Monday, May 11, 2009

Aberdeen Trades Foursomes Results

HAZLEHEAD No 1 COURSE

SECOND ROUND

LAWYERS bt TULLOCH RECRUITMENT by four holes.
W Park & D Purdie 1, T Allan & J Hewitt 0.
D Macandrew & D Kerr 3, S Allan & C Shellard 0.

SPARROW OFFSHIRE bt TEACHERS by nine holes.
S Watt & G Lowe 7, T Liversedge & R Anderson 0.
J Henderson & G Blackwood 2, I Brunton & A Jenkins 0.

APORA (Royal Mail) bt CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS by five holes.
S Speirs & K Duthie 8, J Black & Julie Henderson 0.
T Robertson & R McKen 0, M Duncan, I Castles 3.

POLICE beat PLUMBERS by two holes.
B Ritchie & J Calder 1, I Welsh & R Young 0.
D Forsyth & S Ednie 1, C Philip & G Reid 0.

BANKERS bt ABERDEEN TELEPHONES by 10 holes.
G Stewart & D Templeton 7, D Smith & A Haining 0.
S Carmichael & M Paterson 3, W Smith & O Iversen 0.

GREENKEEPERS 1 bt LUMSDEN SECURITY by 16 holes.
N Saddler & R Paterson 6, M Wheeler & C McBain 0.
R McRae & D Grant 10, F Lawson & N Forbes 0.

SURVEYORS bt ELMAR UK by nine holes.
C Kerr & M Halliday 8, P Elmslie & S Hardie 0.
J Broadley & G Hendry 1, A Strath & K Selbie 0.

TUESDAY'S QUARTER-FINALS
4.19 Lawyers v ACNNS.
4.33 Sparrow Offshore v APORA.
4.47 Police v Bankers.
5.01 Greenkeepers 1 v Surveyors.

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Martin Laird has earned $95,777 this season

Martin Laird earned $18,430 for playing three rounds in the Players' Championship at TPC Sawgrass.
Although he made the halfway cut, the Glasgow man was one of those eliminated after three rounds at which point he was tied 71st.
Laird has won $95,777 this season from 12 events, having made the cut in only four of them.
Last year, the Scot made $852,752 from 29 events, making the cut in 20 tournaments.
Other money notes:
Players Championship winner Henrik Stenson pocketed $1,710,000 and runner-up Ian Poulter got $1,026,000 ... beats working for a living!

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Aberdeen & District Junior Pennant League results:

SUNDAY, MAY 3
Section A
CRAIBSTONE X, NORTHERN X.
CALEDONIAN 2 1/2, STONEHAVEN 3 1/2
AUCHMILL X, KINTORE X.
Section B
CRUDEN BAY 2, PORTLETHEN 4
INVERURIE 5, PETERHEAD 1.
WESTHILL 2 1/2, DEESIDE 3 1/2
Section C
PETERCULTER 3, NEWBURGH 3.
OLDMELDRUM 3, ALFORD 3
Section D
HAZLEHEAD 5, ABOYNE 1.
McDONALD ELLON 2 1/2, MURCAR LINKS 3 1/2.
ROYAL ABERDEEN X, NEWMACHAR X

Sunday, May 10
Section A
STONEHAVEN X, CRAIBSTONE X
CALEDONIAN 3 1/2, NORTHERN 2 1/2
KEMNAY 4, AUCHMILL 2.
Section B
PORTLETHEN 4 1/2, INVERURIE 1 1/2
PETERHEAD 4, WESTHILL 2.
DEESIDE 5 1/2, CRUDEN BAY 1/2.
Section C
BANCHORY 3, OLDMELRUM 3
PETERCULTER 5, NIGG BAY 1.
ALFORD 2, INCHMARLO 4
Section D
NEWMACHAR 3, McDONALD ELLON 3
ABOYNE X, ROYAL ABERDEEN X.

