Friday, January 27, 2012

RUSSELL KNOX MISSES CUT AGAIN ON US PGA TOUR

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
By Staff and wire Reports

LA JOLLA, California -- The tougher South Course at Torrey Pines suited Kyle Stanley just fine Friday in the Farmers Insurance Open.
Stanley overcame a double bogey early in his round by running off four birdies on the front nine for a 4-under 68, giving him a one-shot lead over Brandt Snedeker going into the weekend.
Snedeker, who first gained notoriety as a rookie at Torrey Pines when he shot 61 on the North Course in 2007, had a 64 on the North to make a swift climb up the leaderboard. He is coming off hip surgery at the end of last year and made his season debut at the Humana Challenge in partnership with the Clinton Foundation last week by getting into the hunt. He tied for eighth, and here he is again.
"I'm certainly surprised that I played this well this fast," Snedeker said. "Normally, it takes me a while to get the rust off. But my practice at home went really, really well. I was actually chomping at the bit to get out here because I knew I was playing well.
"Hopefully, that can happen through the weekend."
Stanley, long off the tee and as polished as any of the US PGA Tour rookies who won last year, was at 14-under 130.
A tournament already missing Tiger Woods will have to do without hometown star Phil Mickelson on the weekend. He shot himself out of the tournament with a 77 on the South in the opening round, and didn't make nearly enough birdies on the North to make the cut. Mickelson had to settle for a 68, missing the cut for the first time in 10 years at Torrey Pines.
"We're going to have perfect weather out here at Torrey, and I'd love to be playing," Mickelson said.
Sang-Moon Bae, a US Tour rookie who is No. 34 in the world, had a 67 to match the best score on the South for the second round. That put him two shots behind at 12-under 132, along with Martin Flores, who also had a 67 on the South.
Hunter Mahan shot 65 on the North, while reigning FedExCup champion Bill Haas had a 71 on the South. They were three shots behind.
The cut came at 2-under 142, and there will be another cut Saturday because more than 78 players are still around. The group that remains includes Geoff Ogilvy, who birdied his last hole on the North for a 70, and Ernie Els, who was at 3-under 141.
Stanley goes about his work quietly. He prefers boring golf of fairways and greens, though there was a little too much excitement when his 7-iron from the rough jumped on his clubface and went over the green, down the slope and into the hazard. He chipped to 5 feet and missed the putt, taking double bogey, effectively wiping out the two birdies he had made.
He followed that with a bogey from the bunker on the par-3 16th.
"I got off to a good start, and it was tough to take," Stanley said. "But you've just got to be patient out here."
That he was. He had birdie putts on the last 11 holes he played and birdied all the par 5s. As a testament to his length, he hit his tee shot 346 yards on the par-5 ninth, and hit 2-iron from 270 yards.
"Not a very good one," he said, though it left him an up-and-down from the bunker for one last birdie.
The South played three shots more difficult in the warm sunshine along the Pacific, but at least everyone knows where they stand going into the last two rounds.
Stanley likes his chances, for no other reason than the South is long, and he is hitting his drives where he's aiming at the moment.
A native of the Seattle area who went to school at Clemson, Stanley was on the verge of joining the cast of rookie winners last year when he had a one-shot lead playing the last hole at the John Deere Classic. He made bogey from the bunker, and in the final group behind him, Steve Stricker made an improbable birdie for a one-shot win.
"I wasn't very discouraged," Stanley said. "I think I made more money that week than I had thus far, so it was good. It was nice to really get in contention with a few holes left. That's kind of the goal for this year, to just keep working hard and keep trying to get myself back there."
Snedeker knows the feeling. He played in the final group as a rookie at Torrey Pines, but couldn't keep Woods from another win on this public course along the Pacific. Even so, third place was enough to send Snedeker to keeping his card, the immediate goal of most rookies.
Now, he's looking for yet another win.
"I'm driving the ball as good as I've ever driven it in my career, which isn't saying a lot, but it's saying enough for me right now," Snedeker said. "I'm still putting the ball really, really well. So I'm excited with where I am after the first two days. I feel like as good as I've played, I've left a few out there, which is a good feeling to know my game is where it needs to be."
DIVOTS: Ryo Ishikawa ran off three birdies over his last five holes for a 69 on the North to finish at 6 under. The Japanese star was coming off a missed cut at the Sony Open ... Chris Riley, playing on a sponsor's exemption, was at 7 under. ... Hunter Mahan heads to Qatar next week. His wife, Kandi, will be joining him, then will go to Uganda for mission work geared toward helping children in a tiny village with nutrition and education. ... Vijay Singh holed out with a wedge for eagle on the par-5 18th on the South Course. A San Diego newspaper reporter wanted an interview on the shot, and Singh turned and said, "It was a wedge and it went in. What more do you need?"

