Monday, September 14, 2009

Land of Crouching Caddies and Hidden Tigers

China's Mission Hills Golf Club ... the biggest in

the world with 12 golf courses of its own

FROM THE INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER WEBSITE
It's generally seen as a Western, capitalist pastime: a hobby for wealthy individualists. But now golf is the fastest-growing sport in the People's Republic. Clifford Coonan reports from a land of crouching caddies and hidden Tigers
Vigilant female caddies in wide-brimmed hats, their faces wrapped in scarves as the heat bakes the green, watch intently. A yellow-shirted Chinese entrepreneur descends from his golf cart and examines the fairway, one of 216 in the vast club known as Mission Hills in southern China. He places his tee, the swing is good and straight down the middle, and the four-ball and their caddies patter down the fairway.
This serene golfing scene takes place right in the commercial heart of Guangdong province where former Supreme Leader Deng Xiaoping declared three decades ago that China would open up to the world. To get rich is glorious, he said. To be rich is to play golf, say China's new breed of entrepreneurs. After 30 years of economic growth, plaid trousers, Ping hats and spiked golf shoes have edged out the Mao suits and People's Liberation Army slippers. Welcome to China's golf revolution.
In China, golf is known as "green opium", although the sport is certainly not for the masses. In the old days, the Communists considered golf a decadent way for capitalists to waste their time, but China's new leisure-loving rich have different ideas.
Zhu Kai, who works for the state oil company Sinopec, has been playing golf for just over a year. "I began to play golf in March 2008. I love the feeling of the swing. I feel free, casual and elegant when playing golf," said Mr Zhu.
While golf is still an elite sport in China, public courses do exist, although they are relatively rare. "I usually play golf on the public course at Gaobeidian Central Business District International Golf Course," said Mr Zhu. "During days when it's not a holiday, the price is 150-300 yuan (£13-£26) for one round of golf, which is affordable for me," said Mr Zhu.
Another aficionado, who gave his surname as Xu, is a veteran, playing since 2002. "Golf is not a boring sport," said the 43-year-old. "It changes constantly. It's outdoors. And I like to be in a green environment. I usually play less than three times on the same golf course, since I like to play in different places. Nowadays, agents can book golf courses for a group. So it is not that expensive. They could offer a round of golf for between 200-600 yuan (£17.60-£52.80) for one round of golf. Of course, some are expensive," said Mr Xu.
The only senior Chinese government leader known to have played golf was Zhao Ziyang, the disgraced former potentate who backed the students during the Tiananmen Square crackdown and spent his declining years under house arrest, endlessly putting in his courtyard home.

Golf's reputation is not assured in China, even among the current group of technocrats running the country.
Ideological quibbles aside, these days there are more than 300 golf courses in China, mostly in the south, compared with just 20 or so in the 1980s. The golf market is estimated to be worth £4.5bn annually and is growing by 20 per cent a year. China now ranks fifth in the world and second in Asia in terms of the number of golf courses.
As in other countries, golf is a status sport, as a way of oiling the gears when it comes to building contacts and setting up deals. At the same time, as China grows in sophistication as a golfing nation, increasingly the focus among the elite is on the game itself. They save the deals for the 19th hole.
Or the 217th hole, in the case of Mission Hills. Located in the southern manufacturing hub of Shenzhen (just across the border from Hong Kong, where many of its members hail from), Mission Hills is the world's biggest golf club, with a record-breaking 216 holes. Divide that number by 18 and you get 12, yes, 12 golf courses. Shenzhen is in Guangdong province, which is home to 85 million of China's 1.3 billion people and a region that has for many years driven China's boom.
The economic slowdown means things are not as they were a couple of years ago, but China's economy is still expected to expand by around 8 per cent a year. That is the kind of expansion the rest of the world can only dream of at the moment, and this leaves a lot of leeway for the business community to get out on the fairway.
Full membership, giving you the right to play all 12 courses at Mission Hills, costs around £150,000 a year; but different memberships are offered to address different usage preferences and the lowest entry membership costs less than £25,000. The club has a staff of 7,000, including 3,000 female caddies, wearing the aforementioned wide-brimmed hats. On a busy day around 3,000 golfers can tee off.
"It is no secret that the economic crisis is having its toll on global business. We think China, and Asia as a whole, presents golf's best opportunity for growth in the long run. It certainly has become harder and has taken creativity and some rethinking on tactics to lure customers, but Mission Hills presents an exceptional value proposition and golf experience to members and guests alike. We have an excellent product and therefore continue to grow," said Tenniel Chu, Executive Director of Mission Hills.
In terms of dealing with the downturn, or more accurately the slowdown, Mission Hills said it is trying to accentuate the positives. "The crisis has brought the corporate community much closer together, and innovative ways are being worked out to reach new customers. For example, we have been creating reciprocal and associated golf programmes with other clubs around the world that allow our members and those of partnering clubs to visit each other and enjoy special benefits. It's a little bit like the alliances airlines form," said Chu, the son of the founder, Dr David Chu.
Mission Hills began life in 1994 with a course designed by Jack Nicklaus. Its current collection of 12 courses includes links designed by the some of the biggest names in the game, such as Nick Faldo, José Maria Olazabal, Greg Norman, Ernie Els, Jumbo Ozaki and China's own Zhang Lianwei.
There is a lot riding on Zhang Lianwei, since, for the sport to really thrive in China, the game needs a Chinese name to really shine – look at how Yao Ming has made basketball the most important game in China.
The time and money involved in the sport put it beyond the reach of young players who might boost the competitive side of the game, but there is a growing number of sponsorships for young players. Golf is too land-intensive ever to be a really popular sport – the Communist government likes gymnastics and volleyball, because lots of people play the sport, in a team, in an enclosed space.

