Saturday, May 01, 2010

Rory McIlroy joint seventh with one round to go

United States PGA Tour Scoreboard
QUAIL HOLLOW CHAMPIONSHIP
Quail Hollow Golf Club, Charlotte, North Carolina
THIRD ROUND TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
1 Billy Mayfair 68 68 71 207
T2 Davis Love III 70 71 68 209
T2 Phil Mickelson 70 68 71 209
T4 J.J. Henry 68 71 71 210
T4 Dustin Johnson 73 65 72 210
T4 Angel Cabrera 70 67 73 210
T7 Rory McIlroy 72 73 66 211
T7 Anthony Kim 72 69 70 211
T7 Bill Haas 71 70 70 211
T7 Jim Furyk 75 65 71 211
T7 Paul Goydos 68 70 73 211
T12 Scott McCarron 70 75 67 212
T12 Steve Marino 73 72 67 212
T12 Bubba Watson 70 73 69 212
T12 Bo Van Pelt 65 76 71 212
T12 Camilo Villegas 67 72 73 212
T17 Jason Day 73 71 69 213
T17 Charley Hoffman 72 72 69 213
T17 Brendon de Jonge 70 73 70 213
T17 Heath Slocum 69 74 70 213
T17 Trevor Immelman 74 68 71 213
T17 Robert Allenby 71 70 72 213
T17 Nick Watney 70 71 72 213
T17 Geoff Ogilvy 68 72 73 213
T17 Kevin Sutherland 72 68 73 213
T26 Matt Jones 74 71 69 214
T26 Ross Fisher 72 73 69 214
T26 Chad Collins 74 70 70 214
T26 Padraig Harrington 72 72 70 214
T26 Rickie Fowler 73 70 71 214
T26 Carlos Franco 72 71 71 214
T26 Kevin Na 72 69 73 214
T26 Garth Mulroy 69 71 74 214
T26 Tom Gillis 71 69 74 214
T26 J.P. Hayes 74 64 76 214
T36 Mark Wilson 73 72 70 215
T36 Will MacKenzie 71 74 70 215
T36 Chris Stroud 73 71 71 215
T36 Hunter Mahan 71 71 73 215
T36 Ricky Barnes 69 72 74 215
T36 Greg Chalmers 70 71 74 215
T42 Brian Stuard 69 76 71 216
T42 Stuart Appleby 75 70 71 216
T42 Lee Westwood 73 72 71 216
T42 Greg Owen 74 71 71 216
T42 Blake Adams 73 71 72 216
T42 Chris Tidland 72 71 73 216
T42 Brad Faxon 68 75 73 216
T42 Joe Ogilvie 73 69 74 216
T42 Lucas Glover E F 2 color info 71 71 74 216
T42 Chad Campbell E F 2 color info 72 70 74 216
T52 D.J. Trahan 1 F E color info 73 72 72 217
T52 Henrik Bjornstad 1 F E color info 72 73 72 217
T52 Aron Price 1 F 1 color info 75 69 73 217
T52 Zach Johnson 1 F 1 color info 71 73 73 217
T52 Johnson Wagner 1 F 2 color info 73 70 74 217
T57 Bill Lunde 2 F 1 color info 73 72 73 218
T57 Tim Petrovic 2 F 1 color info 74 71 73 218
T57 Ryuji Imada 2 F 1 color info 74 71 73 218
T57 Rod Pampling 2 F 1 color info 70 75 73 218
T57 Brett Quigley 2 F 1 color info 73 72 73 218
T57 Mark Calcavecchia 2 F 1 color info 71 74 73 218
T57 Aaron Baddeley 2 F 1 color info 73 72 73 218
T57 Andres Romero 2 F 2 color info 68 76 74 218
T57 Jarrod Lyle 2 F 3 color info 71 72 75 218
T57 John Merrick 2 F 4 color info 72 70 76 218
T67 Tim Herron 71 74 75 220
T67 Kenny Perry 66 79 75 220
T67 Charles Howell III 74 71 75 220
T67 Rocco Mediate 70 75 75 220
T67 Brian Gay 73 71 76 220
T72 Michael Connell 76 69 76 221
T72 Roger Tambellini 74 71 76 221
T72 Brandt Snedeker 70 75 76 221
75th D.A. Points 72 73 77 222
T76 Steve Wheatcroft 75 70 78 223
T76 Carl Pettersson 74 71 78 223

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Left to right: Fife Golf Association vice-president Jim Horsfield, tournament convener Bill Dickson, Kevin Hastie, Danny Sommerville, Gary Sharp, FGA president David Mason. Missing from picture: Brian Young.
St Andrews Golf Club retain Fife team championship

St Andrews Golf Club retained the Fife Golf Association men's team championship on a cold and sometimes wet Saturday at The Duke's Course, near St Andrews.
The team of Gary Sharp, Danny Sommerville, Kevin Hastie and Brian Young headed a field of 36 teams with an aggregate score of 298 in testing conditions which produced a CSS of 75.
Sharp had a 72, Sommerville a 74, Hastie a 75 and Young a 77. Sharp and Somerville played in last year's winning St Andrews Golf Club team.
Runners up with a total of 306 were Ladybank Golf Club, represented by A Hain (72), P Stewart (74), A Sutherland (76) and D Gatherum (84). Kirkcaldy were third with 309.
SCOREBOARD (CSS 75)
1 ST ANDREWS 298
D Somerville 74
K Hastie 75
G Sharp 72
B Young 77