BRITSWATCH: Inverness exile Russell Knox was the only British player to miss the cut. He did so by  two shots with a pair of 74s for 144. Justin Rose (71-68) for 139 is the leading Brit in joint 30th place. Greg Owen shot a second-round 67 to make it through on the limit mark of 142 after a first-round 75 endangered his prospects. Also on 142 is fellow Englishman Gary Christian (72-70).

LEADERBOARD
Par 144 (2x72) Prize fund $6million. Winner's prize: $1,044,000.
Players from US unless stated
130 Kyle Stanley 62 68
131 Brandt Snedeker 67 64.
132 Sang-Moon Bae (South Korea) 65 67, Martin Flores 65  67.
134 Hunter Mahan 69 65, Bill Haas 63 71
SELECTED SCORES
139 Justin Rose (England) 71 68 (T30).
142 Greg Owen (England) 75 67, Gary Christian (Englanld) 72 70 (T61).

MISSED THE CUT (142 or better qualified)
144 Russell Knox (Scotland) 72 72
145 Phil Mickelson 77 68.

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES ON THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE

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SPAIN WIN QUADRANGULAR BOYS TITLE AT COSTA BALLENA

Spain won the boys' quadrangular international match at Costa Ballena, clinching their overall victory with a third win in a row.
They beat England 6-3 today after beating Germany 6-3 and Finland 5 1/2-3 1/2.
In today's other match, Finland beat Germany 6-3 to finish runners-up to Spain with 2pt.
Germany and England finished joint last with only a half-point to show for their three days' play.

RESULTS:
DAY 1 - England 3 1/2, Finland 5 1/2; Germany 3, Spain 6.
DAY 2 - England 4 1/2, Germany 4 1/2; Finland 3 1/2, Spain 5 1/2

DAY 3
ENGLAND 3, SPAIN 6
Foursomes 1-2
S Crookall-Nixon and Oliver Carr bt Juan Sarasti and Javier Sainz 5 and 4.
Callum Shinkwin and Paul Kinnear lost to Xavi and Toni Ferrer 3 and 2.
Jordan Smith and Josh Loughery lost to Marious Pastor and Noel Grau 2 holes.
Singles 2-4
Crookall-Nixon bt Sainz 4 and 3.
Shinkwin bt Ferrer 5 and 3
Kinnear lost to Puig 6 and 5.
Smith lost to Grau 2 and 1.
Carr lost to Sarasti 4 and 3.
Loughery lost to Pastor 2 and 1.

GERMANY 3, FINLAND 6
Foursomes 1-2
Singles 2-4

FINAL PLACINGS

1st Spain 3 wins, 2 Finland 2 wins, 3 (equal) Germany and England, 1 halved match each

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AUSTRALIAN LAKE MACQUARIE TOURNAMENT UPDATE

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SEVEN SCOTS GET THROUGH TO SENIORS Q SCHOOL FINAL STAGE

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE EUROPEAN SENIORS TOUR
Former US Open runner-up Mike Donald led the 62 qualifiers to progress from the European Senior Tour Qualifying School First Stage at Pestana Golf Resort on Portugal’s Algarve today.
American Donald, who lost in a play-off to Hale Irwin at the 1990 US Open Championship at Medinah, carded a final round 68 to finish on five under par 135 at Silves, two strokes clear of Canadian Rick Gibson, Japan’s Archie They were among 22 players from Silves to qualify for next week’s Final Stage, which will be held at Pestana’s Vale da Pinta course.
Joining them will be 20 players from First Stage at Pestana’s Gramacho course, where another American, Dick Mast, led the way.
Overnight leader Mast closed with a 73 for a three under par total of 141, one stroke clear of Englishman Matt Briggs. Americans Zeke Martinez, and Mitch Adcock and Frenchman Philippe Dugeny were a shot further back.
Finally, 20 players also sealed their place at Final Stage at Vila Sol, where Engishman Paul Wesselingh signed for a 72 to finish on one over par 145. He was two shots clear of second-placed Australian Tim Elliott and Spaniard José Buendia.
Northern Ireland’s Jimmy Heggarty, the 2008 Senior Tour Qualifying School winner, was among the Vila Sol qualifiers, finishing on nine over par 153 in a share of 12th place.
The 62 qualifiers will join 13 exempt players at Final Stage next week where the top six players will earn full Senior Tour cards for the 2012 season and those finishing seventh to 14th will secure conditional playing rights.
SCOTSWATCH: Seven Scots - Peter Smith (Deeside), Lindsay Mann (Carnoustie), Edzell club pro Alastair Webster), David James, and the lesser known Murray White, Iain Parker and Terry Burgoyne - were among the 62 qualifiers today  from the European Seniors Qualifying School Stage 1 eliminator on Portugal's Algarve coastline.
They join 13 exempt players to make a field of 75 for the Final Stage at the Pestana Resort next week when only six places on the over-50s card will be up for grabs. Those who finish seventh will be rewarded with conditional playing rights.
Former Northern Open champion Smith made the top 20 qualifiers at Gramacho with a second-round par-matching 72 for 149 and joint 17th place.
One-time Walker Cup player Mann shot 72-70 for a two-over tally of 142 at Silves where David James (71-66 for 137) tied for second place. Iain Parker (74-71) for 145 made it through in joint 16th place among the 22 qualifiers from this venue.
Webster shot a pair of 78s for 12-over-par 156 but that was good enough to give him joint 19th place among the 20 qualifiers from Vila Sol, arguably the toughest of the three courses in use.
Terry Burgoyne (74-75 for 149) qualiied in joint fifth place at this venue.
Kind regards