It is much easier logistically to promote these kinds of activities when you have a population of 1.3 billion people than it is to encourage youngsters to get out on a huge park, on their own, and play for China.
Nonetheless, China's population of regular golfers has doubled since 2001 (partly because of the success of Tiger Woods, with his Asian background) and the China Golf Association predicts that by 2020 China will have 20 million golfers. Of the 3 million who currently play, around 1 million are believed to tee off on a regular basis, although significantly fewer are club members – and hardly any are woman. Around 2,000 of China's golfers are competitive amateurs (sufficiently serious to take part in competitions), while about 300 are professionals.

There are many top-flight competitions in China, mostly in Shanghai with occasional outings in courses near Beijing or in Guangdong. The most prestigious is the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, and it is a sign of China's growing significance in the game that stars who are expected to be competing for the tournament's $7m purse in November include Tiger Woods, Padraig Harrington, Paul Casey, Henrik Stenson and Rory McIlroy.
Another club that receives regular praise in the golf magazines is Spring City Golf and Lake Resort in the Yunnanese capital of Kunming, in the south-west of the country. The development has luxury villas and two championship courses – the Mountain Course, by Jack Nicklaus, and the Lake Course, designed by Robert Trent Jones Jr.
Spring City began life as an investment by Singaporean property developer Keppel Land Group in 1992. It has been operational since 1998. The overseas membership is predominantly from South-east Asia – Thailand, Hong Kong and Singapore are all within four hours of Kunming.
"It's a very reachable destination for people from south-east Asia. We see more and more mainland golfers here. There are between 5,000 and 8,000 golfers playing in Kunming and up to 1,000 going to courses – a big increase from zero a few years ago," said Lau Tong Chye, general manager of operations at Spring City.
"There are lots of reasons why Kunming is popular. The weather is great, and the grass is the best in the world."
There is another dimension to this picture of serene golfing pleasure. The development of the game is tightly allied to the social changes in China over the past three decades. As with so much else in the New China, this golf revolution is built on cold, hard cash. The primary motivation behind developing the game of golf in China is property, not bashing a little white ball around a course. Plush villas pay the green fees.
"What make money in most clubs are the villas and apartments ringing the courses. The golf itself is a loss leader, and many of the courses in China are chronically underutilised," said a golfer at another club – on condition of anonymity: he doesn't want problems with his membership.
In extreme cases, developers buy up large tracts of farmland on the outskirts of the boom towns of New China: Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Chongqing, Tianjin, Beijing and Shanghai. They then start building flashy villas – reasonably priced by UK standards but more than most Chinese families would earn in a lifetime. The courses are often an afterthought, hastily-constructed – even unplayable. The developers don't care; they can charge a lot more for property near a course.
Sometimes this land is taken illegally with the connivance of corrupt local officials, leading to social unrest as disenfranchised farmers take to the streets and demonstrate, attacking building sites and picketing government offices.

China's arable land is scarce, and the government is worried about a growing wealth gap between the rich of the cities and the poor in the countryside.
There have also been efforts to clamp down on Communist Party cadres doing business on golf courses. The central government has put a ban on the construction of new courses for fear of a potentially-destabilising backlash, and ultimately the development of golf in China is largely dependent on what the Beijing government does.
But the ruling doesn't mean an end to the construction of golf courses in China. Many courses are listed as part of the facilities for a luxury villa development or as country clubs to get around the ban. Most people believe the government is more concerned about stopping course development turning into another bubble, and the slowing of growth is aimed at cooling the market.
Meanwhile, there are good golf clubs with real facilities and there are bad clubs. In one city-centre development in Beijing, it looked as though the builders had just put up a few flags and tried to sell the villa development as a golfing lifestyle scheme. This was a golf like an army assault course, although a bigger turn-off was the grand piano in the show house villa that played schmaltzy tunes automatically when the front door opened.
Other clubs combine a decent sporting reputation with a name for being a good property investment. Huatang Golf and Country Club lies in the Yanjiao Development Zone, which, if traffic is clear, is within a half an hour of downtown Beijing. The area is expanding at an incredible rate.

