Sunday, February 28, 2010

Three early bogeys cost Snedeker the lead in Phoenix Open

Brandt Snedeker blew his overnight lead with bogeys at the second, fifth and short seventh in the final round of the Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in Arizona today.
Snedeker did birdied the eighth but that only raised him to 11 under par overall.
New leaders are Joe Ogilvie and rookie Rickie Fowler, both -13 after nine holes.
Snedeker is not quite out of it yet - only two strokes cover the leading 11 players so a lot can and probably will happen before the last putt drops at Scottsdale.

LATER NEWS: Y E Yang took up the running at -14 after 14 holes.
LATER STILL: Hunter Mahan leading at -15 after 14 holes.

LAST-ROUND POSITIONS
-15 after 14 holes Hunter Mahan
-13 after 10 holes Joe Ogilvie.
-13 after 10 holes Rickie Fowler.
-12 after 11 holes Hunter Mahan.
-12 after 10 holes Charles Howell.
-12 after nine holes Brandt Snedeker.
-12 after nine holes Scott Piercy.
-11 after nine holes Matt Every.
-11 after 11 holes Robert Allenby.
-11 after 12 holes Vaughn Taylor.

EARLY FINAL TOTALS
Par 284 (4x71)
270 Y E Yang 66 70 69 65.
273 Bryce Molder 68 67 70 68.
274 Ryan Moore 66 66 74 68, Ryan Palmer 69 68 69 68, D J Trahan 70 68 69 67, Rich Beem 70 65 70 69, Andres Romero (Argentina) 69 67 69 69.
Selected totals:
275 Phil Mickelson 68 68 72 67, Ian Poulter (England) 72 63 70 70.
281 Justin Rose (England) 65 70 71 75.

FOR LIVE SCORING FROM THE COURSE:
http://www.pgatour.com/r/leaderboard/

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Midland Alliance switch to Arbroath on Thursday

Thursday’s Midland Golfers Alliance meeting, sponsored by J B Motor Co, has been moved from Kirkcaldy Golf Club to Arbroath Links due to course conditions. Tee times reserved from 8.30am to 12.30pm. Spaces still available for Burntisland Pro-Am, please contact Eddie.
Lee Sutherland
Head professional, Ballumbie Castle GC
Secretary, Midland Golfers Alliance

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WALLACE BOOTH MISSES GEORGIA CUT

Rookie pro Wallace Booth from Comrie, Perthshire missed the cut in the eGolf Professional Tour's Savannah Quarters Classic in Georgia on Friday. He had rounds of 72 and 80 for 152 - four shots too many to qualify for the final round.
American Roberto Castro won the first prize of $34,459 with scores of 70, 69 and 70 for seven-under-par 209.
Booth won $1,465 for a down-the-field finish in the satellite circuit's first event, the Palmetto Hall Championship, won by fellow Scot Russell Knox who did not play in the event at Savannah Quarters Country Club.
The next event, the Cabarrus Classic in North Carolina does not start until March 17.

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Dear, McNicoll enter French Q School ... but they'll keep their clothes on!

Carnoustie's Keir McNicoll and Gavin Dear from Scone, Perthshire are the only two Scots in the field for the French Allianz Tour Qualifying School tournament at Cap d'Agde from Wednesday to Friday this week.
Dear has already earned playing rights on the Alps Tour.
Cap d'Agde, a few miles from Montpellier, is one of the world's best naturist resorts!
The golf course was opened in 1989. You do not have to take your clothes off to play it.
Dear and McNicoll were exempt from the Allianz Tour Pre-qualifying tournament over 36 holes at Golf de Montpellier this weekend.
Forty-four players qualified for the main event, starting on Wednesday. Only one of four players on 164 qualified.
LEADING QUALIFIERS
Par 144 (2x72)
139 Ivo Giner (Spain) 70 69.
145 Yves Petit Dubousquet (France) 70 75.
147 Scott Hill (France) 74 73.
148 Marcos Juan Tomas (Spain) 74 74, Brendan McCarroll (Ireland) 74 74.