2 LADYBANK 306
D Gatherum 84
A Sutherland 76
A Hain 72
P Stewart 74

3 KIRKCALDY 309
A Elder 78
A Morrison 81
C Armstrong 75
E Crawford 75

4 BALBIRNIE PARK 310
C Martin 74
A Mair 80
J Duncan 80
R Napier 76

T5 LUNDIN 313
S Brown 75
G McNab 78
K Blyth 76
R Brown 84

T5 EARLSFERRY 313
A Hodge 75
G Glen 81
G Souter 78
J Paisley 79

T5 BURNTISLAND GHC 313
G Kilpatrick 85
S Brownlie 74
A Anderson 74
D Thom 80

8 THORNTON 318
M Main 76
A Moir 86
S Swan 74
D Imrie 82

9 KINGHORN 319
D Cunningham 82
C Palmer 79
L Clark 75
G Wilkinson 83

10 ST ANDREWS NEW 321
R Stephenson 81
S Nanji 87
L McGowan 73
B Jamieson 80

11 CHARLETON 321
G A Wishart 82
K Anderson 75
S Thomassen 84
G Wishart 80
T12 DUNNIKIER PARK 322
G Ballantyne 81
R Johnstone 82
C Steffen 80
M Beveridge 79
T12 ABERDOUR 322
S Meiklejohn 82
P Brown 76
J Stephen 78
P Hempsteed 86
14 LUNDIN MONTRAVE 323
B Hay 90
C Mitchell 77
J Baxter 85
S Main 71
T15 SCOTSCRAIG 324
G Landsburgh 87
I Bell 76
M Clinch 83
S Squires 78
T15 CRAIL 324
S Doherty 85
G McDougall 78
M Forgan 80
B Doig 81
17 THE DUKE'S 325
C Lawton 74
S Thomson 79
W Kerr 83
M Fraser 89
18 CANMORE 326
L Stewart 80
J McDonald 84
A McKelvie 83
C Sword 79
T19 DUNFERMLINE 327
G Watson 84
S Ferguson 79
E Comerford 77
D Taylor 87
T19 DRUMOIG 327
G Miller 83
D Gorman 82
S Scott 74
R Collie 88
21 FIFE POLICE 328
R Hall 79
G Stein 84
G Johnstone 80
G Laing 85
T22 ST ANDREWS THISTLE 329
P Tulleth 83
C Donaldson 85
J Woods 82
K Stirling 79
T22 LEVEN THISTLE 329
L Murray 91
J Adie 79
D Mitchell 74
S Hill 85
24 ST MICHAEL'S 330
N Manzie 84
D Leggat 82
M Aitken 80
I Sturrock 84
T25 PITREAVIE 331
B Hynd 76
T Dillon 79
C Wilson 93
R Cook 83
T25 LEVEN GOLFING SOCIETY 331
C Bond 85
L Bain 81
E McGregor 83
D Hunter 82
T27 KINGHORN THISTLE 332
D Walker 80
M Smith 83
M Brown 82
S Brown 87

T27 BALINGRY 332
M Kelly 91
C Russell 77
K Murphy 84
R Doyle 80
T27 SALINE 333
S Cowburgh 89
B Maxwell 81
M Dobbin 86
C Mellon 77

T30 BURNTISLAND 334
A McPherson 91
W Beveridge 84
F Hutchinson 80
A McLeod 79
T30 ANSTRUTHER 334
D Wilson 85
L Jack 85
P Anderson 79
D Boyter 85

T32 GLENROTHES 337
N Urquhart 84
B Philp 79
S Stenhouse 91
N McLeish 83
T32 ELMWOOD 337
D Drummond 83
J Michie 86
J Naylor 90
M Lawson 78
T32 FORRESTER PARK 346
A Fieldsend 82
B Mackie 82
R Northin 90
G Crumlish 92
35 LUNDIN 350
D Thomson Lundin 82
R Spalding 94
A Thomson 84
C Thomson 90
36 LOCHGELLY No Return
D Green 73
F Sneddon NR
P Ratcliffe 82
C Kenny 86
ends

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ALPS OPEN'S GOSSER OPEN


Gordon Manson top Scot in Austria

FROM THE ALPS TOUR WEBSITE
Frenchman Nicolas Joakimides returned the day's best score, a 64, to take the lead at 12-under-par 132 in Austria at the Gösser Open.
One stroke behind on 133 is Austrian Uli Weinhandl who signed for a 65 and has a real chance of winning on home soil. Weinhandl will be defending champion at next week's Lyoness Open.
The feeling of the day is kind of the same whatever players scored. They are almost all exhausted at the end of their round. The Maria Lankowitz course is quite short but very tricky and frustrating. As every hole could be a birdie hole, players get disappointed more often.
“I am three under but it could have been so much better.... I hit 16 greens and got 35 putts ... I can not read the grain ...We have no hole to hit a big drive with no stress...”
These are the sentences you can hear on course all day long.
Still, Nicolas Joakimides did well and his experience made the difference. He used to play on the European Tour but he is not the longest player in the field. For him that is not the point.
“I always did well on long courses such as Golf National during French Open so I really don't think it is a question of how long I can hit the ball. Here at Maria Lankowitz you have to be patient and but the ball on the right side.
"The grain ? Yes, I stayed short sometimes on long putts for example but I holed for par. I had three putts on the 17th but I holed a few others.”
Joakimides knows perfectly the way to adapt his game to a course. Beside playing on Alps Tour and Challenge Tour, he is on the verge to be the architect of the big project of 27 holes in the south of France.
“Almost all the courses in France are to short from the men's white tees and too long from women's red tees. I work hard on this and my course will offer 6500 metres back tee to 4500 front tee with 6 different tees."
In third position, two strokes behind the leader on 134, is Englishman Ricki Neil Jones. He scored 67 again, The cut is fixed at three under par, a very low score on the Alps Tour. Forty-one professionals and four amateurs qualified.
Gordon Manson, pictured above, a long-time resident of Austria, is the leading Scot on 136 after a second-round 66. Gordon was a European Tour player earlier in his career before he was appointed national coach by the Austrian Golf Federation.
Murrayshall's Gavin Dear is also in the top 20 after a 70 for 139.
But the third Scot in the field, Steven Hume, also from Perthshire, failed to make the cut by six shots despite a brilliant second-round 68, 10 shots better than his first-round effort.
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 144 (2x72)
132 Nicolas JOAKIMIDES (FRA) 68 64.
133 Uli WEINHANDL (AUT) 68 65
134 Ricki NEIL-JONES (ENG) 67 67.
135 Juan Antonio BRAGULAT (ESP) 67 68, Nunzio Daniele LOMBARDI (ITA) 66 69.
136 Gordon MANSON (AUT) 70 66, Lukas NEMECZ (AUT) (amateur) 64 72.
137 Agus DOMINGO HOSPITAL (ESP) 68 69, Miguel PUJALTE SASTRE (ESP) golf son servera 69 68, Hamza AMIN (AUT) (amateur) 71 66,
Matteo DELPODIO (ITA) 68 69 »»
138 Jason KELLY (NOR) GC 68 70, Matthias MONTGAILLARD (FRA) 70 68, Peter LEPITSCHNIK (AUT) 67 71, Thomas FOURNIER (FRA) 72 66, Jason PALMER (ENG) England 67 71.
139 Gregor SLABE (SLO) 67 72, Jann SCHMID (SWI) 69 70, Matthew CRYER (ENG), Andrea SIGNOR (ITA) 68 71, Jaime CAMARGO (ESP) 68 71, Gavin DEAR (SCO) 69 70, Carlos BALMASEDA (ESP) Spain 68 71.
140 Ignacio SANCHEZ PALENCIA (ESP) Spain 70 70, Paolo TERRENI (ITA) 68 72, Fredrik SVANBERG (SWI) 67 73, Juan PARRON (ESP) 73 67, Pedro ERICE (ESP) 69 71, Olivier SERRES (FRA) 70 70, Farren KEENAN (ENG) 66 74, Julien FORET (FRA) France 67 73,
Moritz MAYRHAUSER (AUT) (amateur), Martin WIEGELE (AUT) 72 68, Manuel TRAPPEL (AUT) (amateur) 74 66, Nicolo' RAVANO (ITA) 70 70, Adam HODKINSON (ENG) 72 68 »»
Claude GRENIER (AUT) 68 72, Kim Joon (ITA) 71 69, Rudy THUILLIER (FRA) 70 70.
Selected scores:
141 Richard KILPATRICK (NIR) 73 68, Jason BARNES (ENG) 69 72.
MISSED THE CUT
142 Justin BRINK (IRL) 71 71.
143 Mark DAVIES (ENG) 77 66.
144 Lawrence DODD (ENG) 74 70.
145 James COOKSON (ENG) 77 68.
146 Steven HUME (SCO) 78 68.
149 Sam ROBINSON (ENG) 77 72.
156 Neil CHAUDHURI (ENG) 79 77.
Retired: Mark HOOPER (ENG).
*Official tour scoring and statistics provided by the
ALPS TOUR.