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Moray Golf Club win G R Thomson Trophy

By ROBIN WILSON
Host side Elgin, with no wins in four ties, had one of their worst Moray and Nairn League records when seeing their great rivals, Moray Golf Club, clinch the G R Thomson Trophy for the ninth time with an unblemished record of eight points from four games.
Moray's big test came in their second game on Saturday against Nairn, holders for the past three years, and they passed it with flying colours. They swept into a 5-0 lead, dropping just two games in the 6-2 result, then enjoying similar score lines against Nairn Dunbar and Elgin.
Results
Nairn Dunbar 2, Moray 6
Elgin 2, Forres 6
Nairn 2, Moray 6
Elgin 2, Nairn Dunbar 6
Forres 0, Nairn 8
Moray 6, Elgin 2
Nairn Dunbar 2, Nairn 6
Moray 5½, Forres 2½
Nairn 4½, Elgin 3½.
League Totals
Moray 8, Nairn 6, Nairn Dunbar 3, Forres 3. Elgin 0.

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Brora's winning squad. See below report/results for a caption to the image (by courtesy of Robin Wilson). Click on it to enlarge.

Brora win Dornoch Firth League

at home after nine-year wait

By ROBIN WILSON
Brora Golf Club ended a nine-year wait for the return of the Dornoch Firth League Targe at the weekend, building up a 4pt win over the holders, Royal Dornoch when the five-club league competition was played over their own course.
Once the dominant club in the league with 16 victories since 1973, as the players of this era grew older or left the village, Brora went through a lean spell, even having to take a home loss five years ago to Royal Dornoch.
Even at the beginning of the week there was a struggle to fill the three places below the club's present leading four players and with their promising juniors, Calum Stewart and Liam MacDonald not available for all four games due to exam study or in MacDonald's case attending a Clubgolf examination for a Level 1 Coaching certificate, it was to the “old hands” the club turned to to heal the sore of 2004.
Showing the same enthusiasm as he did when leading Brora to the majority of their previous 16 wins, Jim Miller came out of retirement and with him brought a sense of belief back to the team.
James MacBeath and Roddy Cameron, who have shared most of the Brora club championships since Miller's day, spearheaded the Brora attack in Saturday morning's opening clash with Tain, winners six years ago, and between, Cameron, MacBeath, Miller and club secretary Tony Gill highlighted the score board requiring only 53 holes of the 72 to scatter Tain in a 6-1 match result.
Brora were off to a flier with the other tie between Invergordon and Golspie finishing level at 3 1/2pt each.
Golspie, making a return to the league after a three-year absence, were dependent on their greenkeeper and club champion leading their revival but when Alec MacDonald had to make a late call off, a former junior star of the club, Robert Bremner, now resident in Aberdeen, and returning from a 12-year golfing absence since joining Murcar Links, made a surprise return. Playing No. 2 behind former Ross County footballer Chris Somerville, they gave Golspie the ideal start, beating Invergordon's Allan Gilmour and Lyle McAlpine in the first two games before Golspie's last man, Larry Stewart, beat Craig Cameron final game to share the points.
Golspie then caused the upset of the weekend with another shared result against the hosts who rested Miller and replaced him with schoolboy Calum Stewart who took a break from his school books and required just 12 holes to bring down Bremner as Brora were again quick off the mark. But old neighbourly rivalries are difficult to stop and Golspie's tail wagged again.
Overnight, Brora, after two games played, led by 2 1/2pt from Golspie, with the other three clubs all having a game in hand for crunch time on Sunday.
The big tie came on Sunday morning, Brora v the holders, Royal Dornoch. The result of the corresponding match five years ago gave the title to Dornoch after the overall tied result was decided on this individual game. This was Brora's chance to wipe the slate clean. Miller, now in his 66th year, was reinstated and added also to the home squad was his former team-mate Robin Wilson.
This time club champion MacBeath led the team against his Dornoch opposite, Chris Mailley but MacBeath was in blistering form, five birdies in succession from the fifth to 11th holes and although Mailley all but holed his second to the 14th green MacBeath holed a birdie putt to match the 3 and win 5 and 4, Brora's first point.
Daniel Holden got one of Dornoch's two points in the match result of 5-2 and by doing so matched Brora's MacBeath as the only two players with four-game 100% individual weekend win records.
The Ross shire tie between Tain and Invergordon proved what many thought was possible, Invergordon had a team capable of repeating their success of 2007. Talented teenagers McAlpine and Peter Renwick were of age to send out in the first two ties and Invergordon took three points from the first four matches.
McAlpine lost narrowly to Munro Ferries but Renwick beat the in- form Craig Smith and Invergordon's next two points came from Allan Gilmour who beat Mike Sangster, then Glen McAlpine beat Graham MacKintosh in the overall result of 5 1/2-1 1/2.
Invergordon were unable to sustain their pressure on Brora in the final Sunday afternoon fixture, Brora holding onto their unbeaten record with a 5-2 result to bring their points total to 19 1/2.
The other three clubs were involved in the three-some games, Golspie v Tain, v Royal Dornoch where 14 points were available to each club. None of the three teams took advantage, the results of Golspie 2, Tain 5; Tain 3, Royal Dornoch 4; and Royal Dornoch 4 1/2, Golspie 2 1/2 gave final point totals of:
Brora 19 1/2
Royal Dornoch 15 1/2
Invergordon 13
Golspie 11 1/2
Tain 10 1/2.
Which meant Brora were back on top of the waves, recording their 17th Firth League title.,
MATCH RESULTS
Saturday am- Brora 6, Tain 1; Invergordon 3 1/2, Invergordon 3 1/2.
Saturday pm Brora 3 1/2, Golspie 3 1/2; Invergordon 2, Royal Dornoch 5.
Sunday am - Brora 5, Royal Dornoch 2; Tain 1 1/2, Invergordon 5 1/2.
Sunday pm – Brora 5, Invergordon 2; Golspie 2, Tain 5; Tain 3, Royal Dornoch 4; Royal Dornoch 4 1/2, Golspie 2 1/2.


