Thursday, July 29, 2010

Burnett's birdie blitz KOs Chris Lloyd in third round at Little Aston

FROM THE ENGLISH GOLF UNION WEBSITE
When you hit your opponent with four successive birdies on the back nine it can prove crucial. That was the case for James Burnett and helped him to a 3 and 1 victory over fellow boy cap Chris Lloyd in round three of the English Amateur Championship at Little Aston.
The pair, who were England team-mates in the recent European Boys Team Championships in Turkey, were locked in a tight match which looked like going Lloyd’s way when he went 2up after seven holes. But Lincolnshire’s Burnett trimmed the lead and the first of his quartet of birdies at the 12th got him back to all square. He then delivered the decisive blow with three more birdies and although Lloyd won the 16th with a par four, the end was near.
It came at the 17th where Bristol-based Lloyd fired his wedge approach over the green and into the lake. He took a drop and chipped back then, with Burnett’s ball safely on the putting surface in two, shook his hand.
“That win has given me a great confidence boost,” said Burnett. “Chris is a fine player and it’s nice to beat the best. But the birdie at the 14th was crucial when I came out of a bunker and holed from 15 feet.”
Lloyd was philosophical about his defeat. “It wasn’t my day,” he said. “At the end it came down to a putting contest. I didn’t play badly but he hit me with four birdies.”
Burnett will now play Ross Dee from Essex in the quarter finals, Dee having pulled off a sensational 3 and 2 victory over Brabazon Trophy winner Darren Wright.
Dee, at 31, one of the oldest players left in the championship, went 2up after four holes and was never pegged back, confirming his victory by winning the 14th and adding two halves.
“This is awesome,” he said. “I didn’t believe I could do it but this the biggest win of my career and I’ve never got this far before. I was so nervous over the last few holes because I played with Darren in the South of England at Walton Heath and he is quality.”
Wright, who was looking to add the English title to his Brabazon success, said: “I felt I could do ‘the double’. I was playing good enough but every putt this afternoon got to the hole and burned the edge. But I can’t fault Ross, he played very steady.”
Derbyshire’s Nick Newbold, another boy cap, was on the wrong end of a 3 and 1 scoreline against Warren Harmston. The Surrey man won the first and stayed 1up to the 11th which Newbold won to square matters. But Harmston took the next and gradually increased his advantage to clinch his place in the quarter finals.
Andrew Sullivan, perhaps the dark horse of the championship, also won the first against Nick Maddison and went further in front at the third and fourth. Maddison, the Northumberland County Champion, hit back but Sullivan restored his 3up advantage on the ninth and eventually won 4 and 3.

Tom Lewis, last year’s British Boys Champion, fell 2down through four holes against Adam Hedges, conqueror of international Laurie Canter in round one. But Lewis, who got past boy cap Max Smith on the final green in the morning, won the sixth and the seventh with an eagle-two, holing a 30-yard pitch, to level matters. He went ahead for the first time with a birdie-three at the 11th, added another at 12 and took the 15th on his way to a 3 and 2 success. Lewis, who was about six under par for 16 holes, will now meet Sullivan in the quarter finals.
In the bottom match, Tommy Fleetwood, who cruised past Luke Cornford from Sussex in the morning, was given a tougher match by James Doswell and it wasn’t until the seventh that the Lancastrian edged in front. However, once Fleetwood gets ahead he is tough to dislodge and after going 3up through 14 holes then losing 15, he had a chance from a foot to close out the match at 16 but missed. But he made amends at the next, firing a nine iron to three feet for a 2 and 1 victory.
Sam Edwards, the Devon junior, ended the hopes of international Jamie Abbott. The Suffolk man was 1up playing the last but took three from the back fringe which meant the match went into extra holes. It lasted five more before a par at the short 23rd ensured Edwards' victory as Abbott's par putt shaved the hole. Edwards will now meet Fleetwood.