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Argyll & Bute name six for Scottish area team championship

Argyll & Bute have named an experienced team for the Scottish men's area team golf championship at Kinross Golf Club on May 15 and 16.
It is:
Les Pirie (Millport)
Gordon Lundie (Millport)
George MacMillan (Machrihanish)
Bobby Willan (Machrihanish)
Chris Carson (Innellan)
Alan McKie (Glencruitten)

+Scottishgolfview.com will gladly publish any of the team lind-ups not so far made public by the respective areas. E-mail the information to Colin@scottishgolfview.com

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Lytham Trophy Scoreboard

ROYAL LYTHAM & ST ANNES GOLF CLUB, LANCASHIRE

Par 140 (2x70)
SECOND-ROUND LEADERS
139 A M Levy (France) 67 72.
140 Kris Nicol (Fraserburgh) 72 68, Paul Cutler (Ireland) 74 66, Tommy Fleetwood (Formby Hall) 66 74.
Selected scores:
143 Philip McLean (Peterhead) 73 70, A Szzapanos 67 76, M Kieffer (Germany) 69 74, Ross Kellett (Colville Park) 72 71.
144 Chris Paisley 68 76.
146 Scott Larkin (Royal Aberdeen) 73 73, Romain Wattel (France) 71 75.
147 M Young (Longridge) 67 80, Ben Westgate (Trevose) 71 76, M Bedford (Prestbury) 71 76.
PROJECTED CUT 147
148 Fraser McKenna (Balmore) 68 80.
149 Matthew Southgate (Thorpe Hall) 71 78.
150 Mark Halliday (Royal Aberdeen) 75 75, Gordon Yates (Hilton Park) 73 77, Adam Dunton (McDonald Ellon) 79 71.
151 Mark Bookless (Sandyhills) 80 71, Fraser Fotheringham (Nairn) 77 74.
154 Philip Spraggs (St Andrews Univ) 73 81.
155 David Law (Hazlehead) 73 82, Greg Paterson (St Andrews New) 80 75.
160 Ross Bell (Downfield) 78 82.
162 Jordan Findlay (Fraserburgh) 86 76.

+The Editor would like to apologise for the patchy scores service from one of the biggest men's amateur tournaments in Britain. I'm afraid the Royal Lytham club's idea of "live scoring" does not even come close to what you would expect at a small club open. Most of our scores information above has been supplied to us, as a favour, by golf photographer Tom Ward - Colin Farquharson .

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Scotland's Jack McDonald (Kilmarnock Barassie), the first round boys' leader and joint second after 36 holes at Fairhaven. Image by courtesy of Tom Ward Photography.

Fairhaven Trophies Junior Tournament Scoreboard
FAIRHAVEN GOLF CLUB, LANCASHIRE
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS

BOYS
Par 144 (2x72) CSS 75 74
139 Rhys Pugh (Vale of Glamorgan) 70 69.
144 Craig Young (Ashbourne) 74 70, Daniel Brown (Bedale) 74 70, Jack McDonald (Kilmarnock Barassie) 68 76.
145 Harry Casey (Enfield) 77 68, Jamie Harrison (Rotherham) 72 73, Billy Downing (Truro) 70 75, Neil Colbeck (Moor Allerton) 70 75.
146 James Sandford (Saffron Walden) 76 70, Max Orrin (North Foreland) 73 73, Liam Harper (Lydd) 73 73, Kieron Fowler (El Plantio) 73 73, Toby Tree (Worthing) 72 74, Matthew Fitzpatrick (Hallamshire) 71 75.
147 Jack English (Colchester) 76 71, Ross Dickson (Crews Hill) 74 73, Sebastian Von der Hoff (Trier) 73 74, Will Jones (Oswestry) 72 75, James Burnett (Sleaford) 72 75.
148 Nathan Kimsey (Woodhall Spa) 76 72, Julian Taylor (York) 75 73, Ian Redford (St Andrews New) 74 74, David Boote (Walton Heath) 74 74, Oliver Carr (Heswall) 73 75, Callum Shinkwin (Moor Park 73 75.
149 Paul Lockwood (Hessle) 77 72, Paul Kinnear (Formby) 77 72, Michael Helyard (Hessle) 75 74, Jordan Smith (Bowood) 74 75, Dan Park (Kendal) 72 77.
150 Luke Jackson (Worksop) 78 72, Sam Claypole (Horsley Lodge) 78 72, Matthew Chapman (Wentworth) 78 72, Conor O'Neil (Pollock) 74 76, Luke Johnson (Kings Lynn) 74 76, Tom Clements (Royal Norwich) 74 76.
MISSED THE CUT
151 Matthew Bacon (Costessey Park) 80 71, Jerome Titlaw (The London) 80 71, Ben Taylor (Walton Heath) 79 72, Patrick Kelly (Woodhall Spa) 79 72, Mark Duncalf (Formby) 78 73, Jimmy Mullen (Royal North Devon) 77 74, Will Cooper (Woburn) 77 74, Steven Jones (Canons Brook) 75 76, William Whiteoak (Bingley St Ives) 75 76, Colin Walsh (Hayling) 75 76, Benjamin Wheeler (Purley Downs) 75 76, Jack Heasman (West Essex) 73 78, Sam Edwards (Bigbury) 72 79.
152 Craig Cameron (Wentworth) 78 74, Sam Benton (South Staffs) 77 75, Ryan Wallace (Handsworth) 77 75, Jonathan Grey (Lindfield) 77 75, Dominic Moon (Rotherham) 77 75, Nick Newbold (Kedleston Park) 77 75, Harrison Greenberry (Exeter) 74 78.
153 Andrew Scrimshaw (Prudhoe) 77 76, Phil Hartley (Woolston Manor) 77 76.
154 Jamie Bower (Meltham) 82 72, Leon Fricker (Yelverton) 81 73, Nick Ward (Redbourn) 80 74, Scott Gibson (Southerness) 79 75, Mark Geddes (Prenton) 78 76, Gregory Payne (Chobham) 77 77, James Smith (Yelverton) 76 78, Jack Colegate (Rochester & Cobham) 75 79, Sebastian (Workington) 75 79, Curtis Griffiths (Wentworth) 74 80.
155 Levi Desmond (Sleaford) 81 74, Harry Whittle (Woburn) 79 76, Ben Herbert (Clacton on Sea) 79 76, Sam Young (Rotherham) 78 77, Thomas Goodair (Woodsome Hall) 77 78, Alfie Plant (Rochester & Cobham) 77 78, James Bolton (Formby) 76 79, Tom Heggarty (Royal Liverpool) 76 79, Bradley Read (Warrington) 75 80.
156 Sam Sullivan (Woodspring) 81 75, Oliver Baker (Cardiff) 80 76, Mitchell Hadfield (Worksop) 78 78, Jack Cardy (Hintlesham) 78 78, Fraser Macleod (Hazel Grove) 78 78, Rob Burlison (Oxley Park) 76 80.
157 Josh Johnson (Welwyn Garden City) 86 71, Gareth Johnson (Moor Allerton) 82 75, Oscar Sharpe (Minchinhampton) 82 75, James Fawssett (Walton Heath) 81 76, Liam Johnston (Dumfries & Co) 80 and 77, Philippe Schweizer (Vilars) 77 80.
158 Ben Smith (Worksop) 83 75, Louis Birchall (Ingestre Park) 81 77, Rodolphe de Heer(Lausanne) 79 79, Jake Canning (Stoke Park) 79 79, Connor Chant (Betchworth Park) 78 80, Oliver Carr (Ulverston) 75 83.
159 Bradley Thomas (Foxhills) 85 74, Robin Mattson (Leuk) 82 77, Jake Spearpoint (Littlestone) 82 77, George Howard (Girton) 80 79, Casey Rossiter-Legg (Rochester & Cobham) 77 82.
160 Freddie Sheridan Mills (Walsall) 84 76, Laurie Owen (Letchworth) 82 78, Callum Brown (Bowood) 81 79, Thomas Rowland (Prudhoe) 78 82, Tom Harris (Castletown) 78 82, Freddie Price (Royal Blackheath) 75 85.
161 Tom Perry (Abbeydale) 83 78
162 Jack Owen (Basingstoke) 86 76, Connor Fletcher (Chart Hills) 78 74
163 Daniel Parsons (Sudbury) 87 76, Timothy Martin (Worthing) 85 78,
164 Adam Charnock (Hornsea) 86 78, Sam Westmancoat (Reading) 84 80, Jonathan McAllister (Hallowes) 72 72,
165 Patrick Mullins (Whitchurch) 84 81.
166 Alexander Hull (Notts) 86 80, Daniel Ellis-Banbury (Letchworth) 80 86.
NR Arthur Leonard (Rochford Hundred) 81 NR
NR Ryan Corbett (West Lancashire) 81 NR

GIRLS
Par 150 (2x75) CSS 75 74.
154 Charlotte Thompson (Channels) 76 78, Brogan Townend (Pleasington) 77 77.
155 Bronte Law (Bramhall) 76 79.
156 Natalie Karcher (Lausanne) 79 77, Emily Taylor (Royal Lytham) 83 73.
159 Lucy Evans (Wrekin) 81 78.
MISSED THE CUT
160 Bethany Garton (Royal Lytham) 82 78.
164 Amber Ratcliffe (Royal Cromer) 81 83.
165 Gemma Clews (Ashton on Mersey) 86 79.
167 Rachel Rossel (Interlachen) 83 84.
168 Lucie Walker (Ormskirk) 86 82.
172 Hannah Mannion (Teeside) 82 90.

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ENGLISH PAIR LEAD CHALLENGE TOUR EVENT


