Sunday, May 27, 2012

ZACK JOHNSON CATCHES JASON DUFNER OVER LAST ROUND AT COLONIAL

Jason Dufner could not quite make it into the winner's enclosure again.
He was caught over the final round of the Crown Plaza Invational at Colonial by Zack Johnson with a two-over 72 for 12-under 268  to Dufner's four-over 74 for 269.
Not great stuff by either man over the last round but they had shaken off the field in the earlier circuits.
Tommy "Two Gloves" Gainey, with a 67 for 273, and Jim Furyk, with a 64 for 274, finished third and fourth without getting close to the leading pair.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 280 (4x70)
Players from US unless stated

268 Zach Johnson 64 67 75 72
269 Jason Dufner 65 64 66 74
273 Tommy Gainey 66 67 73 67
274 Jim Furyk 69 69 68 68

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LAST GREEN TWO-STROKE PENALTY ON JOHNSON

MADE IT LOOK CLOSER FINISH THAN IT WAS

Johnson was assessed a two-stroke penalty for failing to replace his ball to its original position after marking it on the 18th hole. That left him with a 2-over 72 and a one-stroke victory.
"I'm going to focus on the positives, because I hit a really solid putt and it's a good thing I made it," Johnson said. "No harm, no foul. It was my fault."
Johnson moved his original ball mark out of the line of Dufner's putt on the 18th green. But he forgot to move it back before his final 5-foot putt.
Even with the penalty assessed before signing his scorecard, Johnson's 12-under 268 total was enough to edge Dufner, who closed with a 74.
Tommy Gainey was a distant third at 7 under after a 67, a stroke better than Jim Furyk.
In what was essentially a match-play final round for the winner's plaid jacket, Johnson took command at the 414-yard 15th hole. Dufner's approach hit the left side of that green then rolled into a ditch, leading to a triple bogey that put him four strokes back after Johnson's par.
It was the eighth US PGA Tour victory for Johnson, who earned 500 FedExCup points to move to No. 3 in the standings, just 349 points behind leading Dufner. The 2007 Masters champion's record streak of 15 consecutive under-par rounds at Colonial ended.
Dufner's only two US Tour victories came in the last four weeks, a stretch in which he also got married.
After winning last week at the HP Byron Nelson Championship, he was trying to match Ben Hogan, his hero, as the only players to win both US Tour events in the Dallas-Fort Worth area in the same year. Hogan did it in 1946, when the tournaments weren't played in consecutive weeks.
"Pretty good run, today obviously a little disappointing to play that poorly and not (have a) kind of a chance there at the end," said Dufner, insisting fatigue didn't come into play.
 "I feel pretty good actually. ... I just played really poorly today."
There had already been four two-stroke swings between Dufner and Johnson before that fateful 15th hole.
Dufner drove into a fairway bunker before the shot that trickled over a ledge into the water. He then pitched his drop all the way over the green and missed a 4-foot putt for double bogey.
Johnson made par at the same hole where a day earlier his approach settled into a grassy clump only inches from going into that ditch. With his feet together to keep from falling over himself, Johnson's pitch from about 81 feet rolled only inches from the cup to set up a tap-in par-saver.
A hole earlier, Johnson had regained the lead with a 9-foot birdie putt at the 445-yard 14th after having blown a two-stroke lead.
At the 616-yard 11th, a straight par 5, Johnson's drive to the left hit a tree and ricocheted back into the middle of the fairway. He took advantage with an 18 1/2-foot birdie putt to get to 15 under.
Dufner wasn't as fortunate with his wayward drive, which settled under a tree. He had to punch a low shot around the branches before hitting his approach into a greenside bunker and two-putting from 23 feet for bogey.
But Dufner needed only one hole to get even again, with an 8-foot birdie at No. 12. Johnson hit his tee shot into a fairway bunker, then his first attempt out of there hit the lip and rebounded over and behind him. He settled for a bogey after a 90-foot shot out of the fringe settled about a foot past the hole.
Dufner and Johnson were tied at 14 under going to the back nine after Dufner's double bogey at the 386-yard par 4 ninth hole, where his approach from 103 yards hit just short of the green and rolled back into the water.
In a rare and still slight show of frustration, Dufner slapped his hands together when the ball came up short before his first double bogey in 147 holes.
It looked as if Johnson was the one in trouble at the ninth, when his drive settled in the rough. He had an awkward stance, with one foot in the bunker the ball just missed, when he hit his approach to 15 feet. And he almost made birdie, but the putt lipped the cup and rolled away.
After both started with disappointing pars at the easiest hole on the course, the opening par 5, there was a two-stroke swing at the 382-yard second hole that cost Dufner his lead.
Dufner drove into a fairway bunker on the left side, then three-putted from 28 feet for his first bogey on any of the first eight holes all week. Johnson made a 28-foot birdie putt to go in front by a stroke.
At No. 5, Dufner made an 8-footer for his third birdie of the week at the tight par 4 parallel to the Trinity River that is one of Colonial's toughest holes. Even after a frustrating tee shot into the rough at the sixth hole, Dufner regained the lead by rolling in a 34-foot birdie putt.
Johnson trailed by two strokes when his tee shot at the 188-yard eighth was way left before his short pitch shot missed the green and he bogeyed.
FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
FORT WORTH, Texas -- Zach Johnson won a tournament for the first time in two years when he claimed the Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial title on Sunday, pulling ahead of the field when Jason Dufner faltered.