Massive new villa and apartment developments are within reach of the golf club, which has also been developing real estate near the course. But not too near – it's still a good course.
What is fascinating about Huatang is the way a town has sprung up out of nowhere just outside its boundaries – apartments, shops, offices, a whole new community. All the buildings seem to have been constructed in less than a year. They ooze aspiration. Entrepreneurial hawkers – who may be members of the club by this time next year – are selling golf balls and hats from the backs of their tricycles as you approach the course.
"Golf fortune here is to do with property fortune," said one player. "If the economy continues to grow and the Central Business District continues to expand, then the demand will grow for places to live. In general, it's an optimistic outlook, not necessarily because of the golf but because of the economy and thus the property."
The financial services company KPMG's Golfbenchmark report on the industry in China in 2008 was compiled before the financial crisis. But its author, Andrea Sartori, said he expects its positive outlooks to remain in place. According to KPMG, the average club membership in China costs €32,000 (£28,000), far higher than in Europe, the Middle East or Africa. "If only 0.1 per cent of China's population will play golf by 2030 – approximately one-tenth of the European and a hundredth of the North American participation in the game today – China would have 1.3 million golfers," the Golfbenchmark report reckons.
Assuming an average of 650 golfers per course, this implies a total supply of 2,000 golf courses in China. That means 1,700 golf courses being built in the next 20 or 25 years, it said. Fore!
And we should never forget China invented the sport. Chinese historians argue that their ancestors were teeing off in 945 and say Mongolian travellers took chuiwan – "chui" means to hit, and "wan" is a ball – to Europe. According to this theory, the rules of the sport were formulated in a 1282 book called Wan Jing (or Manual of Ball Games).
An ancient scroll called The Autumn Banquet, dating from 1368, shows officials playing chuiwan. It is a familiar scene, as one eccentrically-dressed nobleman putts, another watches balefully, while a third seems to be consulting the rules. Even the Emperor Huizong is said to have played; his handicap is unknown.
Visiting Mission Hills a few years back, I went to a showhouse villa and was bowled over by the way the double-doors at the back opened on to a pool with a fantastic view of one of the tees at a signature course. This was a lifestyle straight out of Entourage. You could lie in this pool sipping daiquiris and watch great golfers tee off, I told the saleswoman. She waved her hand dismissively.
"It's all going to be filled in, moved around the back. Bad feng shui," she said. Some things are still more important than real estate or golf.

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The Angus team who won the Provan Salver earlier in the season with the trophy which was presented at Tulliallan Golf Club on Sunday. Left to right: William Bremner, Ross Cull, Kris Harper, Keith Bruce (captain), Gary Duncan (image by courtesy of Hugh Hunter; click to enlarge).

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SCHOOLS INTERNATIONAL COVERAGE

Scotland drew 4 1/2-4 1/2 with England in the schoolgirls' international match at Westerwood Hotel, Cumbernauld today but England won the schoolboys' match 10-8.
Switch over to our sister website, www.kirkwoodgolf.co.uk, to read a report and all the results.

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England field their European champions