To see all the results, click here

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THOMPSETT WINS NE BOYS' TITLE ON TIE-BREAKER

Aboyne's Daniel Thompsett is the new North-east District boys' golf champion. He won the title at Peterculter today with a total of level par total of 142 which was matched by Aboyne clubmate Sam McNeill.
The tie-breaker was the better second round of Thompson's - a 67 to McNeill's 71.
Andrew Carrell, playing over his home course, was third on 144 with rounds of 69 and 75.
Carrell won the Under-16s championship by seven shots from Lewis Mutch (Duff House Royal).
The leading four players qualify to contest the North-east District boys' match-play championship and the semi-final line-up at the Peterculter course on Friday morning will be:
9.30 Thompsett v Lawrie.
9.40 McNeill v Carrell.
The final will tee off at 1.50.

LEADING TOTALS
Par 142 (2x71) CSS 70 70
142 Daniel Thompsett (Aboyne) 75 67, Sam McNeill (Aboyne) 71 71 (Thompson won with better second round).
144 Andrew Carrell (Peterculter) 69 75.
147 Sean Lawrie (Portlethen) 73 74.
148 Callum Sutherland (Deeside) 74 74, Callum Cromar (Aboyne) 69 79.
149 Ross Gordon (Peterhead) 73 76.
150 Jamie Pryde (Deeside) 74 76, Lewis Mutch (Duff House Royal) 71 79.

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Xltec Pro Tour at Westerwood

FINAL TOTALS


1. Stephen Gray 68 + 68 = 136 £800
2. Greig Hutcheon 68 + 69 = 137 £640
3=. Scott Henderson 67 + 71 = 138 £465
3=. Alan Lockhart 71 + 67 = 138 £465
5=. Andrew Oldcorn 70 + 70 = 140 £340
5=. Keir McNicoll 67 + 73 = 140 £340
5=. John Gallagher 68 + 72 = 140 £340
8=. Craig Mathieson 74 + 67 = 141 £190
9=. Mark Kerr 71 + 71 = 142 £152.50
9=. Graeme Lornie 72 + 70 = 142 £152.50
11. Chris Kelly 71 + 72 = 143 £115
12. Gavin Dear 74 + 70 = 144 £100

Leading Lady
1. Corisande Lee 74 + 71 = 145 £400
2. Kylie Walker 75 + 71 = 146 £0

Hopefully see you all soon.

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Rock (65) disqualified for wrong-score blunder at Irish Open

FROM THE AOL GOLF NEWS SERVICE
England's Robert Rock, the player who lost a play-off to local amateur Shane Lowry last year, opened the 3 Irish Open with a six-under-par 65 at Killarney on Thursday - and then was disqualified for signing for a wrong score.
Rock, seventh in The Open two weeks ago, did not spot that his card had him down for a par on the 14th and birdie at the next instead of the other way around.
Hoping to win the £415,000 first prize for a second successive time - Lowry was unable to claim the money - the 33-year-old said: "It's my fault. I checked it, but didn't see it and it's my job to do that."
He added: "I don't think I've been disqualified for anything before. I'd have preferred it to be after an 80!"

