Friday, July 08, 2011

CHEZ REAVIE SHOOTS 62 TO LEAD JOHN DEERE CLASSIC

FROM THE GOLF.COM WEBSITE
SILVIS, Illinois (AP) — For Chez Reavie, the mental aspect of overcoming knee surgery was tougher than the physical work of rehabilitation.
He didn't get comfortable on the golf course again until he stopped thinking about his rebuilt right knee.
Reavie, who had surgery on June 1 last year for a torn ACL and meniscus in his right knee, relied on near-flawless putting Friday to shoot a 9-under 62 and claim a two-stroke lead at the John Deere Classic.
"I knew if I just got it on the green somewhere, I really had a good chance of making a birdie," he said.
It was a sharp contrast to the way he played early in the year, when he missed the cut in three of his first five tournaments. Reavie blamed those struggles on worrying too much about his knee and everything he missed while sitting out for eight months.
"At first I was kind of counting my starts and counting how much money (I wasn't making) and I was so stressed about thinking about that I wasn't thinking about golf so much," he said. "So after about five or six tournaments at the beginning of the year, I just said to hell with this, I'm just going to go play and wherever I finish up, I finish up.
"Then I started playing better golf."
Reavie found the greens at TPC Deere Run to his liking while making an eagle and a succession of birdie putts, going 8 under during one nine-hole stretch. He went into the weekend at 14-under 128 in search of his first victory since the 2008 Canadian Open.
"The putter's been great," he said. "That's been the key. I saved some poor shots with good par putts and hit some good shots and made birdies. "It's always fun when you do that."
Reavie finished early, then waited to see if anyone could catch him. No one did.
Steve Stricker shot a 64 to finish at 12 under in his bid for a third straight victory in the tournament. Steve Marino (66) also was 12 under, while Jhonattan Vegas (64), Mark Wilson (67), Brendon de Jonge (66) and Kyle Stanley (67) were four off the lead.
The last two British Open champions, Louis Oosthuizen (2010) and Stewart Cink (2009), both were 3 under and missed the cut by one stroke. Oosthuizen shot a 68, Cink a 67. Goydos, last year's runner-up, failed to reach the weekend after going 66-75.
Reavie was playing so well that he had his sights on a 59 after he birdied his 16th hole of the day, the par-3 No. 7, to drop to 10 under for the round.
Birdies on his final two holes would have put him at the magic number, which Goydos reached in the first round of last year's tournament. But those hopes died when Reavie's birdie attempt from 14 feet lipped out on No. 8.
"Then I kind of took a deep breath and I was like, 'OK, now it's not really in the cards,' " he said.
Reavie still had chance at 60 when he reached No. 9, but his second shot found the bunker right of the green and he made bogey after missing an 8-footer, the only putt he missed inside 10 feet all day.
"I couldn't be upset," he said. "I made enough putts. I only had 21 putts today, so I can't really complain about a putt not going in."
Stricker got off to a birdie-eagle start while playing the course with his usual precision. During his two victories and the two rounds this year, he's 58-under par. He would have been a stroke closer to Reavie except for a birdie putt that skidded just past the hole on 18.
"I don't know what it is," Stricker said of his success on the course. "I make a lot of putts. I've been putting real well here and seem to read the greens OK. I don't know what it is, but it's been a good ride."
Marino highlighted his round with a 22-foot eagle putt at No. 2 after reaching the green with a 5-iron from 225 yards. He gave one of those strokes back with a bogey on 5, but rolled in a 19-footer for birdie two holes later.
"Yesterday, the putter was really good. I made a bunch of putts," Marino said. "Today, I hit the ball great, hit a bunch of shots close to the hole and was able to make a few putts."
First-round leader Kris Blanks drove his first shot of the day into a bunker left of the fairway on No. 1, made double bogey and never found the rhythm he had Thursday, when he birdied his final five holes. He finished with an even-par 71 to remain 8 under heading into the weekend.
"I've just got to hit it a little better," Blanks said. "I didn't hit it very good today and got out of position a lot, so I can't be too upset."
John Daly was on track to make the cut for the first time in seven appearances here after an eagle on his 11th hole of the day, the par-5 No. 2, left him to 2 under for the tournament. But two holes later, he sent his tee shot into thick grass right of the fairway, hacked at the ball seven times while advancing it only a few feet on each try, finally took a drop and ended up with a 13.
"It's just brutal over there," said Daly, who finished with an 81 that left him 11 over. "I mean, I hit it in the worst spot on the golf course. You just can't hit it there."

SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 142 (2x71)
Players from US unless stated
128 Chez Reavie 66 62.
130 Steve Marino 64 66, Steve Stricker 66 64.
132 Jhonattan Vegas (Venezuela) 68 64, Mark Wilson 65 67, Brendon de Jonge (S Africa) 66 66, Kyle Stanley 65 67.

Selected score
138 Brian Davis (England) 70 66 (T35).

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MOUL STILL LEADS BUT DOAK ON HIS TAIL AT HALFWAY

By SARAH GWYNN
European Challenge Tour Press OfficerJamie Moul leads by two shots at the halfway stage of the Acaya Open in Italy, but he could have had a greater advantage had he not dropped six shots on the back nine of his second round.
The Englishman was five under for his round after ten holes, but wayward tee shots proved his undoing as he slipped to a one over par 71 to go back to four under par overall, two strokes clear of Austrian H P Bacher, who signed for a level par 70, Spaniard Jorge Campillo and Scot Chris Doak, who both carded 69.
Five players - Henrik Norlander (71), Nino Bertasio (67), Daniel Vancsik (67), Florian Praegant (65) and Steven Tiley (68) - are another shot back at one under.
Moul, who had a 65 on day one, looked to be once again stamping his authority on the Acaya Golf Resort course with five birdies in the first ten holes, but his round unravelled with a double bogey at the 12th and bogeys at the 14th and 16th. Another double bogey at the last added insult to injury.
“I got off to a great start and was five under through ten, then I just hit four bad tee shots,” said the 26 year old from Essex. “You can’t do that round here – it means you’ll be dropping shots all over the place.
“I went in the water three times and left up the last. It was all down to the tee shots; I didn’t do too much else wrong today. Even tee shots you think are going to be alright, if they drift slightly off line or run into the rough, you’re going to be punished.
“On the 15th it just ran out of fairway and went into the rough, and it took me three minutes to find it, it was so buried.
“I’ll maybe work on my driving a little this afternoon but I’m very happy with the way I’m playing. It’s just four bad tee shots that have cost me a few shots, and you’re going to hit a few bad ones at some point. This course bites you.
“It is roasting out there, it’s unbelievable. At 6.30 this morning the practice range was the sweatiest place in the world. It’s energy sapping playing in this heat so I need to have some food and rest this afternoon.”
Bacher might have had a share for the lead if he had not double-bogeyed the last.
He said: “I took the lead at one stage, at five under, but I bogeyed the par three fourth and I didn’t make any more birdies. I had a good par at the eighth but then I hit it left into the rough on the ninth – my last hole – and ended up with a double bogey.
“That was the first shot of the whole tournament I hit in the rough, and now I know why the scores are so high. It’s not nice to hit out from there and I would say I got away with a six.
“Level par is a good score round here though so I’ll take it. Everything feels very good – I’m solid off the tee and making some good putts. It doesn’t matter to me whether I’m leading or just behind – either is a nice position to be in. I’m just looking forward to the next two rounds.”
Campillo, who was one over at the halfway mark but managed to turn things around on the back nine, said: “I’m playing well and it’s nice to test yourself on a course as difficult as this,” he said. “It’s good to come away with par or one under and feel like you’ve played really well. It’s a nice change from scores of seven, eight under every day, it means it’s not a putting competition.”
Doak added: “It’s hard to make birdies out there because the fairways are narrow and the rough is thick, so I’ll take two under. I played solid again so hopefully I can keep it up over the weekend."

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EUROPEAN CHALLENGE TOUR SCOREBOARD

