Friday, October 29, 2010

EISENHOWER TROPHY SCOREBOARD IN ARGENTINA

Friday's second-round play was suspended for 2 1/2 hours due to a thunderstorm and, after play resumed in a steady downpour, lightning forced another stoppage at 4.42pm local time.
 SECOND-ROUND CLUBHOUSE TOTALS
+Several teams have still to complete 36 holes
280 Denmark 139 141.
285 United States 143 142.
286 New Zealand 142 144.
289 Colombia 143 146.
290 Scotland 150 140.
292 Spain 145 147.
293 Iceland 147 146, Japan 146 147, Germany 146 147.
294 Portugal 153 141.
295 Switzerland 149 146.
296 Mexico 144 152, Wales 148 148, Hong Kong 146 150.
297 Belgium 146 151, China 143 154.
298 Peru 149 149.
299 Argentina 147 152, South Africa 147 152.
303 Slovakia 156 147.
305 Brazil 155 150, Uruguay 152 153.
307 India 152 155.





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LAWRIE, FORSYTH MISS VALDERRAMA CUT

McDowell leads by two from Maybin 

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Graeme McDowell has a chance to make up significant ground on Race to Dubai leader Martin Kaymer after he claimed the halfway lead at the Andalucia Valderrama Masters.
McDowell followed his first round 68 with a wonderful 67 to move two shots clear of fellow Northern Irishman Gareth Maybin, with Niclas Fasth a further two shots back in third.
The US Open champion currently lies over €900,000 behind Kaymer at the top of the Race to Dubai standings, but is now in pole position to take the €500,000 first prize in Sotogrande, with his German rival down the field on four over.
McDowell was unable to keep a bogey off his card as he had done on the opening day, with dropped shots coming at the fifth and ninth.
However, the Ulsterman more than made up for his slip-ups with six birdies - four of those coming in the space of six holes on the back nine.
“I didn’t play that well on the front nine, it was rather scrappy, but the back nine was good,” said McDowell. “I gave myself birdie chances and positioned the ball well.
“Level par is a good job at Valderrama. I will just keep doing what I'm doing for the next couple of days.
“Martin has not had his best two days, but he is a world class player. I will have to control my own game, and I'm going to do my best; that's all I have to do.
“At Valderrama you’ve got to stay patient and focused.”
Maybin, seeking his maiden European Tour victory, picked up shots on the third, fifth, 15th and 17th holes to climb into second place, with his only bogey of the tournament so far arriving at the seventh.
“Overall I’m really happy,” he said. “Patience has been my game plan for the last couple of days, and will be for the next two.”
Fasth surged up the leaderboard with a faultless round of 66 - equalling the lowest round of the week so far.
The 38 year old Swede has not tasted victory since his triumph at the BMW International Open in 2007, but will enter the weekend in confident mood following a sterling display around Valderrama’s notoriously tricky greens.
“It is a lovely score,” he said. “I am very pleased and somewhat surprised because my game is not so solid, but my putting and my short game were sensational.
“On this course you need to have a good short game even if you are in great form.
“I have had another tough season this year, but it’s getting better at the end and here I have found a bit of spark, a bit of energy.”
Miguel Angel Jimenez and Gary Boyd fired rounds of 70 and 69 respectively to share fourth place on two under, while Jean-Baptiste Gonnet claimed four birdies in his first five holes and six in total during a 67 which lifted him into a group of eight players at one under.
But it was another disappointing day for Kaymer, who needs to win or share second place with no more than one other player if he, rather than the absent Lee Westwood, is to succeed Tiger Woods as World Number One when the American's 281-week reign at the top of the rankings ends on Monday.
Kaymer posted two birdies and two bogeys on his front nine, but dropped further shots at the 14th, 16th and 18th to fall 11 shots behind McDowell.
Overnight leader Pablo Larrazabal also found things tough and slipped back to one over courtesy of a 77.
Players needed to score five-over-par 147 or better to survive the halfway cut. Paul Lawrie, the leading Scot after the first round with a 72, failed to qualify after a disastrous second-round 79 for 151, the same 36-hole mark as Alastair Forsyth.
On his website, Paul writes:
It would have to be said that today was not one of my better days - 79 blows is never good. I was one under after 7 holes, having had 4 or 5 good birdie chances. Then I hit some poor shots, making quite a few bogeys and 2 double bogeys. The course is tough but I played poorly for 11 holes. I played with Gareth Maybin who played awesome to be -5 for two days. I fly home tomorrow morning.

