Sunday, February 22, 2009

US PGA Scoreboard
NORTHERN TRUST OPEN
Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades, California
LAST-ROUND OVERALL POSITIONS
-15 after 16 holes Steve Stricker.
-14 after 15 holes Rory Sabbatini.
-13 after 14 holes Phil Mickelson.
-13 after 14 holes Fred Couples.
-12 after 17 holes J B Holmes.
-12 after 16 holes Mark Calcavecchia.
-12 after 14 holes Andres Romero.
Selected position:
-11 after 17 holes Luke Donald
COMPLETED ROUNDS
Par 284 (4 x 71)
276 (-8) Brian Davis (Eng) 69 69 68 70.
280 Graeme McDowell (NIr) 70 71 66 73.

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Fotheringham wins Alliance by four

FROM ALAN COWIE
Bryan Fotheringham from Forres won the North Scottish Golfers' Alliance fixture over the New Course at Moray with a level par 69 in windy conditions at the weekend.

LEADING SCRATCH
69 B Fotheringham (Forres).
73 G Hay (Grantown), J Simpson (Forres), M Macdonald (Fortrose & Rosemarkie).
75 R A L Cameron (Inverness), J A G Innes (Elgin).
76 N McWilliam (Garmouth & Kingston), K Godsman (Moray), M L MacLeman (Moray).
77 S Wilson (Inverness), J A Grant (Grantown), D Hector (Elgin), R McKerron (Forres).
78 J C Milne (Rothes), W Donnelly (Fortrose & Rosemarkie), A Tait (Fortrose & Rosemarkie), K Stables (Pro)(Elgin), N D Hampton (Loch Ness).
79 R Harrower (Boat of Garten) pro, M. Mann (Moray).
80 A W Mair (Moray), K. Thomson (Moray), D. Stewart (Grantown) pro.
81 I Findlay (Grantown ), D.F. Sharp (Boat of Garten).
82 S H C Milne (Elgin), K. Taylor (Elgin), L. Reid (Fortrose & Rosemarkie).
83 D Chisholm (Fortrose & Rosemarkie), K. Ross (Fortrose & Rosemarkie), B Inch (Elgin), R. Stewart (Grantown).

LEADING HANDICAP
Class 1 (8 and under)

71 J C Milne (Rothes) (7).
72 A Tait (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) (6), J A G Innes (Elgin).
73 M Mann (Moray) (6).
74 D Hector (Elgin) (3), W Donnelly (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) (4).

Class 2 (9 to 14)
76 I Turner (Boat of Garten)(14).
77 R R Adams (Moray)(9).
78 M McArthur (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) (10).
79 T Loynes (Boat of Garten) (13), S Taylor (Boat of Garten) (11), P Taylor (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) (9), R Barrett (Grantown)(14), J Kennedy (Moray)(13), D Spence (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) (13).

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Dale Whitnell from Five Lakes, Essex, winner of the Portuguese open amateur championship after a play-off against another Englishman, Jamie Abbott (image by courtesy of Tom Ward Photography).