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SUNSHINE TOUR'S VODACOM CHAMPIONSHIP


Hennie Otto (28 under par) wins by nine strokes

FROM THE SUNSHINE TOUR WEBSITE
In boxing terms, the referee should have stopped the Vodacom Championship long before the finish because the outcome was not in doubt, but South African Hennie Otto had to keep going to deliver the coup de grace today with a final round of five-under-par 67 at the Pretoria Country Club, South Africa to win by nine strokes.
Otto finished on 28-under-par 260, one shot off the Sunshine Tour tournament record of 29-under-par, set by Mark McNulty in Swaziland in 1987, and equalled by David Frost in the 1994 SA PGA Championship.
Hennie had set a Pretoria Country Club course record of 11-under 61 in the second round to lead by five, and he had to find some way of keeping his motivation levels up for the final half of the tournament.
“I just went out and approached the round as a match-play event,” he said. “Jbe’ Kruger was the only one who could catch me, and, fortunately for me, he and Thomas Aiken were the ones who made the mistakes.”
Kruger’s challenge looked to have petered out on the back of some putts that just wouldn’t drop, continuing a trend which began in the third round.
This time, his woes were exacerbated by some poor work off the fairways and close to the greens. They were perhaps best exemplified on the 444m par-4 10th, where his second was such a poor shot that he ended up a long way from the green. For the umpteenth time, his chip came up short too, and he overshot the green with his fourth.
The resultant double-bogey, while Otto made a good par save, meant Kruger sank back to 10 off the pace at that stage, while Tjaart van der Walt was elevated into second for a while.
But Kruger fought back and birdies on 16 and 18 saw him regain second place, one ahead of Adilson Da Silva and Aiken.
Aiken got his final position thanks to a birdie-eagle finish to edge out Michiel Bothma who finished fifth, with Van der Walt sharing sixth with Grant Veenstra.
But for all the jostling for position, the truth is Otto’s opponents were out on their feet after a display of golf that the winner rated as close to the best he’s ever played.
“Maybe my win in the Italian Open in 2008 was better,” he said, “because Oliver Wilson threw a 63 at me, and I only had a one-shot lead down the stretch.”
But there were elements which made this very sweet indeed: A friend who has lung cancer and is undergoing chemotherapy, and who walked all 18 with him on his way to the triumph. “How inspiring is that,” he said.
And Martin Maritz’s mother, who told Otto that he was her ‘son’ for the week. “It gives me goose bumps just telling that story,” he said.
And it was the support in his reborn Christian faith he got from a group of people called ‘Manne van die Woord’ (Men of the Word). “I had something to say about them, but we ran out of time in the prize-giving,” he laughed.
In truth, the goose bumps came from some of the most consistent golf he has ever played, and in the jaw-dropping margin of victory over some of the best players on the Sunshine Tour.
Two weeks on his new farm in the Northern Cape – “I’m going to be doing some real work,” he laughed – before he spends a brief period again on the European Tour is going to be a rest well-earned.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72)
Players from South Africa unless stated.
260 Hennie Otto 65 61 67 67 (420,025 Rand).
269 Jbe Kruger 65 66 66 72 (304,750 Rand).
270 Adilson Da Silva (Brazil) 69 66 69 66, Thomas Aiken 65 66 70 69 (156,747 Rand)
271 Michiel Bothma 66 70 69 66 (109,445 Rand).
272 Tjaart Van Der Walt 67 66 69 70, Grant Veenstra 70 65 67 70 (85,992 Rand each)).
273 Alex Haindl 72 66 68 67, Peter Karmis 70 68 67 68 (61,215 Rand each).
274 James Kamte 72 65 70 67, Mark Murless 66 68 70 70 (49,687 Rand each).
275 Dawie Van der Walt 68 66 70 71 (44,255 Rand).
276 Darren Fichardt 71 70 68 67, Andre Bossert (Switzerland) 68 68 68 72, Branden Grace 64 69 70 73 (39,396 Rand each).
277 Keith Horne 72 69 68 68, Jake Roos 69 69 679 70 69, Doug McGui9gan 66 66 75 70 (34,980 Rand each).