ACAYA OPEN
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 140 (2x70)
136 J Moul (Eng) 65 71
138 C Doak (Sco) 69 69, H Bacher (Aut) 68 70, J Campillo (Esp) 69 69
139 D Vancsik (Arg) 72 67, H Norlander (Swe) 68 71, F Praegant (Aut) 74 65, N Bertasio (Ita) 72 67, S Tiley (Eng) 71 68
140 E Kofstad (Nor) 72 68, L Kennedy (Eng) 70 70, E Saltman (Sco) 68 72
141 G Houston (Wal) 73 68, B Grace (RSA) 68 73, V Riu (Fra) 70 71, M Bernardini (Ita) 73 68, M Delpodio (Ita) 70 71, K Borsheim (Nor) 71 70
142 L Jensen (Den) 75 67, N Bollini (USA) 71 71, E Dubois (Fra) 71 71
143 S Hutsby (Eng) 72 71, K Sullivan (Wal) 73 70, M Kieffer (Ger) 71 72, R Neil-Jones (Eng) 73 70, F Delamontagne (Fra) 73 70, J Hepworth (Eng) 72 71, N Lemke (Swe) 72 71
144 C Brazillier (Fra) 76 68, M Madsen (Den) 76 68, P Edberg (Swe) 73 71, J Guerrier (Fra) 71 73, M Cryer (Eng) 77 67, J Doherty (Sco) 71 73, J Robinson (Eng) 78 66
145 C Rocca (Ita) 72 73, A Bruschi (Ita) 73 72, C Ford (Eng) 75 70, A Tadini (Ita) 73 72, R Santos (Por) 69 76, B Evans (Eng) 72 73, I Keenan (Eng) 73 72, J Kavanagh (Eng) 74 71, M Erlandsson (Swe) 70 75
146 C Lee (Sco) 77 69, J Heath (Eng) 74 72, J Kennegard (Swe) 74 72, A Signor (Ita) 73 73, A Högberg (Swe) 78 68, A Bihan (Fra) 75 71, J Grillon (Fra) 76 70, J Garcia (Esp) 71 75, T Whitehouse (Eng) 75 71, G Lockerbie (Eng) 75 71
147 A Pavan (Ita) 74 73, R Kind (Ned) 77 70, D Whitnell (Eng) 76 71, J Roth (Den) 75 72, J Palmer (Eng) 75 72, S Whiffin (Eng) 76 71, A Maestroni (Ita) 76 71, S Drummond (Sco) 72 75, A Snobeck (Fra) 68 79, E Pepperell (Eng) 73 74, A Domingo (Esp) 75 72
MISSED THE CUT
148 J Legarrea (Esp) 72 76, S Jeppesen (Swe) 80 68, N James (Wal) 73 75, J Roos (RSA) 78 70, B Etchart (Esp) 79 69, P Relecom (Bel) 76 72, G Molteni (Ita) 77 71, N Kearney (Irl) 73 75, C Russo (Fra) 70 78, V Almstrom (Swe) 72 76, J Van Der Vaart (Ned) 74 74
149 M Crespi (Ita) 78 71, J Morgan (Eng) 76 73, C Macaulay (Sco) 74 75, B Åkesson (Swe) 78 71, G Jackson (Eng) 76 73, S Harrington (USA) 70 79, J Garcia Pinto (Esp) 76 73, M Vibe-Hastrup (Den) 74 75, M McGeady (Irl) 73 76, N Henriques (Por) 74 75, M Bosse (Ger) 76 73
150 J Caldwell (Nir) 76 74, M Cobo (Esp) 72 78, M Cidonio (Ita) 77 73, J Jeong (Kor) 74 76
151 A Perrino (Ita) 81 70, S Piaget (Mon) 79 72, M Kramer (Ger) 76 75, L Richard (Bel) 77 74, J Lomas (Eng) 77 74, B Miarka (Ger) 74 77, D Brooks (Eng) 82 69, R Leonard (Eng) 79 72
152 J Bragulat (Esp) 78 74, E Lattanzi (Ita) 75 77, J Lopez Lazaro (Fra) 76 76
153 B Mannix (Eng) 75 78, I Urquizu (Esp) 75 78, W De Vries (Ned) 78 75, M Bothma (RSA) 73 80, D Lokke (Den) 74 79, D Perrier (Fra) 77 76
154 C Blaesi (Sui) 77 77, M Southgate (Eng) 72 82, A Bossert (Sui) 78 76, M Dam (Den) 78 76, A Grammatica (Ita) 77 77, T Curtis (Eng) 77 77, G Dear (Sco) 75 79
155 L Westerberg (Swe) 77 78, D Wuensche (Ger) 78 77, N Meitinger (Ger) 78 77, M Hooper (Eng) 78 77, N Lombardi (Ita) 76 79, A Bernadet (Fra) 78 77, L Scotto (am) (Ita) 81 74, R Michelini (am) (Ita) 79 76,
156 J Abbate (Arg) 75 81, F Elli (Ita) 76 80, P De Salvatore (Ita) 76 80,
157 R De Sousa (Sui) 80 77, N Smith (Eng) 76 81, J Hedin (Swe) 82 75,
158 W Schauman (Swe) 86 72, C Monasterio (Arg) 79 79, M Krainz (Aut) 80 78, J Billot (Fra) 78 80,
159 R Bastard (Eng) 78 81, K Garwood (Eng) 80 79, L Galliano (Ita) 80 79, A Bolognesi (am) (Ita) 81 78,
160 R Whitelock (Eng) 77 83,
162 L Magini (Ita) 79 83,
164 A Saragnese (Ita) 75 89, M Zanini (Ita) 84 80,
166 T Ferreira (RSA) 84 82,
167 H Thethy (Ken) 85 82,
168 V Vaccaro (Ita) 89 79,
170 E Sesia (am) (Ita) 84 86,
173 L Beneduce (Ita) 82 91, D Bertoli (Ita) 88 85,
176 A Gall (Ger) 87 89,
** J Little (Eng) 80 RT, E Canonica (Ita) 80 RT, B Chapellan (Fra) 83 WD, A Tampion (Aus) RT 0,

