Saturday, January 30, 2010

Flint on fire - four shots clear in Myanmar Masters

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ASIA TOUR
Yangon, January 30: Australia’s Gavin Flint moved closer to lifting the US$75,000 Air Bagan Myanmar Masters presented by IBTC title following a third-round one-under-par 71 today.
The Australian’s three-day total of 10-under-par 206 put him in a commanding four- shot lead over Myanmar ’s Aung Win who returned with a 68 to take second place on 210 at the season-opening event of the inaugural Asian Development Tour.
Malaysia ’s Akhmal Tarmizee added a 73 to his previous rounds of 69 and 69 to take a share of third place alongside Chinese Taipei’s Hsu Chia-jen who posted a 69 for a 211 total.
Brazil’s Lucas Lee is a further shot back in fifth place on 212 while Sweden’s Richard Karlberg recorded the day’s best score of 67 to take a share of sixth place with first round joint-leader Myanmar’s Thein Zaw Myint on 213.
Overnight leader Flint, who enjoyed two top-10s en route to a 49th place on the Asian Tour Order of Merit last season, continued his pre-season warm-up by marking his card with birdies on holes seventh, ninth and 13th before dropping shots on the 15th and 16th.
“It’s always nice to be in the lead but there are still 18 more holes to play tomorrow and I hope to be up there on the leaderboard when it all ends,” said Flint of his final round before he heads to Bangkok next week for the start of the 2010 Asian Tour season.
Local prospect Aung who began the day in tied-seventh put in the red numbers with four birdies against one lone bogey on the sixth hole in his opening front-nine.
He recorded further birdies on the 10th and 17th after the turn but dropped another shot on the 13th to eventually sign for a 68. Looking ahead to the all-important final round, Aung hopes to reward the home crowd by taking the contest down to the wire on the final day.
“I played pretty solid today. I stuck to my same game plan for three rounds and I’ll continue to do the same for the final round tomorrow,” said Aung, who attracted the large galleries who had followed him throughout the Pun Hlaing Golf Club.
Despite moving one place down to third, Akhmal was satisfied with his performance all week and is hopeful of ending it on a high note on Sunday.
“My iron shots have been really good. I hit a lot of greens and my putts from longer distance have been really good today,” said the Malaysian, a bronze medallist at the 2007 South East Asia games.
Asian Tour hopeful Lee knows that he needs another good round on the final day before he can secure a dream start at next week’s full field Asian Tour event in Bangkok .
The leading non Asian Tour member who finishes within the top-five will receive a place at the season-opening Asian Tour International in Bangkok next week.
“I’ve always wanted to play on the Asian Tour and I know that I’ve a good chance of doing it if I play one more solid round tomorrow,” said the Brazilian-born Lee.
While a place at next week’s Asian Tour is at stake, a good result at this week’s Air Bagan Myanmar Masters is also crucial for many of the aspiring professionals as the leading three players on the Asian Development Tour will win their coveted Asian Tour cards for the following season.
“My dream is to play on the Asian Tour and I hope to gain more confidence by playing against an international field this week,” said Myanmar ’s Zaw Paing Oo who is nine shots off the lead after carding a 71 for a share of 13th place.
The Asian Development Tour is designed in the same structure as the Nationwide Tour in America and European Challenge Tour to build a career pathway for professional golfers in Asia .
The Air Bagan Myanmar Masters presented by IBTC marks the start of the inaugural Asian Development Tour. Since the announcement of the Asian Development Tour, many regional tournaments have shown a keen interest to support this new and exciting initiative by the Asian Tour.
The Tour not only allows aspiring young talent to develop their game through a secondary circuit in Asia , it also provides sponsorship opportunities to local companies hoping to maximize their exposure through the Tour.
Other legs on the Asian Development Tour are being finalised in the Philippines , Chinese Taipei, Indonesia , Thailand , Malaysia , Vietnam and India .
For more information and the latest news on the Asian Development Tour, visit the Asian Development Tour website at http://www.asiantour.com/adt_home.aspx
SCROLL DOWN FOR THE THIRD-ROUND TOTALS