Leader McLeary slumps to joint 19th in Turkey

FROM THE EUROPEAN CHALLENGE TOUR WEBSITE
The English duo of Stuart Davis and Charlie Ford will carry a slender lead into the final day of the Turkish Airlines Challenge hosted by Carya Golf Club, with both bidding to capture their maiden Challenge Tour titles. Overnight leader Jamie McLeary from Scotland had a day to forget. He dropped to joint 19th position with a 77 for 213.
Ford, who has new caddy James on his bag for the first time this week, celebrated his 25th birthday with a stunning round of 66 at Carya Golf Club in Belek, Antalya Turkey, to surge to the head of affairs on nine under par. He was later joined on that mark by his more experienced compatriot Davis, who is seeking to shrug off his bridesmaid tag after three runner-up finishes in his Challenge Tour career.
Ford, who had looked on course to secure a European Tour card at the 2009 Qualifying School before going into reverse over the final two rounds, compiled a solid rather than spectacular opening nine, as he reached the turn in 35.
But his round exploded into life on the back nine with five birdies, with the highlights coming at the 11th hole, where he sunk a 35 feet putt, and the demanding 17th, where he put his approach shot to within a foot.
Ford, embarking on his maiden Challenge Tour campaign after attending Tennessee State University in America, said: “I made some good par saves from eight or ten feet on the front nine, which kept me chugging along. Then after that long putt dropped on the 11th, I didn’t really hit a poor shot. My playing partner [Charles-Edouard Russo] also played really well, so we were just really feeding off each other. Often when you see other people making birdies, it inspires you to raise your game.
“There’ll probably be a few nerves on the last day, but that’s a good thing because it means you’re in there and challenging for the lead. If I play as solidly as I have done over the past two rounds, you never know. It’s my first season on the Challenge Tour, so it’s still a learning process for me.
"Obviously I was disappointed with what went on at Q School but in a funny way it might’ve been a blessing in disguise. I only turned pro just before Q School, so it might’ve been too much too soon. This way I can get a full season on the Challenge Tour under my belt, and then hopefully get onto the main Tour next season.”
Davis has already experienced life on The European Tour, having finished 20th in the Challenge Tour Rankings in 2008 thanks largely to his runner-up finish at the money-spinning Kazakhstan Open.
He has returned to the Challenge Tour after struggling for consistency on the top tier last term, but showed signs of rediscovering his touch with five birdies in a flawless round of 67. Davies said:
“Funnily enough I probably didn’t play as well today as I did yesterday, but the putts started to drop which made all the difference. The first two days was the best I’ve played from tee to green for a long time, so I was a bit disappointed not to be in a better position.
"But I found something on the putting green this morning, and it served me well. I didn’t sink any really long putts, but I was holing out really well – I probably only missed one makeable putt.
"If I putt as well again tomorrow, then I’ll have every chance. I’ve obviously been in this position before, so hopefully I can draw on that experience and finish the job off this time.”
Third place is shared by Dutchman Wil Besseling and Frenchman Russo, who carded respective rounds of 66 and 67 to move to eight under par.
Besseling’s round would have been even better had his approach to the 18th hole not been hindered by a tree in the middle of the fairway, but the Dutchman – who is trying to regain his European Tour playing credentials after missing out at the 2009 Qualifying School Final Stage by just one stroke – preferred to dwell on the positives.
He said: “That was probably my best round for the last couple of years, so I’m very satisfied. If anything today was probably the toughest day because the wind got up a little bit, so that makes it even more pleasing.
"I’m now probably playing better than I did when I was when I was last on the Challenge Tour two years ago, so hopefully I can get the rewards for it.”
Besseling has one Challenge Tour title to his name but Russo, who shot a round of 67, is seeking his maiden win. The Frenchman picked up two shots on the front nine and added another four after the turn to join Besseling in a tie for third place, with England’s Benn Barham, Denmark’s Lasse Jensen and Austrian Bernd Wiesberger one shot back in a share of fifth on seven under par.
LEADING THIRD-ROUND TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72) 7178yd
207 Charlie Ford (England) 73 68 66, Stuart Davis (England) 72 68 67.
208 Charles-Edouard Russo (France) 71 70 677, Will Besseling (Netherlands) 72 70 66.
209 Lasse Jensen (Denmark) 68 70 71, Bernd Wiesberger (Austria) 69 70 70, Benn Barham (England) 69 71 69.
Selected scores:
211 Colm Moriarty (Ireland) 70 70 71 (jt 10th).
212 Raymond Russell (Scotland) 66 73 73, Lee Slattery (England) 72 68 72. (jt 14th).
213 Jamie McLeary (Scotland) 69 67 77., Steve Lewton (England) 70 74 69, Oliver Whiteley (England) 71 71 71 (jt 19th).
Other Scots' scores:
214 George Murray (Scotland) 70 71 73 (jt 24th).
216 Scott Jamieson (Scotland) 72 71 73 (jt 45th).

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Drysdale, Lawrie leading Scots looking for Sunday best