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EUROPEAN TOUR SCOREBOARD

ANDALUCIA VALDERRAMA MASTERS
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Club de Golf Valderrama, Sotogrande, Spain
Par 142 (2x71)
135 Graeme McDowell 68 67
137 Gareth Maybin 69 68
139 Niclas Fasth (Swe) 73 66
140 Gary Boyd 71 69, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 70 70
141 Jeev Milkha Singh (Ind) 70 71, Jean-Baptiste Gonnet (Fra) 74 67, Robert Jan Derksen (Ned) 70 71, Damien McGrane 68 73, James Kingston (Rsa) 71 70, Peter Hedblom (Swe) 71 70, Raphael Jacquelin (Fra) 71 70, Thomas Bjorn (Den) 72 69
142 Thomas Aiken (Rsa) 73 69, Rafael Echenique (Arg) 71 71, Darren Clarke 72 70, Gonzalo Fdez-Castano (Spa) 71 71, Michael Hoey 70 72
143 Francesco Molinari (Ita) 70 73, Joost Luiten (Ned) 74 69, Sergio Garcia (Spa) 70 73, Richard Green (Aus) 72 71, Pablo Larrazabal (Spa) 66 77
144 Ross Fisher 71 73, Shane Lowry 73 71, Fabrizio Zanotti (Par) 74 70, Shiv Shankar Prasad Chowrasia (Ind) 71 73, Thomas Levet (Fra) 73 71, Gregory Havret (Fra) 74 70
145 Jose-Maria Olazabal (Spa) 73 72, Anthony Wall 72 73, Anthony Kang (USA) 73 72, Robert Rock 71 74, David Drysdale 73 72, Soren Hansen (Den) 70 75, Jamie Donaldson 72 73, Jean-Francois Lucquin (Fra) 72 73
146 Soren Kjeldsen (Den) 71 75, Peter Hanson (Swe) 72 74, Chris Wood 72 74, Stephen Gallacher 75 71, Oliver Wilson 74 72, Alejandro Canizares (Spa) 71 75, Martin Kaymer (Ger) 72 74, Santiago Luna (Spa) 72 74, Peter Lawrie 72 74
147 Martin Wiegele (Aut) 73 74, Mikael Lundberg (Swe) 72 75, Steve Webster 73 74, Shiv Kapur (Ind) 69 78, David Howell 76 71, Marc Warren 75 72, Ignacio Garrido (Spa) 71 76, Oskar Henningsson (Swe) 71 76
MISSED THE CUT
148 Ricardo Gonzalez (Arg) 71 77, Christian Nilsson (Swe) 74 74, John Parry 70 78, Scott Strange (Aus) 75 73, Rafael Cabrera Bello (Spa) 71 77, Alvaro Quiros (Spa) 77 71, Ross McGowan 70 78
149 Felipe Aguilar (Chi) 74 75, Niklas Lemke (Swe) 74 75, Richard Finch 72 77, Tano Goya (Arg) 74 75, Kenneth Ferrie 78 71, Pablo Martin (Spa) 77 72, Paul McGinley 74 75, Edoardo Molinari (Ita) 76 73
150 Johan Edfors (Swe) 73 77, Bradley Dredge 73 77, Graeme Storm 76 74, Jose Manuel Lara (Spa) 73 77
151 Jeppe Huldahl (Den) 74 77, Mikko Ilonen (Fin) 76 75, Alexander Noren (Swe) 77 74, Paul Lawrie 72 79, Marcel Siem (Ger) 73 78, Alastair Forsyth 74 77, Nicolas Colsaerts (Bel) 75 76
152 Christian Cevaer (Fra) 75 77, Stephen Dodd 74 78, Martin Erlandsson (Swe) 76 76, Michael Jonzon (Swe) 75 77, Nick Dougherty 76 76, Ariel Canete (Arg) 74 78
153 James Morrison 75 78
154 Carl Suneson (Spa) 80 74, Mark Brown (Nzl) 76 78
155 Gabriel Canizares (Spa) 75 80, Moises Cobo (Spa) 77 78, Simon Dyson 74 81
156 Daniel Vancsik (Arg) 76 80, Todd Hamilton (USA) 76 80
157 Hennie Otto (Rsa) 76 81, Raul Quiros (Spa) 78 79