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Asian Developmental Tour Scoreboard
AIR BAGAN MYANMAR MASTERS

Pun Hlaing Golf Club, Yangon, Rangoon, Myanmar
THIRD ROUND TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
206 Gavin Flint (Aus) 69 66 71
210 Aung Win (Mya) 70 72 68
211 Akhmal Tarmizee (Mal) 69 69 73, Hsu Chia-Jen (Tpe) 72 70 69
212 Lucas Lee (Bra) 69 72 71
213 Thein Zaw Myint (Mya) 67 76 70, Richard Karlberg (Swe) 74 72 67
214 Jani Pertilla (Fin) 67 73 74, Takafumi Kawane (Jpn) 71 70 73, Zaw Zin Win (Mya) 73 70 71, Gabriel Canizares (Spa) 70 75 69, Nick Redfern (Eng) 75 70 69
215 Naing Naing Lin (Mya) 71 71 73, Masaki Sakata (Jpn) 71 72 72, Zaw Paing Oo (Mya) 70 74 71, Lindsay Renolds (Can) 71 75 69
216 Eltoro Sjoholm (Swe) 71 71 74, Kyaw Thiha (Mya) 73 72 71
217 Min Naing (Mya) 70 71 76, Soe Moe Win (Mya) 72 71 74, Mardan Mamat (Sin) 71 74 72, Zaw Moe (Mya) 71 74 72, Soe Kyaw Naing (Mya) 72 74 71, Panuphol Pittayarat (Tha) 75 71 71, Pravee Visalkit (Tha) 75 72 70
218 Hla Myo (Mya) 71 72 75, Stuart Lunn-Walker (Aus) 71 73 74, Michael Tran (Vie) 71 73 74, Lee Jung-Oh (Kor) 74 70 74, Kim Young-Jin (Kor) 75 69 74, Myo Min Aung (Mya) 72 75 71, Kim Gi-Hwan (Kor) 77 72 69, Zaw Zaw Latt (Mya) 75 75 68
219 Myint Shwe (Mya) 74 72 73, Choi Min-Chel (Kor) 77 72 70
220 Myint Thaung (Mya) 72 75 73, Khor Kheng-Hwai (Mal) 77 73 70
221 Scott Taylor (USA) 71 77 73, Tommy Mansuwan (Tha) 75 74 72, Senroku Isa (Jpn) 78 73 70
222 Justin Evans (Eng) 73 77 72
223 Ryan Panichpakdee (USA) 69 79 75, Varan Israbhakdi (Tha) 74 75 74
224 Haziq Hamizan (Mal) 71 79 74, M.Sasidaran (Mal) 73 77 74, Nguyen Thai Duong (Vie) 71 80 73
225 Stephen Lindskog (Swe) 74 76 75
226 Mitchell Slorach (Sin) 72 70 84, Hirotaro Naito (Jpn) 76 74 78, Airil Rizman (Mal) 75 76 75
229 Hanafiah Jamil (Mal) 75 75 79