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ROGER CHAPMAN FIRST, SANDY LYLE JT 4th IN US SENIOR PGA CH/SHIP

FROM THE US PGA TOUR SENIORS WEBSITE
BENTON HARBOR, Michigan (AP) -- Roger Chapman has won the US Senior PGA Championship presented by KitchenAid, holding on for a two-stroke victory after leading comfortably throughout the final round Sunday.
Chapman led by five after 54 holes and was never really threatened Sunday. His closing 1-over 72 was his worst score of the tournament -- but it was enough to give the Englishman a win at the major championship.
Chapman, who had never won on the Champions Tour, finished at 13 under. He bogeyed three of the last five holes but had enough of a cushion that it didn't matter.
John Cook was at 11 under after a 69. Hale Irwin shot 68 to finish another stroke back.
Sandy Lyle finished joint fourth on 275 with scores of 74 71 77 and 64.
Kenny Perry shot a tournament-record 62 at Harbor Shores but finished five shots behind in ninth place.
Image of Roger Chapman with the US PGA Seniors Championship trophy by courtesy of (c)Getty Images.

+Even in Europe Roger Chapman is an "unknown" to most golf punters - not a leading light by any means on the European Senior Tour after a far from successful career on the European Tour. But he was a frontline amateur in the 1980s when he was English amateur champion, Lytham Trophy winner and played for GB and I in the Walker Cup. Speak about getting your second wind!

ROGER CHAMPION QUOTES FROM EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
"It's the greatest day of my professional career. No question about that. It was hard work in the end, and your mind just starts to wander a bit. And I was thinking of George (Will, his late coach and former Ryder Cup player) all the way around.
"What he would be thinking ... and Ijust lost my focus a bit. But I hung in there and fortunately I could bogey the last two to still win.”
Glancing at the huge trophy next to him and the names engraved on this incredible piece of silverware, he said: “It's incredible. You have got Hale Irwin, Jack Nicklaus, and Tom Watson and Fuzzy Zoeller, Jay Haas. And it's incredible just to have my name under Tom Watson's name, the defending champion.
“It's the best feeling in the world. This is what we strive for, this is what we practice and work hard for.”
The 53 year old Englishman’s victory was built on a stunning third round of 64 and with ten holes to play he was eight strokes clear. Despite the best efforts of the chasing pack, who produced some blistering low scores such as the 62 of Kenny Perry, 63 of Senior and 64 of Sandy Lyle, Chapman was not to be denied the greatest victory of his career.
He had only won once previously on The European Tour in the Brazil 500 Years Rio de Janiero Open, when he defeated Padraig Harrington in a play-off.
“If I had a school report I would probably give myself a B-minus for my European Tour career. There were tournaments that I should have closed out and I think not winning early in my career, and I was expected to win early in my career, had a negative effect on the way I played and on the way things happened. And I would let leads slip, etcetera.
“So this week, having led from wire to wire, that to me is the greatest thing I've ever done.”
Holding a five-stroke lead overnight, Chapman, sponsored by Speedy Services – the new title sponsors of the Wales Senior Open, extended his lead to eight with birdies at the fourth, sixth and seventh holes.
Dropped shots at the ninth and 14th followed before two bogeys to finish but such was the lead he had established that they did not matter.
Sandy Lyle, a two-time Major Champion and the newest member of the World Golf Hall of Fame, led the applause for Chapman.
The Scot said: “Roger's lost his coach just recently due to illness and I think that's been a great motivation for him. It's been wonderful for him to pull it off this week. He's been a great player for many years, but maybe under the radar a little bit.
"If you look at Roger's record, he hasn't achieved a massive amount of tournament wins, but he's always been a good player.
“And I think that since he's turned 50 he's kept himself pretty healthy and he's still a very powerful player. It's a fantastic achievement."
 LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 284 (4x71) Yardage 6,822
271 Roger Chapman (England) 68 67 6472
273 John Cook (US) 69 68 69 69
274 Hale Irwin (US) 71 6 69 68
275 Sandy Lyle (Scotland) 74 71 66 64, Peter Senior (Australia) 74 67 71 63, Joe Daley (US) 73 72 66 64, Bernhard Langer (Germany) 73 68 64 65, David Frost (South Africa) 70 70 68 67.

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SAM BINNING, SCOTT CRICHTON FINISH WELL UP IN WALES

 Ranfurly Castle's Sam Binning finished third and Scott Crichton (Aberdour) joint fourth in the the Welsh men's open amateur stroke-play golf championship over the weekend at Prestatyn Golf Club.
Binning shot 74-74-70-71 for a one-over-par total of 289. He finished eight shots behind the runaway winner by seven, Craig Hinton (The Oxfordshire) who had scores of 69-75-70-67 for a seven-under-par total of 281. Hinton was the only man under par at the end of 72 holes in bright but quite often breezy conditions.
Binning finished only one shot behind the runner-up on 288, New Zealander Vaughan McCall (Gore).
Crichton had rounds of 70-76-72-72 for two-over 290
Colin Thomson (East Renfreshire) came 13th on 297 with scores of 75-76-75-71.
South African open amateur champion Brian Soutar (Leven Golfing Society) was well in the picture with rounds of 72-73-72 before he fell away drastically with a closing round of eight-over 80 for a total of 298 and a joint 14th finish.
Adam Dunton (McDonald Ellon) scored 73-76-76-79 for a share of 22nd place on 300 - a shot ahead of Scott Gibson (Southerness) (74-76-75-76) in joint 25th place.
Gordon Stevenson (Whitecraigs) tied for 34th place with 74-75-76-79 for 304.
Scott Larkin (Royal Aberdeen) finished 37th on 305 with rounds of 76-76-77-76
Conor O'Neil (Pollock) scored 71-76-78-85 for 310 while Greg Smail (Craigielaw) brought up the rear for the Scots with rounds of 79-70-89-81 for 319.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72) CSS 76 77 74 75
281 Craig Hinton (The Oxfordshire) 69 75 70 67.
288 Vaughan McCall (Gore, Southland, New Zealand) 72 73 70 71
289 Sam Binning (Ranfurly Castle) 74 74 70 71.
290 Scott Crichton (Aberdour) 70 76 72 72, Rhys Enoch (Truro) 73 72 72 73.
SELECTED TOTALS
296 Nigel Edwards (Whitchurch) 70 80 69 77 (T10)
297 Colin Thomson (East Renfrewshire) 75 76 75 71 (13th)
298 Brian Soutar (Leven GS) 72 73 72 80 (T14)
300 Adam Dunton (McDonald Ellon) 73 76 76 79 (T22)
301 Scott Gibson (Southerness) 74 76 75 76 (T25)
304 Gordon Stevenson (Whitecraigs) 74 75 76 79 (T34)
305 Scott Larkin (Royal Aberdeen) 76 76 77 76 (37th)
310 Conor O'Neil (Pollok) 71 76 78 85.
319 Greg Smail (Craigielaw) 79 70 89 81.
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JUNIOR TOUR WINNER JAMIE SAVAGE NOT AT HIS SUNDAY BEST

