Thursday, June 21, 2012

SCOTS FERRIER AND McDONALD IN LAST EIGHT AT ROYAL TROON

Bravehearts Paul Ferrier (Baberton) and Kilmarnock Barassie's Jack McDonald have done amazingly well to reach Friday morning's quarter-finals of the British amateur championship at Royal Troon.
Scotland is the only country to have two representatives in the last eight.
2007 Scottish boys' match-play champion, Ferrier, pictured right, who last month graduated after four years at the University of Charlotte-North Carolina, first beat Victor Henum (Denmark) by 4 and 3 and then Lorenzo Scotto (Italy) at the 19th.
Stirling student Jack McDonald, the British Universities champion, ousted the highly-rated American Will McCurdy at the 24th of an epic third-round tie and then won by one hole against Irishman Rory McNamara (Headfort)

In the quarter-finals, Ferrier, who is due to defend the East of Scotland Open Stroke-play at Lundin Links this weekend - but may have bigger fish to fry! - plays Matthew Steiger (Australia).

McDonald, pictured left, plays the up and coming young Englishman, Toby Tree from Worthing, Sussex for a place in the afternoon semi-finals.
+Alasdair Malcolm, secretary of the Ayrshire Golf Association, has provided some interesting background information about Jack McDonald for Scottishgolfview readers. Alasdair writes:
Jack's grandfather is Gordon Cosh (Cowglen), the former Scottish International (1964 - 1969) who played in the 1965 European Team Championship and the Walker Cup the same year.
He won the Scottish Amateur at Muirfield in 1968 and was runner up in 1965 to Ronnie Shade at St Andrews.
Interestingly, Gordon Cosh reached the semi-final of the Amateur Championship 46 years ago, in 1966 at Carnoustie, where Ronnie Shade beat him by 2 and 1, and perhaps more pertinent for a story, lost in the quarter finals 44 years ago, by 2 and 1 hole to Geoffrey C Marks (Trentham), at Troon.
Gordon was here at Royal Troon this afternoon as a spectator. He looked a lot more nervous than he ever did as a player!
Alasdair Malcolm

SELECTED RESULTS

THIRD ROUND - Paul Ferrier (Baberton) bt Victor Henum (Denmark) 4 and 3, Jack McDonald (Kilmarnock Barassie) bt Will McCurdy (US) at 24th.
FOURTH ROUND - Ferrier bt Lorenzo Scotto (Italy) at 19th, McDonald bt Rory McNamara (Headfort) 1 hole.

SUMMARY FROM THE R and A WEBSITE
Home hopes are high heading into the last eight of the 117th Amateur Championship at Royal Troon. Four Great Britain and Ireland players have a chance to lift the trophy, but they face strong competition from Continental Europeans.
Scotland’s Jack McDonald leads the home challenge, surviving 42 holes to take his place in the quarter-finals. He is bidding to become the first Scottish winner since Stuart Wilson in 2004. 
The 19-year-old from the nearby Kilmarnock (Barassie) club at Troon needed 24 holes in the morning’s third round to see off strong American Will McCurdy. Then he went to the final hole to defeat Ireland’s Rory McNamara by one hole in round four.
“It was a lot of golf but I kept my concentration brilliantly all day,” said McDonald, who is studying mathematics at Stirling University. “I was down most of the way in the afternoon but managed to turn it around.”
Two down through 11 holes, McDonald squared the match at the 12th hole when McNamara drove into bushes and conceded the hole. McDonald went ahead at the 178-yard, par-3, 14th hole when he hit a 7-iron to four feet and made the birdie putt. He stayed ahead with four straight halves over the last four holes, much to the delight of onlookers.
“It was great having all my family and friends supporting me out there today.”
The Scot will have the same support when he takes on England’s Toby Tree. The 18-year-old from Worthing had a comprehensive victory over Great Britain & Ireland Walker Cup player Rhys Pugh 7 and 6 in the third round before defeating Tyler Raber 2 and 1, the last American in the draw.
Tree is a member of the English Golf Union’s elite squad, and was expected to do well when he arrived in Troon. Earlier this year he won the Gauteng North Open in South Africa. 
He got ahead of Raber early and that proved the difference. “I played the front nine really well,” Tree said. “I had three birdies and was three up after nine. The back nine was a bit scrappy but I hung on.”
There’s a lot riding on his 18-year-old shoulders. No Englishman has won the Amateur Championship since Gary Wolstenholme won here at Royal Troon nine years ago.
Ireland’s Alan Dunbar is carrying on the fine form that saw him win two out of three matches in last year’s Walker Cup to help GB&I defeat the United States 14-12. He is trying to become the first Irish winner since Brian McElhinney at Royal Birkdale in 2005.
“I didn’t really come here with expectations,” Dunbar said. “The goal is just to make the cut and see where you go from there.”
Dunbar goes to the last eight after defeating reigning Scottish Stroke Play champion Paul Barjon of France by two holes. He plays Sweden’s Robert Karlsson in the quarter-finals, the highest World Amateur Golf Ranked player left in the draw at number at 23.
Scotland’s Paul Ferrier is also through to the last eight after defeating Italy’s Lorenzo Scotto at the 19th hole in their round four match. Ferrier has just graduated from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte with a degree in psychology. His university studies have helped him advance this far.
“It’s amazing how it (his psychology degree) all links to golf,” Ferrier said. “It really taught me whether it’s a 4-iron or a putt to win, it’s all the same.
Ferrier holed a 35-foot putt on the 19th hole to defeat Scotto and now faces Australia’s Matthew Stieger.  Stieger defeated countryman Daniel Nisbet 3 and 2 to reach the last eight.
Austria’s Matthias Schwab fought through rounds three and four with respective wins over Slovenia’s Tim Gornik and 2009 British Boys’ champion Pedro Figueiredo. He now faces Spain’s Jacobo Pastor.
Pastor defeated Argentina’s Jorge Fernandez Valdes and Germany’s Daniel Schmieding to reach the last eight.
An Englishman, an Irishman and two Scotsmen carry the hopes of a home win for the first time since McElhinney seven years ago, with McDonald entering the penultimate day as local favourite.
Final results and tomorrow’s draw can be found on www.RandA.org .  The first of the quarter-finals starts at 08.15am.

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