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CHIBERTA GRAND PRIX SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD

CHIBERTA GOLF CLUB, BIARRITZ, SOUTH-WEST FRANCE

Par 140 (2x70)
Players from France unless stated
133 Brice Chanfreau 69 64.
134 Thomas Elissalde 69 65.
136 Florent Ales 67 69.
137 Adrian Monnier 69 68.
138 Oliver Farr (England) 68 70.
Selected totals
140 Paul Kinnear (England) 70 70 (T6).
141 Tom Harris (England) 68 73, Jason Timmis (England) 70 71 (T11).
143 Ben Stow (England) 74 69 (T16).
144 Josh Loughrey (England) 74 70 (T22).

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PAUL LAWRIE'S 64 AFTER 'ABSOLUTELY MAGNIFICENT' PUTTING

FROM THE DAILY TELEGRAPH WEBSITE
By ALASDAIR REID
Paul Lawrie has reached a stage of life where each day seems to bring a new niggle, pain or affliction. “I’m getting old,” he complained. “When you get to 42 you wake up as someone else.” But it’s not all bad news. On the morning of the Barclays Scottish Open’s second round he woke up as Jack Nicklaus.
At least that was how it looked as the 1999 Open champion sashayed around the Castle Stuart course in a manner that suggested he had quietly added another 17 majors to the one he collected at Carnoustie.
By the end Paul, pictured right, had bolted a 64 to his opening 71, equalling the course record Graeme McDowell had set a few minutes earlier, and propelled himself to the upper reaches of the leaderboard.
Lawrie’s most recent ailment has been a shoulder problem – possibly the result, someone cruelly suggested, of having a chip there for the past 12 years. It may be true that Lawrie has never been give the recognition and respect that Open champions normally enjoy, but the fact of the matter is that the elegance of his swing, a thing of true beauty, has always been undermined by the ugliness of his work on the greens.
Yesterday, though, he only had to look at a putt for his ball to drop obediently into the hole. The consequence was a sight that would have confounded P G Wodehouse: a Scotsman with a grievance who could be mistaken for a ray of sunshine. “I putted absolutely magnificently out there,” the Aberdonian beamed.
Lawrie’s performance delighted the home crowd, but the hoots that were heard round the course were not the traditional expressions of Scottish joy, rather the blasts of the klaxon that signalled a two-hour suspension of play due to an imminent electrical storm.
When the tournament resumed, just after 5pm, it did so in calm conditions and for a while, the lead McDowell shared with Scott Jamieson and Peter Whiteford at 11 under par looked distinctly vulnerable. However, Jamie Donaldson was the only afternoon starter to take advantage, carding four birdies to move within three shots before play was called off for the day just after 6pm.
With Royal St George’s looming, McDowell’s return to form was timely. The Northern Irishman has had a humdrum year, but his visit to Castle Stuart has had a rejuvenating effect. “The art of going low is a very important art,” he observed. “It’s nice to get the low juices going.”
Jamieson’s were flowing, too. After 11 holes the Scot had five birdies and two eagles and the course was buzzing with talk of a first-ever 59 on the European Tour. A poor finish turned that into a 66, but McDowell believes that a sub-60 could yet be witnessed.