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US PGA's Nationwide Tour Scoreboard
Michael Hill NEW ZEALAND OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP
The Hills Golf Club, Queenstown, New Zealand
THIRD ROUND TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
200 Robert Gates 65 67 68
203 Andrew Dodt 65 68 70
205 Michael Curtain 69 68 68
207 Mark Hensby 71 70 66, Matthew Griffin 67 70 70, Kevin Chappell 70 66 71
208 Kelly Grunewald 68 71 69, Jamie Lovemark 70 69 69, Tag Ridings 69 70 69, Phil Tataurangi 69 68 71
209 Andrew Martin 71 70 68, Barrett Jarosch 69 69 71, Martin Piller 71 66 72, Darron Stiles 67 69 73, D.J. Brigman 66 69 74
210 Brendan Steele 72 70 68, Chris Kirk 68 73 69, Alistair Presnell 70 71 69, Rob Oppenheim 72 68 70, David Smail 65 74 71, Peter O'Malley 70 69 71, Aaron Watkins 71 67 72, Kevin Kisner 69 69 72, Michael Wright 67 71 72, Bradley Iles 71 67 72, Scott Gardiner 70 67 73, Jarrod Lyle 69 68 73
211 Matt Jager 68 73 70, Casey Wittenberg 72 69 70, Jeff Brehaut 69 71 71, Michael Sims 72 68 71, Andrew Buckle 67 72 72, Josh Geary 69 69 73
212 Mark Anderson 74 68 70, Won Joon Lee 68 74 70, Gavin Coles 72 70 70, Adam Bland 69 73 70, Gareth Paddison 72 70 70, Jason Gore 70 72 70, James Hahn 75 66 71, Stephen Dartnall 69 72 71, Ryan Armour 72 69 71, Paul Gow 70 71 71, Scott Dunlap 70 70 72, Keegan Bradley 69 71 72, Justin Hicks 69 69 74, Jeff Gallagher 69 69 74, Ryan Haller 67 70 75, Jon Mills 68 69 75
213 Jim Carter 72 70 71, Dave Schultz 67 71 75
214 Jin Park 69 73 72, Jess Daley 71 71 72, Nick Flanagan 67 75 72, Brian Smock 69 71 74, Jay Delsing 70 70 74, Kyle Stanley 70 69 75
216 Andrew Tschudin 71 71 74, Ashley Hall 72 70 74, Andrew Bonhomme 66 75 75, Ted Brown 71 70 75
217 Jason Norris 73 69 75, Bryan DeCorso 71 71 75, Scott Stallings 72 69 76
218 Joe Affrunti 69 73 76, Terry Pilkadaris 70 70 78
222 Adam Crawford 68 74 80

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Marc Warren lying joint eighth in Qatar Masters


Joint leaders Bradley Dredge (left) and Paul Casey (right) in action at the Qatar Masters today.

