Thursday, July 07, 2011

KRIS WHO? BIRDIES LAST FIVE TO LEAD JOHN DEERE CLASSIC

FROM THE GOLF.COM WEBSITE
SILVIS, Illinois (AP) — His putting was miserable, he was missing cuts and every round was turning into a struggle.
Kris Blanks knew he was better than that so he made a change, focusing on the part of his game that was causing the most grief. He had to do something about his putting.
"I always equate a golfer to NASCAR. We're always making tweaks," Blanks said. "I just needed to do something to change it up and that's what we did."
Sometimes the tweaks don't work.
This time, they did.
Blanks birdied his final five holes Thursday to finish with an 8-under-par 63 and grab the first-round lead at the John Deere Classic.
Blanks, who played the back nine first, rolled in a 25-foot putt on No. 5 to start his late run and capped it with an 11-footer to leave him alone at the top after Canadian rookie Matt McQuillan and veteran Davis Love III had held that spot much of the day with 64s.
"I hope I can keep it going," Blanks said. "I've never made a cut here. I think this week I will -- hopefully."
Blanks, 38, is in his third year on the tour and came in tied for 175th in putting. But after tinkering with his approach the previous night, he found what he needed and put himself in good position to reach the weekend.
"It was good to finally see some putts fall, which I've been struggling with all year," said Blanks, who has missed the cut in 11 of 20 tournaments. "So that was definitely a positive. It's just fun to make some putts."
If Blanks was a surprise in the lead, seeing McQuillan near the top was even a bigger shock. McQuillan, who has missed 10 straight cuts this year, grew so discouraged with his game in 2005 that he spent two years tending bar in his hometown of Kingston, Ontario.
He then played a year on the Canadian Tour and two on the eGolf Tour before going to Q-school on what he called "a shot in the dark" and earning a spot on this year's US PGA Tour.
But he hasn't made a cut since tying for 54th at the Sony Open in mid-January and has won just $12,705 on the year.
"It's very difficult, and to stay positive and patient has been the key for me," McQuillan said. "I'm out here playing with the best players in the world and on the best golf courses in the world.
"So it's very tough to stay positive and patient. But I just figure I'm out here, I qualified to get out here, so I'm trying to have fun and make some birdies."
Though no one approached the eye-popping numbers of last year's first round, when Paul Goydos shot a 59 and Stricker had a 60, there were plenty of golfers bunched in the mid-60s. Goydos matched Stricker with a 66, as did Charles Howell III, Josh Teater, Lee Janzen, D.A. Points, Cameron Percy, Brendon de Jonge, Zach Johnson, Cameron Beckman, Chez Reavie and Jim Herman.
Goydos said conditions were completely different from a year ago, when rain left the course soft and vulnerable to low scores.
"It plays shorter, but it plays harder," he said. "It's hard to kind of squeeze your ball in there on some of the holes. Last year we were just shooting darts. The ball stopped where it landed. Today, you had to kind of bounce it in a little. It makes it more difficult."
It wasn't particularly difficult for Blanks, who spent time on the putting green Wednesday and a half-hour in front of the mirror in his hotel room later that evening trying to get everything right.
"The way I was stepping into the ball was creating my shoulders to be open, so I just changed my routine where I don't go with it the same way," Blanks said. "It was more awkward, but at this point, I kind of needed some awkwardness. If it felt comfortable, I was back to my older tendencies."
After a bogey on No. 4 dropped him to 3 under, Blanks faced a 25-foot uphill putt on 5 and knocked it in. His confidence suddenly fired, he came back with a 14-footer for birdie on 6, rolled in birdie putts of 17 feet on each of the next two holes, then topped off his big day with a final birdie at No. 9.
"I thought my speed was real good all day," he said. "I worked real hard yesterday afternoon and evening and went to a heavier putter to try to get the ball rolling."
McQuillan recovered from a crazy bogey-eagle-bogey start to play near flawless golf the rest of the way - seven birdies without a bogey.
"Well, I figured I got my great stuff and bad stuff out early and then just tried to make some good swings," he said.
His play Thursday left him with a much better feeling than he had when stepped away from the game six years ago. He welcomed the change at first because he needed something different. Eventually, it helped the former University of Georgia golfer realize what he really wanted to do.
"After about a year working, I realized golf wasn't too bad," he said.
Starting on the back nine, Love rolled in an 11-foot birdie putt on his first hole and went on to his best round of the year. He salvaged par on No. 17 by holing out from a greenside bunker and made a 13-foot putt for par on No. 8 after hitting into a bunker and then the rough.
"I putted well," Love said. "Even the ones that didn't go in, most of them I felt like I hit really good."
Marino, who has two runner-up finishes this year, was even after three holes and a modest 2-under at the turn. But birdies on 10, 11, 12 and 13 put him in a position to challenge for the lead, a spot he would have held had he not missed a 9-footer for birdie at 14.
"Shooting 7-under the first day is awesome," Marino said. "But it's not going to get you anything come Sunday."
David Toms (hip) and Robert Garrigus (back) withdrew from the tournament halfway through their rounds because of injuries. Toms said his injury will keep him out of next week's British Open. George McNeill (76) and Scott Verplank (78) pulled out after finishing their rounds.
FIRST ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 71
63 Kris Blanks
64 Davis Love, Matt McQuillan (Canada), Steve Marino.
65 Mark Wilson, Kyle Stanley.