Foster leads Open de Espana by three in Seville

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
More than 200 European Tour events and seven years on from his only victory, England's Mark Foster takes a three-stroke lead into the final day of the Open de España in Seville.
Worksop's second most famous golfer - World No 4 Lee Westwood is the first, of course - is on 12 under par after a third round 69.
Now Foster must just hope that he does not come a cropper like the leaders at the end of the opening two days.
First Argentina's Ricardo Gonzalez followed up a 65 with a 79 and only just survived the halfway cut, then Swede Johan Edfors returned after a second round 64 and slumped to a 76.
World Number 363 Foster's sole success on The European Tour came with a 40 foot eagle putt after a six-man play-off in South Africa, but he will be hoping this one does not have that drama.
Spaniards Alvaro Quiros and Carlos Del Moral and Frenchman Raphaël Jacquelin share second place, but the home pair both finished poorly.
Big-hitter Quiros, at 35th the highest-ranked player in the field, hooked into the water on the last and bogeyed for a 67, while Del Moral dropped a shot at the 17th and 18th and signed for a 70, one better than Jacquelin.
Story of the day came from Darren Clarke, although not about the 72 that kept him at level par and deep in the pack, but rather what happened to him after the second round.
The former Ryder Cup hero flew to London in mid-afternoon thinking he would miss the cut, but arrived back home to discover there was a good chance of him surviving.
Told there was a flight from Gatwick to Malaga at 7.25pm he set off for it, but M25 traffic prevented him making that.
"We then looked into getting a (private) jet to get me back here, but as it was the Bank Holiday weekend and they were all busy," said the Ulsterman.
"At 8.15pm though I got a call telling me to get to Oxford airport as soon as possible. It took off at 10.30pm, I got to Malaga at 1.55am and the hotel at 4.15am."
He reckoned he had less than an hour's sleep before getting up to prepare for his 8.45am tee-off time.
Even with a barrage of birdies on the final day Clarke is unlikely to cover the cost of his return private jet.
He refused to reveal exactly how much, but added: "With the Tour staging such a good event it would have been very unprofessional not to make the event.
"I was not quite at the races and I'm off for some more sleep now."
Sebi Garcia, second at halfway, dropped back to six under alongside Edfors with a 75.
Foster said: "I was off to a slowish start, but stayed patient and gave myself a little reminder to keep going.
"Last time I had the lead was the British Masters and a couple of guys (Westwood and Ian Poulter) played really well.
"Whatever happens happens, but I am in a good frame of mind. I was surprised how relaxed I was, but tomorrow is another day."
Thanks to an injury to Indian Jeev Milkha Singh he is back with his former caddie Janet Squire for the first time in about a year this week.
"I didn't have one coming here from Korea. Janet's been sat a home for six weeks and was happy to come out. She's a brilliant caddie - one I can trust."
SCOTSWATCH: David Drysdale (74-211) and Paul Lawrie (71-212) are the leading Scots with a round to go. A top-10 to top-15 finish is well within their scope if they produce their best on Sunday. Same applies to Stephen Gallacher (69-213).
THIRD-ROUND TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
204 Mark Foster 69 66 69
207 Carlos Del Morral (Spa) 68 69 70, Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 69 67 71, Alvaro Quiros (Spa) 68 72 67
208 Stephen Dodd 69 68 71, Fabrizio Zanotti (Par) 70 67 71
209 Anthony Wall 71 68 70, Francesco Molinari (Ita) 69 71 69, Damien McGrane 68 71 70, Joost Luiten (Ned) 69 70 70, Shane Lowry 71 68 70, Nicolas Colsaerts (Bel) 71 66 72, Jamie Donaldson 71 72 66
210 Sebastian Garcia-Grout (Spa) 68 67 75, Alejandro Canizares (Spa) 71 69 70, Gregory Bourdy (Fra) 69 72 69, Johan Edfors (Swe) 70 64 76, James Morrison 73 67 70
211 David Drysdale 70 67 74, Chris Wood 70 68 73, Danny Willett 68 68 75, Rafael Echenique (Arg) 68 70 73, Fredrik Andersson Hed (Swe) 72 68 71
212 Robert Jan Derksen (Ned) 73 66 73, Alvaro Velasco (Spa) 72 69 71, Martin Erlandsson (Swe) 68 73 71, Simon Dyson 68 73 71, Gary Boyd 72 71 69, Paul Lawrie 74 67 71, Ignacio Garrido (Spa) 72 72 68, Ariel Canete (Arg) 70 67 75
213 Daniel Vancsik (Arg) 71 70 72, Stephen Gallacher 76 68 69, David Howell 74 66 73, Paul Waring 66 75 72, Oskar Henningsson (Swe) 71 70 72, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano (Spa) 73 69 71, Edoardo Molinari (Ita) 71 69 73
214 Mikael Lundberg (Swe) 68 69 77, Richie Ramsay 69 72 73, Gary Orr 72 72 70, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 73 70 71
215 James Kingston (Rsa) 72 70 73, Phillip Price 71 71 73, Jose Manuel Lara (Spa) 69 72 74
216 Richard Bland 71 70 75, Christian Nilsson (Swe) 72 72 72, Mikko Ilonen (Fin) 73 71 72, Sion E Bebb 72 71 73, David Horsey 72 70 74, Steven O'Hara 72 71 73, Darren Clarke 75 69 72, Felipe Aguilar (Chi) 74 69 73, Jorge Campillo (Spa) 70 69 77, Richard Finch 69 73 74, Rafael Cabrera Bello (Spa) 73 71 72
217 Jamie Elson 73 69 75, Robert Rock 74 69 74, Pedro Linhart (Spa) 74 70 73, Peter Whiteford 73 71 73, Colin Montgomerie 71 71 75, Nick Dougherty 73 70 74, Richard Green (Aus) 71 73 73, Pedro Oriol (Spa) 69 71 77, Manuel Quiros (Spa) 71 70 76
218 Ricardo Gonzalez (Arg) 65 79 74, Alexander Noren (Swe) 72 71 75, Michael Jonzon (Swe) 73 71 74, Alfredo Garcia-Heredia (Spa) 71 71 76, Peter Hedblom (Swe) 71 73 74, Pablo Larrazabal (Spa) 72 72 74
219 Luis Claverie (Spa) 74 69 76, Simon Khan 72 72 75
220 Eirik Tage Johansen (Nor) 73 71 76, Raul Quiros (Spa) 69 75 76
221 Sam Hutsby 71 72 78, Carl Suneson (Spa) 71 72 78, Thomas Levet (Fra) 73 70 78
222 Jose-Filipe Lima (Por) 74 69 79, Fredrik Ohlsson (Swe) 73 70 79, Marc Warren 71 73 78, Clodomiro Carranza (Arg) 72 71 79
223 Jean-Baptiste Gonnet (Fra) 71 73 79

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NEW-LOOK DAVID LAW AT THE LYTHAM TROPHY

David Law as you have probably never seen him before ... golfing without glasses! The Hazlehead player, last year's Scottish boys' and Scottish men's amateur match-play champion, is trying playing golf with lenses instead of spectacles ... and he told photographer Tom Ward, who took the above picture at today's second round of the Lytham Trophy, that he is still getting used to them.
We would like to give you the Lytham Trophy second-round totals but the Royal Lytham & St Annes Golf Club's website has one of the poorest live-scoring systems imaginable for a major club and a major tournament - Editor.

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Tway and Thompson lead US seniors' event

FROM THE PGA.COM WEBSITE
SAUCIER, Mississippi. Bob Tway and 63-year-old Leonard Thompson shot 5-under 67s on Friday to share the first-round lead in the Champions Tour's inaugural Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic.
Tom Purtzer, David Peoples, Brad Bryant and David Eger opened with 68s at Fallen Oak. Mark O'Meara, coming off his first Champions Tour victory last week with Nick Price in the Legends of Golf team event, was two strokes back at 69 along with Eduardo Romero and Ted Schultz. Price had a 70.
Thompson, who won the last of his three Champions Tour titles in 2001, has cut his tournament schedule, but has been playing almost every day at home in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla., at Sawgrass Country Club and TPC Sawgrass.
"I think it had something to do with it. Yes I do," Thompson said. "I really do. ... You can't find too many places that you go from one to the other that are as difficult as those two on a daily basis. That's where we've been playing. I'm not saying that that was the be all, end all, but it certainly helps."
The 51-year-old Tway birdied Nos. 12, 14 and 16 to match Thompson at 5 under.
Tway said staying out of trouble areas was the key to his score.
"I'm pleased with how I played," Tway said. "The golf course, I think everybody likes it. It's in wonderful shape. If you can avoid the bunkers, that's the starting point, I think, off the tee because they're awfully penal. ... It was a challenging day because of the wind, but I was pleased with how everything went."
Thompson bogeyed the second hole, then ran off four straight birdies. He also bogeyed No. 11, then birdied Nos. 13-15 and closed with three pars.
Bernhard Langer, a two-time winner this year, opened with a 72.
Jodie Mudd and Bobby Clampett made their Champions Tour debut. Clampett had a 72, and Mudd shot a 74.
LEADERBOARD
Par 72
67 Leonard Thompson, Bob Tway.
68 David Peoples, Tom Purtzer, Brad Bryant, David Eger.
Selected scores:
71 Mark James (England) (jt 18th).
72 Bernhard Langer (Germany) (jt 33rd).
75 Sandy Lyle (Scotland) (jt 62nd)