Caption for picture (by courtest of Robin Wilson): Ten of the Brora twelve man squad who recaptured the Dornoch Firth League Trophy. At the back, Liam MacDonald and Roddy Cameron. Front left to right. - John Sutherland, Graham Grant, Robin Wilson, James MacBeath, Calum Stewart, Jim Miller, Mike MacKintosh, Tony Gill. Missing: George Duncan and Jimmy Murray who played on Saturday.

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Thanks for the memory ...

Excellent Scottishgolfview article about Finlay Morris.
Few, if any, golfing 'anoraks' recall his outstanding achievements, and potential!
When I heard about young Ben Enoch's very sad demise, I was also reminded of reading about tragic road accidents in the 1950s affecting the golf community, one involving Arnold Palmer's college friend and another the Walker Cup Etonian Phil Scrutton.
Regards
Gordon G. Simmonds
Managing Director
GGS International Consultancy

+SCROLL DOWN A FEW PAGES TO READ Scottishgolfview's tribute to the memory of Finlay Morris, the rising young Scottish star who died in a motor accident in November 1967.

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Scottish qualifying round for Powerade championship

Patrick, Colquhoun head PGA

assistants at Auchterarder

The vast experience of former Walker Cup player David Patrick helped hoist him to joint top spot in today's Scottish qualifying round at Auchterarder in the flagship event for Britain and Ireland’s top young players.
Playing in the Powerade PGA Assistants’ Championship in association with FootJoy, Patrick and Iain Colquhoun (Dundonald Links) tied on a two-under 67. The leading 16 players will now contest the 54-hole final at The London Club in August.
Patrick, who spent seven years on the Challenge Tour, is now, at the age of 34, undergoing PGA training under Ian Muir at Elie Golf Centre in Fife. But his playing ability clearly hasn’t deserted him.
The 33-year-old shot a steady front nine of eight pars and a birdie, but on a topsy-turvy inward half he alternated birdies with bogeys from the 11th to the 15th, for an inward 32, one under.
Like Patrick, pictured above in action at Auchterarder today, who studied at Charleston in South Carolina, Colquhoun is another product of the US educational system, having picked up a degree in general business studies at Midland College in Texas, through whose doors have passed Andrew Coltart, former British amateur champion Stephen Dundas, former British and Scottish boys champion Steven Young, Dean Robertson and Mark Loftus.

Colquhoun, after a level-par outward half, picked up three birdies and a solitary bogey on the way home, finishing with a flourish as he chipped in from the back of the 188yd 18th.

First-year assistant Robin Gaden, signing for a 68, eventually made light work of the course that adjoins his workplace, Gleneagles Hotel. A keen fan of online poker (“but I don’t play for money – just points in a league”), Gaden overcame a dispiriting start – two bogeys in the first three holes – to grab three birdies before the turn, and then add a birdie and a bogey to a card otherwise peppered with pars.