McNicoll top Scot as Whitnell beats

Abbott in Portuguese play-off

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Carnoustie's Keir McNicoll finished top Scot in a fog-shortened Portuguese men's open amateur golf championship dominated by English players at Troia Golf Resort, near Lisbon today.
So much time was lost with early-morning mist on Thursday and Friday that the second round was not completed until Saturday afternoon by which time the Portuguese Federation officials had decided to lop a round off the traditional 72-hole stroke-play championship.
St Andrews Links Trophy winner McNicoll came joint 13th on one-over-par 217 with rounds of 74, 71 and 72. He had two birdies (eighth and long 14th) and two bogeys (sixth and 10th) in his par-matching final round over what is rated one of the toughest courses in Portugal.
Greg Paterson (St Andrews New) had one of the best rounds of the final day - a three-under-par 69 - and that, coupled with earlier scores of 79 and 71, saw him finished a creditable joint 18th on 219.
In that final round, Paterson birdied the third, fourth, eighth, 10th and 17th in halves of 33 and 36. He bogeyed the 12th and 14th.
Aberdeen teenager David Law (Hazlehead) scored 77, 70 and 74 for joint 29th position on 221, running up a double bogey 6 at the 16th in his final round. A par 4 at that hole would have put Law alongside Paterson in the final totals.
Earlier in the round, David had birdied the sixth and 14th but bogeyed the third and fifth in halves of 37. In his first round 77, Laws had a triple bogey and two double bogeys.
Peterhead's Philip McLean was the only other Scot to survive the 36-hole cut. He finished joint 37th on 222 with scores of 76, 74 and 72.
Philip, like Law, a protege of Paul Lawrie, had two double bogeys over his first two rounds. In his par-matching final circuit, McLean bigdied the sixth,m eighth, 11th, 12th and 14th in halvges of 37 and 35. He dropped shots at the second, third, fifth, 13th and 15th.
Scots who failed to figure among the 57 players with totals of 150 or better who contested the final round were Eisenhower Trophy-winning heroes Wallace Booth (Comrie) and Gavin Dear (Murrayshall), who both missed out by one shot on 1511, Steven McEwan (Caprington) on 151, Paul O'Hara (Colville Park) on 153 and Scott Borrowman (Dollar) on 155 after an opening round of 83.
England provided four of the top seven finishers in the championship, including both participants in the sudden-death play-off which was required after Dale Whitnell from Five Lakes, Essex tied with compatriot Jamie Abbot (Fynn Valley, Suffolk) on six-under-par 210.
Twenty-year-old Whitnell won the play-off with a birdie at the second extra hole.

He had rounds of 71, 68 and 71, starting off his final round in glorious style with an eagle 3. Birdies at the fifth and seventh, either side of a bogey at the sixth, were cancelled out by a double bogey 6 at the eighth, which put him out in 35 but he fell back to level par again with a bogey at the 11th.
Eventually, it was a birdie at the 16th that got Whitnell into the play-off.
Abbot scored 73, 69 and 68 with birdies in his final round at the third, seventh, ninth, 11th, 13th and 14th. He had bogeys at the fourth, eighth and, crucially, another at the 15th. A par there would have won him the title with a total of 209. But 33 home for 68 put him on 210 and into a play-off situation.
Dutchman Reinier Saxton, winner of the British Amateur title at Turnberry last year, finished third with a closing 70 for 212, two strokes out of the play-off.
Luke Goddard, winner of the Argentine title in December was a creditable joint fourth on 213 with a second Dutchman, Jurrian Van Der Vaart who played the American college circuit for four years with first the University of Minnesota before a transfer to Virginia Tech.
Jurrian led the field after 36 holes but nosedived to a 76 with the pressure on over the final 18 holes.
Sam Hutsby was the fourth Englishman in the picture. He finished joint sixth with defending champion Pedro Figueiredo of Portugal on 214.