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SHAUN MCALLISTER FINISHES JOINT THIRD, EARNS £2,100

 
 
By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Craigielaw's Shaun McAllister, well placed overnight, did not win the top prize of £10,000 in this week's PGA EuroPro Tour event, the Audi Cork Irish Masters  but nobody could accuse the young Scot of buckling under the last-day pressure at the Fota Island Resort.
McAllister, pictured left, shot rounds of 68, 70 and 70 for an eight-under-par total of 208, finishing joint third behind first-time winner Paul Reed (Bristol and Clifton).
Shaun, who was Scottish boys' open stroke-play champion at Alloa in 2006, birdied the ninth, short 13th, 15th and short 17th in his final sub-par round, dropping shots at the short 11th and 14th.
It was his highest ever finish on the EuroPro Tour and the £2,100 reward was his biggest payslip so far as a pro. He's on a learning curve and this will give him a huge confidence boost.
Chris Kelly (Cawder) was the  next best Scottish pro in joint 16th place on 216 for which he earned £429.
 FINAL TOTALSPar 216 (3x72)
205 Paul Reed (Bristol and Clifton) 70 67 68 (£10,000).
207 Darryn Lloyd (S Africa) 68 71 68 (£5,000).
208 Shaun McAllister (Craigielaw) 68 70 70, Niall Turner (Ireland) 70 71 67 (£2,100 each).
210 Kevin Harper (East Devon) 70 70 70 (£1,000).
Other Scots' totals
216 Chris Kelly (Cawder) 71 73 73 (T16) (£429).
217 Ed Wood (Crow Wood) 70 74 73 (T22) (£355).
219 Paul Doherty (Vale Hotel) 70 75 74 (T33) (£277).
221 Kevin McAlpine (Alyth) 70 74 77, Zack Saltman (Archerfield Links) 73 73 75 (£240 each).

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KINSLEY IS NEW SCOTTISH UNDER-16 BOYS STROKE CHAMPION


Ben Kinsley, another golfing prince from the Kingdom of Fife. Image by courtesy of the Scottish Golf Union.

FROM THE SCOTTISH GOLF UNION WEBSITE
By ROSS DUNCAN
Ben Kinsley from St Andrews is the new Scottish Boys Under-16s champion after carding a superb four-under par closing round of 65 to hold off the challenge from Newcastle’s Jack Hermeston.
The 15-year-old Madras College pupil, who posted a 68 in this morning’s second round to move into contention, finished with a four-under par aggregate of 203, one shot ahead of Hermeston, who saw his 30-foot birdie putt at the last just slip past.
Kinsley got his final round off to a flying start, hitting a wedge to within a foot of the first hole to set up an easy birdie, before rolling in a 25-foot birdie putt at the second to move to two-under. An unlikely birdie followed at the seventh after he caught a tree trunk at impact with his 7-iron in the process of hitting his approach shot to 10-feet, which snapped the shaft of the club, but he calmly rolled in the putt for a superb three.
A further birdie three followed at the tenth and despite dropping a shot at the 12th, he made birdie at the par five fourteenth hole, before paring home to clinch his first national championship.
“I played great all day, hitting it really well off the tee and holing some good putts. That’s one of my lowest ever rounds and it’s nice to do that in a big event like this. I got off to a good start this afternoon which was important and thankfully my wrist recovered after hitting the tree with my club at the seventh,” said Kinsley, coached by Gary Forrester in his first year of the Scottish Golf Academy programme.
“It’s been a good year so far having reached the semis of the Scottish Boys Championship. My goal is to keep progressing and hopefully I’ll do well in the McGregor Trophy down in England next week.”
Hermeston, a member of the Northumberland junior team, posted rounds of 69, 68 and 67 to clinch the runners-up spot, one shot clear of Barassie’s Euan Walker, who fired a superb final round of 64, the lowest score of the week. Walker, who opened with a 73 yesterday, was an incredible 8-under par for his last 24 holes.
The first three boys all broke par with their 54-hole totals.
Overnight leader, Italian Luigi Botta, finished level par in fourth place after rounds of 72 and 69.
Kinsley’s win continues Fife’s dominance of amateur golf events in Scotland this season, while the Kingdom’s golfers will be keeping a close eye on 1996 Scottish Boys Under-16s champion Peter Whiteford from Kirkcaldy, who currently shares the lead in the Barclays Scottish Open.