The kind of luck he needs with the playing cards came to his aid after his four-iron tee shot at the 188yd final hole landed in the left rough. He then watched with some relief as his next shot, with a 58deg. gap wedge, took two bounces – and disappeared into the hole for his fourth birdie of the round.

AUCHTERARDER QUALIFIERS

Par 69

67 David Patrick (Elie), Iain Colquhoun (Dundonald Links).

68 Robin Gaden (Gleneagles Hotel).

69 Graham Fox (East Kilbride).

70 Peter McLachlan (West Kilbride), Craig Dempster (Inchmarlo), Mark Barnard (Inchmarlo).

71 David Blackadder (Kingsbarns), Alan Martin (Dunbar), Richard Valentine (Craigielaw).

72 Graeme Stuart (Gleddoch), Alasdair McDonald (Elie), Ross Ewen (West Lothian), Graham Mackay (Prestonfield), Christopher Currie (Caldwell), Ryan Buckley (Craigielaw).


*Full results from Auchterarder can be found under ‘Schedule, Scores and Results’ at http://www.pga.info/PGAAssistantsChampionship.aspx


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October 27 to November 1 at PortAventura Golf Resort

Hamiltons ready to defend European

father and son championship in Spain

English pair Martin and Connor Hamilton are set to return to defend their title when the 2009 European Father and Son Championship is held in Spain later this year.
The Hamiltons, from The Lambourne GC, Berkshire, beat off stiff competition from pairs from countries including France, Germany, Sweden, Ireland, Finland, Wales and the Czech Republic to be crowned champions when the event was held for the first time last October.
And the 2009 tournament is likely to be just as fiercely contested when it returns to the magnificent PortAventura Golf Resort on Spain's Costa Dorada from October 27 to November 1 with around 150 teams from across Europe set to contest the championship.
“I've never known pressure like it,” said Martin, a dentist from Slough. “Luckily we both played some good shots at crucial times in the final few holes to see us home.
“The whole event exceeded all our expectations. It was a fantastic week and we can't wait to come back and defend our title.”Tournament director Toby Marsden said: “The tournament made a great start last year with Martin and Connor emerging as worthy winners, and 2009 promises to be even better.
“The whole event is a family fiesta where fathers, sons, mothers, sisters and grandparents come from all over Europe to enjoy one of the best weeks of their lives.
“We provide a complete package from accommodation, transport, food and golf to a real professional tournament experience on the course which the competitors are guaranteed never to forget.”
The 54-hole Stableford event is open to any father and son combinations including grandfathers, stepfathers and professionals with no age restrictions and a handicap limit of 24.
Sky Sports TV has agreed to televise the tournament for the second year running and it will once again be played on PortAventura’s impressive South and North championship courses – the latter designed by Australian golfing legend Greg Norman.
The cost of the week is just £699 per player with £100 discount for juniors - which includes two rounds of golf each on the North and South courses, five nights’ half-board stay in a four-star hotel within the resort, transfers, evening entertainment, gala dinner and prize-giving on the final night - and places are expected to go fast.
Marsden added: “PortAventura provided a magnificent setting for the inaugural competition last year and we're delighted to be returning.
“Competitors and families alike will have the chance to experience one of Europe's finest new golf resorts, while the presence of Sky's cameras will only help add to the tension as the leading pairs battle it out for the top honours.”
As well as playing four rounds of championship golf, competitors and their families will also have the opportunity to enjoy the other facilities that has quickly made PortAventura one of the top family resorts in Europe.
Staying at the four-star Hotel Caribe, guests can use the swimming pool, tennis courts and other leisure facilities to unwind after a hard day on the fairways, while they will also have direct free access to the resort’s theme park, bars, cafes and restaurants during their stay.
For a free DVD of last year’s Sky Sports show and a brochure, call RedGolf on +44 (0)1702 337020 or e-mail info@fatherandsongolf.co.uk
For more information on the 2009 European Father and Son Golf Championship, visit its website at www.fatherandsongolf.co.uk

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MORE NEWS ABOUT THAT GREAT SCOTS 1-2

