Sunday, March 18, 2012

DALMAHOY BOY HAS BEST SCORE AT SJGT EVENT AT LONGNIDDRY

FROM WALTER BURNSLEADING SCORES
Scottish Junior Golf Tour
Here are the results from the Scottish Junior Golf Tour event at Longniddry today. It was a level 4 and 5 event.
Conditions were very good on a spring-like day. The greens were very fast for the time of year which did cause the juniors some problems as they were not used to quick greens. However good experience with the Scottish boys only a few weeks away.
Callum Cochrane from Dalmahoy had the best score of the day with a 3 over par 71. The standard scratch went up from 70 to 71.

Par 68 CSS 71.
Under-15 years
74 Paul Delaney (Balmore), Niall McMullen (Lochgelly).
77 Robbie Kemsley (Balmore).
78 Fraser Kane (Kirkhill).
Under-18 years
71 Callum Cochrane (Dalmahoy).
73 Richard Smith (Williamwood).
74 Aidan Fortune (Kelso).
75 Chris McLean (Clydebank).

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LUKE DONALD WINS 4-MAN PLAY-OFF AND IS WORLD NO 1 AGAIN

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
By Staff and wire reports

PALM HARBOR, Florida -- One great round. One solid swing out of the rough. One clutch birdie putt.
That's what Luke Donald needed to win the Transitions Championship in a playoff, make his first big splash of the FedExCup season and get back to No. 1 in the world.
Donald was starting to feel overlooked in the two weeks since Rory McIlroy replaced him atop the world ranking, and he even allowed a few doubts about his game to creep into his head.
That changed on a steamy Sunday (85 degrees) at Innisbrook, where Donald closed with a 5-under 66 and won a four-man playoff on the first extra hole with a 7-iron out of the rough to 6 feet below the cup for birdie to beat Jim Furyk, Robert Garrigus and Sang-moon Bae.
"I think people ... thought that my last year was maybe a little bit more of a -- not a fluke, but I don't think many people thought I could do that all over again this year," Donald said. "Hopefully, I can prove them wrong."
With his fifth win in his last 31 starts around the world, Donald went back to No. 1 and will stay there until he gets to Augusta National and tries to capture his first major championship.
McIlroy wasted no time sending his congratulations through Twitter.
"Well I enjoyed it while it lasted! Congrats (at)LukeDonald! Impressive performance!" he tweeted.
Rory followed with another tweet that at least he won't have to change his profile picture, taken late last year with McIlroy flashing a No. 2 sign alongside his girlfriend, tennis star Caroline Wozniacki.
"I'm sure he got a taste of the view and I'm sure he'll want more of it. He's a great player," Donald said. "I think golf is in a good spot right now. There's a lot of excitement going on."
The only fluke was how Donald returned to No. 1 -- by winning a playoff, just like he did at Wentworth last May when he first rose to the top of the world ranking.
With so many possibilities in this wild final round, only the best golf was going to get rewarded.
Garrigus birdied the last two holes for a 64 and was the first to finish on 13-under 271, which turned out to be enough for the playoff. Bae, the South Korean with the fluid swing, made a 6-foot par putt on the final hole for a 68. Furyk had a 69 and was the last one to join the four-man playoff.
Missing from the group was Ernie Els, whose bogey-bogey finish cost him a chance to win -- and maybe a trip to the Masters.
Els was leading at 14-under par when he missed a 4-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, missed the green badly on the par-3 17th for a bogey, then pulled a 4-foot par putt on the 18th hole for a 67 to finish one shot out of the playoff.
The Big Easy could have secured a Masters invitation by winning. Because he tied for fifth, he only moved to No. 62 in the world. Bay Hill does not have as strong of a field, meaning Els might have to win next week or the Houston Open to get back to Augusta National.
"It's going to be tough," he said. "I'm pretty hot now, and it's difficult to talk with a straight head here. If I take stock, I think I'm playing good golf, and I've got to head into the next couple of weeks trying to get a win."
Donald felt the jangled nerves of trying to win, only it was different from Wentworth.
This was more about the trophy, not the ranking.
Donald jumped all the way to No. 12 in the race for the FedExCup.
He started the final round three shots out of the lead, then swiftly moved into position with four birdies in a seven-hole stretch around the turn, showing off his polished iron play on a couple of those birdies.
In the final hour, there was a six-way tie for the lead until two players dropped out -- Els with his bogey on the 18th, and Ken Duke with a bogey on the 17th when he rimmed out a 5-foot putt.
Donald had a heavy lie in the right rough, up the hill to a pin tucked over the bunker. He went with a 7-iron from 157 yards -- it was playing closer to 170 yards with the elevation change -- and the shot narrowly cleared the bunker and settled 6 feet below the cup. It was a remarkable shot, especially in a four-man playoff. That's what No. 1 players do.
"That shot just came out perfectly," Donald said. "You never quite know out of the rough. Sometimes it comes out soft and sometimes it comes out a little hot. That one, just when it was in the air, looked good to me."
Furyk caught an awkward lie short of the fairway bunker and hit 8-iron 40 feet past the hole. Bae, who closed with eight strong pars, missed his 18-foot birdie attempt on the low side. Garrigus hit a big drive and had a wedge to the green. It covered the flag and spun back about 7 feet away. Using a long putter to help steady himself in such pressure situations, he pulled the putt.
"Made a lot of birdies today and didn't happen," Garrigus said. "Was a lot of fun, though."
That set the stage for Donald, who delivered a right uppercut when the putt curled into the side of the cup.
"I was a lot more nervous the first time," Donald said of getting to No. 1. "That certainly wasn't my focus. I was just focused on trying to win the tournament, and it worked out."
Donald and McIlroy figure to see each other next week in Palm Beach County for practice. Neither is playing until the Masters, assuring that Donald will go to Augusta National as No. 1 in the world.
Scott Piercy, who finished his 62 before the leaders teed off, joined Els (67), Ken Duke (68) and Jeff Overton (66) in a tie for fifth. Overton and Piercy had birdie chances on the 18th, neither knowing it would be enough for a playoff. Duke missed a 5-foot par putt on the 17th hole to fall out of a six-way share of the lead.
Retief Goosen showed on the opening hole that it was a minor miracle he was even tied for the lead. His back was in such pain that he could barely finish his swing. He hit his drive into the trees, took five shots to reach the green and made double bogey, a four-shot swing when Furyk holed a bunker shot for eagle.
Goosen was among the eight players atop the leaderboard at some point, though not for long. With bogeys on the last two holes, he closed with a 75. Goosen now goes to Virginia for a protein injection for his back. He could have qualified for the Masters by finishing among the top eight, and now gets an extended break.