It was a tournament of two halves for Jamie Savage (Cawder), winner of the weekend's 72-hole Scottish Hydro Junior Tour event at Roxburghe Hotel and golf course, near Kelso.
Over Saturday's 36 holes, Jamie played like a chip off the old block - his father Stewart is the Dalmuir professional - to shoot nine shots clear of the field of all the top Under-18 names in Scottish boys golf with brillianT rounds of 68 and 66 for a 10-under-par tally of 134.
But Sunday's 36 holes cost young Savage (pictured by Tom Ward Photography) 147 shots and in the end he did not so much cruise to victory as paddle furiously to cross the finishing line a couple of shots ahead of the fast finishing Greig Marchbank (Dumfries and Co) who had rounds of 72-72-71-68 for 283.
Alasdair McDougall (Elderslie finished third on 288 while the fourth-placed Anthony Blaney (Liberton) included in his 291 the round of the tournament, an eight-under-par 64 in the third round.
Golf Data Lab Scottish youths title-winner Ewan Scott (St Andrews) finished a creditable fifth on 292.
Paul Lawrie Foundation Scottish boys match-play champion Craig Howie (Peebles) retired after completing rounds of 72-76-82.
SCOTTISH HYDRO JUNIOR TOUR
Roxburghe Hotel and Golf course, nr Kelso
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72)
281 Jamie Savage (Cawder) 68 66 74 73
283 Greig Maqrchbank (Dumfries & Co) 72 72 71 68
288 Alasdair McDougall (Elderslie) 71 72 72 73
291 Anthony Blaney (Liberton) 74 75 64 78.
292 Ewan Scott (St Andrews) 75 76 72 69.
294 Lawrence Allan (Alva) 73 73 75 73.
298 Greg Forrester (Lundin) 74 69 80 75.
299 Ewan Ferguson (Bearsden) 78 76 73 72, Ryan Walsh (Kirkcaldy) 74 74 71 80.
300 Robert MacIntyre (Glencruitten) 73 76 77 74
302 Craig Chalmers (Lenzie) 73 78 75 76, Alan Waugh (Cowglen) 74 73 77 78
303 Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie) 80 79 70 74, Cameron Farrell (Cardross) 81 74 73 75, Angus Carrick (Douglas Park) 73 73 84 73.
304 Alexander Wilson (The Renaissance) 79 79 81 85.
305 Jordan Shaw (Kingussie) 81 76 73 75.
306 Alasdair McDougall (St Andrews New) 77 79 73 77, Calum Hill (Tantallon) 78 73 77 78.
307 Ben Murray (Poretlethen) 79 74 77 77, Daniel Flannery (Peebles) 72 76 79 80.
309 Euan Walker (Kilmarnock Barassie) 79 77 72 81.
310 Jake Scott (Buckpool) 75 72 79 84
311 Paul Reilly (Lochwinnoch) 80 77 77 77, Connor Syme (Dumfries & Co) 78 76 76 81, Callum McGuigan (Comrie) 77 77 79 78, David Wilson (Troon Welbeck) 79 71 77 84
312 Euan Bowden (The Glen) 77 78 80 77
313 Ben Craggs (Glenbervie) 71 78 79 75.

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FOX WINS £1,200 PRIZE AT BISHOPBRIGGS

Rowallan Castle's Graham Fox won the top pro prize of £1,200 in today's (Sunday) Bishopbriggs Golf Club pro-am with a bogey-free round of three-under-par 68.
Fox birdied the third, eighth and 17th to win by a single shot from Garry Forrester (St Andrews Golf School with third place on 70 shared by Greg McBain (Gamola Golf), David Patrick (Elie Sports Club) and Neil Fenwick (Dunbar).
Fenwick led the Bishopbriggs Golf Club team of Ricky Spinelli (handicap 10), David Smart (11) and Robert Mills (15) to victory in the pro-am event with a net score of 15-under-par 56 but only after a countback with the team led by Ballumbie Castle pro Patrick Walker.
BISHOPBRIGGS PRO-AM
Bishopbriggs GC
LEADING PRO SCORES
Par 71
68 Graham Fox (Rowallan Castle).
69 Garry Forrester (St Andrews Golf School)
70 Greg McBain (Gamola Golf), David Patrick (Elie SC), Neil Fenwick (Dunbar).
71 Greig Hutcheon (Banchory), Alasdair McDonald (Dunnikier Park), Paul McKechnie (Braid Hills), Craig Matheson (Falkirk Tryst), Chris Kelly (Cawder), Lee Vannet (Carnoustie Links), Mark Kerr (unatt), Stephen Gray (Hayston), James McKinnon (Irvine).
72 Scott Herald (Mearns Castle), Craig Ronald (Carluke).
73 Robert Arnott (Bishopbriggs), Mark King (Kingsfield), Scott Henderson (Kings Links), Alan Lockhart (Ladybank), Iain Colquhoun (Dundonald Links), Alan Tait (Marriott Dalmahoy).
74 Ian Graham (Crow Wood), Andrew McIntyre (Ranfurly Castle), Paul Wardell (Whitekirk), Jason McCreadie (Buchanan Castle), Christopher Currie (Caldwell) .
ends