Casey and Dredge leaders of the pack

By ALAN EWENS
British pair Paul Casey and Bradley Dredge go into the final day of the US$ 2.5 million Commercialbank Qatar Masters, Presented by Dolphin Energy (today) tied on ten-under par with just four shots separating the top ten.
Although world number nine Casey admitted before the tournament that the course at Doha Golf Club didn’t suit him visually, he seemed to be well focused as he stormed through the field with a near-flawless round of 66 (-6) that saw him storm to the top of the leaderboard alongside Welshman Dredge who carded a 70(-2).
“I think it's my best round around this golf course in four years of trying, so I can't say anything bad about it,” smiled Casey after a round of seven birdies was spoiled by a bogey on the notoriously difficult fifteenth hole. “Three times I have missed the cut so to be sitting here at the top of the leaderboard makes me smile.”
“Tomorrow is just a case of going out and having fun and giving myself as many opportunities to make birdies as I can. If somebody starts playing great golf and I need to react to that and maybe force the issue, then I'll go for things a little bit. But I've had a good game plan on where to hit it and what to hit off every tee, and I'm just going to stick with that.”
For Dredge, it’s a welcome return to the top of the leaderboard and the Welshman is determined to stay there with vital world ranking points at stake and a shot at a place in Europe’s Ryder Cup team in mind.
“Making a Ryder Cup in Wales is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” he said. “There’s no reason to think I can’t make the team but there are probably 150 other guys who think the same. There are players like Paul Casey, Lee Westwood, Rory McIllroy and Padraig Harrington who will form the base of the team but it’s up to me to play well and try and grab a place.”
Dredge’s hard work over the winter season seems to be paying off but the final round will see a whole host of others believing they can win the $416,600 first prize as well as the world ranking points on offer. Among them is world number four Lee Westwood in third place just one shot off the leaders despite suffering a broken driver mid-way through his round.
“I think on the tenth tee, I may have smashed the face of the driver - I looked at it and it had a crack there on the face so that one is gone,” said Westwood after a third round 70 (-2). A replacement driver proved difficult to get used to but the European number 1 remains firmly in contention going into the final day.
“I'm obviously only one behind, so it's a good position to be in and tomorrow I’ll try and come out and have a fresh start and get on a roll,” he added.
Also still in the hunt is overnight leader Brett Rumford (73) who holds joint fourth place with Robert Karlsson (70) on eight under par, while defending champion Alvaro Quiros and England’s Oliver Wilson are a shot further behind on seven under, one stroke ahead of Richard Bland, Marc Warren and world number 19 Retief Goosen.
Goosen – a winner here in 2007 – made a big move through the field with a morning round of 66 (-6) but the South African believes it should have been so much better.
“There comes a time when you know you had a chance for a really low round but overall I’m very happy although it means I am going to have to shoot something under 65 to have a chance to win,” he said after carding seven birdies in what were superb playing conditions with little wind.
But while it was a good day at the office for one former champion, for 2006 Qatar winner Henrik Stenson it’s a day he will want to forget – a five over par 77 ended his interest in a second crown, while America’s Kenny Perry fired a 71 (-1) to finish the day some eleven shots behind the leader.
Leaders after round three:
Par 216 (3x72)
1 Bradley DREDGE WAL 67 69 70 206
1 Paul CASEY ENG 71 69 66 206
3 Lee WESTWOOD ENG 68 69 70 207
4 Robert KARLSSON SWE 68 70 70 208
4 Brett RUMFORD AUS 69 66 73 208
6 Alvaro QUIROS ESP 71 70 68 209
6 Oliver WILSON ENG 67 70 72 209
8 Retief GOOSEN RSA 73 71 66 210
8 Marc WARREN SCO 71 71 68 210
8 Richard BLAND ENG 74 69 67 210
11 Niclas FASTH SWE 70 68 73 211
12 David HORSEY ENG 74 69 69 212
12 Graeme MCDOWELL NIR 73 67 72 212
12 Peter HANSON SWE 70 69 73 212
12 Sergio GARCIA ESP 70 70 72 212
12 Charl SCHWARTZEL RSA 70 69 73 212
12 Gonzalo FERNANDEZ-CASTAÑO ESP 74 71 67 212
12 Chris WOOD ENG 75 68 69 212
12 Camilo VILLEGAS COL 70 72 70 212
20 Shane LOWRY IRL 71 70 72 213
20 Ignacio GARRIDO ESP 72 68 73 213
20 Peter LAWRIE IRL 72 68 73 213
20 Thomas BJÖRN DEN 73 70 70 213
24 Nick DOUGHERTY ENG 72 71 71 214
24 Simon DYSON ENG 73 71 70 214
24 Ross FISHER ENG 70 73 71 214
24 Pablo LARRAZÁBAL ESP 75 70 69 214
28 Ricardo GONZALEZ ARG 72 72 71 215
28 Peter HEDBLOM SWE 73 72 70 215
28 Danny WILLETT ENG 76 68 71 215
28 Edoardo MOLINARI ITA 73 72 70 215
28 Louis OOSTHUIZEN RSA 72 72 71 215
28 Richard FINCH ENG 74 67 74 215
28 Sam HUTSBY ENG 72 71 72 215
28 Marcel SIEM GER 68 75 72 215
28 Hennie OTTO RSA 71 74 70 215
28 Stephen GALLACHER SCO 75 70 70 215
28 Martin KAYMER GER 74 70 71 215
28 Mark BROWN NZL 76 68 71 215
40 Raphaël JACQUELIN FRA 74 71 71 216
40 Søren HANSEN DEN 75 69 72 216
42 Thomas LEVET FRA 75 71 71 217
42 François DELAMONTAGNE FRA 71 73 73 217
42 Thongchai JAIDEE THA 75 70 72 217
42 Kenny PERRY USA 74 72 71 217
42 Stephen DODD WAL 75 70 72 217
42 Gareth MAYBIN NIR 71 74 72 217
42 Michael HOEY NIR 74 72 71 217
42 Anthony KANG USA 73 70 74 217
50 Mikko ILONEN FIN 74 69 75 218
50 Robert-Jan DERKSEN NED 71 72 75 218
50 Alexander NOREN SWE 68 76 74 218
50 Mikael LUNDBERG SWE 71 73 74 218
50 Danny LEE NZL 73 73 72 218
50 Miguel Angel JIMÉNEZ ESP 72 70 76 218
50 Richie RAMSAY SCO 70 73 75 218
57 John BICKERTON ENG 74 72 73 219
57 Maarten LAFEBER NED 78 68 73 219
57 Shiv KAPUR IND 74 72 73 219
57 Søren KJELDSEN DEN 74 72 73 219
61 Joakim HAEGGMAN SWE 77 69 74 220
62 Richard GREEN AUS 74 72 75 221
62 Simon KHAN ENG 76 69 76 221
62 Henrik STENSON SWE 75 69 77 221
65 Anders HANSEN DEN 71 75 76 222
65 Shaun MICHEEL USA 73 71 78 222
65 Jyoti RANDHAWA IND 77 69 76 222
65 Christian NILSSON SWE 74 72 76 222