FINAL TOTALS
Par 207 (3x69). CSS 69 69 68
203 Ben Kinsley (St Andrews) 70 68 65.
204 Jack Hermeston (City of Newcastle) 68 69 67.
205 Euan Walker (Kilmarnock Barassie) 73 68 64.
207 Luigi Botta (Italy) 66 72 69.
208 Rico Thome (Germany) 71 71 66.
209 Tom Sloman (Taunton) 73 70 66, Connor Syme (Dumfries and Co) 68 66 75.
210 Jake Storey (Alnmouth) 69 68 73, Calum Hill (Tantallon) 69 72 69.
211 Lorenzo Scalise (Italy) 72 69 70, Innes Ferguson (Drumpellier) 70 72 69.
212 Callum Gorrie (Kilmarnock Barassie) 73 67 72, Lewis Mutch (Duff house Royal) 72 74 66.
213 Vincent Abel (Germany) 72 69 72, Willem Kerr (Craigielaw) 71 71 71, Taylor Hutton (Foxhills) 68 72 73.
214 Renato Paratore (Italy) 71 74 69, Andrew Carrell (Peterculter) 71 70 73, James Rooney (West Lancs) 71 70 73.
215 Adam Fisher (Inchmarlo) 72 73 70, Adam Chapman (Windermere) 72 72 71.
216 Roberrt Johnson (Helensburgh) 73 75 69, Jack Walsh (Castle) 72 70 74, Ewen Ferguson (Bearsden) 71 74 71, Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie) 71 73 72, Euan Bowden (The Glen) 69 73 74, Stuart Blair (Royal Musselbugh) 69 75 72, Cameron Kirkwood (Bearsden) 69 73 74.
217 Cameron Bennie (Balmore) 73 76 68, Jack Merry (Birstall) 73 73 71, William Aldred (Brocket Hall) 72 74 71, Bjorn Bojesen (Denmark) 69 72 76.
218 Alexander Wilson (Gullane) 72 71 75.
219 Louis Murray (Troon Welbeck) 72 74 73, Alexander Henderson (Royal Ashdown Forest) 72 70 77, Neal Woernhard (Switzerland) 72 75 72.
220 Jevann Parmar (Leicestershire) 73 71 76.
221 Fraser Davren (Williamwood) 73 79 69, Joel Lenz (Switzerland) 69 80 72.
224 Connar Cook (Caird Park) 73 76 75, Alistair MacVicar (Glencruitten) 72 81 71.
225 Andrew Burgess (Nairn) 72 78 75.
229 Alasdair McDougall (St Andrews New) 73 76 80.
231 Robert Willemars (Blairowrie) 72 75 84, Victor Van Doorn (Netherlands) 72 80 79.
.