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SCOTT HENRY CHALKS UP FIRST TOP-10 FINISH ON CHALLENGE TOUR

CHALLENGE TOUR REPORT .
from Neil Ahern
Scott Henry claimed the first top ten finish of his Challenge Tour career at the Telenet Trophy in Belgium thanks to a one under par final round of 70, which left him in tied 10th as Italian Marco Crespi sealed his maiden victory.
Henry reached the turn in level par thanks to birdies at the third and fifth holes and bogeys at the fourth and ninth.
Four more birdies on the back nine, at the 12th, 13th, 16th and 18th were offset by bogeys at the 11th, 14th and 17th and meant the 25 year old signed for a one under par 70 to finish on six under for the tournament and take home €3,160.
“I played a lot of good stuff,” said Henry. “I made too many mistakes though, even if I did have six birdies. I missed a three foot eagle putt at the last. I know I would have taken birdie on the tee but when you’re playing great shots and not making the most of it it’s frustrating.
“I feel as though I'm playing better than I'm scoring but I guess time will tell. I was feeling really confident the last few weeks and then I missed the cut by miles in Brittany. But to turn it around and come here and play better is a big positive. I just tried to free it up a bit this week and it’s helping me feel more relaxed and hit better shots.
“I'm glad to be on a run now, it’s been a bit stop start so far. It’ll be good to get going and get a chance to get rid of the silly mistakes because sometimes it’s hard to take. I know my game’s good though so I just want to score better now.”
A three under par round of 68 meant Steven O’Hara climbed to a tied 18th place finish while Chris Doak signed for a three over par round of 74 to finish tied 20th.
Crespi, meanwhile, claimed his first Challenge Tour victory as he cruised to victory with a four under par round of 67 thanks to an incredible run of four successive birdies on the back nine.
The Italian was the overnight leader after the second and third rounds and, while he admitted to struggling with nerves on the penultimate day, he overcame them with aplomb when it really mattered to finish three shots clear of Carlos Aguilar on 14 under.
FINAL TOTALS
270 M Crespi  (Ita) 68 65 70 67,
273 C Aguilar  (Esp) 67 71 68 67,
274 J Lima  (Por) 69 69 69 67,
275 A Kaleka  (Fra) 69 66 69 71, B Åkesson (Swe) 69 71 68 67,
276 E Pepperell (Eng) 71 71 65 69, P Oriol (Esp) 67 70 70 69, O Whiteley (Eng) 69 66 70 71
277 A Tadini (Ita) 71 72 69 65
278 A Perrino  (Ita) 69 68 69 72, S Wakefield (Eng) 68 69 72 69, J Maurer  (Aut) 71 67 68 72, S Henry  (Sco) 69 68 71 70
279 M Korhonen (Fin) 71 69 69 70, A Sullivan (Eng) 64 76 68 71, G Houston (Wal) 70 72 68 69, J Garcia Pinto (Esp) 71 71 70 67
280 S O'Hara  (Sco) 72 70 70 68, S Tiley (Eng) 73 69 70 68
281 E De La Riva  (Esp) 75 67 75 64, H Joannes  (Bel) 69 71 70 71, A Otaegui  (Esp) 73 66 70 72, H Bacher (Aut) 73 65 70 73, B An (Kor) 67 74 73 67, C Doak (Sco) 68 70 69 74, M Ford (Eng) 72 68 73 68, S Strange (Aus) 72 70 68 71,
282 J Garcia  (Esp) 70 68 71 73, M Kieffer (Ger) 70 70 71 71, R Karlberg  (Swe) 69 72 70 71, C Paisley  (Eng) 69 74 70 69, T Baek (Kor) 67 71 71 73, M Delpodio  (Ita) 68 74 69 71,
283 F De Vries  (Ned) 72 71 72 68, C Macaulay  (Sco) 69 70 71 73, B Barham (Eng) 66 73 72 72, N Lemke (Swe) 70 69 72 72, A Hortal  (Esp) 72 65 74 72, C Gane (Eng) 70 71 76 66, N Ravano (Ita) 73 70 66 74,
284 T Ferreira  (RSA) 75 68 75 66, A Bernadet  (Fra) 69 72 72 71, F Fritsch  (Ger) 66 76 72 70, E Kofstad (Nor) 71 69 72 72, V Riu  (Fra) 67 75 71 71,
285 J Guerrier  (Fra) 68 73 75 69, N Dougherty  (Eng) 72 71 73 69, S Walker (Eng) 69 71 74 71, B Pastore (Ita) 69 71 76 69, M Lafeber (Ned) 70 69 74 72,
286 B Ritthammer (Ger) 70 73 75 68, J Doherty  (Sco) 68 72 69 77, J Parry (Eng) 66 69 73 78, C Ford (Eng) 68 70 74 74, K Eriksson (Swe) 69 70 72 75, J Wahlqvist (Swe) 67 72 73 74, A Hartø  (Den) 69 72 72 73, C Moriarty (Irl) 72 71 72 71,
288 A Velasco (Esp) 66 73 72 77, P Archer (Eng) 71 71 70 76, S Kim (Kor) 71 68 71 78, S Davis (Eng) 69 74 73 72,
289 P Dwyer (Eng) 71 71 75 72,
290 A Hansen  (Den) 70 72 77 71, D Lokke (Den) 75 65 72 78,
292 S Pinckney (USA) 71 72 76 73,
293 A Ahokas (Fin) 72 70 77 74,
294 Å Nilsson (Swe) 67 75 79 73, L Richard (Bel) 76 67 72 79,