Selected score:
70 Brian Davis (England) (T73)

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INAUGURAL ST ANDREWS GOLF FESTIVAL NEXT YEAR

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY ON COURSE STRATEGIES LLC
We are pleased to announce the inaugural St. Andrews Golf Festival in 2012. The global celebration in St. Andrews will draw in visitors to experience the rich history, traditions and modern innovations that reflect the 600 years that golf has been played in Scotland and around the world.
The Festival promises a wide variety of exhibits and activities that include golf photography, golf literature, films, guided walks, golf humour/entertainment, cutting edge technology, golf course architecture, fashion, trends, personalities and so much more.

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ELLIOT SALTMAN IN THE HUNT AFTER CHALLENGE TOUR ROUND 1

By SARAH GWYNN
European Challenge Tour Press OfficerEnglishman Jamie Moul made light work of a tough course by shooting a five under par 65 to take the first-round lead in the Acaya Open in Italy.
The 26=year-old had an eagle, five birdies and two bogeys at Acaya Golf Resort to lead five players – Elliot Saltman of Scotland, Austrian HP Bacher, South African Branden Grace, Anthony Snobeck of France and Swede Henrik Norlander - by three shots.
The general consensus after the first day was that the course – part of the Challenge Tour schedule for the first time this season - is one of the hardest but fairest on the Challenge Tour schedule, but Moul’s tactics worked perfectly.
“I hit a lot of fairways and kept it out of that thick rough,” he said. “Even on the par fives, where you might be tempted to go for the green in two, I just stayed sensible and made sure it was on the fairway.
“I had a chip-in for eagle at the seventh which was nice. I didn’t do anything fantastic, just kept it in play. One of my strengths is hitting it straight so this course is set up nicely for me. Although it doesn’t look particularly tight the rough is so punishing it’s just about keeping it on the fairway.
I’ve been hitting it well the last month or so, just not getting as much out of my rounds as I’d like. It’s nice to come off with a 65 today and feel like I got everything out of it. This score has been coming for a while. My putting hasn’t been fantastic but I’m working on it and it feels like it’s improving week by week.
“So far the courses we’ve played in Italy have been the best. It’s a great country – the weather’s perfect and the food’s always good so I can’t complain.”
Saltman made up for the disappointment of missing the Barclays Scottish Open this week with a fine opening effort. The 29 year old’s category did not give him exemption to the European Tour event at Castle Stuart, and he said: “It would’ve been nice to play in my home country on The European Tour but it’s a good thing I’m here for the weather as I’ve heard it’s pouring with rain in Scotland and it’s 30 degrees here.