Howell's back - with a seven-under-par 64 at Killarney

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Former Ryder Cup star David Howell's determination not to let his career sink without trace finally paid rich dividends in the 3 Irish Open at the Killarney Golf & Fishing Club.
Down at 479th in the world - he was ninth four years ago - Howell emerged from the wilderness with a seven under par 64 in the first round.
"I've never wanted to give up, but it's crossed my mind that if I carry on playing as I did last year I wouldn't have a career to be worried about," said the 35 year old.
Five birdies and then an eagle on the 519 yard 16th lifted Howell into a one stroke lead over Ireland's Damien McGrane and Australian left hander Richard Green.
Last year's runner up Robert Rock - he actually took the first prize of over £400,000 because the winner was amateur Shane Lowry - also handed in a 65, but was then disqualified for a scorecard mix up.
McGrane out scored his illustrious compatriots Padraig Harrington and Graeme McDowell by three and five shots respectively, while Darren Clarke, Michael Hoey and Paul Lawrie shot 66, and Rory McIlroy 67.
Howell, who did not drop a shot today, said: "That was nice. Haven't done that for a long time but I holed a few bombs today.
"I chipped in and I think I holed three long ones as well. As it happens, I had a few more chances that I missed but I certainly holed more than my fair share, which in fairness you normally do when you shoot 64."
Having played his best round this year, he added: "I just haven't got off to a good start all year.
"Obviously I've not been playing well, or as well as I know I can, but my form has not been that bad
"But it's pretty hard to make cuts out here when you shoot 73 in the first round, puts added pressure, and I've been dying to get off to a nice start. That fidaynally happened to."
Green, who went out in 33 and came back in 32 like McGrane, said: "I felt very comfortable when I first saw the course on Tuesday and practised and played very nicely.
"I thought this is a nice old golf course for a change that's a little bit old school. I felt very comfortable out there. I played very nicely today.
"I'm not known as one of the longer hitters out on tour, and when you get a golf course that feels like the sort of golf course that I grew up on, length wise, putting surfaces, it's nice.
"It's nice to play a golf course like that again."
McGrane, who naturally hopes to pick up where Lowry left off last year, added: "I smothered a few tee shots today which is unlike me but that's golf.
"Nothing is ever...it's never 100 per cent all the way around. But I made pars when I was struggling and I picked off the board slowly and surely and that's golf and exactly what I've done."
With talk of a possible 59 - something never achieved on The European Tour - the course held up well given that there was no more than a breeze.
Clarke, continuing a recent revival, said: "I was wrong in my initial assessment.
"This morning it would have been impossible to get Killarney playing any easier. Yes the guys will get more familiar with it, but there's so many places that they can put the pins that we just can't get at."
McIlroy, at eighth in the world the highest-ranked player on view, made eight birdies, but also threw in four bogeys.
Harrington did not drop a shot, but admitted his keenness to end almost two years without a win is making him more tense than he would like to be.
"Sometimes you find it very hard to win and then all of a sudden the floodgates open."
He should know - his first major title in 2007 was quickly followed by two more.
McDowell, hoping for the same thing after capturing The US Open last month, stated: "I just need to sharpen up across the board. I said someone would go super low, but you can defend this course by hiding the pins."
FIRST ROUND SCORES
Par 71
64 David Howell
65 Damien McGrane, Richard Green (Aus)
66 Jean-Baptiste Gonnet (Fra), Seung-yul Noh (Kor), Anton Haig (Rsa), Marcel Siem (Ger), Darren Clarke, Brett Rumford (Aus), Paul Lawrie, Gonzalo Fdez-Castano (Spa), Michael Hoey
67 Martin Wiegele (Aut), Francesco Molinari (Ita), Anders Hansen (Den), Francois Delamontagne (Fra), Andrew Dodt (Aus), Johan Edfors (Swe), Danny Lee (Nzl), David Drysdale, Rory McIlroy, Eirik Tage Johansen (Nor), Mark F Haastrup (Den), David Dixon
68 Patrik Sjoland (Swe), Shiv Kapur (Ind), Nicolas Colsaerts (Bel), Steven O'Hara, Paul McGinley, Padraig Harrington, Paul Broadhurst, Simon Khan
69 Barrie Trainor, John Parry, Ross Fisher, Robert Coles, Anthony Kang (USA), Marc Warren, Alastair Forsyth, Alejandro Canizares (Spa), Markus Brier (Aut), Richard Bland, Christian Nilsson (Swe), Richard McEvoy, Sam Hutsby, Ariel Canete (Arg), Ignacio Garrido (Spa), Mark Foster, Peter O'Malley (Aus)
70 Jeppe Huldahl (Den), Graeme McDowell, Peter Whiteford, Sion E Bebb, Phillip Price, Maarten Lafeber (Ned), Simon Dyson, George Coetzee (Rsa), Graeme Storm, Stephen Gallacher, Richard Finch, Fabrizio Zanotti (Par), Bradley Dredge
71 Robert Jan Derksen (Ned), Mikael Lundberg (Swe), Thomas Aiken (Rsa), Martin Erlandsson (Swe), Peter Baker, Niclas Fasth (Swe), Simon Thornton, Marcus Fraser (Aus), Fredrik Ohlsson (Swe), Hennie Otto (Rsa), Richie Ramsay, Chris Wood, Gareth Maybin, Victor Dubuisson (Fra), Julien Quesne (Fra), Ricardo Gonzalez (Arg), Marco Ruiz (Par), Rick Kulacz (Aus), Phillip Archer
72 Alan Dunbar, Andrew Butterfield, Andrew Tampion (Aus), Matteo Manassero (Ita), Clodomiro Carranza (Arg), Peter Lawrie, Pablo Larrazabal (Spa), Anthony Wall, Damian Mooney, Gary Boyd, Oskar Henningsson (Swe), David Higgins, Sam Little, Rafael Cabrera Bello (Spa), Gregory Havret (Fra), Christian Cevaer (Fra), Steve Webster, Michael Campbell (Nzl), David Horsey, Scott Strange (Aus), Rhys Davies, Mark Brown (Nzl), Daniel Vancsik (Arg), Jamie Donaldson, Tano Goya (Arg), James Kamte (Rsa)
73 David Carter, Colm Moriarty, Nick Dougherty, Cian Curley, Carlos Rodiles (Spa), David Lynn, Paul Cutler, Pablo Martin (Spa), Benjamin Hebert (Fra), Ross McGowan
74 Mikko Ilonen (Fin), Joost Luiten (Ned), Peter Hedblom (Swe), Daniel Sugrue, Oliver Fisher, Jamie Elson, Carl Suneson (Spa), Justin Rose, Stephen Dodd, Shane Lowry
75 Peter Martin (Aus), Gary Murphy, David Ryan (Rsa), Paul Waring, Shiv Shankar Prasad Chowrasia (Ind), Barry Lane, Jose Manuel Lara (Spa), James Morrison
76 Chapchai Nirat (Tha), Rafael Echenique (Arg)
77 Gary Lockerbie, Felipe Aguilar (Chi), John Kelly (USA), Jean-Francois Lucquin (Fra), Kenneth Ferrie, Gary David Cullen
78 Chris Gane, Pat Murray, Jose-Filipe Lima (Por)
79 Michael Collins, Philip Walton, Andrew Coltart
DQ: Robert Rock 65