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EUROPEAN CHALLENGE TOUR FINALE


George Murray can take

it easy in Italy

FROM THE SCOTSMAN.COM WEBSITE
By Nick Rodger
As the Apulia San Domenico Grand Final reaches a pressurised conclusion in southern Italy on Saturday, George Murray will cut a relaxed figure amid the tension as he looks to set the seal on a rewarding campaign.
The 27-year-old from Anstruther moved up into a share of tenth in the Challenge Tour showdown yesterday with a three-under 68 for a one-under 212 which left him five shots behind Australian leader Daniel Gaunt, who surged to the front with a 66.

Murray has already sealed promotion to next year's European Tour having manoeuvred himself into eighth place on the second-tier circuit's order of merit during a season illuminated by a maiden title in the Scottish Hydro Challenge.
While he is still targeting a strong finish today to cement his place in the top-ten on the money-list, which will secure a high category for 2011, the former Scottish Amateur champion is enjoying the fact that he is sitting in such a comfortable position and not scrapping for one of the 20 promotion places on offer.
"For some of the other players who are further down the order of merit, it must be horrible at this stage of the event," said Murray, who highlighted a tidy round with two birdie putts of 20-feet at the 13th and 16th. "I'm in a fortunate position where I can kind of relax here. But I've worked hard all season and played well."
Glasgow's Scott Jamieson, 11th on the rankings and also on course for the 2011 Race to Dubai, was left disappointed with a one-over 72 as he slipped off the pace with a one-over 214.
The 26-year-old started brightly with a birdie on the third but a quartet of bogeys hindered his progress, although he did repair some of the damage with a nine-iron to eight-feet on the last which led to a birdie-three.
Raymond Russell made sure he would have everything to play for over the closing 18-holes with a neatly-assembled 69 that moved him up into the leading 20 with a two-over 215.
The 38-year-old from Prestonpans is 21st on the money-list and some £1500 short of the promotion-winning top-20 but the former European Tour champion refused to embroil himself in the mathematics of his situation ahead of his biggest round of the season. "I'm not trying to think of the bigger picture," said Russell.
"I don't think it's worth looking at the order of merit and trying to work out all the possibilities until it's all done."
Jamie McLeary, whose challenge ended with a 79 in round two, endured another torrid day and covered his last eight holes in seven-over for 76 and a 226.
At the head of the field, Melbourne-born Gaunt, took another major step towards taking his place at the top table with a five-under round that moved him two clear of Bernd Wiesberger with a six-under 207.