ALL THE FINAL TOTALS
(reduced to three rounds because of fog)
Par 216 (3 x 72)
210 Dale Whitnell (Eng) 71 68 71, Jamie Abbott (Eng) 73 69 68 (Whitnell won play-off at second extra hole).
212 Reinier Saxton (Net) 72 70 70.
213 Luke Goddard (Eng) 72 70 71, Jurrian Van Der Vaart (Net) 68 69 76.
214 Sam Hutsby (Eng) 72 66 76, Pedro Figueiredo (Por) 69 72 73
215 Kalle Samooja (Fin) 75 70 70, Anders Kristiansen (Nor) 70 68 77
216 Shane Lowry (Ire) 75 71 70, Nino Bertasio (Ita) 73 71 72.
217 Victor Dubuisson (Fra) 76 71 70, Cian Curley (Ire) 74 71 72, Keir McNicoll (Sco) 74 71 72, Ben Westgate (Wal) 72 73 72.
218 Matt Haines (Eng) 77 69 72, Oliver Farr (Wal) 75 69 74.
219 Greg Paterson (Sco) 78 71 69, Alexandre Kaleka (Fra) 76 71 72, Andrew Hogan (Ire) 75 75 69, Stephan Wolters (Ger) 74 73 72, Tommy Fleetwood (Eng) 70 75 74, Edouard Espana (Fra) 79 66 74.
220 Dylan Boshart (Net) 75 73 72, Olivier Serres (Fra) 74 74 72, Mayel Cheikh (Fra) 73 75 72, Manuel Violas (Por) 75 71 74, Stanislas Gautier (Fra) 72 73 75.
221 David Law (Sco) 77 70 74, Niclas Carlsson (Swe) 75 75 71, Mikael Salminen (Fra) 75 72 73, Adam Runcie (Wal) 75 72 74, Stiggy Hodgson (Eng) 73 75 73, Miles Mackman (Eng) 72 75 74, Romain Schneider (Fra) 70 76 75, Eddie Pepperell (Eng) 72 73 76
222 Jason Barnes (Eng) 77 71 74, Philip McLean (Sco) 76 74 72.
223 Christopher Mivis (Bel) 78 70 75, Jake Shepherd (Eng) 75 75 73 James Taverner (Eng) 75 73 75, Craig Hinton (Eng) 75 72 76.
224 Darren Wright (Eng) 77 70 77, Jacob Roth (Den) 75 75 74, Leonard Motta (Ita) 73 71 80.
225 Richard Merchant (Wal) 76 73 76, Alexander Levy (Fra) 76 72 77, Billy Hemstock (Eng) 75 74 76, Miguel Gaspar (Por) 74 73 78, Luke Lennox (Ire) 73 75 77, Paul Cutler (Ire) 73 73 79.
226 Are Freistad (Nor) 77 73 76, Erwan Vieilledent (Fra) 74 73 79.
228 Elias Bertheussen (Nor) 77 72 79, Floris De Vries (Net) 75 75 78, Kevin Turlan (Fra) 71 79 78.
232 Julien Brun (Fra) 74 75 83.

MISSED THE CUT (150 or better qualified)

Selected scores
151
James Howie (Wal) 80 71, Jonathan Gidney (Eng) 79 72, Gavin Dear (Sco) 75 76, Todd Adcock (Eng) 78 73, Wallace Booth (Sco) 77 74, Dara Lernihan (Ire) 77 74, Tom Lewis (Eng) 76 75.
152 Richard Prophet (Eng) 77 75, Steven McEwan (Sco) 76 76.
153 Paul O'Hara (Sco) 80 73, Alan Dunbar (Ire) 78 75, Pat Murray (Ire) 76 77.
155 Scott Borrowman (Sco) 84 71, Jack Senior (Eng) 80 75.
156 James Webber (Eng) 78 78
158 Andy Sullivan (Eng) 76 82.

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McLean, Drysdale fail to make

top 20 in Sunshine Tour event

Scots Alan McLean and David Drysdale both finished outside the top 20 despite finishing well under par in the South African Sunshine Tour's Telkom PGA championship at Country Club Johannesburg today (Sunday).
Glasgow-born Canada-based McLean had rounds of 72, 68, 69 and 69 for joint 22nd place on 10-under-par 278. He birdied the first, second, sixth, 14th, 16th, 17th and 18th in his final round but a mid-round slump which saw him bogeyed the seventh, eighth, ninth and 13th, cost him a much higher finish.
Dunbar's Drysdale scored 73, 70, 68 and 69 for a shared of 29th place with an eight-under-par total f0 280. After bogeying the first in his final round, Drysdale covered the remaining holes in four under par with birdies at the sixth, 15th, 16th and 18th.
South African Jaco Van Zyl birdied the 15th, 16th and 18th in his final round 66 to win the title with an 18-under-par total of 270. He finished one shot ahead of Canada's Graham DeLaet and South African Trevor Fisher junior.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72). Players from South Africa unless stated
270 Jaco Van Zyl 70 68 66 66.
271 Graham DeLaet (Can) 68 73 66 64, Trevor Fisher jun 69 68 69 65.
273 Jean Hugo 65 69 69 70, Thomas Aiken 65 71 66 71.
274 Branden Grtace 67 68 72 67, Anders Hansen (Den) 69 70 68 67, George Coetzee 69 70 67 68, Louis de Jager 69 67 69 69, Charl Coetzee 69 68 68 659.
275 James Kingston 69 66 71 69, Michiel Bothma 68 70 68 69, Marc Cayeux (Zim) 68 67 67 73.
Selected scores:
278
Alan McLean (Sco) 72 68 69 69 (jt 22nd).
280 David Drysdale (Sco) 73 70 68 69 (jt 29th)