Gavin Dear was three

shots behind Wallace

Booth with 9 to play

FROM THE IRISHGOLFDESK.COM
Scotland's Gavin Dear produced a sensational back nine performance to win in the Irish Amateur Open in perfect conditions at Royal Dublin on Sunday.
Three strokes behind compatriot and fellow World Cup winner Wallace Booth with nine to play, he stormed home in four under par 33 to close with a 71 and win by two shots on one-over par 289.
Dear, 24, said: "It's very satisfying. I competed very well over the first two days when it was blowing hard. I knew guys would come at me and I'd need a good score to win it today. To come back in 33 down the stretch on the back nine is really satisfying. I know Wallace is a quality player and I knew he was going to make birdies."
Dear and Booth were members of the three-man Scottish team that captured the World Amateur Team Championship for the first time last November.
Leading by a stroke at halfway, Dear carded a level par 72 in the morning round to go into the final round a shot clear of Booth and Knock's Nicky Grant on two over par. But Dear turned in three over par to find himself three shots behind his team mate with nine to play before birdies at the 10th, 11th, 16th and 17th gave him an impressive victory.
Booth was two under for his final round after 11 holes but bogeyed the 12th and 18th for a 72 that left him in second place on three over.
Grant survived stomach cramps to take third place on seven over par after a final round 76 with Ireland's top amateur, Shane Lowry, tied for fifth on 10 over after closing rounds of 71 and 72.
+Image of Gavin Dear with the Irish open amateur championship trophy is by courtesy of the Golf Union of Ireland/photographer Pat Cashman. Enlarge the image by clicking on it.

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Keith Nicholson digs deep to win

fourth Lothians championship

FROM THE SPORT.SCOTSMAN.COM WEBSITE
By MARTIN DEMPSTER
Keith Nicholson reckons his latest Lothians Championship victory was down to a knack of winning ugly in "horrendous" conditions throughout the week-long event at Craigielaw.
The 35-year-old Haddington player put his name on the fabulous Evening News Trophy for a fourth time – he also won in 1997, 1998 and 2001 – after beating Marriott Dalmahoy's Kevin Messer in a wind-affected final on the East Lothian coast.
After battling strong winds every night earlier in the week, the two finalists were eventually bought to a standstill as the conditions deteriorated on Saturday afternoon, similar in fact to the way they did on the corresponding day during the 2002 Open Championship a few miles along the coast at Muirfield.
Due to the strength of the wind, Nicholson, pictured above by Cal Carson Golf Agency, was unable to replace his ball on the 14th green after marking it and, in the circumstances, the officials had no alternative than to suspend play for just over an hour.
Eventually, they were able to resume and, after finding himself two down early on, Nicholson dug deep into his reserves to regain the top prize in Lothians, golf thanks to a one-hole win.
"The conditions this week were horrendous and, without doubt, the secret was being able to win ugly," said the champion, who claimed this latest success was sweet for two reasons.
One was that he hadn't started the event with high expectations due to the fact he hadn't been playing much competitive golf while the other was that his pregnant partner, Nicola, was there to see him lift the trophy.
"It's actually been a wee while since I've given myself a good chance to win this again and it's probably sweeter, to a certain extent at least, because I didn't feel I was the favourite this week," added the Lothians team captain.
"It was also good that Nicola was there to see me win something like this for the first time. She's due to give birth at the end of July so it is an exciting time for the two of us. She actually had her latest scan last Wednesday, the day of the second round, and I had a bit of a rush to get from Roodlands Hospital to Craigielaw in time for my match after it was 40 minutes late."
In Saturday morning's semi-finals, Nicholson recovered from being two down early on to beat Dunbar's Stephen Simants by 3 and 2, while Messer also had to dig deep for his 2 and 1 success over Baberton's Andy Laurence.
Simants had beaten two leading contenders in Pumpherston's Paul Drake and Steven Armstrong from Turnhouse to make it to the last four but was disappointed that he couldn't raise his game one more time.
"I just didn't hole enough putts while Keith putted solidly, sinking a good one from 20 feet at the 16th to clinch his win," said Simants. "But I've enjoyed my week and, hopefully, I can use this to achieve my goal of playing more for the Lothians."
After being two up after two in his match, Laurence was bitterly disappointed about his defeat, the damage being done by Messer as he won three holes in a row from the 11th. "Losing in the semi-finals sucks," said Laurence. "But I've enjoyed my week and hopefully I'll be able to draw on this experience in the future."
Nicholson now shares the record of most wins in the event with Duddingston's Stuart Smith and, still on the right side of 40, there's nothing to suggest he can't add to that title haul, especially when the event is played in his native East Lothian.
But, as he himself admitted, life could be about to change. "Once the wee one arrives, I think the golf clubs might have to be put in the cupboard for a while," said Nicholson.