Link for all the scores:
http://www.pgatour.com/leaderboards/current/s011/

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Three share halfway lead in Nationwide Tour event

FROM THE PGA.COM WEBSITE
ATHENS, Georgia. South Carolina rookie Mark Anderson, leading money-winner Bobby Gates and Utah's Daniel Summerhays are all at 7-under 135 and share the 36-hole lead at the Stadion Athens Classic.
Anderson and Gates carded 2-under 69s on Friday at the University of Georgia Golf Course, while Summerhays went one better with a 3-under 68 to force a tie at the top.
Washington's Michael Putnam (69) and Texan J.J. Killeen (67) are tied for fourth and one shot back in the Nationwide Tour event. Four players -- Ryan Armour (67), Bradley Iles (71), Martin Piller (70) and veteran Bob May (68) -- are two strokes back heading into the weekend.
The UGA course, opened in 1968 and renovated in 2006, continues to be the story as players battle the speedy greens, tall pines and undulating lay-out. Only 38 players in the starting field of 156 have posted sub-par totals for the first two days.
"This golf course is awesome," said Armour, an Ohio State product. "I wish we could play more golf courses that made us think as much as this one's doing, instead of just bombing and bashing. This is fun golf. It's stressful, but it's fun."
It wasn't much fun for Anderson, a 2008 graduate of the University of South Carolina, who battled his way to a 69 despite hitting only four of 14 fairways.
"I was driving on both sides of the golf course," said Anderson. "I didn't have just one miss so it was tough to play. I missed a lot of short putts for birdie inside of 10 feet but I hit it really solid from the fairway or wherever I drove it to."
After rolling in a birdie putt at No. 17 to reach 8 under, he drove it behind a pine tree down the right side of the 18th fairway. The ball ended up buried in pine straw and the 24-year-old had no choice but to chip out. He managed to salvage a bogey and grad a share of the lead, right where he started the day.
"I haven't made any big numbers," he said of his play thus far. "You have to stay away from the big numbers because they're out there. I've just plodded along and made some nice par putts. I'm disappointed with the way I finished but it could have been a little worse."
Not so for Summerhays, who admitted he got all he could on Friday afternoon.
"There aren't too many shots that I left out there, let's just say that," said the former BYU standout. "I drove it better than I did yesterday. I honestly felt like I played better today than I did yesterday (68) but I think the course is playing tougher this afternoon than it did yesterday morning."
Summerhays was just happy he got to tee it up this week, having started off on Monday as the 10thalternate to the field.
"I've been playing well and I was really hoping I'd get in this week," he said. "I knew I just needed to get in the tournament. I've been playing well but my scores haven't reflected how I've been playing this year. I missed three cuts by a shot. I just needed a few breaks. I feel really blessed to be in the tournament."
Though tied at the top, Anderson, Summerhays and the rest of the field are chasing Gates, a 6-foot-6 rookie out of Texas A&M who has stood tall atop the money list since winning the opening event on the 2010 schedule. Gates ranks among the Tour's longest hitters this year, but this week he's managed to solve the winds and the slick greens.
"The wind swirls through the trees and it can be doing two different things on the same hole at the same time," he said. "What you feel on the tee is completely opposite of what you feel on the green. You really have to try and figure it out with you best guess and hope to err on the right side."
Gates hit 11 of 14 fairways and 12 of 18 greens during Friday's second round. His 53 total putts thus far puts him No. 2 in the field.
"I knew putting would be critical this week. Above the hole or below the hole, it doesn't matter," he said. "They're so fast, you cannot be aggressive on these putts. The only thing I'm more conservative with this week is my speed on the putts. I'm really trying to die my putts into the hole. If you hit it an ounce too firm you're going to have eight feet coming back, and that's just going to wear you out."
A total of 69 players made the 36-hole cut, which came at 1-over 143.