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Germany win Costa Ballena Quadrangular title

Germany came out on top of the men's quadrangular amateur intenational tournament at Costa Ballena GC, Spain.
They won all three of their matches, beating England 6-3 on the opening day, Spain 6-3 on Day 2 and Finland 5 1/2-3 1/2 to clinch overall victory on the final day.
England beat Spain 5 1/2-3 1/2 on Day 3 to finish runners-up with two wins.

Results:
DAY 1 - England 3, Germany 6; Finland 3, Spain 6.
DAY 2 - England 5 1/2, Finlands 3 1/2; Germany 6, Spain 3.
DAY 3 - Finland 3 1/2, Germany 5 1/2; England 5 1/2, Spain 3 1/2

Friday's results in detail:
ENGLAND 5 1/2, SPAIN 3 1/2
Foursomes (2 1/2-1/2)
Joshua White & Matt Southgate halved with Jorge Simon & Scott Williams.
Tom Shadbolt & Jonathan Bell bt Andres Cuenca & Adrian Otaegui 3 and 2.
Ben Loughrey & Adam Keogh bt Emilio Cuartero & Sebastian Garcia 3 and 2.
Singles (3-3)
Southgate bt Williams 1 hole.
Shadbolt lost to Simon 2 holes.
White bt Otaegui 7 and 6.
Bell bt Cuenca 2 and 1.
Keogh lost to garcia 3 and 2.
Loughrey lost to Cuartero 3 and 1.

FINLAND 3 1/2, GERMANY 5 1/2
Foursomes: 1/2-2 1/2
Toni Hakulaa & Nicklas Kaivola lost to Martin Keskari & Alexander Matlari 1 hole.
Kalle Samooja & Mikael Salminen halved with Sebastian Kannler & Alexander Knappe.
Atte Raauhala & Tuomas Salminen lost to Max Kieffer & Marcel Schneider 1 hole.
Singles: 3-3
Hakulaa bt Keskari 4 and 3.
Kaivola lost to Matlari 1 hole.
Samooja bt Kannler 4 and 2.
Salminen halved with Kieffer.
Rauhala lost to Knappe 8 and 6.
Salminen halved with Schneider.

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Mickelson defends himself against cheating allegation

FROM THE AOL GOLF NEWS SERVICE
Phil Mickelson has defended his use of a 20-year-old wedge in the wake of accusations by fellow professional Scott McCarron he is cheating by using it.
World number two Mickelson has opened his PGA Tour campaign for 2010 with a Ping i2 wedge in his bag at the Farmers Insurance Open in San Diego, exploiting a loophole in equipment regulations introduced on January 1 by golf's rulemakers, the United States Golf Association and Royal & Ancient.Golf Club.
While the club features the grooves banned by the US, a lawsuit in the early 1990s led to Ping wedges manufactured before 1990 being allowed to be put in play and several tour players have opted to use them, Mickelson the most high-profile.
"It's cheating, and I'm appalled Phil has put it in play," McCarron was quoted as saying by the San Francisco Chronicle.
McCarron is a member of the US PGA Tour Players' Committee and Mickelson last night agreed in principle that he was exploiting a loophole.
"I agree that it's a terrible rule," Mickelson said following his second round at Torrey Pines.
"To change something that has this kind of loophole is nuts. But it's not up to me or any other player to interpret what the rule is or the spirit of the rule.
"I understand black and white. And I think that myself or any other player is allowed to play with those clubs because they're approved. End of story."
Asked to respond directly to McCarron's accusations of cheating, Mickelson replied: "I think rather than answer that directly, I think what he's saying is the rule is a terrible rule, and I agree.
"I'm just as upset. The difference is I've been talking with Dick Rugge of the USGA and talking to (US PGA Tour) commissioner (Tim Finchem) and explaining this behind closed doors, how ridiculous all this is. I don't agree with the way he (McCarron) carried on about it, but that's his choice."