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Mickelson goes four clear with a 62

Defending champion Phil Mickelson continued his roller-coaster ride of a performance in the US PGA Tour's Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club, Pacific Palisades in California by firing a third round nine-under-par 62 on Saturday to move four strokes clear of the field.
Andres Romero signed for a 65 to move into second at 12 under, with Fred Couples (65), Rory Sabbatini (67), KJ Choi (67) and Scott McCarron (70) tied for third a further stroke adrift.
First round pacesetter Mickelson had struggled on Friday and fell three shots behind second round leader McCarron, but the left-hander's consistency quickly returned for the third round to send the American to the top of the leaderboard.
For the second straight day, Mickelson opened with an eagle on the par-five first hole before a birdie at the fourth.
And his round came alive on the back nine with six birdies to put Mickelson in a position to post his first win of the year after so far failing to finish inside the top 40 at the two events he made the cut.
THIRD-ROUND TOTALS
Par 213 (3 x 71)
197 Phil Mickelson 63 72 62
201 Andres Romero (Arg) 66 70 65
202 Scott McCarron 64 68 70, Rory Sabbatini (Rsa) 68 67 67, KJ Choi (Kor) 66 69 67, Fred Couples 67 70 65
203 Steve Stricker 68 66 69, Dustin Johnson 66 70 67, Mark Calcavecchia 70 69 64
204 J.B. Holmes 73 67 64, Luke Donald (Eng) 66 69 69
205 Richard S Johnson (Swe) 70 68 67, Robert Allenby (Aus) 70 67 68, Dean Wilson 66 72 67, Briny Baird 67 70 68
206 Brendon De Jonge 69 70 67, Brian Davis (Eng) 69 69 68, Hunter Mahan 69 69 68, Chris DiMarco 68 72 66, Rich Beem 68 69 69, Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 68 67 71, Ben Curtis 68 69 69, Tim Clark (Rsa) 68 72 66, Tommy Armour III 67 67 72
207 Kenny Perry 70 68 69, Jeff Klauk 67 72 68, Graeme McDowell (NIrl) 70 71 66, Bill Lunde 69 67 71, Woody Austin 68 70 69, Kevin Sutherland 72 67 68, Jason Bohn 73 66 68
208 Kevin Na 67 69 72, Bubba Watson 69 71 68, Angel Cabrera (Arg) 72 68 68, Marc Turnesa 69 68 71, Rocco Mediate 70 68 70
209 Jerry Kelly 72 68 69, Chad Campbell 72 68 69, John Merrick 66 71 72, Joe Ogilvie 70 70 69, Jimmy Walker 69 70 70
210 Jeev Milkha Singh (Ind) 69 70 71, Charley Hoffman 68 72 70, Pat Perez 69 66 75, Kirk Triplett 67 70 73, Retief Goosen (Rsa) 68 71 71, Jeff Quinney 69 71 70, David Duval 70 69 71, Bob Estes 72 65 73, Brandt Jobe 68 72 70
211 Mike Weir (Can) 70 71 70, Soren Hansen (Den) 70 69 72, Ernie Els (Rsa) 71 67 73, Ryuji Imada (Jpn) 67 73 71, John Mallinger 70 68 73, Carl Pettersson (Swe) 68 71 72, D.J. Trahan 67 72 72
212 Michael Letzig 70 71 71, Brad Adamonis 70 70 72, Nick Watney 71 68 73, Bart Bryant 74 67 71, Jim Furyk 66 71 75, Cameron Beckman 70 71 71, Scott Verplank 71 70 71, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 71 68 73, Stephen Ames (Can) 71 70 71
213 Aaron Baddeley (Aus) 71 70 72, Bo Van Pelt 68 71 74, Matt Kuchar 70 68 75
214 Ben Crane 72 68 74, Daniel Chopra (Swe) 73 67 74, Jason Gore 69 70 75, Charles Howell III 72 67 75
215 Charlie Wi (Kor) 70 71 74
216 Ryan Moore 68 71 77