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English Golf Union name three for German Junior Masters

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ENGLISH GOLF UNION
Max Orrin (North Foreland, Kent), who finished runner-up in the English Boys Under 16 Championship for the McGregor Trophy, supported by FootJoy, is one of three players who will represent the English Golf Union in the 54-hole Harder German Junior Masters at Heddesheim Gut Neuzenhof Golf Club on 3rd – 5th August.
He will be accompanied by Matthew Fitzpatrick (Hallamshire, Yorkshire) and Patrick Kelly (Boston West, Lincolnshire) in Heidelberg.
Orrin, 16, fired a closing round of 73 for 295 at Prince’s to secure second place in the McGregor Trophy, finishing five strokes behind the winner, Toby Tree. He was also a member of the winning England team in the Nations Cup. Earlier, he finished tied sixth in the Sir Henry Cooper Junior Masters and ninth in the Fairhaven Trophy.

Fitzpatrick, 15, has just returned from the European Young Masters in Hungary where he finished joint fourth in the individual and was a member of the England team that was equal third in the Nations Cup. He was also a member of the winning Nations Cup team at the McGregor Trophy and earlier this year topped the Brabazon Trophy Northern Qualifying at Huddersfield.

Kelly, 16, was tied fourth in the McGregor Trophy and was a member of the team that finished runners-up in the Nations Cup. Previously he had finished equal fifth in the Midland Boys Championship.

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Super Seniors Tournament

Great Scott! MacDonald goes four clear at Stirling

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Former Walker Cup player Scott MacDonald (Dunfermline), winner of the Scottish senior stroke-polay championship a few weeks ago, is hot on the trail of the "Super Seniors" title over 36 holes at Stiring Golf Club.
MacDonald opened up a four-shot lead with a very good round of one-under-par 72 under blue skies with only a gentle breeze to cope with.
He leads by four shots from a group of four players, including another past Walker Cup player, Sandy Pirie (Hazlehead) whose idea it was to introduce an event for the "older" members of the Scottish Senior Golfing Society.
Also on 75 are Brian Grieve (King James VI), David A Millar (St Andrews new) and Billy Wallace (Prestwick St Cuthbert).
There are two trophies to be won at the end of two rounds - one for those aged from 65 to 69 years and another for the over-70 years.
FIRST ROUND
Par 72. CSS 71
71 Scott MacDonald (Dunfermline).
75 Sandy Pirie (Hazlehead), Brian Grieve (King James VI), David A Millar (St Andrews New), Billy Wallace (St Cuthbert).
77 Duncan McCallum (Stirling), Tom Nicol (Elderslie), Jim Bunting (Ballochmyle).
79 Alan Murphy (Baberton), Trevor Bennet (Great Barr), Alasdair J MacLennan (Stirling).
emds