“I thought I might have had an invite, but they say things happen for a reason so if missing that means I play well here and maybe win, then I’ll have no regrets.
“It’s very hard so I’ll take two under. I’ve been playing well since the Wales Open. I’ve been hitting the ball great and I’ve been putting great, but a few weeks have gone by where nothing’s been happening.
“I’ve just been keeping patient and plodding along knowing it will come, and something just clicked today. If I can keep it going hopefully it’ll be a good week.”
Bacher, who had five birdies and three bogeys, said: “I started very well with two birdies. The second one was really good – I hit a very good 4-iron off the tee then chipped in for a two.
“On this course if you hit the fairways and greens it’s not that hard. But the rough is thick so it’s very hard to control the ball of you go in it. If you’re around 150 metres away and in the rough, it’s very difficult to get the ball on the green.”
Norlander added: “My finish was great – three birdies in the last four holes to get back to two under. I played well all day though. I missed a few short putts at the start but my driving was good and I hit a lot of fairways – that’s the key here.
“This is only my third Challenge Tour event and I’m enjoying it. I played college golf for four years at Augusta State and graduated in May and turned professional two weeks ago.”
FIRST ROUND
Par 70
65 J Moul (Eng) 
68 E Saltman (Sco) , H Norlander (Swe) , A Snobeck (Fra) , B Grace (RSA) , H Bacher (Aut)
69 C Doak (Sco) , R Santos (Por) , J Campillo (Esp) 
70 M Delpodio (Ita) , L Kennedy (Eng) , C Russo (Fra) , M Erlandsson (Swe) , V Riu (Fra) , S Harrington (USA) 
71 J Garcia (Esp) , E Dubois (Fra) , S Tiley (Eng) , M Kieffer (Ger) , J Doherty (Sco) , N Bollini (USA) , J Guerrier (Fra) , K Borsheim (Nor) 
72 M Southgate (Eng) , S Drummond (Sco) , V Almstrom (Swe) , J Hepworth (Eng) , C Rocca (Ita) , D Vancsik (Arg) , J Legarrea (Esp) , M Cobo (Esp) , N Bertasio (Ita) , E Kofstad (Nor) , N Lemke (Swe) , B Evans (Eng) , S Hutsby (Eng)
73 N Kearney (Irl) , N James (Wal) , M Bernardini (Ita) , G Houston (Wal) , K Sullivan (Wal) , I Keenan (Eng) , R Neil-Jones (Eng) , A Tadini (Ita) , A Signor (Ita) , M Bothma (RSA) , M McGeady (Irl) , E Pepperell (Eng) , F Delamontagne (Fra) , P Edberg (Swe) , A Bruschi (Ita)
74 D Lokke (Den) , N Henriques (Por) , C Macaulay (Sco) , J Jeong (Kor) , J Heath (Eng) , M Vibe-Hastrup (Den) , B Miarka (Ger) , J Kavanagh (Eng) , APavan (Ita) , J Van Der Vaart (Ned) , F Praegant (Aut) , J Kennegard (Swe)
75 E Lattanzi (Ita) , J Palmer (Eng) , J Abbate (Arg) , J Roth (Den) , L Jensen (Den) , C Ford (Eng) , T Whitehouse (Eng) , G Dear (Sco) , A Saragnese (Ita) , I Urquizu (Esp) , G Lockerbie (Eng) , B Mannix (Eng) , A Bihan (Fra) , A Domingo (Esp)
76 A Maestroni (Ita) , J Lopez Lazaro (Fra) , J Caldwell (Nir) , J Grillon (Fra) , C Brazillier (Fra) , P De Salvatore (Ita) , M Madsen (Den) , M Bosse (Ger) , J Garcia Pinto (Esp) , F Elli (Ita) , D Whitnell (Eng) , G Jackson (Eng) , N Smith (Eng) , S Whiffin (Eng) , N Lombardi (Ita) , P Relecom (Bel) , M Kramer (Ger) , J Morgan (Eng) ,
77 T Curtis (Eng) , R Whitelock (Eng) , G Molteni (Ita) , L Richard (Bel) , C Lee (Sco) , D Perrier (Fra) , L Westerberg (Swe) , C Blaesi (Sui) , A Grammatica (Ita) , M Cidonio (Ita) , R Kind (Ned) , M Cryer (Eng) , J Lomas (Eng) ,
78 J Bragulat (Esp) , M Dam (Den) , R Bastard (Eng) , M Hooper (Eng) , A Bossert (Sui) , D Wuensche (Ger) , J Billot (Fra) , J Roos (RSA) , B Åkesson (Swe) , J Robinson (Eng) , A Högberg (Swe) , W De Vries (Ned) , A Bernadet (Fra) , M Crespi (Ita) , N Meitinger (Ger) ,
79 B Etchart (Esp) , R Leonard (Eng) , L Magini (Ita) , C Monasterio (Arg) , S Piaget (Mon) , R Michelini (am) (Ita) ,
80 E Canonica (Ita) , M Krainz (Aut) , K Garwood (Eng) , L Galliano (Ita) , R De Sousa (Sui) , S Jeppesen (Swe) , J Little (Eng) ,
81 A Perrino (Ita) , L Scotto (am) (Ita) , A Bolognesi (am) (Ita) ,
82 J Hedin (Swe) , D Brooks (Eng) , L Beneduce (Ita) ,
83 B Chapellan (Fra) 
84 M Zanini (Ita) , T Ferreira (RSA) , E Sesia (am) (Ita) 
85 H Thethy (Ken)
86 W Schauman (Swe) 
87 A Gall (Ger)
88 D Bertoli (Ita) 
89 V Vaccaro (Ita)
** A Tampion (Aus)



Sarah Gwynn

Press Officer

European Tour

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CULTS HOTEL ABERDEEN MEN'S PENNANT LEAGUE SCOREBOARD

BON ACCORD 3, BANCHORY 2
At Kings Links
Matt Greig and Peter Coutts lost to Adam Lindsey and Roy Black 3 and 1
Barrie Edmond and Willy Smith bt Fergus Bisset and Scott Birse 1 hole
Alan Shand and Mark Greig lost to Ross Gray and Martin Gordon 4 and 3.
Jason Annand and Matty Smith bt Craig Lindsey and Steve Cooper 2 and 1.
Matty Dunn and Matty Edmond bt Lindsey Smart and Graham Nelson 1 hole.

PORTLETHEN 3, NIGG BAY 2
At Portlethen
Clark Brechin and Ryan Penny bt Steve Jamieson and Nicky Slater 1 hole
Ryan Donaldson and Ian Craik bt Ross Young and Ricky Nielsen 1 hole
Stephen Cook and Gary Esson lost to Kevin Dalglish and Gordon Grimmer 2 and 1
Donald Smith and Sean Lawrie bt Gary Pacitti and Ryan Forbes 1 hole.
Lewis Shand and Graham Innes lost to Andy Cadman and Gary Fyfe 2 and 1. 


 WAITING FOR RESULTS FROM
AUCHMILL v DEESIDE
HAZLEHEAD v MURCAR LINKS

Details should be E-mailed to Colin@scottishgolfview.com ASAP

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SHAUN MCALLISTER HAS CHANCE OF HITTING £10,000 JACKSPOT

Two late birdies kept alive Shaun McAllister's dream of landing the £10,000 first prize in this week's PGA EuroPro Tour 54-hole event, the Audi Cork Irish Masters at the Fota Island Resort in Ireland.
McAllister is one shot behind leader Paul Reed (Bristol and Clifton) are shooting 68 and 70 for six-under-par 138 and a share of second place with Irishman Daniel Sugrue.
The Craigielaw pro birdied the third and fourth, bogeyed the fifth but birdied the sixth before he had a late wobble with bogeys at the 15th and 16th. But McAllister bounced back in fine style with birdies at the 17th and 18th.
Next best Scot going into the final day is Chris Kelly (Cawder) tied for 17th place on 143.
LEADING SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 144 (2x72)
137 Paul Reed (Bristol and Clifton) 70 67.
138 Shaun McAllister (Craigielaw) 68 70, Daniel Sugrue (Killarney) 70 68.
Selected scores:
143 Chris Kelly (Casder) 71 72 (T17).
144 Ed Wood (Crow Wood0 70 74, Kevin McAlpine (Alyth) 70 74 9T21).
145 Paul Doherty (Vale Hotel) 70 75 (T29).
146 Zack Saltman (Archerfield Links) 73 73 (T40)
MISSED THE CUT (147 or better qualified).
148 Lee Harper (Archerfield Links) 73 75.
152 Keir McNicoll (Carnoustie Golf Links) 78 74.
154 Duncan Stewart (Grantown on Spey) 76 78.
ends