 COMPLETE SCOREBOARD
Silves
Par 140 (2x70)
 (22 players qualified)
135 M Donald (USA) 67 68,
 137 R Gibson (Can) 71 66, A Takamatsu (Jpn) 67 70, D James (Sco) 71 66,
 140 J Laforce (Can) 67 73, M Girouard (Can) 70 70, M Gallagher (Eng) 67 73,
 141 K Moe (USA) 72 69,
 142 N Mitchell (Eng) 69 73, S Okuda (Jpn) 69 73, M Fernandez (Arg) 71 71, L Mann (Sco) 72 70,
 143 M Stokes (Eng) 72 71, K Dickens (Eng) 77 66,
 144 S Ball (Eng) 73 71,
 145 I Parker (Sco) 74 71, L Soto (Ven) 70 75,
 146 J Mathews (Eng) 73 73, M Bright (RSA) 72 74, A Macdonald (Eng) 70 76, R Masters (Eng) 71 75, B Boudreau (Can) 76 70,
MISSED THE CUT
147 C Haynes (Eng) 72 75, J Green (Eng) 73 74,
 148 R Schroeder (USA) 75 73, M Lord (Eng) 71 77, N Self (am) (Eng) 71 77, A Westwell (am) (Eng) 75 73,
 149 D Narveson (USA) 73 76, S East (am) (Eng) 73 76,
 150 F Guedra (Alg) 74 76,
 151 L Sorensen (Aus) 75 76, J Davila (Esp) 72 79,
 152 R Roper (Eng) 73 79, T Fleetwood (USA) 76 76, G Ambrosini (Arg) 75 77,
 153 I Dougan (Sco) 77 76, L Watcham (am) (Eng) 77 76,
 155 G Copeman (Eng) 79 76, F Guedra (Alg) 75 80,
 157 J Eklöf (Swe) 77 80, P Delmas (Bel) 80 77, P Vienings (RSA) 80 77,
 158 M Lang (Sco) 76 82,
 159 A Jarrett (Eng) 79 80,
 160 M Ruth (Eng) 81 79,
 161 K Tenmark (Swe) 76 85, B Stevens (Eng) 81 80,
 163 J Sabel (Swe) 85 78,
 177 G Biggs (Eng) 91 86,
 ** M Buchter (Sui) 77 RT, M Whaler (Eng) 85 WD,
 195 L Paseka (am) (USA) 93 102,

Gramacho
Par 144 (2x72)
 (20 players qualified)
141 D Mast (USA) 68 73,
 142 M Briggs (Eng) 71 71,
 143 Z Martinez (USA) 74 69, M Adcock (USA) 73 70, P Dugeny (Fra) 72 71,
 144 D Wettlaufer (Can) 75 69, P Mortimer (Swe) 73 71,
 145 D Gavrilovic (Eng) 75 70, J Anderson (USA) 72 73,
 146 M White (Sco) 73 73, M Söderberg (Swe) 73 73, J Delgado (Fra) 71 75,
 147 L Turner (Eng) 72 75,
 148 J Salgado (Esp) 75 73, P Brostedt (Swe) 74 74, S Davidson (Eng) 73 75,
 149 P Smith (Sco) 77 72, M Bianco (Ita) 76 73, P Allan (Eng) 74 75, A Dean (Esp) 73 76,
MISSED THE CUT
150 V Garcia (Esp) 77 73, R Lewallen (USA) 77 73, J Murphy (Eng) 75 75,
 151 C Acutis (Ita) 73 78,
 152 A Mackenzie (Sco) 78 74, G Gates (Can) 76 76, G Krause (Eng) 75 77, G Litschka (Aut) 74 78,
 153 S Puzey (USA) 82 71, R Hunter (Eng) 76 77,
 154 M Kierstenson (Eng) 76 78, S Leblanc (Can) 76 78,
 155 R Larsen (Den) 80 75, R Fish (Eng) 80 75, K Capindale-Scott (Eng) 78 77, D Young  (Eng) 77 78,
 156 K Reilly (Eng) 80 76,
 157 S Giardina (Ita) 80 77, J Lee (Esp) 78 79,
 160 H Brousson (Fra) 79 81,
 161 J Naya Palleiro (Esp) 83 78, D Regan (Eng) 77 84,
 162 E Long (Isl) 83 79, E Rider (Fra) 81 81, C Vallender (RSA) 80 82,
 165 A Fihn (Swe) 82 83,
 166 P Barlow (Eng) 84 82,
 168 B Easterling (USA) 82 86, R Falkenstein (Ger) 79 89,
 169 L Du Bouëxic (Fra) 85 84,
 172 R Tol (Ned) 84 88,
 174 R Brouchoud  (Sui) 90 84,
 0 S Shields (Eng) RT  0,