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Champion Law goes out but seeded Byrne, Stewart in last eight

By COLIN FARQUHARSON at Gullane
Colin@scottishgolfview.com
Title-holder David Law bowed out in the fifth round today but the North-east still has three “runners” in Friday morning’s quarter-finals of the Allied Surveyors Scottish men’s amateur golf championship over the Gullane No 1 course, Lothian.
Top seed James Byrne from Banchory, John Duff (Newmachar) and Fraserburgh’s Jordan Findlay are all in the top half of the draw with Duff and Findlay due to meet for a place in the semi-finals.
Byrne moved impressively past two opponents in glorious sunshine.
And the Banchory 21-year-old was looking forward with a little bit of relish to the quarter-final tie againgast  Michael Smyth of Royal Troon.
“Michael beat me in the first round of this championship over his home course 12 months ago, and I’ve been watching his progress through the same quarter of the draw as me,” said Byrne, home on holiday from his golf scholarship at the top-ranked Arizona State University.
“I’m playing just as well as I was when I reached the final of the British championship along the road at Muirfield six weeks ago so I am right in the mood to get my own back on Michael.”
Byrne was three under par in winning his fifth round tie by one hold against man-in-form Allyn Dick, twice winner of the Scottish mid-amateur championship and victor in the recent Newlands Trophy 72-hole event at Lanark.
Michael Smyth will not go into the Byrne match short of confidence. He knocked out the seeded Greg Paterson (St Andrews New) by one hole to reach the quarter-finals.
“I was one under par and I had to hole some good putts over the last few holes to do it after I three-putted to lose the 15th and be pulled back to all square. I holed from 6ft for halves at the 16th and 17th and then got a winning birdie 3 at the last.
“I had small flies in both eyes – they were everywhere – when I played that eight-iron approach to within 3ft of the stick at the 18th. All I need is a good night’s sleep before I play James Byrne again.
“Playing Gullane is so tiring and I’m exhausted but beating James last year has been my golfing highlight so far and I’ve got nothing to lose playing him again. He’s the top seed, the favourite. Me? I never expected to get this far in the championship.”
Aberdeen student John Duff is another who, never in wildest dreams, did he think he would be playing in the quarter-finals of the “Scottish.”
“My previous claim to fame was that I beat Callum Macaulay, when he was Scottish amateur champion, over his home Tulliallian course when I was playing for North-east against Clackmannanshire,” said John
“I won at the 19th with a birdie 3 in the morning round against Paul Moultrie (Royal Troon) – and I did it again in the fifth round against Colin Baird (Bothwell Castle).”
The first hole at Gullane No 1 is 302yd long but, with the wind behind, it was within reach of the bigger hitters today. James Byrne drove the green with a No 3 wood in his tie against Dick and holed the putt for an eagle 2 to cap Dick's birdie 3 from a bunker!
“I used my driver both times and two-putted from about 30ft morning and afternoon,” said Duff who will complete his Masters degree in Computing in September.
Duff had been two up in the early stages against Baird but lost the fifth and seventh and it was the tightest of encounters after that. The Newmachar man did get his nose in front briefly at the 15th but bogeyed the short 16th to be pulled back. Halves at the 17th and 18th set up a repeat of his morning coup de grace at the 19th.
John will be the underdog against Jordan Findlay who seems to have recaptured the game that made him such an outstanding prospect when he twice reached the final of the British boys championship – and won one of them – four or five years ago.
“I’ve made a lot of changes in my swing under the guidance from coach Bob Torrance and it’s all come together over the last few weeks. I hit the ball pretty straight which is one of the reasons why my record has been better in match-play rather than stroke-play events.”
Commeting on his loss of form over his last two years at East Tennessee State University, the Broch man said that golf had played second fiddle as he concentrated on getting a degree at the end of his four-year course in the States.
"I still want to make it to the European Tour eventually but it's nice to know that I do have a university qualification in Business Management that I can fall back on if need be," said Jordan whose American girl friend Tara - who was a successful tennis player at East Tennessee State - has been pulling his bag round Gullane's slopes.
Findlay beat Myles Cunningham (Craigielaw) by 6 and 5 without having to play at his best. Despite that he was roughly one under par for the holes played with three birdies and two bogeys.
In the other quarter-finals Michael Stewart (Troon Welbeck), Scottish boys match-play champion in 2008 and the only other seed apart from Byrne to reach the last eight, plays Jordan McColl (Scotscraig). Stewart, who says his putter hasn’t warmed up yet, reckons he is 16 under par for his last four ties.
Seventeen-year-old Liam Johnston (Dumfries and County) knocked out the holder of the title, 19-year-old David Law (Hazlehead) by 3 and 1 with three under par figures.
Law had the edge in the early stages but Johnston, making his debut in the championship, never trailed again after winning the fourth with a 25ft putt for a birdie 2 at the fourth and taking the fifth with a par after the Aberdonian ran up a double bogey 6.
Johnston’s lead hovered between one and two holes until the vital 16th where Law three-putted to go two down again. The Dumfries teenager then finished a quality tie by holing from 20ft for a birdie 3 at the 17th.
Johnston plays Stephen Neilson (Dunbar) for a place in the semi-finals. Neilson beat the No2 seed Ross Kellett (Colville Park) by 3 and 2 in the morning round.