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KELLETT LOSES AT 20TH - SCOTS CAN'T FINISH HIGHER THAN FIFTH

Second seeds Germany squeezed seventh qualifiers Scotland out of the running for the European men’s amateur team golf championship at Vilamoura Victoria on Portugal’s Algarve yesterday (Thursday).
The best the Scots can now achieve is to finish fifth – but it was a close-run thing before Germany won 4-3.
Scotland took a 2-0 lead with victories in the foursomes by Michael Stewart and Kris Nicol, and James Byrne and Ross Kellett.
Although Byrne won his singles by one hole, Greg Paterson lost by 5 and 4, David Law lost by 2 and 1, and Stewart went down by 2 and 1, leaving the scoreline tied at 3-3 with everything hanging on Kellett’s match, still out on the course, against Marcel Sneider.
Kellett was one up after 15 but the German squared it over the last few holes and finally beat the Scot at the 20th hole.
Scotland lost 3-2 to England in a Flight B match in the European boys’ team championship in Prague, Czech Republic. Scotland’s winneres were Grant Forrest by two holes and Jack McDonald by 2 and 1.

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ITALIAN BOY SETS HOT PACE INTO FORFAR'S FINAL TWO ROUNDS


FROM THE SGU WEBSITE
Italian youngster Luigi Botti shot a superb three-under par 66 to seize the first round lead of the Scottish Boys Under-16s Championship at Forfar today.
The 16-year-old Italian boy international from Turin – the same home town as Eduardo Molinari who defends the Barclays Scottish Open at Castle Stuart this week – enjoyed a flawless round on the Angus course, picking up three birdies with no dropped shots to open up a two shot lead going into tomorrow’s final two rounds.
Dumfries and County’s Conor Syme is one of three players chasing the young Italian on one-under par after a fine 68, embellished by a run of three birdies in the closing five holes.
Syme did very well to recover from a potentially demoralising start – a double bogey 6 at the second and another shot dropped at the third. But the Doonhamer covered the remaining holes in four under par with birdies at the fifth, 11th, 14th, 15th and 18th and only one further shot dropped, at the 12th.
Syme shares second place alongside the English duo of Taylor Hutton (Foxhills) and Jack Hermeston (City of Newcastle).
Scottish Boys Championship semi-finalist Callum Hill (Tantallon) was joined by fellow Lothians youngsters Euan Bowden (Glen) and Stuart Blair (Royal Musselburgh) on level par, while Bearsden’s Cameron Kirkwood also opened with a 69 to share fifth spot.
St Andrews’ Benjamin Kinsley, another player who reached the last four of the national boys’ match play in April, started his campaign with a one-over par 70, with Drumpeillier’s Innes Ferguson notching two birdies in his last five holes to also card a 70.
Last year’s runner-up Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie) is a further shot back on 71, with Gullane’s Alexander Wilson among a group of thirteen players on 72. The cut mark was 73, with forty-five players contesting tomorrow’s final two rounds, after heavy flooding caused the championship to be cut to 54 holes.
Craig Lawrie, son of former Open Champion Paul, missed the cut after carding a 78, which included a couple of double bogey 6s. Last year’s bronze medallist Nick Ward (Redbourn) was also a casualty.
SGU Events Manager Euan Mordaunt praised the Forfar course: “Considering the torrential rain we had nearly all day yesterday, the course was in fantastic conditions and has recovered superbly. Credit must go to the Forfar green keepers for turning it round and I’m sure we’ll have an exciting two rounds on Friday.”


QUALIFIERS FOR FINAL TWO ROUNDS
Par 69. SSS 69. CSS 69
66 Luigi Botta (Ita).
68 Taylor Hutton (Foxhills), Jack Hermeston (Newcastle), Connor Syme (Dumfries and Co), Calum Hill (Tantalon), Euan Bowden (The Glen), Stuart Blair (Royal Musselburgh), Caeron Kirkwood (Bearsden), Bjorn Bojesen (Den), Joel Lenz (Swi), Jake Storey (Alnmouth).
70 Ben Kinsley (St Andrews), Innes Ferguson (Drumpellier).
71 Rice Thome (Ger), James Rooney (West Lancs), Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie), Renato Paratore (Ita), Ewen Ferguson (Bearsden), Willem Kerr (Craigielaw), Andrew Carrell (Peterculter).
72 Adam Chapman (Windermere), Lorenzo Scalise (Ita), Jack Walsh (Castle), Neal Woernhard (Swi), Alexander Wilson (Gullane), Alexander Henderson (Royal Ashdown Forest), William Aldred (Brocket Hall), Victor Van Dorn (Net), Alistair MacVicar (Glencruitten), Lewis Mutch (Duff House Royal), Andrew Burgess (Nairn), Robert Willemars (Blairgowrie), Vincent Abel (Ger), Adam Fisher (Inchmarlo), Lewis Murray (Troon Welbeck).
73 Jack Merry (Birstall), Connor Cook (Caird Park), Euan Walker (Kilmarnock Barassie), Robert Johnson (Helensburgh), Tom Sloman (Taunton), Cameron Bennie (Balmore), Callum Gorrie (Kilmarnock Barassie), Alasdair McDougall (St Andrews New), Fraser Davren (Williamwood), Jevann Parmer (Leicstershire).
MISSED THE CUT
74 Euan Henderson (Kilmarnock Barassie), Christopher Kendall (Furness), Christopher Whatham (West Lancs), James Wilson (Balmore), Jack Moir (Cruden Bay), Andrew Frey (Crieff), Greg Purdie (Vale of Llangollen.
Selected score:
78 Craig Lawrie (Deeside).