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THREE SCOTS IN TOP TEN OF WELSH MEN'S AMATEUR STROKE PLAY

Three Scots - Sam Binning (Ranfurly Castle), Brian Soutar (Leven Golfing Society) and Scott Crichton (Aberdour) - were in the top 10 with one round to play in the Welsh men's open amateur stroke-play championship at Prestatyn Golf club.
Craig Hinton (The Oxfordshire) and Luke Jackson (Misterton) share the lead on two-under-par 214 - two shots ahead of Richard Bentham (St Pierre).
Then, in joint sixth place on two-over 218 come Binning (74-74-74), Soutar (73-73-72) and Crichton (70-76-72).
The CSS for the par 72 course has been 76 77 and 74

BACK AT THE END OF PLAY WITH FINAL TOTALS

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BRILLIANT BLANEY 64 CUTS SAVAGE LEAD TO FIVE ON JUNIOR TOUR

Jamie Savage (Cawder) saw his nine-shot halfway lead slashed to five after three rounds of the Scottish Hydro Junior Tour 72-hole stroke-play event at The Roxburghe Hotel and Golf Course near Kelso today.
Savage, after rounds of 68-66 had left the field strailing, came back to "normal" with a two-over-par 74 for eight-under-par 208.
Today was the turn of Liberton's Anthony Blaney to step into the low-scoring spotlight with a brilliant round of eight-under-par 64 after earlier rounds of 74-75. He is on three-under 213 and Savage's nearest challenger with one round to go.
Paul Lawrie Foundation Scottish boys champion Craig Howie (Peebles) had a bad morning with an 82 - earlier scores 72-76 - for 230, some 22 shots behind leader Savage.

THIRD ROUND LEADERS
Par 216 (3x72)
208 Jamie Savage (Cawder) 68 66 74
213 Anthony Blaney (Liberton) 74 75 64
215 Greig Marchbank (Dumfries and Co) 72 72 71, Alasdair MacDougall (Elderslie) 71 72 72
219 Ryan Walsh (Kirkcaldy) 74 74 71.
221 Lawrence Allan (Alva) 73 73 75
223 Ewan Scott (St Andrews) 75 76 72, Greg Forrester Lundin) 74 69 80.
SELECTED SCORES
229 Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie) 80 79 70.
230 Craig Howie (Peebles) 72 70 82.

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WENTWORTH CRITICISM: ERNIE ELS EATS HUMBLE PIE AND MAKES SUBSTANTIAL DONATION

Ernie Els has wakened up this morning and realised he was totally out of order in the public statements he made yesterday, criticising the Wentworth greenstaff for not watering the greens.

European Tour Chief Executive George O’Grady said:
“Ernie Els asked to see me this morning and apologised for his intemperate language following the conclusion of his round yesterday. He stated that he had already apologised to all the individuals concerned and offered a substantial donation to The European Tour Benevolent Trust, which I accepted.
"The European Tour now consider this matter closed.”

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PAUL LAWRIE FINISHES WITH A 66 FOR JT 2ND PLACE BEHIND LUKE DONALD

NEWS RELEASE FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR
Luke Donald returned to World Number One in style by retaining his BMW PGA Championship title at Wentworth Club.
Donald's sixth victory in the last 15 months makes him only the third player - Sir Nick Faldo and Colin Montgomerie are the others - to win The European Tour's flagship event two years in a row.
After being caught by Justin Rose four holes into the final round, the 34 year old put his foot on the accelerator to go clear once more.
Once he had gone three clear with a 25 foot putt at the short 10th, Donald, the most reliable player in the game right now with the possible exception of America's man of the moment Jason Dufner, never looked like losing.
Playing with supreme confidence, he ended up taking the first prize of €750,000 by four strokes from Rose and 1999 Open Champion Paul Lawrie with an accomplished closing 68 and 15 under par total of 273.
Only a top-eight finish had been required for him to move to the top of the Official World Golf Ranking for the fourth time once McIlroy had missed the cut on Friday.
After requiring a play-off to dethrone Lee Westwood 12 months ago this time Donald never looked like being caught down the closing straight on another gloriously sunny afternoon.
That was the start of Donald's first reign, one which was to continue until this March, but he and McIlroy have now changed places six times since then.
They next meet at the Memorial tournament in Ohio starting on Thursday, but it is the US Open Championship in San Francisco on June 14 that his sights are now on. Play like this and a first Major could well be his.
This was his first successful defence of a title and he said: "What a great one to do it at. This is our biggest event on The European Tour.
"To come and defend and get back to number one is very sweet indeed.
"I was just trying to keep my head down and plug away. I was swinging well and I've putted well all week.
"I just needed to settle down a bit. This is a big week and I felt some of the pressure.
"After the fourth I didn't give him (Rose) another hole where he was teeing off first other than the 18th. I got the job done.
"I take a great amount of satisfaction. It means I am doing the right things - the hard work is paying off and I have a great team around me."
Asked what was next on his wish list he said: "Obviously win Majors. I feel I am getting closer. Every time I win it adds to my confidence.
"These victories are key to bringing that confidence into the Majors."
Paul Lawrie hit a best-of-the-day 66 to catch Rose and the 43 year old Scot is now closing in on securing a return to The Ryder Cup after a gap of 13 years.
Rose, round in 69, would have been second on his own but for missing a five foot birdie putt on the last, but with a World Golf Championships win earlier this season he feels it could be a special season too.
As for the difference in the final round he said: "Luke's putter really. He buried a lot of putts in the middle of the round and there were no loose shots coming down the stretch."
Rose, two behind at the start, was level when he birdied the long fourth and Donald three-putted for bogey.
In went putts of 14 and 18 feet at the sixth and seventh, though, and then came what seemed at the time like the killer blow on the tenth.The gap went to five at the 16th when Donald sank a nine footer and Rose, plugged in sand for two, bogeyed.
First Lawrie and then Rose cut the difference to four, but it was all too late to revive their title hopes with Donald in such imperious form.

