Saturday, November 24, 2012

wEST KILBRIDE AWGA FIXTURE REARRANGED FOR JANUARY 22

The Ayrshire Winter Golf Association fixture at West Kilbride that was cancelled last Tuesday, November 20th has been rescheduled for January 22.
Gerry Smith

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GEORGE MURRAY MAKES GOOD START TO EUROPEAN TOUR Q SCHOOL FINAL IN SPAIN

                                  GEORGE MURRAY IN ACTION

FROM EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS 
 Argentina’s Estanislao Goya made light work of testing conditions in northern Spain to claim a two shot lead following the first round at the Qualifying School Final Stage at PGA Catalunya Resort.
 After a steady, if unspectacular, front nine on the resort’s 6,610-yard par 70 Tour Course on which Goya made two birdies and a bogey to turn in 34, the 24 year old from Cordoba made a remarkable eagle on the par five tenth – a strike that proved the fillip for a highly impressive back nine in an increasingly influential wind that was gusting up to 25 miles per hour at times,
Goya, who won the 2009 Madeira Islands Open – Portugal in his first of four successive years in the top tier of European golf, pulled his drive way left at the 491yd par five tenth, leaving a difficult approach to the green. 
An outstanding approach followed – an effort that finished at the back of the green – before the former Challenge Tour graduate rolled in a monstrous eagle putt from at least 60 feet to light the blue touch paper on his homeward nine. 
A further birdie followed shortly after at the 13th hole before another sizeable birdie putt – this time of around 25ft – at the short 16th preceded a perfect finale as Goya capped off a fine round with a sixth birdie of the day at the 18th.
“I played very nicely today, didn’t miss many shots and managed to hole some putts so it was very good,” said Goya, who finished just four places away from retaining his European Tour card after finishing in 123rd place in The Race to Dubai.
 
“The eagle was definitely a highlight because of what led to it so it was a real boost at that time. That and the long one at 16 were two putts that gave me a lot of confidence. But overall I just played very nicely, I hit a lot of fairways and greens which is obviously the main thing here.”

After finishing 94th, 99th and 98th in his previous three seasons on The European Tour after graduating from the Challenge Tour in 2008, Goya made a sound start to the 2012 season with a tied sixth finish  in the Avantha Masters in February and a tied ninth place at the Sicilian Open in April. 

However, a barren run of eight missed cuts in 12 events in the middle of year saw him slip down the Rankings and narrowly miss out on keeping his card despite a valiant effort at the SA Open Championship last week. 

Goya, though, is keen to take the positives from his performance in South Africa, and is approaching the Qualifying School challenge with refreshing optimism. He reflected: 

“To be honest I just didn’t get the right tournaments; I couldn’t get into the last tournaments in Singapore or Hong Kong but I played very nicely in South Africa and was just two strokes too short.

“I didn’t putt very well, though - I averaged 32 putts for the week and didn’t get the job done but it did help with my confidence.  but I’m still playing well so I’m confident and feel good for the next five rounds.”

On a day when course co-designer, European Tour winner and Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors, Angel Gallardo remarked, “Anything that is par or better on the Stadium Course today is muy, muy bien,” Mikael Lundberg rode the ever-strengthening wind to sign for a superb four under par 68 on the brutal Stadium layout to lie second alongside Scotland’s George Murray.

The Swede, who lives with his family just 60 miles south of PGA Catalunya Resort in the region’s capital of Barcelona, got off to the perfect start in his eighth appearance in the Final Stage with a birdie at the first hole, his first of six on a round that was only slightly soured by a three-putt bogey – his second dropped shot of the day – on the 18th to finish.

“I don’t set goals at something like this; you just play and try to stay as relaxed as possible,” said Lundberg, who was one of only seven players out of 78 to finish under par for the day on the Stadium Course. 

“You don’t want to be here but now I am I just have to make the best of it. My game hasn’t been that good the last month or so, so I’m just happy it’s starting to come together now. 

“It was very tough out there, but I played really solidly and made a few good putts at the beginning and then holed my bunker shot on the 11th. It was unfortunate the way I finished, but overall it was a good round and I’m in a good position.” 

Murray, who finished the 2011 season in 81st place in The Race to Dubai thanks largely to a tied third place finish in the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, fired an excellent 66 on the Tour Course to take a share of second place in his first appearance at the Final Stage since 2009. 