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US PRO TOUR REPORT

Aberdonian Michael Sim is North Star with a 62

FROM THE AOL GOLF NEWS SERVICE
Phil Mickelson left the North course at Torrey Pines four shots off the halfway lead held by DA Points and Ryuji Imada at the Farmers Insurance Open in San Diego, California.
World number two Mickelson had opened his season with a two-under-par 70 on the 7,569yd South course, while Scott Piercy's first-round leading 64 had come on the easier 6874yd North course.
Mickelson had said he was looking to move into contention as he moved across to the North for round two and, while he did card a five-under-par 67 to move to seven under at halfway, American Points and Japan's Imada did enough on the South to get to 11 under par for the 36-hole lead.
Points was the most impressive, shooting a seven-under 65, while Imada took a 68, with another American, Matt Every, moving into a tie for third on nine under following a 70 on the South.
=====================================
Links to more golf news:
Mickelson issues defence over cheating allegations
Daly - I'm done with golf
Rumford out in front
=====================================
The relative difficulties of the courses made no difference to Points, who said: "Funnily enough, I've played this course a lot more than I've played the other one, and I feel pretty comfortable out here.
"The main thing for this course is obviously just making putts and driving the fairway, and those are two things that I've done the last two rounds, especially today I made a lot of putts.
"Iron game isn't quite as sharp as I would love it to be, but certainly making putts is always a good way to make up for a little bit of a sloppy iron game."
Aberdeen-born Australian Michael Sim joined Every at nine under thanks to a 10-under 62 on the North, with compatriot Robert Allenby part of a five-man group on eight under. Allenby shot a 69, with Americans John Rollins (66), George McNeill (67), Ben Crane (71) and Chris Tidland (71) alongside him in a tie for fifth.
Mickelson was also part of a five-man group, on seven under with 50-year-old Tom Pernice (71), rookie Rickie Fowler (70), Australian Marc Leishman (69) and South Korea's Charlie Wi, who shot a 66 on the North course.
Overnight leader Piercy had a bad day on the South course as he dropped to five under with a 75, alongside, among others, Ernie Els of South Africa, who shot a three-under 69 on the North.
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 144 (2x72)
Torrey Pines (South Course)
133 D.A. Points 68 65, Ryuji Imada (Jpn) 65 68
135 Matthew Every 65 70
136 Chris Tidland 65 71, Ben Crane 65 71
137 Rickie Fowler 67 70, Tom Pernice Jnr. 66 71
138 Vance Veazey 67 71, Tom Gillis 67 71, Alex Prugh 67 71
139 David Lutterus (Rsa) 69 70, Spencer Levin 69 70, Scott Piercy 64 75
140 Michael Bradley 71 69, Bill Lunde 72 68, Jason Dufner 69 71, Ted Purdy 69 71, Jeff Klauk 70 70, Justin Rose (Eng) 71 69, Andres Romero (Arg) 69 71, Boo Weekley 67 73, Rocco Mediate 69 71
141 Nick Watney 71 70, Lee Janzen 74 67, Chris Couch 68 73, Blake Adams 69 72, Bill Haas 70 71, Martin Laird (Sco) 71 70, Shane Bertsch 69 72, Troy Merritt 69 72, Josh Teater 67 74, Rich Barcelo 72 69, Nicholas Thompson 68 73
142 Michael Letzig 71 71, Steve Lowery 67 75, Ben Curtis 73 69, Harrison Frazar 70 72, Ricky Barnes 67 75, Chad Collins 72 70, Blake Trimble 68 74, Rich Beem 68 74
MISSED THE CUT
143 Chris Riley 70 73, John Merrick 71 72, Garth Mulroy (Rsa) 70 73, Joe Ogilvie 71 72, Greg Owen (Eng) 71 72, Dustin Johnson 72 71, Nathan Green (Aus) 72 71, Arjun Atwal (Ind) 73 70, Paul Goydos 71 72, Jay Williamson 72 71, Billy Horschel 72 71
144 Scott McCarron 71 73, Charley Hoffman 74 70, Greg Chalmers (Aus) 72 72, J.P. Hayes 69 75, Bubba Watson 70 74, Cameron Percy (Aus) 69 75, John Mallinger 71 73, Matt Bettencourt 69 75, J J Henry 70 74, Ryan Moore 70 74
145 Francis Quinn 69 76, Brian Stuard 73 72, Daniel Chopra (Swe) 69 76, Garrett Willis 72 73
146 Justin Bolli 70 76, Jeff Quinney 71 75, Carl Pettersson (Swe) 72 74
148 Brent Delahoussaye 74 74, Robert Garrigus 74 74
150 Chris Wilson 72 78
151 Steve Wheatcroft 76 75
152 Gregory Casagranda 74 78
153 Nathan Tyler 74 79
154 Estanisiao Guerrero 74 80
159 Tim Parun 81 78