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McDOWELL, WHITEFORD, JAMIESON SHARE CASTLE STUART LEAD

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Graeme McDowell was joined by home pair Scott Jamieson and Peter Whiteford at the top of the leaderboard after firing a second round 64 to set up the possibility of a second Barclays Scottish Open title in four years.
Last year's US Open Champion stands 11 under par at halfway and when play was suspended for the day just after 6pm after two thunderstorm delays he was sharing the lead with Scots Whiteford and Jamieson.
Luke Donald and Lee Westwood, World Numbers One and Two, and Open Championship-chasing Colin Montgomerie were among those affected by the hold-up.
Donald and Westwood managed 11 and nine holes respectively and both will resume on seven under, while Montgomerie is one further back and only joint 25th now in pursuit of the top five finish he needs for Sandwich.
McDowell was only joint 30th when he resumed on three under, but had an eagle and two birdies in his first four holes - "a dream start" - and then added four more birdies.
"We realised conditions were going to be easy and it was going to be there for the taking a little bit,” he said.
"The course obviously doesn't offer much of a challenge off the tee and there's chances galore, but the greens are tricky.
"I think the balance is just right. If we had been coming to a brutal test here maybe you'd be mentally worn out."
Whiteford and Jamieson were both round in 66, but the latter stood four clear at one point and was bitterly disappointed to double bogey his penultimate hole, the 218 yard eighth.
The 27 year old Jamieson, a former Scottish boys' stroke-play champion and US college circuit player, is in his rookie season on The European Tour, but has already had four top-six finishes and said: "It would be a dream come true to win your first tournament on home soil - beyond all expectations."
Jamieson does not have a place in the Sandwich field yet, but top five on Sunday could do it for him.
“The course is fantastic,” he said. “Obviously playing well helps. I think every hole is really well defined.
“All of the fairways are kind of green and you've got the longer grasses with a kind of brown colour, you play through dunes. But it's just a really nice mix. The par fives and the short par fours you feel that you can attack if you like and pick up birdies.
“They are all very tricky greens, and there's tricky areas around the greens. I think patience is probably an important thing on this golf course, as well.”
Whiteford, three years older, came through the qualifier at Sunningdale to earn an Open Championship debut at the 15th attempt.
"It's my third year out here, so I know the golf courses and the faces. What Scott's doing in my opinion is phenomenal - every week is a new week to him."
Spain's Jose Manuel Lara was one behind, while another Scot - 1999 Open Champion Paul Lawrie - matched McDowell's 64 to charge to nine under.
Justin Rose, Padraig Harrington and America's World No 8 Matt Kuchar are eight under and Ernie Els one further back, while Phil Mickelson had to come home in 32 with an eagle and two birdies for a 67 that lifted him to four under.
That was a shot inside the expected cut mark, but that was with half the field still to complete their rounds on Saturday morning.

SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD
+A fair number of players will complete their second rounds on Saturday morning.
Par 144 (2x72)
133 Scott Jamieson (Scotland) 67 66, Graeme McDowell (N Ireland) 69 64, Peter Whiteford (Scotland) 67 66.
134 Jose Manuel Lara (Spain) 68 66.
135 Nicolas Colsaerts (Belgium) 69 66, Angel Cabrera (Argentina) 71 64, Paul Lawrie (Scotland) 71 64.
136 Christian Nilsson (Sweden) 68 68, Justin Rose (England) 69 67, Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 69 677, Matt Kuchar (United States) 70 66, David Dixon (England) 71 65, Markus Brier (Switzerland) 68 68.

OTHER SCORES' SCORES
139 Marc Warren 67 71 (T139)
140 Lloyd Saltman 70 70 (T50).

PROJECTED CUT (140 and better to qualify for final two rounds)
141 Stephen Gallacher 70 71 (T68).
144 George Murray 75 69 (T106).
147 Steven O'Hara 70 77 (T137).
158 Sandy Lyle 78 78 (154th).

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SCOTS BEAT IRELAND, NOW PLAY SPAIN FOR FIFTH PLACE

Scotland beat Ireland 3 1/2-1 1/2 and will play Spain for fifth place in Saturday's concluding matches of the European men's amateur team golf championship at Vilamoura Victoria course on Portugal's Algarve. Spain beat Finland 5-0.
After Greg Paterson and David Law got a square match from the foursomes, Michael Stewart, James Byrne and Ross Kellett all scored useful wins over fellow Walker Cup team candidates, Paul Cutler, Alan Dunbar and Kevan Phelan.

Stewart beat Cutler 3 and 2, Byrne beat Dunbar 3 and 2 and Kellett bt Phelan 5 and 3.

Scotland's only loser was Kris Nicol who has gone off the boil since producing a sub-par score in the first qualifying round.


SCOTLAND 3 1/2, IRELAND 1 1/2

Greg Paterson and David Law halved with Eoin Arthurs and Pat Murray.

Michael Stewart bt Paul Cutler 3 and 2.

James Byrne bt Alan Dunbar 3 and 2.

Ross Kellett bt Kevan Phelan 5 and 3.

Kris Nicol lost to Paul Dunne 5 and 4.


Scotland beat Netherlands 3-2 in a Flight B match in the European boys' team championship at Prague in the Czech Republic.

The Scots now play the host country in their final match.

Winners against the Dutch boys were Ewan Scott and Anthony Blaney at the 19th in the foursomes and Greg Marchank and Jack McDonald. Grant Forrest and Eamon Bradley were both beaten in the singles.

SCOTLAND BOYS 3, NETHERLANDS BOYS 2
Ewan Scott and Anthony Blaney bt Lars Van Meijel and Max Albertus at 19th.

Grant Forrest lost to Rowin Caron 1 hole.