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DAVID TOMS PULLS OUT OF THE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE R AND A 

David Toms (USA) has withdrawn from The Open Championship.
His place has been taken by Simon Dyson (England).
The next five players on the reserve list are as follows:
1. Thomas Bjorn (Denmark)
2. Scott Verplank (USA)
3. Ricky Barnes (USA)
4. Heath Slocum (USA)
5. David Horsey (England)

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WESTWOOD AND 'SCOT' TULLO SET PACE ON 65 AT CASTLE STUART

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Lee Westwood and Mark Tullo starred on day one of the Barclays Scottish Open at the new Castle Stuart Links near Inverness.
The 38 year old Westwood, who would regain the World Number One spot with victory, carded a seven under par opening 65 that made him the joint overnight leader with Chilean Tullo as The European Tour’s newest venue was treated to some scintillating golf amidst stunning scenery on the banks of the Moray Firth.
Westwood, who had a word with the watching Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson during his round, said: "I played well and it's a nice way to start the next two weeks.
"The more pressure I'm under this week the better," said Westwood after grabbing an eagle and six birdies.
"You're never quite sure what to expect when you come to a course that you've never played before.
"I did some nice work last week on the range and hit a lot of shots out there that I probably couldn't have hit two or three weeks ago."
He picked out a driver second to 12 feet on the 530 yard 12th - his third - and a two iron to four feet into the wind on the long 18th as shots that will boost his confidence for another tilt at a first Major title down in Kent.
Tullo, a graduate from last season's Challenge Tour, still has to qualify for The Open Championship.
One spot is up for grabs to the leading non-exempt player this Sunday providing he finishes in the top five and, if Tullo keeps making ten birdies in every round, it should be in the bag for the 33 year old.
The World Number 232 can already boast of a victory over Rory McIlroy - at last year's Egyptian Open.
“One of those days I guess you could say, you have some good bounces,” said Tullo. “This is links golf and you can't control anything. I actually had fun out there - I'm trying to smile more on the golf course.

“Sometimes I get fired up too easily but I'm trying to smile out there more. I had fun, I actually laughed off some good shots and laughed bad shots.

“I have no experience, but as I said, I hit the ball low, and I have good imagination and pretty good short game. So I don't want to talk too much, because maybe tomorrow, shoot a bad score. That's the whole thing, I enjoy playing out here and the wind and the bounces, so there's a lot of imagination into it.”

Tullo has also promised a traditional Scottish celebration on Sunday if he wins – he is trying to track down some Tullo clan tartan for a kilt.

“The funny thing is my dad said our name is Scottish, or he thinks it might be,” he added. “He thinks we have ancestors, from Scotland. I do wear skirts once in awhile so maybe it does come from out there. I do fancy skirts. But do they wear underwear?

“You guys have to help me find it. I can put a kilt on if you get me the tartan. “English father, Dutch mother. They met in Ireland in a bonfire. My dad was playing the guitar and he sang to my mother. He was trying to be the cool guy and I actually guess he did play the cards right. Dutch ladies are not easy to get, that's what I hear.

“He actually sang in Spanish, ‘Yo Tengo Unos Ojos Negres’. I won't sing it because my vocal cords are not the best. My dad was in England and my mother was in Holland, they kept dating, blah, blah, they got married in England, that's where my grandparents are from, and then moved to Chile eventually.”

Luke Donald is the player Westwood is trying to dethrone at the top of the Official World Golf Ranking and they might yet end up in a repeat of the play-off they had in the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth Club in May.

After a slow start Donald came home in 31 for a five-under 67 matched by playing partner Colin Montgomerie.

Last year's Ryder Cup Captain, who has played in every Open Championship since 1989 and was runner-up to Tiger Woods at St Andrews six summers ago, was disappointed not to be two ahead of Westwood rather than two behind him.
He bogeyed the two holes - the third and ninth - he considers the easiest two on the new links.
Montgomerie was also six under with one to play, but a bad drive led to a closing bogey and so he is two behind the joint leaders.
Padraig Harrington, last year's US Open Championship winner Graeme McDowell and Justin Rose all had 69s, while twice champion Ernie Els shot 68.
The most remarkable round was that of Scot Marc Warren. He started with a triple bogey 7, but then had seven successive birdies - one off The European Tour record - from the sixth and shot 67.
Westwood and Tullo were a stroke ahead of Ryder Cup Swede Peter Hanson, South African George Coetzee and Dane Thorbjorn Olesen, joint runner-up in the Alstom Open de France on Sunday.