Torrey Pines (North Course)
135 Michael Sim (Sco/Aus) 73 62
136 John Rollins 70 66, George McNeill 69 67, Robert Allenby (Aus) 67 69
137 Phil Mickelson 70 67, Charlie Wi (Kor) 71 66, Marc Leishman (Aus) 68 69
138 Michael Allen 72 66, K J Choi (Kor) 72 66, Lucas Glover 71 67
139 Hunter Mahan 72 67, Ernie Els (Rsa) 70 69, Michael Putnam 71 68, Brandt Snedeker 71 68, Derek Lamely 70 69
140 Brendon De Jonge 70 70, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 71 69, Michael Connell 69 71, Charles Howell III 71 69
141 Tim Herron 71 70, Kevin Sutherland 74 67, Andrew McLardy (Rsa) 71 70, Matthew Jones (Aus) 70 71, J.B. Holmes 72 69, Richard S Johnson (Swe) 71 70, Brett Quigley 73 68, Johnson Wagner 72 69
142 Martin Flores 74 68, James Driscoll 71 71, Tommy Armour III 74 68, Chez Reavie 72 70, Steve Marino 72 70, Mathew Goggin (Aus) 72 70, Craig Bowden 72 70, Luke Donald (Eng) 70 72, Jonathan Byrd 73 69, Stephen Ames (Can) 74 68
MISSED THE CUT
143 Chad Campbell 71 72, Kevin Stadler 77 66, Jason Day (Aus) 72 71, Jesper Parnevik (Swe) 73 70, Kevin Streelman 75 68
144 Aaron Baddeley (Aus) 75 69, Omar Uresti 74 70, Mark Calcavecchia 74 70, Tim Petrovic 76 68, John Huston 74 70, Bryce Molder 71 73, Graham Delaet (Can) 70 74, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 75 69, Alex Cejka (Ger) 72 72
145 Will MacKenzie 72 73, Rodney Pampling (Aus) 72 73, Henrik Bjornstad (Nor) 74 71, Pat Perez 69 76, Ryan Palmer 68 77, Jimmy Walker 75 70, Cameron Tringale 74 71, Mark Wilson 73 72
146 Jeff Overton 75 71, Billy Mayfair 78 68, James Nitties (Aus) 80 66, Troy Matteson 73 73
147 Aron Price (Aus) 79 68, Marc Turnesa 75 72, Jerod Turner 72 75, Parker McLachlin 76 71, Brenden Pappas (Rsa) 71 76
148 Brad Adamonis 74 74, Kris Blanks 75 73, Greg Kraft 74 74, Roger Tambellini 74 74
149 Steve Flesch 80 69, Kevin Johnson 76 73, Christopher Baryla (Can) 74 75
150 John Daly 79 71
151 Jeff Gove 76 75, Gunner Wiebe 73 78
WD: 75 Roland Thatcher

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