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Poulter confounding the doubters while Garcia

again fails to live up to great expectations

FROM THE SCOTSMAN.COM WEBSITE
By JOHN HUGGAN
The contrast could hardly have been more marked. There they were, going head-to-head in the semi-final of last week's Accenture Match Play Championship: golf's biggest over-achiever against the current holder of the game's "most lamentable under-achiever" title. Or, put another way: Ian Poulter versus Sergio Garcia.
Just about the only thing this pair has in common is an unfortunate propensity to wear outlandishly bright-coloured clothing of rather questionable taste.
Now the first Englishman to win a World Golf Championship, Poulter, who turned professional when he was supposedly a four-handicapper at best, has forever surprised and confounded those – your correspondent included – who have doubted his ability to compete at the very highest level.
The former market trader and assistant pro at something called the "Family Golf Centre" in his hometown of Leighton Buzzard – where he earned £5.60 an hour – is your original working-class hero.
"I'm not like most guys who turn pro after playing in the Walker Cup and what have you," he points out. "Or those that come through the college system. I didn't even know those things existed. I was oblivious. I come from a very normal upbringing. I played at the local municipal. And I had to earn money. Which is why I worked on a market stall.
"My upbringing only adds to my appreciation of what I have now. It's been a great ride for me, from the pro's shop to the top-five in the world. What comes with that is a lot of money. But that can only buy you stuff. I don't rate people by how much money they make. And I would hope no one would do the same with me."
And Sergio? Well, let's just say that the former teenage prodigy – he was probably playing off four when still wearing shorts to primary school – has generally speaking failed to live up to the admittedly lofty expectations expressed by most "experts" when he left the amateur ranks just over a decade ago.
Yes, he has won a Players Championship, the so-called "fifth major", and a host of other events around the globe, but Grand Slam success has so far eluded the now 30-year-old Spaniard.
The result of last week's match, of course, was a resounding 7&6 victory for the over-achiever, the proverbial "dog licence."
Such a thrashing would normally have been bad enough as far as Garcia was concerned, but even worse was the fact that he did not appear to be trying anything like 100 per cent. Perhaps disturbed by the appalling weather – or the fact that he was being comprehensively outplayed – Garcia behaved like a spoiled and petulant brat denied immediate and unfettered access to his poke of sweeties.
This isn't the first time the former Amateur champion has, in Australian parlance, "spat the dummy" either. The mind goes back to Carnoustie and the 2007 Open when a ten-foot putt for victory kissed the edge of the 72nd cup but failed to drop.
Garcia's whining attitude in the wake of his subsequent play-off defeat by Padraig Harrington, while not as bad as portrayed by certain members of the US media, did him few favours.
Then there was the 2008 USPGA Championship at Oakland Hills, where Harrington again prevailed, this time over the regulation distance. During the closing nine holes, Garcia behaved appallingly, resorting to all kinds of immature gamesmanship in a vain attempt to get inside the likeable Irishman's head.
At one point, Harrington was compelled to ask his caddie to stand between himself and his playing companion so that he could fully focus on the shot in hand. It was a disgraceful display of bad sportsmanship, capped by a lacklustre "limp fish" handshake on the 18th green.
So perhaps we shouldn't be too surprised that Garcia, in the face of heavy and inevitable defeat to Poulter, was unable to behave himself with even a semblance of class.
His huffy attitude towards his opponent's perfectly legitimate investigation of options when in an awkward lie was especially disappointing – or put up an effort worthy of a player of his undoubted class.
Sergio needs to be careful he doesn't run out of friends in low, never mind high, places. While there is little doubt that he remains one of Europe's best 12 golfers, his place in the next Ryder Cup side cannot be regarded as a foregone conclusion.
For one thing, his dodgy putting – always a weakness – continues to offer nothing but encouragement to opponents, especially in head-to-head play. For another, if strong rumour is anything to go by, his deteriorating relationship with Harrington caused two distinct camps to develop within the European side during the last Ryder Cup at Valhalla.
And let's not even get into the hard-to-forget occasion when he expectorated into a cup after holing out. Yuk.
None of those aspects of the Garcia character will, one imagines, be encouraging empathy from European skipper Colin Montgomerie should it come to pass that the five-time Ryder Cup player requires one of the three wild-card picks available come late August and the final qualifying event at Gleneagles.
The irony there, of course, is that Poulter – already a certainty to qualify as of right – would have been in a similar position had his play over the last few months been less stellar. He and Monty have, shall we say, never been close.
"I know people have their own opinions of me," acknowledges Poulter. "They may think I'm wacky or flamboyant or whatever. But they form those opinions without knowing me. Those who do know me know that there is more to me than some flashy trousers. I'm serious about my golf."
And, if last week is anything to go by, that dedication to improvement is paying off in a big way. Let's hope the floundering Garcia takes due note and changes his increasingly errant ways in time to turn round his own career, one that shows disturbing signs of attracting adjectives like "unfulfilled" and "declining."
Come on Sergio, time is a'wasting.
+The full article above appears in the Scotland On Sunday newspaper today.