Pestana Vila Sol
Par 144 (2x72)
(20 players qualified)
145 P Wesselingh (Eng) 73 72,
 147 J Buendia (Esp) 76 71, T Elliott (Aus) 72 75,
 148 M Guzman (Arg) 73 75,
 149 W Grant (Eng) 75 74, E Rodriguez (Esp) 74 75, T Burgoyne (Sco) 74 75, D Edwards (USA) 74 75,
 150 P Horrobin (Jam) 75 75,
 152 A Mori (Ita) 79 73, R Sabarros (Fra) 76 76,
 153 B Evans (Eng) 77 76, J Heggarty (Nir) 77 76,
 154 D Stirling (Eng) 77 77, P Ebner (Aut) 75 79,
 155 J King (Eng) 79 76, P Jonas (Can) 77 78, C Bolling  (USA) 75 80,
 156 J Fronceda (Esp) 79 77, A Webster (Sco) 78 78,
MISSED THE CUT
157 C Milne (USA) 81 76, G Ruth (am) (Eng) 80 77, D Hill (Aus) 79 78, G Owens (Eng) 79 78, P Cernold (Swe) 79 78, R Mugglestone (Eng) 78 79,
 158 F Illouz (Fra) 81 77, S Daniels (RSA) 79 79, M Forrest (Can) 77 81,
 159 K Smith (Can) 76 83,
 160 P Carman (Eng) 82 78,
 161 R Van Blankers (Ned) 79 82,
 162 J Montecino (USA) 81 81, N Humphreys  (Eng) 80 82,
 163 T Price (Wal) 84 79, E Costa (Por) 81 82, B Smith (Eng) 81 82,
 164 B Wearne (Aus) 79 85,
 165 C Giddins (Eng) 83 82, D Shaw  (USA) 81 84,
 166 G Green (USA) 88 78, N Gassiebayle (am) (Arg) 83 83, L Modin (Swe) 83 83,
 167 S Lindberg (am) (Swe) 85 82,
 171 J Benitez (Esp) 82 89,
 172 J Molina (Arg) 84 88,
 176 F Kicq (Bel) 85 91,
 186 M Oltz (Fra) 92 94,
 82 C Linstead (Eng) 82 RT,
 83 M Capaul (Sui) 83 RT,
 0 C Boyce (Irl) RT  0,



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RAYMOND RUSSELL MOVES UP TO TOP 10 IN INDIA

By NEIL AHERN
European Challenge Tour Press Officer

Raymond Russell launched himself right into contention at the Gujarat Kensville Challenge after a three under par second round of 69 elevated him to tied ninth position, five shots off the lead set by home favourites Shiv Kapur and Rahil Gangjee.
The Edinburgh-born European and Challenge Tour winner began the day five shots off the lead after a one over par opening round of 73, but produced a superb back nine to move to two under par for the tournament and keep himself in the running for the title at Kensville Golf and Country Club in the Gujarat region of India.
After carding a birdie on the second hole, he bogeyed the par five sixth and the par three eighth to reach the turn in 37; but things picked up for Russell as birdies on the tenth, 14th, 15th and 18th holes saw him come home in 32 shots.
“I scored a lot better today,” said the 39 year old. “It’s tricky out there, the greens are firming up so you obviously try and take advantage of the morning tee-off.
“I still had a few loose shots, making six at a par five (sixth hole) is criminal and that frustrated me. I missed a couple of short putts but then got it going again on the back nine, which is nice.
“To be fair, I’ve not really hit it close apart from with my wedge, but it’s pretty hard to get it close. Maybe I’m trying to be too defensive but I’m trying to watch what I’m doing, because if you start going over greens you’re doing well to make bogey. It’s just a case of trying to be sensible.
“My first four rounds in South Africa, I made about 20 birdies and then here I’ve made a few so it’s just a case of cutting out the stupid mistakes. I'm making progress, now I’d just like to go bogey-free at the weekend – that’s the plan.”
It was a good day in all for most of the Scots, as Callum Macaulay and Chris Doak both shot two under par rounds of 70 to climb to joint 20th place on level par overall.
Andrew McArthur and Jack Doherty, however, will fly home disappointed as they both failed to make the cut, McArthur adding an eight over par 80 to his 73 on the first day, while Doherty replicated his five over par first round of 77.
Former top American amateur Peter Uihlein made the cut (149 or better) with a shot to spare on 148 with rounds of 76 and 72.

SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 144 (2x72)
137 S Kapur (Ind) 69 68, R Gangjee (Ind) 68 69,
138 G Lockerbie (Eng) 69 69, J Dantorp (Swe) 70 68, S Benson (Eng) 70 68,
141 M Kieffer (Ger) 70 71, D Kemmer (USA) 69 72, D Gaunt (Aus) 73 68,
142 C Brazillier (Fra) 72 70, C Paisley (Eng) 72 70, A Snobeck (Fra) 71 71, L Goddard (Eng) 71 71, R Russell (Sco) 73 69, C Lloyd (Eng) 72 70,
143 M Ford (Eng) 72 71, A Hartø (Den) 73 70, B Åkesson (Swe) 70 73, B Barham (Eng) 71 72, P Dwyer (Eng) 71 72,
144 J Gibb (Eng) 72 72, R Singh (Ind) 71 73, C Macaulay (Sco) 74 70, B Parker (Eng) 71 73, S Engell Andersen (Ken) 75 69, J Walters (RSA) 71 73, C Doak (Sco) 74 70, M Carlsson (Swe) 71 73, P Archer (Eng) 73 71, H Bacher (Aut) 70 74,
145 D Singh (Ind) 72 73, O Henningsson (Swe) 73 72, B Ritthammer (Ger) 71 74, M Kumar (Ind) 72 73, A Kumar (Ind) 75 70, C Hanson (Eng) 72 73, A Lohan (Ind) 72 73, M Perera (Sri) 73 72,
146 K Kumar (Ind) 73 73, B Chapellan (Fra) 75 71, S Tiley (Eng) 75 71, V Kumar (Ind) 75 71, T Ferreira (RSA) 70 76, M Cryer (Eng) 73 73, A Parr (Can) 74 72, G Bhullar (Ind) 71 75,
147 M Singh Pathania (Ind) 75 72, B An (Kor) 76 71, R Dinwiddie (Eng) 72 75, M Jaini (Ind) 70 77, S Khan (Ind) 72 75
148 P Uihlein (USA) 76 72, B Evans (Eng) 71 77, A Sandhu (Ind) 72 76, A John (Ger) 71 77, J Hansen (Den) 77 71, E Kofstad (Nor) 77 71, F Praegant (Aut) 73 75, Å Nilsson (Swe) 76 72, V Kumar (Ind) 76 72, S Pinckney (USA) 72 76
MISSED THE CUT
149 A Perrino (Ita) 75 74, J Parry (Eng) 73 76, H Kahlon (Ind) 74 75, V Bhandari (Ind) 76 73, C Monasterio (Arg) 76 73,
150 C Kumar (Ind) 71 79, A Sher (Ind) 73 77, A Tiwana (Ind) 74 76, G Mann (Ind) 74 76, K Vasudeva (Ind) 74 76, R Steiner (Aut) 76 74,
151 J Lima (Por) 75 76, G Ghei (Ind) 78 73, R Murthy (Ind) 73 78, H Rai (Ind) 77 74, J Garcia Pinto (Esp) 72 79, R Mollah (Ind) 76 75, D Vancsik (Arg) 76 75, S Buhl (Ger) 78 73,
152 J Heath (Eng) 75 77, L Jensen (Den) 76 76, P Relecom (Bel) 78 74,
153 S Kumar (Ind) 72 81, S Das (Ind) 80 73, K Eriksson (Swe) 75 78, M Haines (Eng) 74 79, F McGuirk (Eng) 79 74, A McArthur (Sco) 73 80,
154 F Ali Mollah (Ind) 78 76, M Dharma (Ind) 73 81, J Doherty (Sco) 77 77, D Singh Kullar (Ind) 78 76, O Prakash Chouhan (Ind) 75 79, P Delhi (Ind) 81 73, R Singh (Ind) 78 76, R Bajaj (Ind) 79 75,
156 K Bhasin (Aus) 73 83, N Dawar (Ind) 78 78,
157 R Sharma (Ind) 83 74, A Jha (Ind) 77 80,
158 N Mandal (Ind) 77 81, H Gupta (Ind) 81 77,
159 R Ghotra (Ind) 78 81, C Ford (Eng) 76 83, A Rohana (Sri) 79 80,
163 M Sanju (Ind) 82 81,
167 A Singh (Ind) 81 86,
169 R Khan (Ind) 76 93,
** A Malik (Ind) 72 RT, S Syal (Ind) 75 RT, V Chopra (Ind) 77 RT, G Shergill (Ind) 75 RT, G Singh (Ind) 81 RT, V Singh (Ind) 84 WD,