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ALLIED SURVEYORS SCOTTISH AMATEUR CHAMPIONSHIP
Gullane No 1 course, East Lothian
FOURTH ROUND
*James Byrne (Banchory) bt Cameron Marr (Musselburgh) 2 and 1.
Allyn Dick (Kingsknowe) bt David Shields (Dunblane New) 7 and 5.
Michael Smyth (Royal Troon) bt Michael Watson (Elgin) 3 and 2.
*Greg Paterson (St Andrews New) bt Keith Hamilton (Ayr Belleisle) 2 holes.
John Duff (Newmachar) bt Paul Moultrie (Royal Troon) at 19th.
Colin Baird (Bothwell Castle) bt John Shanks (Irvine) 2 and 1.
Jordan Findlay (Fraserburgh) bt Malcolm Pennycott (Whiting Bay) 1 hole.
Myles Cunningham (Craigielaw) bt Michael Gray (Lanark) 4 and 3.

Nicky Gold (Bonnyton) bt Alasdair McDougall (Elderslie) at 19th.
Jordan McColl (Scotscraig) bt Jeff Wright (Forres) 1 hole.
Jamie MacKay (Kilmarnock Barassie) bt Thomas Sharkey (Helensburgh) 3 and 1.
*Michael Stewart (Troon Welbeck) bt Kyle Godsman (Hopeman) 3 and 2.
*David Law (Hazlehead) bt Ed Wood (Crow Wood) 4 and 2.
Liam Johnston (Dumfries and Co) bt Clark Riddick (Southerness) 1 hole.
Stephen Neilson (Dunbar) bt Paul Shields (Kirkhill) 2 and 1.
Paul Ferrier bt *Ross Kellett (Colville Park) 3 and 1.

FIFTH ROUND.
*Byrne bt Dick 1 hole.
Smyth bt *Paterson 1 hole.
Duff bt Baird at 19th.
Findlay bt Cunningham 6 and 5.

McColl bt Gold 5 and 4.
*Stewart bt MacKay 3and 2
Johnston bt *Law 3 and 1..
Neilson bt Ferrier 1 hole.
(*denotes seeded player).

No 2 seed Ross Kellett loses in round of last 32 at Gullane

 David Law driving his way to success at Gullane this morning. Image courtesy of the Scottish Golf Union.