plus Stewart King for senior homes

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY ENGLISH GOLF UNION
England will field their European Championship-winning team when they bid to regain the Seniors Home Internationals title at Westport, County Clare, Ireland from September 29 to Otober 1.
The six-strong squad of Douglas Arnold (Copthorne, Sussex), Andrew Carman (Coventry, Warwickshire), Geoff King (West Essex, Essex), Chris Reynolds (Littlestone, Kent), Philip Slater (Sandiway, Cheshire) and Andrew Stracey (Littlestone, Kent) who lifted the European title for the first time last month, will be joined in Ireland by Stewart King (West Lancs, Lancashire).
It was a real team effort in Ascona in Switzerland with all six players contributing to the victory achieved with a 3-2 scoreline over Sweden in the final. Arnold has played in every Seniors Home Internationals since its inception in 2002 and has three English Seniors Championships, the last in 2006. The Sussex man has also represented England in all four European Seniors Team Championships to date.
Carman, won his first seniors cap in the Europeans, having been a full England international in 1979 and ’80. He played in his maiden seniors event in this year’s English Seniors Championship at Moor Park, finishing third and has since won the Midland seniors title.
Geoff King, no relation to Stewart, was capped at senior level for the first time in last year’s Seniors Home Internationals. The Essex man finished third in the South East Seniors Qualifying and tied fourth in this year’s English Seniors Championship.
Stewart King, the secretary/manager at West Lancs, last played in the England seniors team in 2006 when he was capped for the Europeans and Seniors Home Internationals. This year, he has won the Welsh Seniors Open at Prestatyn. Reynolds secured the English Seniors title at Moor Park in June, having finished runner-up two years ago and third in 2008.
He was first capped by England in the 2006 Seniors Home Internationals and has played in the last three European Seniors Team Championships. Reynolds has also helped Kent win the Seniors County Finals in 2007, he finished runner-up in the British Seniors last year, won the South East Seniors title last year.
Slater has been a regular in the England side since securing his first seniors cap in last year’s European Team Championships in Ireland and he also played in the 2008 Seniors Home Internationals.
A former Cheshire Seniors champion, he has helped Cheshire win two English Seniors County Championships. Stracey, like Carman, is a newcomer to the seniors scene, having won his first event in this year’s Irish Open Seniors before finishing runner-up to Reynolds in the English Championship.
With the boys and men’s Home Internationals titles already in England’s grasp, the seniors will be hoping to complete the Grand Slam by taking the title off the Irish who won at Tenby last year.
This will be the eighth playing of the Seniors Home Internationals following their inception in 2002 and England have won the title three times, the last at Caldy in 2007.

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Workington put Cumbria back on

England's golfing map

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY ENGLISH GOLF UNION
The three-man team from Workington carried off the English Champion Club Tournament when most of their rivals failed to mount a challenge on the second and final day of the event at North Hants.
After finishing runners-up a year ago at The Wiltshire, the Workington lads were determined to go a stage better and they did just that to take the title to Cumbria for the first time.
The Workington trio of William Bowe, Seb Crookall-Nixon and Mark Cowan finished on 428, eight over par, five strokes ahead of City of Newcastle from Northumberland with Hayling from Hampshire, Isle of Wight & Channel Islands third on 441.
On a day that turned distinctly autumnal, the outcome was clear halfway through the day as no team managed to threaten Workington’s position.
“We are thrilled to bits,” said Cowan, who with Bowe played in last year’s competition. “We came here with a strong team and after yesterday we were in a good position. This adds to what has been a great year for Cumbria. We’ve won the Northern Counties League, qualified for the County Finals, Seb is the English Under 16 Champion again and John Longcake won the Mid Amateur. We’re back on the map.”
For Crookall-Nixon it was another victory in what is turning out to be highly successful for the 16 year old. “Yes, it’s been a great year for me,” he said. “Winning the McGregor Trophy again and being a member of the winning teams in the Boys Home Internationals and the Jacques Leglise Trophy has been superb.”
The Cumbrian Champions began the day four clear of Porters Park from Hertfordshire and Surrey representatives Wentworth with The Kendleshire six shots back in fourth place. It was the City of Newcastle who made the first move, posting a second round aggregate of 213 for 433, Nicky Maddison returning 67. “I didn’t make the best start with bogeys at the first two holes,” he said.
“But I picked up three shots over the next two holes with a birdie and an eagle 2 at the fourth where I hit my drive to three feet. I got it to five under but managed to finish bogey-bogey-par. The pins were a bit fairer today but the weather was a bit harder. However, I’d have taken that at the start.” Yet the target fell well within Workington’s reach.
Out early, Bowe reached the turn in 34 with a couple of birdies on his way to 71, while Crookall-Nixon signed for 72. That meant if Cowan could shoot better than 78 they would hit the top of the leaderboard. He did just that, signing for 73 for an aggregate of 216 and 428.
Hayling, who were late starters, clinched third place late in the day when under 16 cap Colin Walsh came in with 69 and Toby Burden added 70 in an aggregate of 218. But the best return of the day came from Cosby’s David Gibson with a six-birdie 66 for the lowest individual tally of 137, three under par.
Scores for all matches, championship commentary and news updates are available on the Championships Section of the EGU website, http://www.englishgolfunion.org/

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Shot in the water at final hole costs Ian

Poulter place in Tour Championship

Ian Poulter has missed out on the Tour Championship in Atlanta next week by 0.46 points after a shot into water on the final hole of the BMW Championship on Sunday.
A closing par in Chicago would have kept the Ryder Cup star in the top 30 for the final leg of the FedEx Cup play-offs, but he carded a bogey and so exited the series with 1,531 points against Australian John Senden's 1,532.
Luke Donald did par the last hole and that got him to Atlanta in 29th spot, aided by Senden's double bogey at the 17th and Brandt Snedeker four-putting the 18th green for a triple-bogey 7.
Padraig Harrington and Sergio Garcia were the top Europeans in the event in joint sixth place.
But that was not enough to get Garcia into the Tour Championship - while, by moving up only to sixth in the points standings, Harrington cannot now win the 10million US dollars bonus.
That will be fought out between the top five - Tiger Woods, Steve Stricker, Jim Furyk, Zach Johnson and Heath Slocum.