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THORBURN'S THIRD WIN IN NORTH ALLIANCE AT TAIN

By ROBIN WILSON
The recent spell of cold and wet weather had a lot to blame for the poor entry entry of just 35 at the North Golf Alliance fixture played over the Tain links last Sunday when resilient Caithness golfers headed the leaderboards in all three categories.
In the opening fixture of 2012 Thurso duo Dougie Thorburn and Bryan Ronald went head to head for the honour of winning the scratch section and it was Thorburn (pictured left by Robin Wilson) who marked up his third win of the season.
The plus one handicap rated Thurso member has now won the last three fixtures. At the beginning of November he won on a better inward half count at Brora from Wick's Ronnie Taylor and then at the end of the same month at Wick, the last fixture played in 2011, he beat Tain's Mike Sangster to first place by one shot.
The six-week gap in fixtures due to weather postponements has not affected Thorburn's form. Again last Sunday he was involved in another tie for first place following his excellent score of 73.
When it came to the card comparison Thorburn's inward half count of one under par 34 edged out his Thurso clubmate Bryan Ronald. Ronald was home in 35 but denied recording a second win of the season, after winning the opening fixture at Durness, with a three-putt bogey on the final green.
Out on the course when the morning wind and rain was at its most miserable local club captain and champion Munro Ferries had a 76 and his club member Mike Sangster missed the opportunity to post another score to maintain his aggregate Scratch Quaich challenge by failing to return a card on his home patch.
Playing with a handicap of two Ronald's net score of 71 headed the Class 1 returns by a four-shot margin from Thurso clubmate Malcolm Morrison before Tarbat's Hamish Skinner got a prize for third place with a net 76, off 7, and behind him Invergordon's Mike Moran (7) and local Andrew Watt (8) both a shot more.
Spreadeagling the Class 2 section was 11-handicapper Ian Ross (Reay) who matched the gross 76 from the Tain champion with a sparkling finish of birdie 2, par 3, and birdie 3 to take him home in 36 for a net 65.
For the fifth fixture in succession Francis Keith maintained a Durness presence, winning a second place with his net card of 71, off 12, and added to his previously posted nett scores of 69 and 73 has launched his bid for the end of season MacKintosh Salver. Weathered against similar prevailing conditions on Sandside Links, Reay GC members filled the next two places.
The next fixture on the rota will be played over the Reay course on February 5
Tain Alliance Results
Scratch
71 D Thorburn (Thurso) 37-34, B Ronald (Thurso) 36-35.
76 M Ferries (Tain), I Ross (Reay).
Handicap
Class 1 - B Ronald (Thurso) (2) 71; M Morrison (Thurso) (8) 75; H Skinner (Tarbat) (7) 76; M Moran (Invergordon) (7), A Watt (Tain) (8) 77.
Class 2 – I Ross (Reay) (11) 65; F R M Keith (Durness) (12) 71; A Mackay (Reay) (14) 77; A Gunn (Reay) (11) 79.

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RORY BLUNDER COSTS HIM TWO-STROKE PENALTY AT ABU DHABI

DAY 2 REPORT FROM EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Thorbjørn Olesen carded a brilliant five under par 67 to lead the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship, but the 22-year-old Dane has a host of big names right behind him going into the weekend.