Defending Champion David Through as Nicky Strikes Gold

By ROSS DUNCAN
SGU Marketing and Sponsorship Manager
David Law continued his love affair with match play golf to storm through to the last 16 of the Allied Surveyors Scottish Amateur Championship today while the veteran Nicky Gold continued his excellent progress to knock out youngster Alasdair McDougall.
Law enjoyed a comprehensive 4&2 win over Crow Wood’s Ed Wood, firing birdies at the 1st and 3rd to seize an early two hole lead which he never relinquished. Further birdies followed at the 9th and 11th to stretch his lead and a par at the short 16th was good enough to see him through to the fifth round.
“I played really good again this morning and I am really happy overall with my game. My irons are going close and I didn’t have to hole anything too long for my birdies. It’s good to get a run going and I like the match play format which suits my game. I feel I can draw on my feelings from last year so hopefully I can keep the momentum going this afternoon.” said 19-year-old Law, who last year became the first golfer to win the boys and men’s national match play championship.
Bonnyton’s Nicky Gold is also through to the fifth round after a titanic battle against 15-year-old Alasdair McDougall from Elderslie. Gold, the oldest man still left in the field, was made to fight all the way, eventually winning at the first extra hole to set up a last 16 clash with Scotscraig’s Jordan McColl.
Lothians ace Allyn Dick enjoyed another early win, firing four birdies and an eagle at the twelfth to knock out 49-year-old David Shields (Dunblane New) and now faces number one seed James Byrne, who ran out a 2 and 1 winner with "one or two under par" figures against Musselburgh youngster Cameron Marr.
Craigielaw’s Myles Cunningham and Dunbar’s Stephen Neilson continue to fly the flag for East Lothian, reaching the fifth round with victories this morning. Cunningham powered past Michael Gray 4&3, while Neilson knocked up former Scottish Boys finalist Paul Shields by 3 and 2.
Troon Welbeck’s Michael Stewart marched on with a superb 3 and 2 victory over Hopeman’s Kyle Godsman to set up an all Ayrshire clash with Barrasie’s Jamie MacKay, who won 3&1 in his battle with Thomas Sharkey. The number two seed, Ross Kellett, crashed out however with a 3 and 2 loss to the 2007 Scottish Boys Champion Paul Ferrier from Baberton. Ferrier was two up on the outward journey

For all the results and "live scoring" from the course, click here

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North-east and North Under-16 and Under-18 boys' matches

North-east beat North Under-16 5 1/2-2 1/2 in an Under-16 inter-district boys' golf match at Royal Tarlair but, the Under-18s match, at the same venue ended in a 4-4 draw.
Results (NE boys names first):

NE U16s BOYS 5 1/2, NORTH U16s BOYS 2 1/2
Chris Lamb (Newmachar) lost to Andrew Burgess (Nairn) 3 and 2.
Andrew Carrell (Peterculter) bt Craig Oram (Nairn Dunbar) 5 and 4.
Lewis Mutch (Duff House Royal) bt Peter Sangster (Thurso) 1 hole.
Robbie Gauld (Cruden Bay) halved with Craig Brown (Fort William).
Craig Bain (Strathlene) lost to Jordan Shaw (Kingussie) 5 and 4.
Kerr Baptie (Duff House Royal) bt Craig Black (Inverness) 5 and 4.
Scott Lawson (Cruden Bay) bt Andrew Kenyon (Inverness) 6 and 4.
Sam Kiloh (Portlethen) bt Ian Stewart (Brora) 4 and 2.

NE U18s BOYS 4, NORTH U18s BOYS 4
Sean Lawrie (Portlethen) bt Freddie Brown (Nairn Dunbar) 3 and 2.
Callum Cromar (Aboyne) lost to Sean Burgess) (Nairn) 1 hole.
Greg Law (Oldmeldrum) lost to Dale Wright (Alness) 6 and 4.
Jamie Reid (Cruden Bay) halved with Michael Manson (Fortrose and Rosemarkie).
Scott Main (Hazlehead) halved with Greg Forsyth (Inverness).
Jack Walker (Fraserburgh) bt Ross Black (Alness) 4 and 3.
Sam McNeil (Aboyne) bt Ryan Ferguson (Alness) 5 and 4.
Ross Anderson (Stonehaven) bt Cameron Dixon (Hopeman) 3 and 2.

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Angus County Golf Association Boys' Championship

AT ARBROATH GC

FIRST ROUND
R Storrier w.o. R Johnston scr.
R Munro bt J Miller 3 and 1.
G Urquhart bt A Greensmith at 19th.
C Cook bt S Smith 2 and 1
I Douglas bt R Mitchell 2 and 1.
E Matthew bt S Grant at 19th
C McKay bt R Dallas 2 holes.
G Bowman bt R McGregor 6 and 5.

QUARTER FINALS
Storrier bt Munro 2 and 1.
Cook bt Urquart 3 and 2.
Douglas bt Matthew 3 and 2.
Bowman bt  McKay 2 holes.

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