Greg Marchbank bt Aaron Van Dungen 3 and 1.

Eamon Bradley lost to Martijn Broeren 4 and 2.

Jack McDonald bt Philip Pootsma 2 holes.







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THREE TIE FOR FIRST AT NEWMACHAR PRO-AM

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Three players - Stephen Gray (Hayston), Robert Arnott (Bishopbriggs) and Craig Gordon (Edinburgh Golf Centre) - shared the honours in today's Fairways Newmachar pro-am.
They all hit the four-under-par 68 mark to earn £733 apiece.
Gray, who had a bogey-free round studded with birdies at the first, 10th, 12th and 16th, was chalking up his fourth win of the season and he has now earned £11,286 on the current Tartan Tour campaign.
Arnott also had a flawless round with birdies at three long holes, the second, eighth and 16th, as well as the par-4 17th. It was Arnott's fifth win of the season during which he has now earned £10,144.
Craig Gordon, leading the way for the first time this year, had five birdies, at the first, fourth, eighth, 12th and 13th but also one bogey, at the ninth. He has earned £4,078.
Host club pro Andrew Cooper, who finished a creditable joint fifth individually, led the Cameron Ltd No 1 team to a seven-stroke victory in the pro-am team event with a net total of 23 under par 121. His amateur partners were John Brown (handicap 11), Stewart Naismith (18) and Gary Ogg (8).
LEADING PRO SCORES
Par 72
68 Stephen Gray (Hayston), R Arnott (Bishopbriggs), Craig Gordon (Edinburgh Golf Centre) (£733 each).
69 Craig Matheson (Falkirk Tryst) (£412).
70 Andrew Cooper (Newmachar), Graham Fox (East Kilbride), Paul McKechnie (Braid Hills) (£281 each).
71 Jason McCreadie (Buchanan Castle), Graeme Brown (Montrose Links), Ross Cameron (McDonald Ellon) (£177 each).
72 Alan Lockhart (Ladybank), Ross Dixon (Renaissance Club) (£132 each).
73 Scott Henderson (Kings Links), James McGhee (Duddingston) (£114 each).
74 Peter Smith (Deeside), Jamie Carver (unatt), Mark Kerr (Murrayfield), Craig Ronald (Carluke), Fraser Clarke (Newmachar), Sandy Aird (McDonald Ellon) (£78 each).
77 Chris McCalman (Turnhouse) (£78).
79 Robbie Stewart (Cruden Bay) (£78).

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SUTHERLAND CHALICE HAS STRONG FIELD THIS WEEKEND

Although the Scotland international squad is away competing in the European men's team championship in Portugal, there is still a strong field for the Scottish Fuels Sutherland Chalice tournament at Dumfries and Galloway Golf Club this weekend.
Four winners on the SGU Order of Merit 72-hole circuit will be bidding for a second success this summer.
Last year's Chalice winner James White (Lundin), a former Scottish boys champion, won the Tennant Cup a few weeks back.
Scott Crichton (Aberdour), who beat Peterhead's Philip McLean in a play-off for the Cameron Corbett Vase at Haggs Castle last Sunday, is in the field of 81. McLean will be there also.Crichton finished joint third with Fraserburgh's Jordan Findlay behind White and runner-up Sam Binning (Ranfurly Castle) in last year's Chalice.
Paul Ferrier (Baberton), like White a former Scottish boys match-play champion, will be bidding to follow up his success in the East of Scotland Open stroke-play.
ends

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CHIBERTA GRAND PRIX SCOREBOARD

CHIBERTA GOLF CLUB, BIARRITZ, SW FRANCE

FIRST ROUND
66 Bertrand Noel (France), Thomas Le Flohic (France).
67 Florent Ales (France).
68 Oliver Carr (England), Emmanuel Mercadier (France), Tom Harris (England), Adrien Le Sech (France), Thomas Chaussey (France).

SELECTED SCORES
70 Jason Timmis (England), Paul Kinnear (England) (T14)..
74 Ben Stow (England) (T46).

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WEST OF SCOTLAND SENIOR OPEN - SCOREBOARD

Andrew Campbell (Kinross) and Brian Grieve (King James VI) set the first-round pace at Lanark Golf Club with 71 apiece.
They lead by one shot from Phil Dempsey (Tulliallan)

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

CLICK HERE

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