Welshman Phillip Price carded the shot of the day - and had 168 reasons for enjoying his first competitive hole in one at the par three 11th.

The former Ryder Cup hero holed out with an eight iron – then learned that the 168 yards he covered in one sweet stroke would be rewarded with 168 bottles of Laurent-Perrier champagne.

He said: “This is a lovely prize, and I am sure my wife Sandra and I will enjoy the product. It was nice to make a hole in one in competition for a change and even better to watch it bounce once and drop into the cup.”

FIRST ROUND LEADER BOARD
Par 72
65 Lee Westwood (England), Mark Tullo (Chile).
66 Peter Hanson (Sweden), George Coetzee (S Africa), Thorbjorn Olesen (Denmark).
67 Chris Wood (England), Barry Lane (England), Edoardo Molinari (Italy), Retief Goosen (S Africa), Jamie Donaldson (England), Luke Donald (England), Colin Montgomerie (Scotland), Richard Finch (England), Carlos Del Moral (Spain), Richard McEvoy (England), Marc Warren (Scotland), Peter Whiteford (Scotland), Scott Jamieson (Scotland).

SELECTED SCORES
68 Greig Hutcheon (Scotland), Ernie Els (S Africa) (T19)
69 Graeme McDowell (N Ireland), Padraig Harrington (Ireland)  (T30).
70 Alastair Forsyth (Scotland), Martin Laird (Scotland), Richie Ramsay (Scotland), Steven O'Hara (Scotland), Stephen Gallacher (Scotland), Lloyd Saltman (Scotland) (T46).
71 Paul Lawrie (Scotland) (T69)
72 Gary Orr (Scotland) (T87)
73 David Drysdale (Scotland), Phil Mickelson (US)  (T107).
75 George Murray (Scotland) (T129).
79 Sandy Lyle (Scotland) (last of 155).

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EDITOR'S NOTE: Is Castle Stuart just a little bit on the easy side for the European Tour pros? Eighty-six players players got under the par of 72 and another 20 matched the par figure ... 106 players in a field of 155 scoring par or better.
I would have expected a tougher test from a new course which has been much heralded, perhaps too much hype. Maybe somebody should have told the King he wasn't wearing any clothes.  Would 106 players have scored par or better at Carnoustie, Muirfield or Royal Troon today? I think not. That has to be the yardstick for a new Scottish links, surely?

WHAT'S YOUR VIEW? E-MAIL IT TO Colin@scottishgolfview.com

FIRST RESPONSE

Hi Colin
I play a bit of golf with Stevie Gallacher and he played the course for the first time about six weeks ago and commented that if the weather is calm then the pros would "RIP IT APART"
Like most places the weather is the major determining factor in how good or bad the scores are and I think todays scoring reflected this arguement - as in amateur events too
Stan Drews

Editor: All links courses need the "protection" of a wind but shouldn't the rough at Castle Stuart be more punishing, the bunkers more prolific and deeper and so on? For us, the Scottish Open is the fifth major - and the RandA never set up an Open venue that can be "ripped apart."
I feared the worst when I heard three weeks ago that a boy of 15 had gone round Castle Stuart in three under par. Today has confirmed those fears.

SECOND RESPONSE

Colin
I understand what you are getting at but from a spectator's point of view I prefer to see birdies and eagles rather than bogeys and more.
Remember how the fun and the roars have returned to Augusta following their decision not to make it easier as such but simply make it more playable. I am sure the spectators at Augusta have enjoyed it more with the good scores rather than some of the turgid affairs we had before with level par or just under par over 72 holes being the winning score.
D Neal Stewart

THIRD RESPONSE

Colin
I think the Castle Stuart designer needs to go back to the drawing board before next year's Scottish Open. They could have spared a lot of expense and got the same kind of scores by playing it at the muncipal Kings Links in Aberdeen.
J D C

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STRONG INTERNATIONAL FIELD FOR McGREGOR TROPHY

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ENGLISH GOLF UNION
The English Boys Under 16 Open Stroke Play Championship for the McGregor Trophy has been in English hands for the past seven years. But with youngsters from nine foreign countries including Barbados and the United States as well as the other Home Nations in action at South Moor Golf Club, County Durham, on 12th -14th July, that run could be tested.
Wouter de Vries from the Netherlands, in 2003, was the last overseas winner of the title but the recent trend has been for the previous year’s leading performers in the Reid Trophy, the English under 14 Championship, to move up to the older event and collect the spoils.
If that is the case then look no further than Scotland’s Bradley Neil, last year’s under 14 champion. In fact, the leading eight in last year’s under 14 championship are all competing at South Moor.
Jack Hermeston (City of Newcastle, Northumberland), runner-up to Neil, finished third in the recent English Schools National Championships at Belton Park, while Ashton Turner (Kenwick Park, Lincolnshire) was third in last year’s Reid.
Max Martin (Copt Heath, Warwickshire) finished joint fifth in last year’s Reid Trophy but won the under 13 title, while others likely to be in the shake-up are Robert Burlison (Oxley Park, Staffordshire), Hadyn McCullen (Delamere Forest, Cheshire) and Nick Ward (Redbourn, Hertfordshire).
Burlison, a member of the England under 16 squad, was English Schools under 16 champion and Staffordshire Schools under 18 champion in 2009. He was an England under 16 cap last year and recently finished first in the Midland Boys Qualifying.
McCullen, the English under 13 champion in 2009, finished tied fifth overall last year, while Ward, another England under 16 squad member, was an under 16 cap last year.
Two other players, Cameron Long (Drayton Park, Staffordshire) and Bradley Moore (Kedleston Park, Derbyshire) lost out in a five-man playoff for the recent Midland Boys Championship at Mickleover.
Also competing is Conor Coles, grandson of European Tour chairman Neil Coles, while among the overseas challenge is Austria’s Johannes Schwab, who led the McGregor last year and eventually finished third.
There is a Nations Cup competition over the opening two rounds with England fielding two three-man teams. These comprise of Burlison, Ward and Jake Spearpoint (Littlestone, Kent), while the other line-up is Pavan Sagoo (Ealing, Middlesex), Harry Ellis (Meon Valley, Hampshire) and Jack Singh Brar (Bramshaw, Hampshire).
The other teams competing are Belgium, France (2), Ireland (2), Italy (2), Norway, Scotland (2) and Spain (2).
Play starts at 7.30am each day and admission is free. For those unable to attend, live scoring and news updates will available on the Championships Section of the English Golf Union's website, www.englishgolfunion.org.