Most notably another 22 year old, Rory McIlroy, promised never to make the same mistake again after a two shot penalty cost him a share of the halfway lead.
Northern Ireland's US Open Champion would have been alongside Olesen but for brushing sand away from his line on the ninth hole of his second round.
That would have been all right if it had been on the green, but he was six feet off the putting surface and World Number One Luke Donald instantly brought it to his attention.
"I wasn't thinking clearly and just made a very stupid mental mistake," McIlroy said following a level par 72 that left him tied for fourth on five under par and part of a group which also included Tiger Woods.
Asked if he did not know the rule or just had a loss of concentration he added: "I think it was a little bit of both - first week back as well.
"Luke said 'Don't think you can do that' and I was like 'Oh yeah, I can't, can I?'
"It happens and you just have to take it on the chin.
"There was so much sand in my line I didn't even think about it. I'll definitely not do it again."
McIlroy certainly did not blame Donald for pointing it out and remembered what happened to Padraig Harrington in the same event last year.
The Irishman shot an opening 65, but then was disqualified after an eagle-eyed television viewer spotted that his ball had moved a fraction on a green.
The rule was subsequently changed, but on this incident McIlroy said: "It's a bit of a weird rule. You can move a loose impediment like a divot out of your line. You can't move sand.
"Not a weird rule, but a tricky rule. That's the same penalty as hitting the ball out of bounds. It's tough, but the rules are the rules and we've got to play by them.
"I'm sure Luke was put in an awkward position there, but he had to say it. If I was in his position I would have said the same thing.
"It's fine. I have a hundred more tournaments to play, so it's not life-and-death out there."
While Donald remained deep in the pack on one under with a 72, Woods is right in the thick of things heading into the weekend.
He is going for a second successive victory after more than two barren years and for a while it looked as if he might even catch World Number 171 Olesen.
“I hit it pretty close and holed some good putts,” said Olesen, who chipped in at the 12th as he reached seven under par despite a bogey at the last.
“I had a few bad shots here and there on the back nine but I saved a lot of them. It's a bit of a shame to finish with a bogey but I played really well, so that's good.”
Woods was tied for second after birdies at the 11th, 12th and 15th, but bogeyed the next after driving into rough.
He was happy enough after his 69, though, and certainly putted better than he had in his opening 70.
"I thought I played well today," he said.
"I feel like I'm swinging well and a lot of things that Sean (coach Sean Foley) and I have been working on are starting to feel very comfortable.
"I've grown to understand what he wants me to do and how my body is going to do those things and produce the numbers he wants me to produce." The pair have been together almost 18 months now.
Lee Westwood survived the cut with two strokes to spare despite a neck problem that he has been battling with since Christmas.
At three over with six to play the World Number Two looked in trouble, but he produced a hat-trick of birdies.
Before going off for treatment he said: "This is the first time I've played three days in a row since it started.
"The pain goes down into my elbow and it feels like somebody is driving a needle in there."
Asked if there was any possibility of him withdrawing during the round he added: "If I'd hit it in the long rough I might have had to think about it, but hopefully I'll be ok tomorrow."
Defending champion Martin Kaymer, winner of the title three of the past four years, did crash out on six over and Colin Montgomerie (76), Open Champion Darren Clarke (81) and South African Branden Grace, winner the last two weeks on home soil, failed to make it through either.
Olesen still has a host of stars snapping at his heels, but he was a runner-up three times in his rookie season last year.
He leads by a shot from McIlroy's fellow Ulsterman Gareth Maybin and Italian teenager Matteo Manassero, who shot a best-of-the-week 65.
Tied with Woods and McIlroy, who will also play together in the third round, are Scot Paul Lawrie, England's Robert Rock and Richard Finch, Frenchman Jean-Baptiste Gonnet and Swede Robert Karlsson.
Sergio Garcia and Padraig Harrington are among those one further back.

HALFWAY LEADERS
Par 144 (2x72)
137 Thorbjorn Olesen (Denmark) 70 67.
138 Gareth Maybin (Northern Ireland) 68 70, Matteo Manassero (Italy) 73 65, Jean-Baptiste (Gonnet (France) 68 71.
139 Robert Rock (England)  69 70, Paul Lawrie (Scotland) 67 72, Rory McIlroy (Northern Ireland) 67 72, Tiger Woods (US) 70 68, Richard Finch (England) 68 71.
Selected scores:
140 Richie Ramsay (Scotland) 69 71 (T8).
142 David Drysdale (Scotland) 70 72 (T23).
144 Stephen Gallacher (Scotland) 72 72 (T40).
146 Peter Whiteford (Scotland) 73 73 (T59)

MISSED THE CUT (146 or better qualified).
147 Colin Montgomerie (Scotland) 71 76, Tom Lewis (England) 75 72, Branden Grace (South Africa) 75 73.
149 Scott Jamieson (Scotland) 73 76.
151 George Murray (Scotland) 76 75.
155 Marc Warren (Scotland) 75 80.