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Top class international field

for St Andrews Links Trophy

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY ST ANDREWS LINKS TRUST
The 21st St Andrews Links Trophy promises to be the best yet as a top-class international field prepares to play at the Home of Golf.
With Walker Cup places at Merion in September up for grabs, the Links Trophy is sure to be one of the pivotal events of the year and the majority of the Great Britain and Ireland squad will be on show in St Andrews looking to impress team boss Colin Dalgleish.
Pride of place goes to defending champion Keir McNicoll of Carnoustie, who is also the backmarker in the event with a handicap of +5.6. He pipped Troon Welbeck’s Michael Stewart and France’s Rudy Thuillier with a final-green birdie last year.
McNicoll will be joined by a group of fine young Scottish players, including Eisenhower Trophy winners Wallace Booth (Comrie) and Gavin Dear (Murrayshall) who, together with Callum Macaulay, now a professional on the European Tour, took the world amateur team title in Australia last autumn.
Highest ranked player is Sam Hutsby, who came fourth at St Andrews in 2008. The Liphook man, a fixture in the world’s top ten this year, lost narrowly to British Amateur champion Reiner Saxton in the final of the Spanish Amateur Open in March but went on to win the individual title at the European Nations Cup while helping England to the team honours.
England will be strongly represented, with newly-crowned Lytham Trophy champion James Robinson (Southport and Ainsdale), 2008 Amateur Championship runner-up Tommy Fleetwood (Formby Hall) and Todd Adcock (Nevill), the reigning English Amateur Champion, hoping to make a big impact. Luke Goddard (Hendon) and Charlie Ford (Kirby Muxloe) were members of the triumphant European Nations Cup team and Eddie Pepperell (Drayton Park) is in the Walker Cup squad.
New Course record holder Nigel Edwards (Whitchurch) will return to the Links to be joined by Welsh compatriots Rhys Enoch (Truro), Adam Runcie (Abergele), Joe Vickery (Newport) and Oliver Farr (Ludlow), who was the Eden Trophy champion at St Andrews three years ago.
Irish hopes will lean on Shane Lowry (Esker Hills) who won the Irish Amateur Closed Championship in 2007 and was third in last season’s Lytham Trophy.
The overseas contingent includes Americans Jack Eckardt (Firewheel), recently tied second at the Texas Golf Association's North Mid-Amateur and Gregory O’Mahony (The Dye Preserve), a third place finisher at the Southeastern Collegiate in Valdosta, Georgia , where he scored low round of the week. Scott Pinkney (Arizona) and Bill Rankin (University of Michigan) are two high-ranking US college golfers set to play in St Andrews.
Top-performing Canadians Peter Sauerbrei (Cataraqui) and Christopher Ross (Hamilton) will also play and there will be a return to St Andrews for South Africa‘s Derik Ferreira (Centurion) and Andre De Decker (Westlake) who will be joined by young stars Mark Fensham (Port Elizabeth) and Jake Redman (Fancourt), first and second in the Border-EP Kat Leisure 72-hole Strokeplay Championship at Fish River Country Club this April.
Brendan Smith (Pymble) and Matt Jager (Melville Glades) were members of Australia’s victorious Southern Cross Cup team, with Jager the recent winner of the New Zealand Men’s Amateur Championship. Both will be looking to emulate the excellent finishes of countrymen Scott Arnold, second in 2007 and Stephen Dartnell, runner-up in 2006. Australian Stuart Bouvier remains the only overseas player to have won the Links Trophy, back in 1990.
Europeans Alexandre Kaleka of France, third two years ago, and Pontus Widegren of Sweden will be hoping for top ten finishes.
The first two rounds of the St Andrews Links Trophy 2009 will be played on the New Course and the Old Course on 5 and 6 June, with the final two rounds taking place on the Old Course on Sunday, 7 June.