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IT'S ALL HAPPENING - AND A BIT SCARY TOO! - AT CLOBER G C


Ross Roger and John Downie, both had holes in one at Clober's 15th while playing together
on Monday.

FROM GARY McFARLANE
Thought I would update you on some amazing results and happenings at Clober Golf Club of late...
We have had some form players of late one of which is Nichola Ferguson who over the last few weeks has won the Dumbartonshire and Argyll ladies Championship and the Milngavie Golf Club Championship for the 3rd time in a row as well as being favourite to lift the title at Clober next week.
Gavin Roger, who at the age of 17 has recently won the West of Scotland Boys matchplay championship as well as the Dunbartonshire Boys strokeplay championships with 67-63, recently shot a 61 at Clober which included 9 birdies and an outward half of 27! Amazing scoring.
Then it gets scary. Neil Hansen, our course record holder with a 59, shot in our July medal a 58. Yes, 29-29 for 58. Nine birdies and one bogey on a tough day.

On that day on the july medal Scott Millen had a hole in one, sounds fairly average but considering it was one of only 5 this week, also Dougie Craig and Robert Cannon.

And here is the big one. Two juniors playing as part of a four-ball on Monday, playing the 15th hole, Ross Roger and John Downie, both stand up, and both get holes in one....incredible.

What a week for Clober, if only their pro could win something nowl


Gary McFarlane
PGA Professional and Managing Secretary
Clober Golf Club
Craigton Road
Milngavie

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YORKSHIRE TEENAGERS GO DUTCH FOR ENGLAND

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ENGLISH GOLF UNION
Yorkshire teenagers, Daniel Wasteney (Bondhay, Yorkshire) and Sam Young (Rotherham, Yorkshire) have been selected to represent the English Golf Union in the RiverWoods Junior Open at Toxandria Golf Club, near Breda, in the Netherlands July 13 to 16.
Wasteney, 19, is a member of the England A squad who achieved two significant victories last year. He won the Yorkshire Open and the National Association of Public Golf Courses Championship. He was also tied fifth in the Lee Westwood Trophy. This year he was a member of the England squad in the Costa Ballena Quadrangular Tournament in Spain.

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STRATHAVEN PAIR BOOK TRIP TO TURKEY IN LOMBARD QUALIFIER

Strathaven club captain Jim Preston (left) and PGA professional Stuart Kerr. Image by courtesy of Sandy Young at Getty Images. More images from the event are available from www.gettyimages.com

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE PGAStrathaven’s Stuart Kerr described himself as ‘pleasantly shocked’ after he and club captain Jim Preston qualified for the Grand Final of the Lombard Challenge, a PGA Pro-Captain Tournament.
The showpiece event carries a £25,000 prize fund and will be held in November at the PGA Sultan Club, Antalya, Turkey.
And Kerr, the PGA professional at Strathaven, and Preston booked their place in it by winning the Scottish Region qualifier at Crail Golf Club.
But their triumph was a close run thing – the South Lanarkshire pair posted a 13-under-par round of 56 to beat Newmachar duo Andrew Cooper and Manson Merchant by one stroke.
That impressive display came as a surprise to Kerr who had not played as much as he wanted to following a stomach operation in January.
He said: “I was pleasantly shocked. I’ve been recovering from the operation all year and not practised as I would’ve liked since then.
“So it was one of those days when you hope it all comes together and that your captain also has a good round. And that’s what happened.
“When I dropped my captain off that evening he was ecstatic. I was pleased too because I’ve been pipped at the post a couple of times in this event.
“When you hit the crossbar like that, it makes you want to win more. But I wasn’t sure we could do it this time.”
Kerr and Preston eased those doubts with a blistering start by reeling off eight successive birdies and, although it was a tight finish, never looked back.
Kerr added: “We were actually disappointed to make par at the ninth as we wanted to go out in nine under par - that would’ve been something special.
“But now we’ve got our place in Turkey and Jim ends his year as captain in December, so this’ll be a great way for him to sign off. It’s a big thing for the club as well.
“I’d spoken to players who’d been out there for the final and it sounds like a terrific event so we can’t wait.”
SCOREBOARD
THE LOMBARD CHALLENGE, a PGA Pro-Captain Tournament
Scottish Region Qualifier at Crail Golf Club, Wednesday 6 July 2011
Qualifiers:
Pos. Score Pro and Captain Represents
1 56 (-13) Stuart Kerr and Jim Preston (Strathaven)
2 57 (-12) Andrew Cooper and Manson Merchant (Newmachar).
T3 60 (-9) Ian Taylor and Sandy Lauder (Drumpellier)
T3 60 (-9) Gerry Reilly and David Brown (Lochwinnoch)