The Anstruther man fired five birdies and  one bogey but after finishing the season 155th in the Rankings, Murray stressed the need for perspective so early in the marathon contest in Spain. 

“It’s a nice start, it was very windy at times so it wasn’t easy at all out there,” he said. “I got off to a good start with a regulation birdie at my first, the tenth, then I picked up another shot on the 12th. “I got lucky on the 18th, where my drive could easily have bounced out of bounds but it just stayed in bounds. 

"So that was a lucky break, and I made the most of it with three more birdies on my back nine.

“I can’t really put my finger on where it’s gone wrong for me this season, I just haven’t really got going, but hopefully I’ve turned a bit of a corner today. There’s obviously still a long way to go though, so I’m not going to get carried away just yet.” 

Gary Orr is lying second in the Scotland "hit parade" with a three-under 67 over the shorter course. And Jamie McLeary also got under par with a 69 at the Tour Course. 

The Scots did not fare so well over the par-72 course which, at 7,333yd is about 700yd longer than the Tour Course. In the wind that was blowing, that difference in length was reflected in the scores. 

A good first round is not enough to win a player one of the 25 European Tour cards that will be handed out after six rounds but a bad opening score can
leave a man so far behind that he never catches up

Wallace Booth (Comrie) with a 77 and Andrew McArthur (Windyhill) with an 80 are in the danger zone already. They need to get really good second-round scores to keep alive their hopes and their self-confidence.

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DUBAI SUNDAY SHOOTOUT BETWEEN LUKE DONALD AND RORY McILROY

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
The DP World Tour CChampionship looks set for a fitting finale with World Number One Rory McIlroy and World Number Two Luke Donald going head-to-head on Sunday, locked in joint leadership at 17 under par.
England’s Donald extended his bogey free run at Jumeirah Golf Estates’ Earth Course to 100 holes with his 66 – the last time he dropped a shot at this venue coming at the eighth hole in the second round a year ago – as he reached 199 at the 54-hole mark.
While that was enough to shake off the remainder of the field, McIlroy was able to keep pace with 66 that started with a bogey at the first but was followed by five birdies and an eagle at the long 14th.
The chasing pack is headed, three strokes off the pace,  by South African Major Champions Charl Schwartzel and Louis Oosthuizen on 14 under, with another South African, four-time European Tour winner Branden Grace, and Dutchman Joost Luiten two shots further back.
 But it is the final group on the final day of The European Tour season that will provide the talking point as the two best players on the planet fight for the €1,041,429 winner's cheque with their contrasting styles.
While Donald has pummelled most of the field into submission with his unerring consistency – Jesper Parnevik in 1995 was the last player to win an event without a bogey - McIlroy found on the back nine the sort of inspiration reserved only for the game’s greats.
Everybody else looks too far back given the pedigree of the leaders.
Told of his century of holes without a bogey Donald said: "I'm not sure I can believe that.
"That's pretty good. I guess that's my style - I don't make too many mistakes.
"It's going to be fun - great for the crowd and everyone watching around the world. Hopefully we can make some birdies."
Donald played the front nine much the better, a four-birdie 32 compared to McIlroy's 35 which contained an opening bogey after he drove into a bunker, but then birdies at the third and sixth.
It was on the inward half that the 23 year old from Hollywood near Belfast has really prospered all week, though, and after picking up more shots on the 11th and 12th he found the green in two at the long 14th and holed an eagle putt of around 30 feet.
Donald had needed to sink a ten footer just for birdie there after twice finding the left-hand rough and he added another at the par five last after pitching to six feet before McIlroy, in rough off the tee, matched it with a putt of similar distance.
Scot Marc Warren, joint halfway leader with Donald and McIlroy, managed only a 72 to remain 11 under, his troubles starting when he pulled his drive down the long second into bushes, took a penalty drop and ran up a bogey 6.
Warren is joint seventh on 205. Richie Ramsay lost ground with a 73 for 208 and a share of 21st place.

Scott Jamieson had a 72 for 209, Stephen Gallacher a 72 for 210 and Paul Lawrie a 70 - his best so far - for a share of 44th palce on 213.
David Drysdale brings up the rear for the Scots with a 70 - also his best - for joint 51st place on one-under-par 213.
McIlroy achieved his score despite another rough night with a fever.
"I woke up at four and was not feeling great, but I guess the adrenaline keeps you going when playing," he said.
Told about Donald's run without a bogey he smiled and replied: "He must be due one."
“I think everyone is looking forward to the Number One and Number Two duel tomorrow, and that's the way it's panned out. 
“I know I'm excited about it, and I'm sure a lot of people are. It will be a great way to finish the 2012 European Tour season.”