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THE PLAYERS' CHAMPIONSHIP

Cejka blows big lead:

Stenson wins by

four from Poulter

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
By Helen Ross, PGATOUR.COM Chief of Correspondents
PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Florida -- Ingemar Stenson played hockey in his youth, as most Swedes do, and he turned to soccer and handball as an adult.
When a neighbour encouraged his eight-year-old son, Henrik, to start playing golf, though, the patriarch of the clan had no choice but to join him.
"I had to be at the course every night," Ingemar recalled with a shrug of his shoulders. "He didn't want to go home. Just one more bucket, he said, one more bucket. So I bought some clubs and then I understood how difficult the game was."
So it was only fitting that Ingemar was standing by the 18th green, crying like a baby, on Sunday as his son won The Players' Championship he so called "fifth major" - making up five shots on one of the game's most challenging courses, TPC at Sawgrass, to capture the biggest title of his career.
"Marvelous, marvelous," was all that an overwhelmed Ingemar, who turned 60 last week, could say as he saw his son win for the first time in person.
Stenson fired a bogey-free 66 on Sunday to overtake a faltering Alex Cejka (who finished with a 79), leave an erratic Tiger Woods (73) in his dust and turn back every other challenge at the Stadium Course. The Swede only missed two fairways on the weekend and won by four.
"It's a hell of a round of golf out there today," said Ian Poulter, who finished second. "Those greens, they were icy quick. ... You have to hit it in the right spot certainly at times and you had to take a few pins on today, so if you missed it on the wrong shelf, there was no way you were going to two putt. 66 is a great round."
The first time Stenson played the Stadium Course in 2006, he loved it. He tied for third that year and didn't finish lower than 23rd in his next two appearances. He has the patience to prosper when conditions are tough and he's prudent in the choices he makes.
"It's obviously a great feeling to have won this championship, and it's a golf course I really enjoy playing," Stenson said. "It suits my eye, suits my game, and I just handled myself very well throughout these four days, putted well and (gave) myself plenty of chances and stayed very level headed.
"I just like the whole concept of risk and reward (at the Stadium Course). You see pretty clearly what you can do, and if you pull off the shots, you're going to get rewarded, and if you don't, you're going to be in trouble a lot of times. I think it's a very fair and square golf course in that sense."
As well as he played, not everything went perfectly for Stenson over the weekend, though. He bogeyed three of his last five holes on Saturday to fall from two strokes behind Cejka to five. Not everyone would have handled the finish as well as the Swede, who isn't the same man his father remembers uttering choice words in anger and tossing clubs.
"When he became a father that was so key; and when he got married, too," Ingemar explained.
So Stenson simply went home to the house on the beach he'd rented -- "that I might have to buy now," he said -- and relaxed with his family. His wife, Emma, and their daughter, Lisa, were waiting there along with his mom and dad and sister, Ulrika, who abandoned golf for equestrian pursuits when she became a teen.
"He was very focused this morning," said Ingemar, who has whittled his handicap to 9 but never beaten his son. "Relaxed and focused at the same time."
Emma, who can relate more than most wives after playing golf at the University of South Carolina from 1996-2000, agreed.
"He's very calm and sensible," Emma said as she kept a watchful eye on an energetic Lisa as Stenson made the round of interviews. "The more you play it down, the better it usually goes and everybody knows one shot can make a big difference either way."
By the time he came to the final three holes on Sunday, the most difficult stretch on what had become an unforgiving course, Stenson had a three-shot cushion. He stretched that to four with a two-putt birdie at the par-5 16th and cruised to the victory, which was the second straight for an international player and 10th overall.
"It's definitely up there, if not the best final round I've done," Stenson said. "It's just going to give me a lot of confidence to go out there and control myself and play as well as I did today on the last day at TPC Sawgrass and to hold off such a strong field.
"It's just going to give me a lot of confidence going into the majors, and obviously if I can play as well as I did today, I surely can do it on a Sunday at the majors."
Stenson, who moved from ninth to fifth in the world on Sunday, is headed for the Bahamas next week to "practice some bunker shots," he said with a smile. He'll play two events on the European Tour before heading back to the States for a week off before the St. Jude Classic and U.S. Open.
Stenson, whose first win on American soil was at the 2007 World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship, really came into his own at the majors last year. He tied for third at the British Open and fourth at the PGA Championship, where "I felt like I was one out of four or five guys that had a chance to win it," he said.
"It just seems to bring the best out of me when I have to, playing the best players, and obviously now I feel like I'm up there where I belong when I'm playing good," Stenson said.
He's the first to admit that having Fanny Sunesson on his bag for the last 2 ½ years has been a huge benefit. His fellow Swede is regarded among the game's best caddies and, during their nine years together, she toted Nick Faldo's clubs for four of his six majors (Fanny and Henrik are picture above from a previous tournament).
"It's just been a great journey," Stenson said. " ... We just have a great time, and obviously with her experience being out there for 20-odd years and winning some great championships with some great players, I know that she's spot on with everything she does. I couldn't have a caddie that's more prepared than she is when we tee off."
Sunesson was there two months ago -- only holding his clothes rather than his bag -- as Stenson stripped down to his skivvies to play a ball in the water during the World Golf Championships-CA Championship at Doral. The photos caused quite a stir worldwide and prompted his peers to present him with an autographed pair of undies at the Tavistock Club the following Monday.
"A lot of publicity for the game obviously," Stenson said, chuckling. "A lot of publicity for me, and I managed to get a few new fans, which is nice. I guess I got as much attention off that thing as from my results the last ten years. That's the way it felt like."
The Players' Championship will head his resume now, though. And as Stenson acknowledged the cheers of the crowd on this steamy Sunday afternoon, his tow-headed 2-year-old ran onto the 18th green and wrapped her father's leg in a tiny bear hug.
Maybe that will be the lasting image now.
+STENSON STATS: His average drive was 294.8yd. His average number of putts per green hit in regulation was 1.735. He hit 68.1% of the greens in regulation figures.