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UBC BOYS' TOURNAMENT AT ELLON

CLARKE AND WRIGHT SPEARHEAD

WINNING NORTH TEAM EFFORT


North, spearheaded by Rodger Clarke (Moray) and Jeff Wright (Forres) who finished first and second in the individual tallies, won the UBC inter-district boys’ team tournament at McDonald Ellon Golf Club.
With 10 scores out of 12 to count in each round of the 36-hole event, North won with ease with a total of 1470.
North-east came second with 1526 and Angus third with 1562.
Clarke shot the lowest score of the day – a three-under-par 67 – in the morning round and followed that up with a 70 for 137.
Jeff Wright scores 70 and 72 for 142.
Three boys hit the 144 mark and their second rounds decided the finishing order. Ryan Bain (Strathlene) was placed third with scores of 72 and 72, Nick McAndrew (Cullen) fourth with 71 and 73, and Jamie Treasurer (Inverness) fifth with 71 and 73.

FINAL TEAM TOTALS
1470 NORTH 737 733: Rodger Clarke (Moray) 67 70, Jeff Wright (Forres) 70 72, Jamie Treasurer (Inverness) 71 73, Lyle McAlpine (Invergordon) 76 70, Tommy Dingwall (Nairn Dunbar) 72 75, Ali Begg (Muir of Ord) 79 71, Freddie Brown (Nairn Dunbar) 76 76, Jordan Shaw (Kingussie) 75 78, Danny Edwards (Elgin) 84 70, Michael Manson (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) 76 78, Andrew Burgess (Nairn) 80 79, Sean Burgess (Nairn) 75 91.
1526 NORTH-EAST 762 764: Nick McAndrew (Cullen) 71 73, Ryan Bain (Strathlene) 72 72, Gordon Munro (Fraserburgh) 73 73, Ryan Gordon (Alford) 75 79, Daniel Thomsett (Aboyne) 80 75, Andrew Carrell (Peterculter) 78 77, John Drummond (Strathlene) 77 79, Chris Lamb (Newmachar) 76 81, Jack Presly (Banchory) 79 79, Richie Manson (Braemar) 84 71, Connor Campbell (Inchmarlo) 81 80, David Ritchie (Fraserburgh) 86 87.
1562 ANGUS 775 767: Matthew Reid (Downfield) 75 74, Callum McKay (Grange) 77 75, Grant Bowman (Monifieth) 73 79, Chris Bremner (Edzell) 76 77, Andy Simpson (Royal Montrose) 76 79, Ross Munro (Monifieth) 76 79, Scott Smith (Monifieth) 80 76, Ian Douglas (Monifieth) 80 80, Ross Pert (Royal Montrose) 81 86, Liam McKelvie (Monifieth) 85 82, Jevin Wilkie (Downfield) 81 90. Withdrew: Reece Mitchell (Downfield).

LEADING INDIVIDUALS
Par 140 (2x70)
137 Rodger Clarke (Moray) 67 70.
142 Jeff Wright (Forres) 70 72.
144 Ryan Bain (Strathlene) 72 72, Nick McAndrew (Cullen) 71 73, Jamie Treasurer (Inverness) 71 73.
146 Gordon Munro (Fraserburgh) 73 73, Lyle McAlpine (Invergordon) 76 70.
147 Tommy Dingwall (Nairn Dunbar) 72 75.
149 Matthew Reid (Downfield) 75 74.

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A glorious view of the North Sea from The Duke's Course, St Andrews. Click on it to enlarge.