Challenge Tour Press Officer Paul Symes writes:
Australian Daniel Gaunt will carry a two-stroke lead into the final day of the Apulia San Domenico Grand Final, when the fates of the 45 hopefuls battling for 20 European Tour cards will be decided.
After a round of 66 which moved him to six under par, Gaunt – whose life has changed immeasurably since winning the English Challenge in the summer – is now targeting a second Challenge Tour title to put the seal on a season which started with him playing on the third tier of professional golf.
Regardless of the outcome of the €300,000 event – which is being played at the stunning San Domenico Golf in Puglia, on Italy’s Adriatic coastline – Gaunt has guaranteed his graduation to The European Tour, where he will be joined by Austrian Bernd Wiesberger, currently in second place on four under par.
A closing bogey on the 18th hole, where he left his approach short of the green, rankled with the man from Melbourne, whose only other mistake came at the 14th hole, where he managed to save par after finding the water.
Gaunt, currently 12th in the Challenge Tour Rankings, said:
“I’m pretty annoyed with the bogey on the last, because it’s one of the easier holes on the course. I hit a pretty average drive and then mishit my wedge, so it wasn’t the best of finishes. The only other mistake was at the 14th, but saving par meant I managed to maintain the momentum, then I holed a long putt on the 17th to build it even further.
"But the nature of golf is that you forget about those and only remember the last hole, especially if it’s a bad one. Overall I have to be very pleased with a round of 66 though, especially as it takes me to the top of the leaderboard.”
A third victory of the campaign for Wiesberger would see the big-hitting Austrian end the season as the Number One graduate, unless current Rankings leader Alvaro Velasco of Spain can finish inside the top six and so move out of reach.
After two disappointing rounds Velasco fought back valiantly with a three under par round of 68 to recover to one over par, but the Spaniard still trails Wiesberger by five strokes.
The man from Vienna started brightly with gains at the third and fourth en route to turning in 32, but a cold putter and a bogey on the 17th – where Gaunt’s birdie meant a two-shot swing – saw him sign for a round of 70.
He said: “I got a couple of bad lies in the rough on the front nine, especially on the fifth where I made bogey. But after turning in two under par I felt pretty good, and then on the back nine I just couldn’t get anything going – especially on the greens. I just couldn’t read the greens at all. I hardly holed anything at all from the three to five metre range, so I’m going to go and work on that on the practice green.
"Then, even when I did hit a good putt on the 17th green I got unlucky, because my ball went left after hitting a pitch mark or a spike mark. So that kind of summed up the day for me on the greens. But hopefully that was my bad break for the week, and I can have a bit more luck on the greens on the last day.”
Peter Gustafsson is on three under par in a share of third place alongside England’s Matt Haines and American Christopher Ryan Baker thanks largely to a late rally in his round of 70. The Swede’s prospects of securing the top two finish he requires in order to leap into the top 20 of the Rankings appeared to recede after bogeys at the eighth, tenth and 12th holes, but he picked two shots up on the 15th and 16th to boost his hopes of a securing a maiden Challenge Tour title and with it a place on The European Tour.
Haines stands every chance of consolidating, and even improving on, his place in the top 20 of the Rankings after a round of 69 which featured four birdies.
He said: “I struggled reading the greens today, but hopefully the pin positions on the final day will suit me more. I like this course – it suits my game. The fairways are quite generous, so you’re not under too much pressure. I’m sure there will be pressure tomorrow, but I’m confident of coping and coming away with my card.”
Baker, who won in Morocco earlier in the season, is currently in 38th place in the Rankings, and so like Gustafsson would need to finish first or second in order to secure promotion to The European Tour for the first time.
Further down the leaderboard, the likes of England’s Charlie Ford (currently 20th in the Rankings) and Spaniard Carlos del Moral (19th) will be staring nervously over their shoulders, as respective rounds of 69 and 72 left them languishing in tied 27th and joint 21st places.



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EUROPEAN CHALLENGE TOUR GRAND FINAL

THIRD-ROUND TOTALS:
207 D Gaunt (Aus) 67 74 66
209 B Wiesberger (Aut) 66 73 70
210 C Baker (USA) 68 73 69, P Gustafsson (Swe) 66 74 70, M Haines (Eng) 69 72 69
211 C Russo (Fra) 73 68 70, B Evans (Eng) 69 73 69, S Tiley (Eng) 66 73 72, L Slattery (Eng) 70 72 69
212 D Denison (Eng) 70 72 70, P Edberg (Swe) 68 75 69, S Manley (Wal) 72 73 67, G Murray (Sco) 71 73 68
213 A Marshall (Eng) 69 75 69
214 S Jamieson (Sco) 69 73 72, J Arruti (Esp) 69 75 70, L Gagli (Ita) 71 74 69, A Velasco (Esp) 72 74 68
215 T Olesen (Den) 69 74 72, R Russell (Sco) 74 72 69
217 A Tadini (Ita) 75 72 70, C Del Moral (Esp) 67 78 72, V Riu (Fra) 71 75 71
218 J Sjöholm (Swe) 71 77 70, M Carlsson (Swe) 72 73 73, S Walker (Eng) 75 74 69,
219 O Floren (Swe) 73 72 74, J Clément (Sui) 73 75 71, C Moriarty (Irl) 69 77 73, C Ford (Eng) 72 78 69, A Kaleka (Fra) 69 76 74
220 M Zions (Aus) 72 78 70
221 E Dubois (Fra) 72 75 74, M Korhonen (Fin) 77 75 69
222 M Tullo (Chi) 73 77 72, F De Vries (Ned) 76 72 74
223 F Colombo (Ita) 76 74 73
224 S Davis (Eng) 69 80 75, D Vanegas (Col) 70 78 76
225 R Dinwiddie (Eng) 72 79 74, M Thorp (Nor) 70 82 73, A Gee (Eng) 75 76 74
226 J McLeary (Sco) 71 79 76, J Zapata (Arg) 71 85 70 
227 J Larsen (Nor) 69 78 80