LEADING FOUR-ROUND TOTALS
Par 274 (4x71)
Players from US unless stated
271 Robert Garrigus 67 72 68 64, Luke Donald (England) 67 68 70 66, Sang-Moon Bae (S Korea) 69 66 68 68, Jim Furyk 66 70 66 69 (Donald won play-off at first extra hole).
272 Scott Piercy 69 68 73 62, Jeff Overton 68 69 69 66, Ernie Els (S Africa) 70 67 68 67, Ken Duke 68 67 69 68

SELECTED SCORES
274 Jason Duffner 66 66 71 71 (T1o)
276 Sergio Garcia (Spain) 68 68 70 70 (T16)
277 Retief Goosen (S Africa) 69 68 65 75, Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 61 73 72 71 (T20).
278 Justin Rose (England) 67 70 75 66 (T29)).
279 Brian Davis (England) 69 71 69 70 (T38).
283 Greg Owen (England) 70 70 69 74 (T55).

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FOR ALL THE FINAL TOTALS

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FRENCHMAN QUESNE BIRDIES FOUR OF LAST FIVE TO WIN IN SPAIN

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Julien Quesne produced the round of his life on the final day of the Open de Andalucía Costa del Sol and with it walked away with the €166,660 winner’s prize this afternoon in southern Spain.=
The 31 year old Frenchman, who graduated from last season’s Challenge Tour, had never before won more than the €22,464 he took home for finishing 17th at last month’s Avantha Masters in a European Tour event.
But an eight under par 64 – matching the Aloha course record – took him to 17 under par and neither Matteo Manassero nor Eduardo De La Riva could catch him.
“It’s the best day of my life,” said Quesne, after becoming the 400th different European Tour winner.
"It’s not easy because you have Matteo Manassero, Miguel [Angel Jiménez], Pablo Larrazábal, they all played good so I just tried to play shot after shot and do my best.
“I knew that if I holed the putt at the last I’d have a good chance.
“I’m very happy. It’s very quick for me to win this year."
Quesne birdied four of the last five holes, his magnificent approach to the difficult 18th leaving him a five foot putt which he nervelessly holed.
The two-time Challenge Tour winner, never previously higher than 16th in a European Tour event and 322nd in the Official World Golf Ranking, finished two clear of Italian teenager Manassero, with De La Riva a shot further back in third after bogeying the last.
Quesne birdied both par 5s on the front nine, and rolled in mid-range birdie putts at the eighth and ninth to turn in 32.
After five consecutive pars he sank a 12 footer at the 14th to spark his decisive run, rolling in a 15 footer at the 15th and two-putting from 60 feet at the long 16th before producing one of the shots of the week into the final green.Manassero and De La Riva were both 15 under at that stage, but neither could force a play-off over the difficult closing holes.
Manassero eventually signed for a 68, while overnight leader De La Riva went round in 70 to match his previous best European Tour finish of third.
England’s David Lynn failed to build on a 30 foot eagle at the fifth as he finished fourth, one ahead of South African Hennie Otto and Quesne’s compatriot Raphaël Jacquelin.
Jacquelin led for much of the afternoon after four straight birdies on the front nine – the highlight a 40 foot putt on the fourth – but a wild second to the 12th led to consecutive bogeys as his challenge faltered.
Tournament host Jiménez, aiming to become the oldest winner in European Tour history, finished in a share of seventh after a 71.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72). Prizemoney in Euros
271 Julien Quesne (France) 68 72 67 64 (166,660)
273 Matteo Manassero (Italy) 64 73 68 68 (111,110).
275 David Lynn (England)70 68 68 69 (50,000).
276 Raphael Jacquelin (France) 70 68 69 69, Hennie Otto (S Africa) 67 71 68 70 (38,700 each).
277 Mark Foster (England) 69 70 69 69, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spain) 69 68 69 71, Shane Lowry (Ireland) 71 72 67 67, Jaco Van Zul (S Africa) 69 71 71 66 (24,300 each).

SCOTS' FINAL TOTALS
283 Richie Ramsay 72 71 71 69 (7,111)
285 Alastair Forsyth 71 70 71 73 (4,700)
286 Stephen Galacher 75 69 71 71, George Murray 71 72 71 71, Gary Orr 71 73 70 72 (3,438 each).
288 David Drysdale 71 71 73 73 (2,700).
290 Marc Warren 74 70 70 76 (2,250).

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