Full results from the event at Crail can be found at: http://pgagbi.bluegolf.com/bluegolf/pgagbi11/event/pgagbi1124/contest/1/leaderboard.htm


Visit http://www.pga.info/ProCaptainChallenge.aspx for more information on The Lombard Challenge

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BUBBA WATSON, AN AMERICAN WHO DOESN'T TRAVEL WELL

FROM THE DAILY TELEGRAPH WEBSITE
By OLIVER BROWN
Americans are, in the words of wisecracking Australian golfer Stuart Appleby, “like a bag of prawns on a hot day — they don’t travel well”.
To take this observation to its logical extreme, Bubba Watson (pictured right) is a prawn that has been peeled, dried and then left to curl up at the edges under a steaming Parisian sun.
The remarks last weekend by this mulleted resident of Bagdad, Florida, about his foray to la cite d’amour were so staggeringly reductive, of such oceangoing crassness, that they warrant a brief re-airing.
The Arc de Triomphe? “The arch I drove around in a circle.” The Palace of Versailles? “The castle that we’re staying next to.”
And what, pray, did he make of the Louvre? Surely our diligent exchange student found delights to detain him there? “A building beginning with ‘L’.”
Watson behaved at the French Open in the fashion of every oafish American tourist you dread to encounter in the patisseries of Old Europe.
He is the buffoon who orders a cappuccino, and then bleats about how it compares to the supersized version at his branch of Dunkin’ Donuts. (Believe me, such behaviour is not merely confined to the continent. At Heathrow recently I watched as a brassy New York woman returned a perfectly serviceable-looking latte to the Starbucks counter. “My son says this is terrible!”) Generalisations on cultural outlook can be invidious. But nowhere is the insularity of the American view better crystallised than in that cosseted commune of the US PGA Tour.
Dear Bubba is simply the front man for a legion of good ol’ boys who rarely travel, rarely experiment, and who as such exhibit all the aesthetic appreciation of Ronald McDonald.
Some positively revel in their redneck roots. Take Boo Weekley, who built a cult of personality from his stories of wrestling alligators out on grandaddy’s back porch.
At the 2008 Ryder Cup, in a corner of Kentucky that seethed with parochialism, he whipped up the crowd by pretending to ride his driver cowboy-style down the first fairway.
Weekley almost made the Scots spit out their shortbread when, ahead of the 2007 Open, he pronounced upon Carnoustie cuisine: “Has been rough on that food. Ain’t got no sweet tea, and ain’t got no sweet chicken.”
The scholar that is Boo hails from a section of the southern states that Jeremy Clarkson once sought — successfully — to provoke by driving a car sprayed pink and emblazoned with such slogans as ‘Man-love rules’ and ‘Nascar sucks’.
It can be no coincidence that the Floridian once played on the same high-school golf team as Watson. Boo and Bubba: what a brain trust that is.
But we should be careful to be too dismissive, for the two represent the American game’s most powerful constituency: namely, reactionaries of scant sense but no little wealth, and of an overwhelmingly gun-toting Republican bent.
Savour this, if you will, from Fred Funk on former President George W Bush: “Huge Bush fan, hate the Democrats.” Or how about the political wisdom of Kenny Perry?
“I love Bush. I just think he speaks about God and is a Christian man, and that’s what I’m about.”
Padraig Harrington once confessed to me his disgruntlement at the narrow terms of debate on the tour circuit, and how a Democrat was about as rare as a hen’s wisdom tooth.
With the Open approaching, it is again open season on those mollycoddled Yanks who cannot cope with the links test when removed from their beloved Bermuda grass.
Golfers of Bubba Watson’s ilk can make $3million or more each season by performing on auto-pilot at dismally-attended tournaments in Texas or Illinois.
It is a reality to leave men like Jack Nicklaus thoroughly nonplussed.
“The fact is that if you want to be an international star then you have to go and play internationally,” he said. “If you don’t, you only have yourself to blame.”
Scott Hoch, perhaps the foremost spokesman of the Bubba generation and a man with cigars the size of vanity, paid no heed to that logic. The 55 year-old once memorably described St Andrews as the “biggest piece of mess” he had ever seen.
Hoch opts not even to attempt to qualify for The Open these days. But if we ever doubted for his fondness for august events, we should be consoled that next year, he hopes to play in the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open instead.
EDITOR'S FOOTNOTE:
It's a fact that many Americans live and die without ever leaving the state they were born in. The vast majority do not have a passport and never leave America's shores.
Criticism by the few who do is by no means new. Many moons ago the late great Sam Snead compared playing golf in Britain - he was talking after winning the 1946 Open at St Andrews - was akin to "going camping" ... roughing it with no luxuries.
Mind you, we were just emerging from World War II. I don't recall the United States suffering many bombing raids between 1939 and 1945. Pearl Harbour, yes; Hot Springs, Virginia (Snead lived and died there), No.   
Who was it that said: The more things change, the more they stay the same.

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