Wonderful Winter Awaits at The Duke’s St Andrews

NEWS RELEASE
The Duke’s St Andrews is already looking forward to a full season of golf as winter approaches and unlike many other courses in Scotland, the championship heathland course will allow golfers to play the full length of the course from a choice of four sets of tees to full greens and directly from the fairways (as opposed to from mats).
With the continual improvement in grass conditioning and drainage, The Duke’s is confident that the course will stand up to even the most extreme weather conditions over the winter.
“The Duke’s is in wonderful shape now after several years of perfecting the course following the remodelling by Tim Liddy in 2006 and the great work that the greenskeepers at The Duke’s have put in over the last three years,” comments David Scott, Manager at The Duke’s.
“Off the course, we also pride ourselves in a fantastic welcome, friendly service and excellent clubhouse facilities so you will leave having had a truly memorable experience on the course and a lot of fun in the clubhouse.”
A protégé of renowned golf course architect Pete Dye, Liddy redesigned the closing holes of the 7,512 yard Championship course and introduced spacious, rough-edged bunkers synonymous with the bygone years of heathland golf.
The Duke’s of course is in stark contrast to its illustrious links neighbours that form the St Andrews Links Trust but offers players of all levels a genuine challenge and some of the most picturesque and spectacular golf on the east coast of Scotland.
With the transformation of The Duke’s almost complete, the course is now gaining plaudits from the world of golf. In 2008, The Duke's was voted one of the UK's premier golf courses by Golf World magazine and was positioned in the UK’s Top 100 courses and just recently climbed the rankings from 44th to 37th in this year’s Scottish Top 100 Golf Course Rankings.
For more information or to book a tee time, please call the reservations team on 01334 470214 or email http://uk.mc870.mail.yahoo.com/mc/compose?to=reservations@oldcoursehotel.co.uk

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HUGH HUNTER'S CLACKMANNAN COUNTY NEWS

RUNNERS UP TO P&K AGAIN!
Last week it was the County Boys golf team who came runners up in the Gary Harvey Trophy; this week it was the same placing for the County Men’s Team with county Junior golfer Gary Chalmers featuring in both teams. Best County performances came from Alloa golfers Ian Ross and Jamie Aitken who set early good scores---Jamie tied for the individual award with a level par score of 69 but lost out on the inward nine score to Keith Anderson from Fife.
The 8 scores for the County were Ian Ross 71, Jamie Aitken 69, Scott Borrowman 74, John Maxwell 75, Ross Benvie 82, Scott Moffat 73, Darren Hulston 75, Gary Chalmers 76 giving a team total of 595, 12 shots behind the winners Perth & Kinross.

CRUNCH MATCH FOR COUNTY GOLFERS
The top County golfers journey to Erskine Golf Club this weekend to play Renfrewshire in the last tie in the 2009 Area Team Championship. With two wins already this year against Fife and Argyll&Bute, the Clackmannan team just need a draw to take them to the Area Team Finals at the beginning of October. Team Captain John Gullen is very hopeful “Our team members are all playing well, and it is certain that Renfrew will have their strongest team competing against us; we look forward to a good game”

2009 COUNTY GOLF AWARDS
The Annual County Golf Awards were determined recently and it was Alloa’s Ian Ross triumphing in both the Harrower Trophy and 2009 Order of Merit.
The Order of Merit is established by awarding points for the top County and Club events in Clackmannanshire.
FINAL POSITIONS 1. Ian Ross (Alloa) 605 points 2.Steven Horne (Tulliallan) 290 3.Darren Hulston (Dollar) 288, 4 Jamie Aitken (Alloa) 268, 5 Gary Chalmers (Dollar) 220, 6 Phil Dempsey (Tulliallan) 213

The Harrower Trophy is awarded for the best scratch aggregate scores in the Spring, Summer and Autumn Meetings
Final Placings 1. Ian Ross (Alloa) 210; 2 Steven Horne (Tulliallan) 215; 3 equal Jamie Aitken (Alloa), Michael Robertson (Alva) 221 5 Darren Hulston (Dollar) 226.

SENIOR GOLF
Tulliallan’s Bob Stewart continues to make headlines and in his own words “playing some of his best golf ever”. In the Midland Alliance events, he continues to outshine the professionals--- in the latest competition at Forfar; he was one of the three amateurs scoring brilliant 66’s, and must be among the top “money” voucher winner so far this season. Bob also had the best handicap score off his one handicap at 65, but like all golf competitions you can only win one prize!!
In the final event of the Scottish Seniors Golfing Society held over the Lansdowne course at Blairgowrie, he lifted himself into 4th position in the 2009 Senior Order of Merit with a score of 72—tying for best of the day..
Bob is also to be congratulated on being selected again for the Seniors Home International team competing at Westport Golf Club in Ireland for the 2009 title.