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Miyazato and Davies win tournaments in Singapore, New Zealand

Ai Miyazato won the HSBC Women's Champions' tournament in Singapore today and Laura Davies won the New Zealand Women's Open.
Switch over to our sister website, www.kirkwoodgolf.co.uk, to read the reports and the final totals.

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PHOENIX OPEN SATURDAY CROWD OF 121,000


Snedeker leads after a rowdy day at Scottsdale

Brandt Snedeker, 29, from Tennessee shot six birdies in a round of 66 for a one-shot lead after three rounds of the fluctuating US PGA Tour event that is the Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale in Arizona.
Snedker is on 14-under-par 199 through 54 holes; Scott Piercy (65) and Rickie Fowler (69) are together on 13 under; Matt Every (68) is in fourth place at 12 under and Colombian Camilo Villegas, one-time leader in the tournament is next at 11 under par.
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RELATED LINK
Complete scores
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Villegas birdied the last two holes to finish even for the day.
The 49-year-old Mark Calcavecchia, winner of the Phoenix Open three times, in 1989, 1992 and 2001 is one of nine players at the 10-under 203 mark. Calcavecchia has not won since 2007.
Then noisy, even rowdy crowd of around 121,000 was about 40,000 down on the 164,000 who attended the Saturday round last year. The tournament record of 170,000 spectators was achieved in 2008.
"It was crazy," Snedeker said. "You've got to take it with a grain of salt and realise golf needs that. We need people out here having fun, being excited about being at a golf tournament. If you can't take it for one hole, good God, get over yourself and have some fun."
Snedeker's was the 2007 US PGA Tour rookie of the year, but his victory at the Wyndham Championship that season remains his lone win.
He struggled early last year, missing the cut 12 of 26 times and was sidelined eight weeks by a rib injury.
"You just listen to your hype," Snedeker said. "You hear people talking about how good you are and how much you could be the next big thing, you should be winning each week. And the minute you think that you should be winning the golf tournament each week, you're completely out of bounds."
The turnaround, he said, came last July at the AT&T National, where he tied for fifth.
"Literally like a flipped switch," Snedeker said, "and I said, 'I'm sick and tired of this.' I don't care if I have to quit playing golf, I'm not going to keep playing the way I've been playing. And ever since then I've been playing good."
He tied for second on January 31 at Torrey Pines, one shot behind winner Ben Crane.
Snedeker's only bogey Saturday, on the par-4 14th, was the most critical hole of the round, he said.

He pulled his second shot into the left bunker. He failed to clear the bunker with his third shot and, with a bad lie, knocked his fourth shot 32 feet past the pin. Then he nailed the putt.
"That says a lot about where my head is right now," Snedeker said. "It completely changed the way I walked on the 15th tee, feeling excited, confident, everything still going good."
Snedeker has led after three rounds only once before, at the 2007 Buick Open.
Piercy, in search of his first victory on the tour, will be in the final group at Phoenix for the second year in a row. He was a shot off the lead going into the last round a year ago and finished tied for sixth.
Piercy said he learned watching eventual winner Kenny Perry play that final round.
"He made a ton of pars. He didn't make any bogeys, or very few bogeys, and then when he made a birdie, that birdie was so huge," Piercy said.
He said it showed him "rather than put the foot on the gas pedal the whole time, maybe drive with a little bit of caution."
Piercy had a two eagles, the second one a tap-in on the par-4, 390yd 10th hole, when his tee shot came to rest 10 inches from the pin.
The scene around the 16th was high spirited to say the least, with the mostly young crowd packed elbow-to-elbow, beer in hand.
People lined up to get into the bleachers as if it was some trendy Scottsdale night club.
SCOREBOARD TO COME