Rose, so close now to taking a place in the OWGR's top five for the first time, would certainly have settled for second on Thursday.
He feared he might have to pull out just before the start because of dizziness and spent an hour with a doctor.
Lawrie, who reached a high of 29th in the world back in 2000, could now move back into the top 30 only 14 months after he stood 272nd - and for the first time he can call himself Scotland's top player.
When he won The Open Championship from 159th in the world in 1999, Colin Montgomerie was riding high at fifth in the OWGR.
Paul, who earned 380,000 Euros for his Wentworth performance, is up to second in The Ryder Cup points race and said: "You're never unhappy when you shoot 66, but really it should have been a few less.
"When you get on a bit of a run the confidence goes up and right now it's probably never been better."

+Picture of Luke Donald with the PGA Championship trophy by courtesy of (c)Getty Images.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 288 (4x72) Prize money in Euros
273 Luke Donald (England) 68 68 69 68 (750,000)
277 Paul Lawrie (Scotland) 69 71 71 66, Justin Rose (England) 67 71 69 70 (380,000 each)
280 Peter Lawrie (Ireland) 66 71 72 71 (225,00)
281 Branden Grace (South Africa) 69 69 73 70 (190,800)
282 Richard Sterne (South Africa) 71 68 72 71 (157,500)

SELECTED TOTALS
284 David Drysdale (Scotland) 66 70 68 70 (T10) (78,300)
288 Marc Warren (Scotland 68 76 72 72 (T27) (40,725)
291 Scott Jamieson (Scotland) 68 75 75 73(T43) (24,300)
302 Colin Montgomrie (Scotland) 69 74 78 81 (72nd) (6,747)

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BRUCE THOMSON WINS NORTH DISTRICT CH/SHIP PLAY-OFF

 Bruce Thomson (The Nairn) beat former Scotland international Ewan Forbes, the Inverness Golf Club secretary-manager, in a two-hole play-off for the North District championship over the Inverness course on Saturday.
It should have been a three-way play-off because Jeff Wright (Forres) also totalled 141 for the 36-hole competition but he had to leave early.
Thomson, pictured with the championship trophy by courtesy of Peter Abbott, birdied the first and parred the second while Forbes, who played for Scotland between 1996 and 2001, had pars at both holes.
Thomson's regulation rounds were 72 and 69, while Forbes scored 75 and 66. Wright shot 67 and 74.
Wright won the Murray Watt Trophy as the North District Under-21s' youth champion.

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 138 (2x69). CSS 70 71
141 Bruce Thomson (The Nairn) 72 69, Ewan Forbes (Inverness) 75 66, Jeff Wright (Forres)  67 74. Thomson bt Forbes in two-hole play-off. Wright unavailable for play-off.
142 Munro Ferries (Tain) 73 69, Bryan Fotheringham (Inverness) 68 74, Kyle Godsman (HOpeman) 77 65.
143 Neil McWilliam (Elgin) 72 71.
144 Tom Dingwall (Nairn Dunbar) 68 76
145 Jordan Milne (Elgin) 70 75
146 Douglas Thorburn (Reay) 71 75, Lewis Reid (Fortrose and Rosemarkie) 67 79.
147 Allan Cameron (Inverness) 71 76.
148 Jamie Whittet (Muir of Ord) 74 74, Chris Gaittens (Fortrose and Rosemarkie) 75 73
149 Cameron Kerr (Elgin) 75 74.
150 Kevin Thomson (Moray) 76 74, Darren Hexley (Inverness) 79 71, David Sanderson (Inverness) 72 78.
151 Laurie Chancellor (Inverness) 76 75.
152 David Grindell (Inverness) 75 77, Steven Paterson (Inverness) 74 78.
153 Robert McKerron (Forres) 78 75, David Joel (Inverness) 76 77
154 Lyle McAlpine (Royal Dornoch) 76 76, Ali Begg (Muir of Ord) 75 79.
155 Cameron Franssen (Inverness) 71 84, Rory Franssen (Inverness) 73 82.
156 Kieran MacKay (Inverness) 79 77.
158 Calum Neil (Loch Ness) 80 78
159 Andrew Kenyon (Inverness) 81 78, Ewan Barras (Loch Ness) 82 77.
160 Ross Proctor (Forres) 80 80
161 Peter Cameron (Fortrose and Rosemarkie) 85 76, Craig Black (Inverness) 80 81, Ray Stewart (Nairn Dunbar) 77 84.
162 Stuart Connell (Inverness) 74 88, Greg Bennett (Inverness) 84 78.
166 Ben Anderson (Inverness) 83 83.
LEADING YOUTHS CHAMPIONSHIP TOTALS
141 Jeff Wright (Forres) 67 74.
142 Kyle Godsman (Hopeman) 77 65.
144 Tom Dingwall (Nairn Dunbar) 68 76
145 Jordan Milne (Elgin) 70 75.
146 Lewis Reid (Fortrose and Rosemarkie) 67 79.
HANDICAP PRIZEWINNERS
139 Cameron Kerr (Elgin) (5) 70 69.
142 Jamie Whittet (Muir of Ord) (3) 71 71, David Grindell (Inverness) (5) 70 72.