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NATIONWIDE TOUR REPORT

Teater scores first pro win in Utah Championship

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
SANDY, Utah -- Josh Teater earned his first victory as a professional with a dominating performance at the Utah Championship. He finished with a 68 to get to 20 under par, four shots better than Tyler Aldridge at 16 under and Andrew Buckle, Matt Jones, Steve Wheatcroft and John Kimbell at 15 under.
As he did in the third round, Teater didn't waste any time on Sunday, pushing his score further into red numbers. He started eagle-par-birdie to extend his one-stroke overnight lead to four. But he bogeyed No. 6 for the second day in a row and followed with two more on Nos. 8 and 9.
"The weather played a factor on the front nine," he said. "The wind was blowing a bit -- which we hadn't seen all week. I might have been a little greedy with my tee shot on eight that ended in the water. But I took my medicine and made a good bogey there."
Meanwhile Aldridge, five groups ahead, birdied three in a row to take a share of the lead at 17 under. But again, just as he did Saturday, Teater bounced right back with birdies on Nos. 10, 12 and 13 to get back to 20 under.
"When I got to the back nine, my thought was to give myself a chance at nine birdies and I did a pretty good job at that," he commented.
After parring the next three, Teater chipped in for eagle on the par-5 17th. Aldridge had stumbled down the stretch to close with two bogeys and Teater and arrived at the No. 18 with a six-shot lead. Although his tee shot found the water and he ended the day with a double-bogey 5, it was nonetheless a convincing display for his first win on any professional tour.
Teater is playing his rookie season on the Nationwide Tour. The 30-year-old from Lexington, Kentucky is a former stand-out at Morehead State University. Since turning professional in 2002, he has played primarily on the mini-tour circuit. Before this week, he had made the cut in 12 of 20 events played and recorded two top-10s. His best finish was a solo second at the Christmas in October Classic in Kansas City, Mo., just over three weeks ago.
With this victory, Teater moves to eighth on the money list with $238,200 and is virtually locked to finish amongst the 25 leading money-winners who are awarded US PGA Tour cards following the Nationwide Tour Championship at Daniel Island in October.
"It's a great feeling," he acknowledged. "But you have to keep playing well to finish as high as possible in the 25 to get in as many tournaments as possible next year, so I'm going to keep my foot down and try to keep making birdies."
Teater joins Alistair Presnell, Derek Lamely and Troy Merritt as the fourth rookie winner on Tour in 2009.




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Great Britain & Ireland humbled in Walker Cup

OUR BEST AMATEURS ARE TURNING PRO TOO EARLY

FROM THE DAILY TELEGRAPH WEBSITE
SAYS MARK REASON
Even the curious fact that Merion, Pennsylvania was originally a cricket club could not save the predominantly English visitors from a seven-point humiliation. Great Britain and Ireland lost all four sessions and suffered their worst Walker Cup defeat since a young Justin Rose played at Quaker Ridge 12 years ago.
GB&I have now lost three Walker Cup matches in a row. They are as strong as they have ever been, but the best home players are turning pro before ever playing in a Walker Cup.
Given the huge financial investment in their development, it might be time to put them on a contract requiring a longer term amateur commitment or a repayment scheme if they turn pro early.
In the lead up to this year's match Colin Dalgleish lost his three best players. Chris Wood, Shane Lowry and Callum Macaulay all decided to cash in rather than remain amateur for the Walker Cup. The same thing happened four years ago.
Darren Clarke is forever telling players to turn pro at a young age, but recent evidence does not support the Northern Irishman's self-justifying stance. 23 of the last 50 major Championships have been won by ex Walker Cup players.
The only outstanding player from Great Britain and Ireland over the past ten years is Padraig Harrington and he played on three Walker Cup teams. Even Tiger Woods played a Walker Cup and waited until he was 20 before he turned pro.
The best player at this year's Walker Cup has been the American Rickie Fowler who won all four of his matches.
The 20-year-old Fowler played in the 2007 Walker Cup and has had plenty of inducements to turn pro since, but decided he would be a better player if he competed at Merion. If only more Brits felt the same way.

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GB&I do down fighting in final singles