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BUSY MAN STEPHEN GRAY TOPS

TARTAN TOUR MONEY TABLE

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Hayston professional Stephen Gray, the busiest man on the Tartan Tour, has topped the PGA Scottish Region money table for 2012 with earnings of £28,879 from 63 competitions.
Gray, 36, pictured, won seven pro-ams during the year, four of them outright, three of them jointly.
He was fifth in the money table in 2007, fourth in 2008 and third in 2009 so the No 1 position this year confirms his standing as one of the most consistent players on the Tartan Tour.
Second in the final cash table was Aberdeen Northern Open winner Greig Hutcheon with £26,251 from 39 outings and Chris Doak came third with £24,118 from 37 events.
Hutcheon won the Order of Merit ahead of Craig Lee and Chris Doak. Gray finished ninth.


TARTAN TOUR FINAL STATS
MONEY TABLE
Number of competitions in brackets
1 Stephen Gray (Hayston) £28,879 (63).
2 Greig Hutcheon (Banchory) (£28,251 (39).
3 Chris Doak (unatt) £24,118 (37).
4 Scott Henderson (Kings Links) £21,331 (55).
5 Jason McCreadie (Buchanan Castle) £18,704 (45).
6 Chris Kelly (Cawder) £18,531 (53).
7 Paul McKechnie (Braid Hills) £16,549 (46).
8 Colin Gillies (Braid Hills) £16,414 (51).
9 Craig Matheson (Falkirk Tryst) £16,111 (51).
10 Robert Arnott (Bishopbriggs GR) £15,878 (48).

11 David Patrick (Elie) £15,774 (40).

12 Steven Taylor (Bothwell Castle) £15,404 (52).
13 Craig Lee (Aspire Golf Centre) (£14,104 (57).
14 Graham Fox (East Kilbride) £14,376 (50).
15 Mark King (Kingsfield Golf Centre) £14,104 (57).
16 Alan Lockhart (Ladybank) £13,337 (49).
17 Gareth Wright (West Linton) £13,119 (20).
18 Lindsay Mann (Carnoustie) £12,603 (53).
19 James McGhee (Turnhouse) £10,064 (44).
20 Mark Kerr (unatt) £8,792 (22).

ORDER OF MERIT
1 Greig Hutcheon 802.50.
2 Craig Lee 735.
3 Chris Doak 731.25.
4 Jason McCreadie 616.36.
5 Scott Henderson 592.86.
6 Paul McKechnie 592.50.
7 Gareth Wright 588.13
8 David Patrick 567.50.
9 Stephen Gray 547.86.
10 Chris Kelly 542.50.