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Milka Singh, Noh and Villegas win

Johnnie Walker awards

PRESS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ASIAN TOUR
India’s Jeev Milkha Singh, talented Korean teenager Noh Seung-yul and Colombian Camilo Villegas were honoured at the Johnnie Walker Gala Evening in Perth, Western Australian on Saturday.
Singh was named the Johnnie Walker Asian Player of the Year for the second time in his illustrious career while Noh won the Johnnie Walker Asian Rising Star award. Villegas received the Johnnie Walker Young Player of the Year award on a night when A$30,500 was raised in a charity auction.
The tenacious Singh produced a spectacular season in 2008 where he won four times around the world and also claimed his second Asian Tour’s Order of Merit title in three years. He also made history by becoming the first player in Asian golf history to surpass US$1 million in earnings during a single season.
Lin Wen-tang of Chinese Taipei and Thai duo Prayad Marksaeng and Thongchai Jaidee were the other nominees of the Johnnie Walker Asian Player of the Year award.
The 17-year-old Noh beat compatriot Bae Sang-moon, Japan’s Ryo Ishikawa and Ben Leong of Malaysia for the Johnnie Walker Asian Rising Star award after an impressive rookie season on the Asian Tour last year.
Noh posted one victory and three other runner-up finishes to finish 10th on the Order of Merit. He received the award from Australian legend Greg Norman, who graced the evening with several other golf stars who are competing in this week’s Johnnie Walker Classic at The Vines Resort and Country Club in Western Australia.
World number nine Villegas beat Rory McIlroy of Ireland, American Anthony Kim, Germany’s Martin Kaymer, Australian Rick Kulacz and Pablo Larrazabal of Spain for his award.
Villegas was victorious in the last two events on the US PGA Tour last season and broke into the world’s top-10, becoming the first Colombian to achieve the feat.
The selection panel of the Johnnie Walker Awards included officials from the Asian, European and Australasian Tours.
Past winners of the Johnnie Walker Asian Player of the Year include Thailand’s Boonchu Ruangkit in 1995, Kyi Hla Han in 1998 and Korea’s KJ Choi (2002 and 2007).
Former winners of the Young Player of Year include Luke Donald (2004), Adam Scott (2003), Justin Rose (2002) and Sergio Garcia (2001) whilst last year, Korea’s Lee Sung was named winner of the Johnnie Walker Asian Rising Star Award.
A hand-painting of Greg Norman by artist Brian Olsen was auctioned for A$28,000 while the Johnnie Walker-themed outfit worn by Ryder Cup star Ian Poulter during the second round of the tournament was sold at A$2,500.
The funds were channeled to the Smith Family, the designated charity of Diageo Australia.

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Johnnie Walker Classic at Perth, Western Australia

