Monday, April 11, 2011

SCHWARTZEL WINS MASTERS AFTER McILROY MELTDOWN

FROM THE BBC SPORTS WEBSITE
By ROB HODGETTS
South Africa's Charl Schwartzel emerged from the pack to clinch his maiden major title on an absorbing final day at the 75th Masters.
The 26-year-old fired a closing 66, including birdies on the last four holes, to reach 14 under and beat Australian duo Jason Day (68) and Adam Scott (67) by two shots at Augusta.
American Tiger Woods (67), England's Luke Donald (69), and another Australian Geoff Ogilvy (67) tied for fourth at 10 under with Argentina's 2009 champion Angel Cabrera (71) nine under.
Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy, 21, who led for three rounds, collapsed on the back nine and carded a round of 80 to end four under.
Schwartzel becomes the third South African to win the Masters on the 50th anniversary of Gary Player's breakthrough win for a non-American at Augusta. Player also won in 1974 and 1978, while Trevor Immelman triumphed in 2008.
"It was such an exciting day, with all the roars," said Schwartzel. "The atmosphere was just incredible."
His victory means that for the first time since 1994, none of the four majors is held by an American. He joins countryman Louis Oosthuizen, who won the Open last July, Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell (US Open) and Germany's Martin Kaymer (US PGA).
Schwartzel, who was tied 30th on his debut last year, is a six-time winner on the European Tour and climbs to 11th in the world rankings.
The Johannesburg-born player started the final day tied second with Cabrera on eight under, four strokes off McIlroy's overnight lead.

But he made an electric start to the fourth round, chipping in from off the green for a birdie at the first and holing his second from the fairway for an eagle at the third hole to reach 11 under and share the lead with McIlroy, who bogeyed the first.

However, Schwartzel slipped back to 10 under at the fourth, where he would remain until his final birdie barrage.

McIlroy slipped further back at the fifth but recouped the stroke at the seventh and still led by one from Schwartzel, Cabrera, Choi and Woods after the ninth.

But when McIlroy endured a nightmare spell of triple-bogey, bogey, double bogey from the 10th, the tournament was wide open.

Scott became the first player to reach 12 under after a birdie on the 16th but could only par his way home.

"It's just disappointing that I didn't win when I held the lead with a few holes to go," said the 30-year-old.

"I'm usually a pretty good closer. I didn't do a bad job but Charl was better. It was an incredible finish. I'm proud of the way I played but I'm disappointed that I didn't get it done when I was right there at the end."

Scott's playing partner Day birdied four of the last seven holes, including the last two to jump up to a tie for second with his compatriot.

However, he said: "You can't do anything about a guy who birdies the last four holes of a tournament.

"If you want to go out and win a tournament, that's how you do it.

"Obviously we fell short a little bit but it just shows how good Australian golf is right now."

At one stage it had looked like it was going to be Woods's day. The former world number one began the final round seven shots behind but four birdies in the first seven holes hinted at a potential charge up the leaderboard.

When he then eagled the eighth hole to get to 10 under and post a front nine score of 31, the momentum seemed to be behind him.

But he squandered birdie chances on the par-five 13th and par-three 16th when it looked like he was about to surge clear and had a good chance of an eagle on the 15th but could only make a birdie as he finished tied for fourth for the second straight year at Augusta.

"I got off to a nice start there and posted 31," he said. "And then on the back nine, I could have capitalised some more. It could have been. I hit it good all day."

His search for a 15th major continues as he looks to chase Jack Nicklaus's record of 18.

Australia's search for a first ever Green Jacket must wait another year. Scott and Day both challenged until the very end to match Greg Norman, who managed three second-placed finishes at Augusta.

Ogilvy made five birdies in a row from the 13th to get to 10 under and tie with Woods and Donald, who birdied four of the last six but then bogeyed the 17th to end any hopes he had of a first major. Donald's fourth place finish sees him move up to third in the world rankings.

Reigning champion Phil Mickelson never threatened as he shot 74 to finish well down the field.

Lee Westwood shot a closing round of 70, featuring four birdies and a double-bogey at the short 12th after finding water, to finish in a tie for 11th with compatriot Justin Rose, who carded a 68.

Ross Fisher finished on four under, with Scotland's Martin Laird a shot further back on his Masters debut.
Masters final leaderboard:
-14: C Schwartzel (SA)
-12: J Day (Aus), A Scott (Aus)
-10: T Woods (US), G Ogilvy (Aus), L Donald (Eng).
-9: A Cabrera (Arg)
Selected others:
-5: J Rose (Eng), L Westwood (Eng)
-4: R McIlroy (NI)
-3: M Laird (Sco)
-1: I Poulter (Eng), P Mickelson (US)
 +1: P Casey (Eng)

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS ON THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE

CLICK HERE

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RECORD-BREAKER PATERSON WINS CRAIGMILLAR PARK OPEN

FROM THE SGU WEBSITE
Fifer Greg Paterson  reaped the rewards of his South African trip with the SGU men’s elite squad as he won a low-scoring Craigmillar Park Open with a record aggregate of 23-under-par.
The 24-year-old Fifer, who finished second to Matthew Clark in the Capital event twelve months ago, went one better thanks to closing rounds of 64 and 62.
“Being out in South Africa was a massive benefit, as was the trip out to the United Arab Emirates before Christmas as that allowed us to get a lot of technical work done,” said Paterson, pictured by courtesy of Tom Ward Photography
Admitting the sun-kissed weekend in Edinburgh had reminded him of being in South Africa, he added: “Not only were we able to play in weather like this but we were also up against some high-class opposition.
“It was great for Michael Stewart (South African Amateur) and David Law (Northern Open Amateur) to pick up wins during the trip and it shows what a strong squad we have at the moment.”
James White, another member of that squad, looked to be heading for victory in the 50th anniversary of the Craigmillar Park event after opening up a four-shot cushion thanks to a course-record 60 in his third round.
Out in four-under 31, the former Scottish Boys’ champion started for home with three straight birdies, picked another one up at the 14th before finishing with two more for a 29, a shot more than Fraserburgh’s Kris Nicol signed for in his 62 to move into second spot.
Paterson started his final round six off the lead but three birdies in his first four holes put him in contention, especially after White opened with a bogey – his first dropped shot of the day – and then failed to take advantage of some good birdie chances early in the round.
In a flawless closing effort, Paterson was out in 30 and closed with two birdies to come home in 32, a final total of 257 beating Clark’s tournament record by three and giving him the title by the same margin over White.
Royal Birkdale’s Mike Howard closed with scores of 64 and 62 to claim third spot on 262, one shot ahead of Colville Park’s Ross Kellett, who also made a significant move on the final day thanks to scores of 61 and 66.
But the day belonged to Paterson, who admitted it was nice to taste victory after coming close on three occasions in 2010, the most painful having come when he finished third in the Welsh Open Stroke Play Championship after taking a six-shot lead into the final round at Royal St David’s.
“This is a nice way to start the season,” admitted the St Andrews New player who lives at Drumoig.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 280 (4x70)
257 Greg Paterson (St Andrews new) 67 64 64 62.
260 James White (Lundin) 68 63 60 71.
262 Mike Howard (Royal Birkdale) 69 67 64 62.
263 Ross Kellett (Colville Park) 65 71 61 66.
265 Kris Nicol (Fraserburgh) 66 66 61 72.
266 Scott Crichton (Aberdour) 68 67 69 92.

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS ON THE SGU WEBSITE

 CLICK HERE

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