but Americans have upper hand

FROM THE SCOTSMAN WEBSITE
By BOB LENTZ
Great Britain & Ireland regained some pride with a fighting display in the final singles but were still convincingly beaten by the United States in the 42nd Walker Cup at Merion Golf Club in Pennsylvania.
Faced with a mountain to climb after losing the three previous sessions, Colin Dalgleish's players battled bravely for their Scottish captain on the closing afternoon but, in the end, still came up well short, losing 16 1/2-9 1/2.
After three wins in a row for GB&I – a run sparked at Nairn in 1999 – the Americans have now regained the upper hand in an event once dubbed the "Walkover Cup" due to their dominance with a hat-trick of their own.
The next match, in 2011, will be played at Royal Aberdeen, and the man handed the task of leading GB&I into battle over the Balgownie course – Dalgleish will be stepping down after the traditional two bites at the cherry offered by the R&A – will certainly be hoping he can stop the rot in the same way that Paul Azinger gave the Americans something to cheer in the Ryder Cup following two heavy defeats in a row.
For Dalgleish, it was the second time he'd been beaten by a team captained by George "Buddy" Marucci Jnr, the Merion member having the added satisfaction of completing his double on home soil after he'd also led the Americans to a 12-11 victory at Royal County Down two years ago.
"At 8-4 (after the first day], I felt we were still within touching distance, but we then had a mountain to climb after losing the second foursomes session," reflected Dalgleish, the former Scottish amateur champion from Helensburgh.
"There was some fantastic golf by both sides in the singles but, in the end, we came up a bit short."
Gavin Dear, one of the two Scots in the GB&I team, at least had the consolation of signing off with a win. The 25-year-old from Scone who plays his golf at Murrayshall did the job he was asked to do by Dalgleish, putting the first point on the board with an excellent 3 and 2 win over Brian Harman, who was also on the winning US team in 2005.
One down at the turn, Dear turned the match around with the help of three birdies in the space of six holes. It was the second time the pair had found themselves going head-to-head over the weekend, the spoils being shared 24 hours earlier when both Dear and fellow Scot Wallace Booth were among four GB&I players who earned half points in their matches.
Booth, who had tasted success together with Englishman Sam Hutsby in the morning's play yesterday, was also on course to end his amateur career with a win. But, after being one up with three to play, the Comrie player lost the 16th to a par and 17th to a bogey as he eventually succumbed to Morgan Hoffmann.
In his foursomes on the second day, Dear and Englishman Matt Haines won the first three holes against Harman and Adam Mitchell, only for the Americans to rally strongly as they fought back for a 3 and 2 win.
Leading 11-5 at lunchtime on Sunday, the Americans went into the singles needing only two points to retain the trophy and they were duly delivered by Rickie Fowler, who beat Matt Haines, and Cameron Tringale, who thumped Luke Goddard by 8 and 6 – the third biggest winning margin in the event's history.
Fowler's win saw him end his amateur career with seven points from eight matches in the last two Walker Cups, the first player to do that in consecutive matches since Luke Donald.
"This is why I stuck around," said Fowler, who plans to make his professional debut this week on the Nationwide Tour. Praising the 20-year-old from California, Marucci Jnr commented: "I'm not sure that anyone has played for the US like Rickie has in the last two Walker Cups."
In addition to Dear, Sam Hutsby, Tommy Fleetwood and Niall Kearney also won in the singles, while Chris Paisley secured a further half point. But those contributions could not stop the Americans from winning the final session as well.

COMPLETED RESULTS CHECK

SATURDAY
FOURSOMES (3-1)
(US names first)
Brian Harman & Morgan Hoffmann bt Wallace Booth & Sam Hutsby 2 & 1.
Peter Uihlein & Nathan Smith bt Gavin Dear & Matt Haines 1 hole.
Rickie Fowler & Bud Cauley bt Luke Goddard & Dale Whitnell 6 & 5.
Cameron Tringale & Adam Mitchell lost to Stiggy Hodgson & Niall Kearney 3 & 1.
SINGLES (5-3)
Brian Harman halved with Gavin Dear.
Rickie Fowler bt Sam Hutsby 7 & 6.
Cameron Tringale halved with Wallace Booth.
Morgan Hoffmann halved with Matt Haines.
Peter Uihlein bt Tommy Fleetwood 2 & 1.
Drew Weaver halved with Chris Paisley.
Bud Cauley bt Niall Kearney 2 & 1.
Brendan Gielow lost to Stiggy Hodgson 2 & 1.

SUNDAY
FOURSOMES (3-1)
B Harman and A Mitchell bt G Dear and M Haines 3 & 2.
R Fowler and B Cauley bt S Hodgson and N Kearney 1 hole.
D Weaver and B Gielow lost to W Booth and S Hutsby 3 & 2.
N Smith and P Uihlein bt C Paisley and D Whitnell 5 & 4.

SINGLES (5 1/2-4 1/2)
B Harman lost to G Dear 3 & 2.
R Fowler bt M Haines 2 & 1.
P Uihlein bt S Hodgson 3 & 1.
P Hoffmann bt W Booth 1 hole.
B Cauley halved with C Paisley.
A Mitchell lost to S Hutsby 1 hole.
D Weaver lost to T Fleetwood 1 hole.
C Tringale bt L Goddard 8 & 6.
N Smith lost to N Kearney 3 & 2.
B Gielow bt D Whitnell 4 & 3.

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