Amateur Danny Lee (18)
birdies last two holes for
historic victory

PRESS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ASIAN TOUR
New Zealand’s amateur sensation Danny Lee showed why he is a star in the making when he claimed a dream victory over a field of top professionals at the Johnnie Walker Classic today.
The 18-year-old birdied his closing two holes for a five-under-par 67 to edge out Japan’s Hiroyuki Fujita, Felipe Aguilar of Chile and overnight co-leader Ross McGowan of England by one stroke at The Vines Resort and Country Club in Perth, Western Australia.
It was a terrific performance by the Korean-born Lee, pictured above with the Johnnie Walker Classic championship trophy, who first made the world sit up and take notice of his prodigious talent when he became the youngest winner at the US Amateur Championship last year, eclipsing Tiger Woods’ record.
The victory, courtesy of his winning total of 17-under-par 271, made Lee the first amateur to win the prestigious Johnnie Walker Classic in 18 editions where past champions include his idol Woods, Greg Norman, Ernie Els, Fred Couples and Nick Faldo.
“It feels like I’m in a dream and I hope nobody wakes me up,” said Lee, who wasn’t eligible to win the US$304,286 top cheque due to his amateur status.
“I have won a couple of amateur tournaments before, but this is a different feeling than that. This is a pro event, and all I wanted to do here was to make the cut and get into the top-20. That was my goal and today I played extremely well and I won.”
Lee’s triumph made him the fifth youngest winner on the Asian Tour and youngest on the European Tour at the age of 18 years and 213 days. He also became the fourth amateur to win a professional tournament in Asia and second to do so in a European Tour event after Spain's Pablo Martin.
Starting the day two off the lead, Lee was one under through 12 holes with three birdies and two bogeys before producing four brilliant birdies over his closing six holes to etch his name on one of Asia’s most prestigious trophies.
It was however a crucial 12-foot par save on the 16th hole which kept Lee firmly in the title chase. “I was 15‑under and the leader was at 16, so I was thinking, this is the putt if you want to win the tournament. I was really focused on the putt and I made it,” he said.
Lee will compete in the US Masters in April as US Amateur champion and will subsequently turn professional where he will have the option of taking up membership on the Asian Tour, European Tour and PGA Tour of Australasia, which tri-sanctioned the Johnnie Walker Classic.
“I’ve played the Asian Tour events and The European Tour events and I just loved them. It's a great experience and they treat you really nicely, and you know, I wish I could play in every Tour event I can,” said Lee.
When asked what his goals were in golf, he replied: “To be the next Tiger Woods maybe. I can't compare to Tiger because he's one of the greatest players in the world, and he's the No. 1 ranked player in the world and all I want to do is just break what he's done. Obviously I can't win three events in a row, the U.S. Amateur, as he did but I'll try to break his record on the (US) PGA Tour.”
Fujita, winner of the Pine Valley Beijing Open on the Asian Tour last season, overcame a poor start to charge up the leaderboard and set the clubhouse mark of 16-under-par with two closing birdies for a 67.
“I did my best and played a near perfect round. I missed a few putts but still holed some. All credit to Danny as he is a very good player,” said Fujita, who has won five times in Japan. “I didn’t have the best of starts when I bogeyed the first hole. I duffed my approach shot and had a ‘fried egg’ in the bunker. But I didn’t give up and fought hard and got some birdies in the end. I’m happy with how I played as this was my first tournament of the season.”
McGowan opened up a two-shot lead after an eagle on the ninth hole and birdied the 12th hole to maintain his push for a maiden professional victory. However, bogeys on the 14th and 16th hole saw him slip back and he missed an eagle chance from 25 feet to force a play-off with Lee.