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ROGER CHAPMAN LEADS US SENIOR PGA CHAMPIONSHIP BY FIVE STROKES

chapman-roger-mp-052612-576x324
Roger Chapman in action yesterday (Montana Pritchard/The PGA of America)

FROM THE US CHAMPIONS TOUR WEBSITE
Benton Harbour, Michigan
Kenya-born Englishman Roger Chapman, 53, began the US Senior PGA Championship third round tied with John Cook, but ended it with a five-shot lead, thanks to a 7-under 64. Cook settled for a 69 to drop into second as Chapman tied the tournament 54-hole scoring record at 199

SCOTWATCH: SANDY LYLE IS LYING T12 ON 211

Chapman finished the day at 14 under par. John Cook began the round tied with Chapman for the lead, but couldn't keep pace with the Englishman and settled for a 69 to drop into second place at Harbor Shores.
Chapman's 54-hole score of 199 tied the tournament record set by Sam Snead in 1973, although Snead was 17 under when he set the mark.
Steve Pate had a 67 to join 66-year-old Hale Irwin at 7 under. Irwin made a triple bogey on the par-3 fourth, but played well on the back nine and shot 69.
Chapman beat Padraig Harrington in a play-off to win a European Tour event in Brazil in 2000, and that's pretty much the highlight of his resume. He has never won on the Champions Tour, though he plays mostly on the European Senior Tour. He made the cut in all 11 of his Champions Tour starts last year, but didn't have a top-10 finish.
He'll have one more challenge this weekend the final round Sunday, when the temperature is expected to reach 90 degrees.
The 53-year-old Chapman came to Harbor Shores after tying for 16th a couple weekends ago at the Mallorca Open -- the European Senior Tour's lone event so far this season.
Chapman began to pull away from the field on the front nine Saturday. While Irwin was making a six on No. 4, Chapman rolled in his second birdie of the day to move to 9 under.
On the par-5 fifth, Chapman's second shot went into the rough to the left of the fairway. He calmly pitched out onto the green, giving himself a birdie putt pin high from about 25 feet, which he made.
Even his lone bogey was impressive in its own way. On the par-4 seventh, Chapman's drive went through the fairway, and he needed two hacks to get the ball out of some tall grass. But he was then able to pitch to within about 10 feet, and he made the putt to prevent further damage.
After making the turn at 9 under, Chapman birdied Nos. 10, 11 and 12 on his way to a 30 on the back nine. His iron play was superb, giving him birdie putts of 3 feet on No. 11 and about a foot on the par-4 14th. He made another 3-foot birdie putt on No. 16, then parred the last two holes.
Irwin shot a 66 on Friday to put himself in contention, and he would've had a similar round Saturday if not for trouble at No. 4. His tee shot missed to the left, where the green is protected by a wetland area. After going back to the drop zone, Irwin pitched onto the green, but then he three-putted from roughly the same distance as Chapman's birdie putt.
Play was delayed about three hours at the start of the third round on a wet morning.

WHAT ROGER HAS TO SAY ABOUT IT ...

By T.J. Auclair, PGA.com Interactive Producer

BENTON HARBOR, Mich. – England’s Roger Chapman has been playing golf since he was 10 years old. He turned pro in 1981 at the age of 21.
Forty-three years after he began playing and 32 years after he turned pro, the 53-year-old Chapman estimates that Saturday’s third round of the 73rd Senior PGA Championship presented by KitchenAid at Harbor Shores was “one of those days where I think it's the best iron play I've ever played in my career.”
That would explain the course-record-tying 7-under 64 that put Chapman at 14-under 199 through 54 holes, good for a commanding five-shot lead over John Cook with 18 holes left to play. Steve Pate and Hale Irwin are seven shots behind Chapman at 7 under.
“Funny enough I was having a bit of lunch with David Frost this morning and we said, aren't we so lucky?” said Chapman, whose 199 total ties the legendary Sam Snead for the best 54-hole mark in tournament history. “We’re 50 years old and more and still doing the sport that we have done for so long. I started when I was 10. I turned pro when I was 21. And to still go at 53, I’m absolutely delighted. We're very lucky.”
Interestingly, Chapman spent 18 months as a rules official on the European Tour after his full-time playing days in 2006.
“When I quit the main European Tour in about '06, I was asked whether I would be interested in being a rules official,” he said. “At the time I said no, I wanted to maybe try and do some company days and et cetera. But they were sort of few and far between. So the Tour asked me again and I did 18 months as a rules official, which was enjoyable. I really enjoyed the course set-up doing the tees and pins every day. The worst bit was sitting in the buggy for about 13 hours.”
Needless to say, he’s happy to be playing instead of officiating.Chapman has been on fire all week – he shot 68-67 in the first two rounds – but Saturday was extra special. He distanced himself from the pack, which was incredibly impressive for a guy who only has one other tournament appearance under his belt in 2012.
That appearance was on the European Senior Tour two weeks ago, where Chapman finished 16th in the Mallorca Open. The way things are going at Harbor Shores this week, even he is surprised by his play.
“I've been working hard at home and everything felt good at home, so two weeks ago when we played it was almost a case of sort of dusting off the cobwebs and getting some stroke play in and trying to focus on what you were doing,” he said. “And I played reasonable finished 16th, I think. So sort of dusted off the cobwebs. And coming out here I had no real expectations. But I knew that I was playing OK and everything, the first three rounds have gone really well for me.”
Chapman made birdies early and often in the third round, beginning at the par-3 second, where he holed a 10-foot putt, the first of three birdies in four holes. He made a bogey at the par-4 seventh after finding trouble in the rough when his tee shot crept just through the fairway, but he got it back quickly at No. 10, the start of a special, back-nine 5-under-par 30.
At the 11th hole, Chapman set up a short birdie with a wedge-shot approach to three feet. He dropped a 10-footer for birdie at No. 12, stuffed a 6-iron to a foot at No. 14 and grabbed his last birdie of the day at No. 16, tapping in a three-footer after a spectacular 8-iron approach.
While Chapman’s lead will certainly be difficult for any other player to overcome, this isn’t a lock just yet.In 16 full seasons as a member of the European Tour, Chapman won just once at the 2000 Brazil Rio De Janeiro 500 Years Open. He defeated Padraig Harrington in a playoff there.
He was close a bunch of other times, but has nothing more to show for his efforts.
“I think I had six seconds on the European Tour,” Chapman said. “I lost a couple of playoffs and I had tournaments that were taken away from me. I was in the clubhouse and then the guy behind I think in Morocco finished birdie-eagle-par to beat me by one. I should have won more than I did, I think I've … it's something like 16, 15 or 16 times I finished second around the world. So yeah, three times in second on the Senior Tour, the European Senior Tour. So always a bridesmaid at the moment.”
Chapman’s in great position to change all that on Sunday.