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Martin Laird four

shots off the pace at

Kuala Lumpur

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ASIAN TOUR
KUALA LUMPUR. Rising Thai star Pariya Junhasavasdikul shared the halfway lead with American Ben Crane at the US$6 million CIMB Asia Pacific Classic, Malaysia today and insisted he wasn’t distracted by a potential US$1 million pay day.
The 26-year-old, a business management graduate from Purdue University and a licensed pilot, flew high at the Mines Resort and Golf Club with a superb six-under-par 65 to lead on 11-under-par 131 with Crane, a three-time PGA Tour winner who fired the day’s best of 64.
Overnight leader Ricky Barnes and Ryan Moore, both from the United States, were a stroke back while world number eight Luke Donald of England and Australian Adam Scott climbed into contention with a 67 and 65 respectively to lie three behind the leaders.
Three-time Major winner Ernie Els of South Africa warned his rivals he was capable of going low at the weekend after ending the second round in equal ninth place on 135 following a 68 in the inaugural event sanctioned by the Asian Tour and PGA Tour.
While the round of the day belonged to Crane, Pariya, with his parents and coach amongst the large galleries, stole the show by storming home with five birdies over the closing seven holes.
“I’m not thinking about the money. I’m just thinking about the lessons I can learn from these guys. Hopefully I can step up to the challenge and play like them,” said Pariya, who broke through for his first Asian Tour victory earlier this month at the Mercuries Taiwan Masters.
“My putting is cooperating very much and my ball striking has been good. If your putting is up there, you’re not far off the lead. We’ve been working on finding consistency in the game and that’s been a reason for my form this year.”
Pariya said he felt more nervous having his coach, Shane Wilding, watching his every shot than playing alongside many of the world’s leading stars at the CIMB Asia Pacific Classic, Malaysia .
“It’s the first time they are watching me and I’m a little nervous as he might see something in my swing but apparently, he hasn’t,” smiled Pariya. “It’s always one shot at a time but sometimes you see that this guy is so good that you don’t want to get in his way. I’m nearly on top of the lead and I don’t want to shoot 80 tomorrow. Of course these things are in the back of your mind and you have to put it aside. I set my goals for each round which is to enjoy 18 holes with my playing partner. When it comes to my shot, I’ll take care of my own business,” he said.
In his first visit to Malaysia , the 34-year-old Crane took advantage of some solid iron play to give himself a chance of winning a second title of the year. “It was a fun day. I haven’t really been overseas other than the British Open and we are having a great time and en jo ying what Malaysia has to offer,” said Crane, who is making his first start since finishing tied 17th at the Tour Championship last month.
“I got off to a fast start. I hit a nice wedge shot to about three feet for birdie on the first hole and that always feels good and frees you up a little bit. I really did well not to think about results and I didn’t even know what I shot until I was done. But I knew it was something good because I played well all day.”
Scott, who has won titles in China and Singapore previously, showed he was back to his best form after a month-long break in Australia . After making two bogeys in his first four holes, the dashing Australian fired six birdies and an eagle from 25 feet on the 17th to move into contention.
“I certainly felt more comfortable out there, not only with the golf course but with the swing as well. I think there was a bit of rust after a month off. But getting back into a flow of competition golf can take some time and it felt good to put a good one up there today,” said Scott, winner of the Texas O pen this year.
Donald, a member of the victorious European Ryder Cup team earlier this month, made six birdies against two bogeys despite not producing his best golf.
 “I’m still within good distance of the leader. I didn’t play really good and obviously I made a couple of mistakes. I wasn’t quite sharp but had six birdies to offset my bogeys so it was still a solid round,” said the Englishman.
Els, chasing a third Tour title this season and fresh off his triumph at the Grand Slam of Golf in Bermuda last week, is counting on his putter to find the range in the weekend rounds to make a title charge.
“I played well and hit a lot of greens. If I can get my putter a little hotter, I can have a chance,” said the man nicknamed the “Big Easy.”
“I know where to go now. I know how the greens react. I’m looking forward to a better weekend. I think I can have a low round. I’m playing good enough.”
SCOTSWATCH: Glasgow's Martin Laird shot a 69 for a halfway total of seven-under-par 135, four shots off the pace. Aberdeen-born Aussie Michael Sim also had a 69 and is one shot behind Laird on 136.
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 142 (2x71)
131 Pariya Junhasavasdikul (THA) 66-65, Ben Crane ( USA ) 67-64
132 Ricky Barnes (USA) 63-69, Ryan Moore (USA) 64-68
133 Carl Pettersson (SWE) 65-68
134 D J Trahan (USA) 67-67, Luke Donald (ENG) 67-67, Adam Scott (AUS) 69-65
135 Brian Davis (ENG) 65-70, Charlie Wi (KOR) 65-70, Thongchai Jaidee (THA) 66-69, Martin Laird (SCO) 66-69, Ernie Els (RSA) 67-68, Rickie Fowler (USA) 68-67, Tom Gillis (USA) 69-66, Kevin Streelman (USA) 69-66
136 Mardan Mamat (SIN) 66-70, Michael Sim (AUS) 67-69, Tim Clark (RSA) 67-69
137 Heath Slocum (USA) 68-69, Siddikur Rahman (BAN) 69-68, Thaworn Wiratchant (THA) 71-66
138 Retief Goosen (RSA) 69-69, Robert Allenby (AUS) 72-66
139 Arjun Atwal (IND) 68-71, K.J. Choi (KOR) 70-69
140 Noh Seung-yul (KOR) 71-69, J.B. Holmes (USA) 73-67, Kiradech Aphibarnrat (THA) 73-67
141 Lam Chih Bing (SIN) 69-72, Kevin Na ( USA ) 70-71, Tetsuji Hiratsuka (JPN) 71-70, Y.E. Yang (KOR) 72-69, Bill Haas ( USA ) 72-69
142 Marc Leishman (AUS) 70-72, Marcus Fraser (AUS) 70-72, John Senden (AUS) 71-71, Ryan Palmer (USA) 72-70
143 Andrew Dodt (AUS) 68-75
144 Shaaban Hussin (MAS) 72-72