Cejka's five-stroke lead lasted one hour on Sunday
Alex Cejka began the final round of The Players' Championship with the largest 54-hole lead in the tournament's 36-year history. With an hour's play, it had gone. Just like that.
Cejka, partnered by Tiger Woods, was 5 over par through his first six holes on Sunday, erasing his five-stroke lead and leaving him in a free-fall from atop the leaderboard.
He finished up a sad day with seven-over-par 79, eight strokes behind winner Stenson, in a five-way tie for ninth place on four-under-par."It was one of these days where nothing is going your way," Cejka said. "There was a little bit of pressure, but I wasn't nervous at all," Cejka said. "I was trying to do my thing. But it's just a tough golf course. If I had a little bit better start. If I don't make the double bogey on 4, it looks totally different. That's sometimes golf."
"It could have been better, should have been better," he said. "But it's OK. I'm playing better, and it shows a little bit. Sometimes you've got to knock at the door a couple of times before you open it."

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Golf at the gallop: Warren and Barham's

last Italian Open round took 2hr 21min

FROM THE AOL GOLF NEWS SERVICE
Scotland's Marc Warren and England's Benn Barham played their final round at the BMW Italian Open in Turin on Sunday in a mere 141 minutes, 2hr 21min.
The pair, first off at 8.20am, had decided over breakfast to get a move on in order to catch a lunchtime flight home - Barham so he could then watch Chelsea's game at Arsenal on television.
"It was good," said Barham. "And what was best was that there was no long debate about club selection with our caddies. It just goes to show."
They would have been round even quicker but for ball searches in the rough at both the seventh and ninth holes.
The pace did not appear to affect them adversely, Barham's 69 was a nine-stroke improvement on his third round and Warren shaved four shots off his Saturday effort with a level-par 71. They both finished on three over par.
Two hours and 21 minutes broke no speed records for a round of golf, however. They were not even close, in fact.
John Daly and Mark Calcavecchia played the last round of the 1992 Players Championship in 123 minutes - and were fined because Daly took 80 and Calcavecchia 81.
The quickest round by anyone was in 1981 by Steve Scott, America's mile and 1500 metres record-holder at the time. He completed 18 holes in under 30 minutes, but did run up a 92.
And last July - also in the States - 40 golfers combined to play a round in under eight minutes.
That was a relay with one player down the fairway ready to hit somebody's else drive as soon as it stopped, another up by the green and another on the next tee who drove off with another ball the moment the previous one went in the hole.
So how long did you take for a round in the Saturday medal?

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