“On 18, it was another misread. The greens are very quick and it was tough to get the perfect line all the time,” said McGowan. “I played pretty nicely all day and on the back nine, I had several in between yardages and dropped a couple of shots in those and it was a bit frustrating really. I stuck to my game plan and hit the ball solid and played nicely. I just didn’t quite get the breaks,” said the Englishman.
Aberdeen-born Michael Sim shot four sub-70 rounds to finish joint seventh on 274, only three shots behind winner Lee.
Sim's financial reward was 42,461 Euros.
Sim emigrated with his parents from the Granite City in the early 1990s when he was only seven and later became the world's top-ranked amateur. A stress fracture of the lower spine during the period between winning promotion from the US Nationnwide tour to the US PGA Tour led to him losing his US players' card.
Fellow-Aberdonian Richie Ramsay got back on a sub-par track with a closing round of 70 for 287. Richie earned 3,397 Euros for 65th place
Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie was second-best Scot in joint 25th place, finishing with a 69 for 278. He earned 14,082 Euros.
Andrew Coltart had a 68 for 281 to earn a joint 45th place pay-out of 7,784 Euros and complete a good final day's set of scores by the Scots-born competitors.
The £1.25 million Johnnie Walker Classic observed a one-minute silence at 10am to mark the national day of mourning following the Victorian bushfire tragedy.
ALL THE FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4 x 72)
271 Danny Lee (Nzl) (am) 67 68 69 67
272 Felipe Aguilar (Chi) 68 68 68 68, Ross McGowan 70 67 65 70, Hiroyuki Fujita (Jpn) 67 68 70 67
273 John Bickerton 66 70 66 71, Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 70 68 66 69
274 Michael Sim 69 69 67 69, Lee Westwood 66 73 68 67, Adam Blyth (Aus) 68 68 71 67
275 Paul Casey 71 68 70 66, Taichiro Kiyota (Jpn) 68 70 69 68, Markus Brier (Aut) 70 68 70 67, Ignacio Garrido (Spa) 67 68 70 70
276 Robert Jan Derksen (Ned) 64 72 69 71, Tony Carolan (Aus) 65 72 71 68, Nick Dougherty 73 66 70 67, Pelle Edberg (Swe) 70 67 74 65, Peter Senior (Aus) 70 67 69 70, Graeme Storm 73 64 73 66, Mardan Mamat (Sin) 65 71 72 68
277 Francesco Molinari (Ita) 68 71 72 66, Niclas Fasth (Swe) 70 69 67 71, Ian Poulter 68 69 71 69, Andrew Dodt (Aus) 70 66 70 71
278 Anthony Kim (USA) 68 68 75 67, Chris Gaunt (Aus) 68 69 71 70, Colin Montgomerie 67 70 72 69, Sang-moon Bae (Kor) 70 70 65 73, Tim Wood (Aus) 69 72 68 69, Peter Hedblom (Swe) 73 66 70 69
279 Won Joon Lee (Aus) 71 70 66 72, Alexander Noren (Swe) 68 69 73 69, David Smail (Nzl) 70 71 69 69, Terry Pilkadaris (Aus) 70 66 68 75, Peter O'Malley (Aus) 73 68 70 68
280 Damien McGrane 66 68 72 74, Gareth Maybin 68 70 68 74, Peter Lawrie 67 70 69 74, Seve Benson 70 67 71 72, Anthony Wall 70 70 69 71, David McKenzie (Aus) 68 73 69 70, Michael Jonzon (Swe) 71 68 69 72, Craig Parry (Aus) 71 69 69 71, Brad Kennedy (Aus) 71 68 70 71
281 Scott Hend (Aus) 68 72 71 70, Clint Rice (Aus) 67 71 73 70, Andrew Coltart 72 69 72 68
282 Anthony Kang (USA) 67 67 77 71, David Howell 70 68 74 70, Jose Manuel Lara (Spa) 71 70 74 67, Marcus Fraser (Aus) 70 71 70 71
283 Brett Rumford (Aus) 71 70 70 72, Gary Lockerbie 69 69 72 73, Scott Laycock (Aus) 68 71 70 74, Alistair Presnell (Aus) 72 68 73 70, Richard Finch 69 70 71 73, Simon Khan 68 73 72 70
284 Phillip Price 68 70 73 73, Andre Stolz (Aus) 69 67 72 76, James Kamte (Rsa) 73 67 74 70
285 Magnus A Carlsson (Swe) 71 67 74 73, Mikko Ilonen (Fin) 72 65 75 73, Marcel Siem (Ger) 72 69 73 71, David Frost (Rsa) 73 64 70 78
287 Richie Ramsay 68 73 76 70
289 Darren Beck (Aus) 70 70 78 71
292 Benn Barham 68 72 82 70
293 Anton Haig (Rsa) 69 72 79 73, Hyung-sung Kim (Kor) 68 71 77 77
294 Michael Long (Nzl) 74 67 77 76
Retired: Robert Dinwiddie 71 70 70

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