For further information, please call the Asian Tour’s Doyle De Costa and Chuah Choo Chiang at the media centre tel: +6012 265 4700. Also visit www.asiantour.com

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WORLD MEN'S AMATEUR TEAM CHAMPIONSHIP

France leads by two

from Canada

NEWS RELEASE

France, bolstered by Alexander Levy and Romain Wattel, built a two-stroke lead over Canada at seven-under-par 137 in the first round of the 2010 World Amateur Team Championship at Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Levy shot a 4-under-68 and Wattel fired a 3-under-69 at the par-72 Buenos Aires Golf Club. The French, who finished tied for fourth at the 2008 Eisenhower Trophy competition, hold the lead at the end of a round of the World Amateur for the first time since the third round in 2002 in Malaysia. They finished second to the USA that year.
“They did their job very well because they followed the strategy and focused on each shot till the end,” said French captain Maitena Delamontagne. “We have to stay focused (Friday) to watch our position.”
Denmark, with a 67 from Joachim Hansen, (139 at Olivos Golf Club) and Sweden and England (141 at Buenos Aires Golf Club) shared third place at 3-under-par.
They were followed by Colombia and Australia tied for sixth place at 1-under and New Zealand in eighth at even par. Four teams, the USA, Netherlands, Puerto Rico and the People’s Republic of China, were in ninth position at 1 over. The Argentines were tied for 26th at 5 over. Defending champion Scotland was tied for 42nd.
Levy, who won the 2009 French Amateur, logged seven birdies versus one bogey and one double bogey.
Meanwhile, Wattel, who won the 2009 Argentine Amateur at Buenos Aires Golf Club in late November, beating Motherwell's Ross Kellett in the 36-hole final, had four birdies against one bogey.
Wattel, who plans to turn professional shortly after the championship, won a European Challenge Tour event (Allianz Europen Strasbourg in La Walentzau, France) on Sept. 5. He shot a final-round 67 to overcome a four-stroke deficit and win by three strokes. In 2010, he also won the Scottish Amateur.

“I knew this course because I have played it before,” Wattel said. “Although each time you play it is a new round. It is a great moment for me. I won the Allianz a few weeks ago. Anyway, this is a different tournament and I have to be focus on it, trying to do a good job every round.

For second-place Canada, Eugene Wong fired a 67 and Albin Choi added a 70 for a 5-under-par total of 137 at the par-71 Olivos Golf Club. Wong, who plays for the University of Oregon won the 2010 Jack Nicklaus Award as the top college player in the USA, made four birdies and an eagle against two bogeys.

“I just wanted to keep the ball in play and not get too aggressive,” Wong said. “I hit it close a couple of times and had tap-ins for birdie. To play well is a bonus. It’s a four-day tournament and there is a lot ahead of us.”

Only 16 sub-par individual scores were recorded with seven over the shorter par-71 course at Olivos Golf Club and nine at Buenos Aires Golf Club (par 72). Hak Shun Yat of Hong Kong, China, made a double eagle 2 at the par-5 2nd hole at Buenos Aires Golf Club.

The threat of a storm looms for the second round Friday with afternoon rain and wind predicted.
SCROLL DOWN FOR NEWS ABOUT THE SCOTS AND ALL THE TEAM SCORES

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