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LEVIN, STANLEY SHARE LEAD WITH 62s AT TORREY PINES NORTH

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
By Staff and wire reports
LA JOLLA, California -- Spencer Levin and Kyle Stanley knew they had to post low scores on the easier North Course at Torrey Pines to get off to a good start Thursday in the Farmers Insurance Open, and did even better than they expected.
Stanley made eagle on his final hole for a 10-under 62, his best score in two years on the US PGA Tour. Levin shot 29 on the back nine and had a 62, matching his career best on tour, as they claimed a share of the lead after the first round.
"I played the pro-am on the North Course yesterday. There were just a lot of birdie opportunities out there, so I knew there was a good score -- maybe not 10 (under), but I'll take it," Stanley said.
They were a shot ahead of reigning FedExCup champion Bill Haas, who had a double bogey on his 15th hole and still managed a 63. The top 12 on the leaderboard played the North, which played slightly more than 3 1/2 strokes easier than the South Course, which hosted the U.S. Open four years ago.
The best score from the South was Marc Turnesa at 66.
Phil Mickelson, meanwhile, went south on the South. The three-time champion hit into 11 bunkers, missed a 3-foot birdie putt on the final hole and signed for a 77. It was his highest score at Torrey Pines since a 78 in the third round of 2005.
"I made some bad swings just in the wrong spot and so forth," Mickelson said. "I felt like my game was ready heading in, and I don't know what to say about the score. Because it was pathetic."
A year ago, the fairways were pinched in and the rough was unusually high on the North Course, helping to make up for the 604-yard difference between the two courses. Based on the scores, that's no longer the case.
Vijay Singh, Rod Pampling, Josh Teater and PGA TOUR rookie John Huh were at 64, with Huh making three eagles. Camilo Villegas and Justin Leonard were among those at 65.
Of the 54 players who shot in the 60s, only 13 of them were on the South Course. One of them was Paul Goydos, who doesn't buy into the theory of two vastly different courses and said the tournament really doesn't start until Saturday when everyone has played both.
"Ten under is leading the tournament, and anyone who says differently is full of it," Goydos said. "I looked at the leaderboard."
He would argue that some players simply have better vibes on the different courses. What might be a big difference to one player might be much less to another.
"All I know is that I'm six shots back and I've got to deal with it," he said.
Levin noticed only one big change in his game, and that was putting the ball in play. That made quite the difference, setting up short irons and plenty of birdie opportunities.
"I had some putts for birdies instead of pars, and kind of added up to a good score," Levin said.
The turning point came when Levin thought he might make bogey. He drove into the bunker on No. 7, leaving him an uphill shot to a difficult green, blocked partially by a tree.
"I was thinking I wouldn't have a shot. I was thinking it's probably going to be a bogey, and I'll go back to even (par)," Levin said. "I cut an 8-iron around and go on the right side of the green and hit a 20-footer -- it probably broke 10 feet -- and I made it. So it felt like at least a one-shot swing."
He followed with a birdie on the par-5 ninth, and making the turn at 3 under instead of 1 under changed everything for him.
the score. Because it was pathetic."
BRITISH PLAYERS' SCORES
71 Justin Rose
72 Gary Christian, Russell Knox.
75 Greg Owen

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NORTH-EAST ALLIANCE TEE TIMES FOR NEWBURGH, WED, FEB 1

Next Wednesday's North-east Golfers' Alliance competition has been switched from Newmachar to Newburgh-on-Ythan Golf Club.
Newmachar's courses are frost-bound and have icy patches, a situation that is not likely to improve by midweek. Newburgh-on-Ythan's proximity to the sea means it will definitely be playable.
The same tee times will apply as follows:


1 08:15 Charlie Cassie, Brian Harper, Keith Watson, Grant Leslie.
2 08:24 FREE ........................ ............................ ............................
3 08:33 David Mackay, Albert Smith, Craig Carnegie, Ryan Fitzpatrick
4 08:42 John Dalgarno, Lawrence Prouse, Claire Prouse, A N OTHER
5 08:51 Gordon Munro, Donald Macandrew, Fraser Clarke, Martin Lawrence.
6 09:00 Laura Murray, Alistair Graham, Keil Beveridge, Charlie Philip
7 09:09 Manson Merchant, Robert Lamb, Euan Kennedy, John Duff
8 09:18 Harry Roulston, Mike Rendall, Les Roger, Mike Booth
9 09:27 Mike Brown, Raymond Brown, Ian Bratton, Sandy Davidson
10 09:36 Duncan Clark, John Hosie, Jim Scott, George Paterson
11 09:45 Colin Nelson, Ian D Smith, Lee Vannet, Neish Chisholm
12 09:54 David Fleming, Les Fowler, Gordon Milne, Jim Duncan
13 10:03 Norman Stewart, Jackie Forrest, Mike Duncan, Alan Gall
14 10:12 John Jessiman, Alistair Petrie, Ian Grant, Mike Smith
15 10:21 Phil McLean, Kris Nicol, Fergus Bisset, Scott Larkin
16 10:30 Donald Lawrie, Hamish McNaughton, Mike Rogers, M Forster
17 10:39 David Bisset, Chris Brindley, Derek Randall, Jim Murray
18 10:48 Willie Shaw, Gary Homer, Ben Lumsden, David Leslie
19 10:57 Dick Wright, Peter Cheyne, Kenny Stephen, A N OTHER
20 11:06 Martin May, Peter Leech, Willie McKenzie, A N OTHER
21 11:15 David Brown, Tommy Collie, Mark Lawrie, Phil Murray
22 11:24 Stewart Finnie, David Mckay, Nigel K Parker, Jim Gall

23 11:33 Bryan Robson, Mike D Brown, A N OTHER, A N OTHER
24 11:42 Gary Ross, Alan Ross, Keith Ingram, A N OTHER
25 11:51 FREE ...................... ............................ ............................
26 12:00 Brian Nicolson, John Nicolson, Graham Allan, Paul Cornfield
27 12:09 David Wilson, John Borthwick, Justin Thomas, A N OTHER

+If you are a NE Alliance member and wish to take up one of the available tee times or amend the one you already have, phone 07801 819746 between 10am and 4.30pm on TUESDAY.


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