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NATIONWIDE TOUR REPORT

Fran Quinn goes five shots clear with a 62

FROM THE PGATOUR.COM WEBSITE
By Joe Chemycz, PGA TOUR Staff
Panama City, PANAMA -- Fran Quinn posted a course-record 8-under 62 Saturday and staked himself to a five-stroke lead after 54 holes at the Panama Claro Championship, the third event on the Nationwide Tour's 2010 schedule.
Quinn's three-day total of 16-under 194 also eclipsed the tournament record of 200.
Argentina's Julio Zapata, playing with Quinn, carded a 3-under 67 and is in second at 11-under, which would have gone into the record books had it not been for his playing partner. Fabian Gomez (66), South Carolina rookie Mark Anderson (67) and Brian Smock (67) share third place, six back of the leader.
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Related link:
Leaderboard: Scores
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The 7,150-yard Panama Golf Club layout was the toughest on Tour last year and consistently ranks among the hardest each year, but it's been softened by three surprising days of rain and a lack of wind. The result has been a rewrite of the record book. There have been 9-hole records, 18-hole records and now 54-hole records. The 72-hole mark of 11-under par set by Tripp Isenhour in 2006 is all but certain to vanish in Sunday's finale.
"We haven't had the wind," said Quinn, who had missed three cuts in five previous starts here and broken par only one time in 14 total rounds. "You get the wind and the greens get a little firmer and a lot of shots get trickier. It's a great golf course, but it's also out there."
Saturday's scoring average of 69.484 is the lowest in tournament history, breaking the mark of 69.704 set on Friday -- the first two times a single-day scoring average has been below par since the tournament began in 2004.
Second-round leader Kevin Kisner carded an even-par 70 and is at 9-under 201 along with 2008 champion Scott Dunlap (69), who is in sixth place. Marco Dawson (69) is eighth, eight shots back.
The story of the day was the 45-year old Quinn, who canned seven birdies in his first 10 holes and raced to the lead. It appeared nobody could slow him down on his quest for his fourth career title. That's when Mother Nature stepped in and dumped one-tenth of an inch of rain in less than 10 minutes on the field, forcing officials to halt play for the first time in the event's seven-year history.
"We had to wait in the fairway and the momentum slowed down a little bit," said Quinn, who had played his second to the green at the par-4 11th when play was stopped. "We waited about 20 minutes. I think it affected everybody. I think it slowed me down but I continued to hit good shots, I just didn't make the putts."
He'd made everything prior to the arrival of the rain, which came around 3:10 p.m.
"I actually played really well last week but didn't get anything out of it," said Quinn, who tied for 23rd at the Mayakoba Golf Classic at Riviera Maya-Cancun on the PGA TOUR. "I knew I was playing good and that's why I didn't go home (to Massachusetts). We were getting snow and I felt good. I said I wanted to keep playing and I've carried it over to this week."
Quinn's momentum may have been stalled by the rains that have rarely been a part of the equation this time of year, but he rallied with a 15-foot birdie putt at the closing hole, his longest on the day, to break the course mark of 63 set by Isenhour four years ago and matched twice that same week.
"I came down here just to keep my momentum and keep playing well and be ready for my next ones," said Quinn. "I think I'm in four of the next five on TOUR. I was using this week to make sure I was ready when I get my opportunity and right now I have a great opportunity on Sunday. I'm enjoying it."
Third-Round Notes
• Both Quinn and Gomez posted 6-under 29s on the front side today, becoming the second and third players in tournament history to shoot sub-30 scores on the front. Kisner carded a 7-under 28 on the front in yesterday's second round.
• A heavy rainstorm moved through the area at mid-afternoon, forcing officials to half play for about 15 minutes. It was the first time in the tournament's seven-year history that play was halted due to weather.
• Quinn's five-stroke lead is the largest on Tour since Marc Leishman led by five at the 2008 WNB Golf Classic in Midland, Texas. Leishman went on to win by a whopping 11 strokes and tie Chris Smith's Tour mark for the largest victory margin. Smith set the record in winning the 1997 Omaha Classic.
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THIRD-ROUND SCOREBOARD TO COME

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