cup champion Billy Horschel.Horschel had a hot streak in the spring of 2013 when he was runner-up in Houston, tied for third in San Antonio and won in New Orleans in a span of four starts. He didnt really heat up again for another 18 months. Horschel had only two top 10s on the PGA Tour and missed seven cuts until he stepped into a phone booth and emerged as guy who couldnt be beat. He threw away a chance to win in Boston, and then won the next two FedEx Cup playoff events.His tally for the year was $4.8 million to finish at No. 7 on the money list, and that doesnt include the $10 million bonus for winning the FedEx Cup. A closer look at Horschels season last year makes him a candidate for the 80-20 club.He made roughly 80 per cent of his season earnings in 19 per cent of his starts.So maybe there is some truth to it.You get hot, you make your money in five or six tournaments. You make 80 per cent in 20 per cent of your starts, J.B. Holmes said. Ive been hearing that for years.Holmes won 82 per cent of his money in 25 per cent of his starts, including a victory in the Wells Fargo Championship.Kuchar used to be one of those guys. He also won roughly 82 per cent of his money from 25 per cent of his tournaments in 2009. Those days are gone. Kuchar has turned into one of the most consistent players on the PGA Tour. In the last five years, he has missed only eight cuts in 121 tournaments. He has 48 top 10s during that stretch, a rate of 40 per cent.Just like anyone else, Kuchar had a hot streak last year. In four straight weeks, he lost a chance to win the Texas Open with a 75 in the final round, he lost in a playoff in Houston when Matt Jones chipped in from 100 feet. He was in the mix at the Masters early on Sunday and tied for fifth. And then he won Hilton Head. After that, he was back to the consistent brand of golf. He never finished out of the top 20 in more than two straight starts.Kuchar won 81 per cent of his money in 42 per cent of his tournaments. He likes that ratio much better.The streaky way is stressful, Kuchar said. The golf I play ... you could watch me play a round of golf and its pretty stress free. I dont do any crazy things. I dont make a ton of birdies, but I dont make a lot of bogeys, either. Its been a lot nicer the last five or six years.Would he trade it for a $10 million bonus and one more victory?I dont think Id trade with Billy Horschel, he said.He loved the consistent play of Steve Stricker until his 2014 season was disrupted by injuries and the death of his brother. He loves the way Jim Furyk played last year. Furyk didnt win, but he gave himself plenty of chances. Winning is hard. Furyk earned 81 per cent of his money in 38 per cent of his starts.Rory McIlroy, the best benchmark in golf right now, won 81 per cent of his tour-leading $8.2 million in 41 per cent of his starts.Kuchar is all about opportunities, though hes willing to make an exception. Bubba Watson went through a 22-month drought without winning from the 2012 Masters until Riviera last year, and then he added another green jacket.Id trade with Bubba, Kuchar said. It would be streaky, but youd throw a Masters in there.Geoff Ogilvy is another guy who has heard all about the 80-20 equation, and he believes it to be accurate in most cases.Its probably true for 80 per cent of the players, Ogilvy said, adding to the math. Guys like Tiger and Jack, and Jim and Kuchar, they make money in all their tournaments. So theres probably 80 per cent of the players who make 80 per cent of their money in 20 tournaments.Winning is still the ultimate. Ask any of the 34 players at Kapalua to start the year. Even so, most players would take a steady diet of contention and take their chances.I would rather contend every week and win a lot, too. Can you have that one? Ogilvy asked.Tiger Woods managed that for the better part of 15 years. Hes a different animal.The most fun is contention, Ogilvy said. Its not fun propping up fields. I dont do this to finish 40th and have no excitement. The happiest I am on the course is in contention. Id rather be that guy. Air Max Dk . Grilli hasnt pitched since straining his left oblique in late April. Manager Clint Hurdle says the right-hander will make a couple of appearances in middle relief before the team determines whether to return Grilli to the back end of the bullpen. Nike Air Max Udsalg . In the Brewers six games this season, no starter has allowed more than three runs. "We see the guy in front of us do a great job and we want to do even better," Gallardo said after the Brewers beat the Red Sox 4-0 on Sunday, his second straight scoreless start. http://www.airmaxdanmark.com/ . Messier, who had been a special assistant to Rangers general manager Glen Sather, announced Thursday in a statement that he is resigning in order to "expand the game of hockey in the New York area by developing the Kingsbridge National Ice Center.WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama can appreciate a team overcoming long odds. Welcoming the Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks to the White House on Wednesday, Obama took note that some football analysts hadnt seen Seattle as a top-tier team. A die-hard fan of his hometown Chicago Bears, Obama nevertheless said he felt a certain kinship with the overachieving Seahawks. "As a guy who was elected president named Barack Obama, I root for the underdog," the president joked. The Seahawks clinched their first Super Bowl victory in the history of the franchise in February by beating the Denver Broncos 43-8. The distinction for the team and by extension for the NFL came a day after a group of retired players accused the league in a lawsuit of turning a blind eye to the use of painkillers by teams that later led to serious complications. Obama has expressed misgivings about the violence of the sport, saying in an interview with the New Yorker published early this year that if he had a son he would not let him play pro football. Next week, Obama will hold a White House meeting on concussions and sports safety at the White House that will include young athletes, professional athletes, parents, coaches and health experts. In a nood to that controversy, Obama took note of Seahawks owner Paul Allens charitable foundation that has donated millions of dollars to research traumatic brain injuries. Air Max Outlet Danmark. "Obviously this is a concern of the NFL, but is also a concern of our troops," Obama said. Obama singled out the teams outspoken cornerback, Richard Sherman, for being a role model to young people. Sherman was born in Compton, California, once a centre of gang activity and a city that suffered from severely underperforming schools. Sherman however was a standout student who attended Stanford University on a scholarship. "If he seems a little brash, its because youve got to have attitude sometimes if you are going to overcome some of this adversity," Obama said. He also recognized Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson, who many scouts believed would be too small to succeed in the NFL only to set a record for most wins in two first seasons by any quarterback. "He also became only the second African-American quarterback ever to win a Super Bowl," Obama said. "And the best part about it is nobody commented on it, which tells you the progress that weve made, although weve got more progress to make." ' ' '