Link to read all the scores:
http://www.pgatour.com/leaderboards/current/s011/

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Woeful Tiger Woods misses the cut
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after a miserable round of 79
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FROM THE SCOTSMAN WEBSITE
By Julian Linden
Tiger Woods had a shocking meltdown in the second round of the Quail Hollow Championship, matching the worst nine-hole score of his US PGA Tour career and ending up with a seven-over 79 to miss a cut for only the sixth time in his 14-year career.
He had three-putt bogeys on consecutive holes. He hit a flop shot that ran over the green and into the water. And he bottomed out on the 15th green with a four-putt double bogey from just over 30 feet.
"It is what it is," Woods said when asked if rustiness was the culprit. "Whatever it was, it wasn't good enough."
Not even close. Making the performance even more surprising was the fact that Woods was coming off a tie for fourth at the Masters three weeks ago, a remarkable performance considering it was his first competition since a five-month break after being caught cheating repeatedly on his wife.
This was a big step back. The 79 was his second-worst score as a pro behind an 81 that Woods shot in the wind-blown third round of the 2002 Open at Muirfield when he was going for the Grand Slam.
His 43 on in the outward half tied his worst nine-hole score on tour; he also shot 43 at the Bay Hill Invitational three years ago, and the 1996 Tour Championship.
"He's obviously got things in his mind other than what's going between the ropes right now," said Open champion Stewart Cink, who played with Woods. "You've got to learn how to balance what's going on in your life with your golf. And if you're not in a great place mentally, then it sometimes shows up out there."
This was Woods' first time playing at a regular US PGA Tour event with public ticket sales, and the crowd was gracious as ever with only a few exceptions, which were a comment more on his golf than his extra-marital behaviour. Two fans, including a woman, held thumbs-down as Woods walked off the 15th green. Police also escorted away a fan who apparently heckled Woods as he left the 17th green.
A friend of the fan, who declined to give his name, said the offending barb was: "No red shirt for you on Sunday."
Otherwise, it was clear over the last two days the fans were more interested in Woods as a golfer than anything to do with his personal life. He just didn't give them much to cheer. And he won't be around for the weekend.
As Woods struggled, many of his main rivals, including Masters champion Phil Mickelson, ripped up the course on a perfect spring day.
Billy Mayfair was the leader through 36 holes. At eight-under 136 after a 68, he had a one-shot lead over two-time major champion Angel Cabrera, who played in Woods' group.
For Woods, it was the first time he had missed a cut since the Open last summer at Turnberry, and the first time at a regular US PGA Tour event since the Disney Classic at the end of the 2005 season.
"Give this guy a chance, though. He'll bounce back," Mayfair said. "We all know that. Everyone on tour knows that. By him missing a few cuts here and there, it's just going to make him come back even stronger. I don't think anyone out here is worried about Tiger, and I'm sure Tiger is not worried about it right now, either."
Cink, who also missed the cut, added: "I've seen him struggle like that off the tee. But he's usually the magician that gets the ball up and down from everywhere, hits some miraculous shots out of the trees and stuff. But you've got to remember, he hasn't played a lot of golf since about November. It's hard to just come back and be the magician instantly."
Mickelson, who was ill from food poisoning and faded late in his opening round, looked a picture of health as he shot a four-under-par 68 to be suddenly feeling upbeat about his chances."I should be 100 per cent for the weekend," he declared.
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 144 (2x72)
136 Billy Mayfair 68 68
137 Angel Cabrera (Arg) 70 67
138 Phil Mickelson 70 68, Dustin Johnson 73 65, Paul Goydos 68 70, J.P. Hayes 74 64
139 J J Henry 68 71, Camilo Villegas (Col) 67 72
140 Jim Furyk 75 65, Garth Mulroy (Rsa) 69 71, Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 68 72, Tom Gillis 71 69, Kevin Sutherland 72 68
141 Nick Watney 70 71, Davis Love III 70 71, Greg Chalmers (Aus) 70 71, Ricky Barnes 69 72, Kevin Na 72 69, Anthony Kim 72 69, Bill Haas 71 70, Robert Allenby (Aus) 71 70, Bo Van Pelt 65 76
142 Hunter Mahan 71 71, Chad Campbell 72 70, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 74 68, John Merrick 72 70, Lucas Glover 71 71, Joe Ogilvie 73 69
143 Brendon De Jonge 70 73, Bubba Watson 70 73, Heath Slocum 69 74, Brad Faxon 68 75, Jarrod Lyle (Aus) 71 72, Chris Tidland 72 71, Carlos Franco (Par) 72 71, Rickie Fowler 73 70, Johnson Wagner 73 70
144 Aron Price (Aus) 75 69, Charley Hoffman 72 72, Chris Stroud 73 71, Zach Johnson 71 73, Brian Gay 73 71, Jason Day (Aus) 73 71, Blake Adams 73 71, Chad Collins 74 70, Andres Romero (Arg) 68 76, Padraig Harrington (Irl) 72 72
145 Brian Stuard 69 76, Bill Lunde 73 72, Ross Fisher (Eng) 72 73, Roger Tambellini 74 71, Steve Wheatcroft 75 70, Greg Owen (Eng) 74 71, Matthew Jones (Aus) 74 71, Charles Howell III 74 71, Will MacKenzie 71 74, Rory McIlroy (NIrl) 72 73, Steve Marino 73 72, Brett Quigley 73 72, Tim Petrovic 74 71, Ryuji Imada (Jpn) 74 71, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 75 70, Lee Westwood (Eng) 73 72, Henrik Bjornstad (Nor) 72 73, Scott McCarron 70 75, Rodney Pampling (Aus) 70 75, Tim Herron 71 74, Michael Connell 76 69, Mark Wilson 73 72, Kenny Perry 66 79, D.A. Points 72 73, Aaron Baddeley (Aus) 73 72, Mark Calcavecchia 71 74, Carl Pettersson (Swe) 74 71, Rocco Mediate 70 75, Brandt Snedeker 70 75, D.J. Trahan 73 72
MISSED THE CUT
146 Kris Blanks 72 74, Vaughn Taylor 71 75, John Senden (Aus) 74 72, David Toms 71 75, Ted Purdy 76 70, Scott Piercy 75 71, Matt Kuchar 75 71, Chez Reavie 73 73, Alex Cejka (Ger) 70 76, Tim Wilkinson (Nzl) 72 74, Troy Matteson 70 76, Ryan Moore 73 73, Jason Bohn 75 71
147 David Lutterus (Rsa) 76 71, Jeff Overton 71 76, David Duval 71 76, Webb Simpson 74 73, Alex Prugh 72 75, Martin Laird (Sco) 72 75, Cortland Lowe 75 72, Brian Davis (Eng) 76 71, Pat Perez 76 71, Stewart Cink 72 75, Fred Couples 76 71, Derek Lamely 75 72, Michael Allen 75 72, J.B. Holmes 79 68, George McNeill 74 73, Jeff Maggert 74 73, Kevin Stadler 72 75, Jonathan Byrd 72 75
148 Spencer Levin 75 73, Charles Warren 74 74, Chris Riley 77 71, Harrison Frazar 70 78, Garrett Willis 74 74, Ben Curtis 71 77, Cameron Percy (Aus) 69 79, James Nitties (Aus) 72 76, Mathew Goggin (Aus) 73 75, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 77 71, Jimmy Walker 73 75, Josh Teater 74 74
149 James Driscoll 73 76, Matt Bettencourt 78 71, Nick O'Hern (Aus) 73 76, Kevin Streelman 74 75, Vijay Singh (Fij) 77 72, Sean O'Hair 72 77, Rich Barcelo 75 74, Cameron Tringale 78 71
150 Bryce Molder 76 74, Rory Sabbatini (Rsa) 72 78, Woody Austin 74 76, Boo Weekley 74 76, Jerod Turner 76 74
151 Nathan Green (Aus) 77 74, Richard S Johnson (Swe) 78 73, Adam Scott (Aus) 78 73, Roland Thatcher 75 76
152 Martin Flores 76 76, Troy Merritt 76 76
153 Daniel Chopra (Swe) 76 77, Tiger Woods 74 79, Omar Uresti 81 72, Cameron Beckman 78 75, Jeff Quinney 74 79
154 Vance Veazey 76 78, Steve Lowery 76 78, Craig Bowden 76 78
155 Jason Dufner 80 75, Notah Begay III 78 77
156 Nicholas Thompson 75 81
157 Jeff Klauk 78 79
158 Willis Ring 78 80, Kevin Johnson 81 77
165 Jeff Peck 87 78
Withdrew: 88 Parker McLachlin

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