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IT'S DUFNER v JOHNSON FOR CROWNE PLAZA INVITATIONAL PLAID JACKET

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
FORT WORTH, Texas -- Jason Dufner and Zach Johnson have set up what will basically be a match-play final round for the winner's plaid jacket in the Crowne Plaza Invitational at Colonial.
will be Dufner, whose only two PGA TOUR victories came in the last four weeks, against the 2007 Masters champion who got the last of his seven wins two years ago at Hogan's Alley.
"It seems like one of us is either going to win or finish second," Dufner said after his 4-under 66 in the third round Saturday.
After two bogeys the previous three holes, Dufner matched playing competitor Johnson's birdie putt on the 17th hole and overcame a wayward final tee shot to save par and keep the lead.
Dufner's 15-under 195 total put him a stroke ahead of Johnson, who shot 65. Tom Gillis was a distant third at 7 under after a 69.
"I really wasn't aware of (the separation) until I looked at the board on 13. It was more than I anticipated," Johnson said.
"It seemed like I didn't hear too many roars in front of us, so that's a telling sign. ... I still have 18 holes and that's my focus. I totally anticipate Dufner to keep doing what he's doing. There's not a whole lot going on that's wrong."
Dufner, the winner last week in the HP Byron Nelson Championship about 30 miles away, is trying to win for the third time in his last four starts. He also is trying to do something only Ben Hogan has done.
Hogan, Dufner's hero, is the only player to win both PGA TOUR events in the Dallas-Fort Worth area in the same year. When he did it in 1946, they weren't played in consecutive weeks.
The last player to win in consecutive weeks on the PGA TOUR was Tiger Woods in 2009. Nobody won more than two tournaments last season.
Like Johnson, who wore a plaid-collared shirt Saturday, the first time Dufner realized the gap from everyone else had widened was when he saw that scoreboard at 156-yard 13th hole. And he had a three-stroke lead then.
"From that point on I kind of knew that ... we are going to be battling it out in kind of a unique situation," Dufner said. "The leaderboards here most of the year have been pretty packed and you got a lot of guys having a chance to win the title the last nine holes."
Dufner avoided a playoff at the Nelson with a 25-foot birdie on the 72nd hole. The victory pushed Dufner to the top spot in the FedExCup standings for the first time in his career. He has led or shared the lead after 12 of his last 35 rounds, including five of the last seven.
After bogeys at Nos. 14 and 16, Dufner's approach at the 379-yard 17th rolled about 8 feet from the flag.
Johnson, within a stroke of the lead after a 17-foot birdie at the par-3 16th, followed Dufner at No. 17 with a shot to the same spot -- his ball up and stopped against the one already on the green.  After a rules official sorted out the marks, Johnson curled in a birdie putt. Dufner then did the same to keep his lead.
When his final tee shot of the day went way left, closer to the 10th fairway than the 18th, Dufner got his next shot on the green and two-putted from 68 feet to save par.
Before winning the Zurich Classic of New Orleans on April 29, the 35-year-old Dufner was winless in his previous 163 US PGA Tour starts. He then took a week off to get married, returned to play at The Players Championship before winning the Nelson.
Bo Van Pelt had his streak of 13 consecutive sub-par rounds at Hogan's Alley end with a 71. But he was fourth at 204, one ahead of John Huh and Ryan Palmer.
When Dufner and Johnson completed their first nine holes, they were tied at 13 under and had a five-stroke lead on the rest of the field. Dufner then had three straight birdies.
Dufner made a 20-foot birdie putt at the 386-yard 10th hole, where Johnson had his first two-putt of the round -- from nearly 51 feet -- to save par.
Dufner had a streak of 38 consecutive bogey-free holes snapped at the 449-yard 14th when he drove into the rough then missed the green with the second shot. But Johnson had his first three-putt of the tournament at the same hole, from 60 feet after his approach from a fairway bunker.
At No. 15, Johnson's second shot settled into a grassy clump only inches from rolling over a ledge into a ditch. With his feet together to keep from falling over himself, Johnson's pitch from about 81 feet rolled only inches from the cup to set up a tap-in par-saver.
Johnson needed only eight putts for a 31 on the front nine, though some of those putts were just to save par since he hit just three of those greens in regulation.
"Today was a battle as far as my ball-striking. With the exception one lucky shot on 15, I didn't put myself in terrible position," Johnson said. "I just scored. I think Dufner played better than I did, but I scored."
Divots: Masters runner-up (and past British Open champion) Louis Oosthuizen opened his third round with four consecutive birdies. He was in a group of seven players tied for seventh, but 11 strokes behind Dufner. .. That group at 206 includes Kelly Kraft, the 2011 U.S. Amateur who turned pro after the Masters. The former SMU player was 6 under through his first eight holes and played even the rest of the round. ... Vijay Singh, who got the last of his 34 US PGA Tour wins four years ago, was 4 under through six holes Saturday. He had four consecutive bogeys on the back nine.

LEADING THIRD ROUND TOTALS
Par 210 (3x70). Temperature 80degrees F
Players from US unless stated
195 Jason Dufner 65 64 66
196 Zach Johnson 64 67 65
203 Tom Gillis 65 69 69
204 Bo Van Pelt 69 6471
205 John Huh 70 66 69, Ryan Palmer 68 67 70
206 Kelly Kraft 71 71 64, Jonas Blixt (Sweden) 73 67 66, Jim Furyk 69 69 68, Louis Oosthuizen (South Africa) 71 67 68, Ryan Moore 67 69 70, Rickie Fowler 68 68 70, Tommy Gainey 66 67 73

SELECTED SCORES
208 Greg Owen (England) 69 68 71.
210 Sergio Garcia (Spain) 66 73 71 (T34)
215 Gary Christian (England) 70 73 72 (T70)

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