DP WORLD TOUR CHAMPIONSHIP
DUBAI

THIRD-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 216 (3x72)
199 Luke Donald (England) 65 68 66, Rory McIlroy (Northern Ireland) 66 67 66
202 Charl Schwartzel (South Africa) 68 67 72, Louis Oosthuizen (South Africa) 67 67 68
204 Joost Lutten (Netherlands) 68 68 67, Branden Grace (South Afirca) 69 65 70]
205 Romain Wattel (France) 70 68 67, George Coetzee (South Africa) 71 67 67, Thongchai Jaidee (Thailand) 68 68 68, Jamie Doaldsnh (Wales) 68 68 69, Henrik Stenson (Sweden) 68 68 69, Marc Warren (Scotland) 66 69 73 (T7)

OTHER SCOTS' SCORES
208 Richie Ramsay 67 68 73 (T210
209 Scott Jamieson 68 69 72 (T25)
210 Stephen Gallacher 68 70 72 (T31)
213 Paul Lawrie 71 72 70 (T44)
215 David Drysdale 71 74 70 (T51)    
 

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

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MACAULAY IN FINE FETTLE FOR EUROPEAN TOUR Q SCHOOL FINAL TEST

FROM THE HERALDSCOTLAND WEBSITE

'I'm looking forward to it," said Callum Macaulay as he prepared for the European Tour qualifying school final teeing off at PGA Catalunya, Girona today.



Some would say expressing enthusiasm for this anguish-laden six-round scramble is a bit like harbouring a fondness for eye surgery without anaesthesia, but Macaulay is made of sterner stuff.
While many in the field will be going into the event, which tees off today, with waning morale having slipped off the main tour, Macaulay is in fine fettle after progressing through stage two of the process in third place at the El Valle resort earlier this month. With a strong card for the Challenge Tour tucked safely in his back pocket, the former Scottish Amateur champion has nothing to lose and everything to gain in north east Spain.
Four years ago, during a glittering campaign in the unpaid ranks in which he won the national matchplay championship and the Eisenhower Trophy with his Scotland team-mates Wallace Booth and Gavin Dear, Macaulay (pictured below) ended the season on the ultimate high by securing a place on the European circuit in the Q school final.


His rookie year in 2009, which was burnished by a second-place finish in the Madeira Islands Open, ended with him narrowly losing his place at the top table and he has been trying to get back there ever since. 
"I have always thought that if you win your way through second stage you are going to be in a better frame of mind than coming there having lost your card on the main tour," said Macaulay, who will be making his fourth appearance in the final stage at PGA Catalunya. 
"The only time I got my card, which was the first time, I didn't feel any nerves at all. That's probably because I had nothing to lose.
"It's tough in terms of having to play well over six rounds but I wouldn't say it's tough endurance-wise, as there are guys in their 70s who will play golf six days in a row. I think the toughest test is the mental side."
Having started the Challenge Tour season with a tie for third in India in January, Macaulay went off the boil during the peak months of the campaign and a run of six missed cuts in eight events hindered his promotion push.
"Having had a look at my results over the past couple of years, I've noticed that I've had quite a dip in form in the middle of the season," he said. "There can be as many as 12 events in a row and it's hard for me to leave one off my schedule as I don't like the thought of sitting in the house and worrying about people passing me on the money list. I've tried to play every week and, in hindsight, I think that's been too many. When you get on a bad run it's difficult to get out of it.
"I was starting to think something was blatantly wrong and I think I'm going to have to look at my scheduling differently in the future. I feel I'm good enough to be on the European Tour and think I've spent enough time now on the Challenge Tour. I've played these Q school courses umpteen times now and know what I need to do."
Macaulay will be one of nine Scots involved in the scrap for 25 tour cards on offer. Alastair Forsyth, George Murray and Gary Orr, who all dropped off the main circuit, will be aiming for an instant return while Macaulay's former amateur team-mate Booth, who earned promotion to the Challenge Tour through the PGA EuroPro Tour rankings, tees up in the final for the first time. 
Raymond Russell, Jamie McLeary, Andrew McArthur and Scott Drummond are also steeling themselves for this golfing dogfight.

TO VIEW THE SCORES LATER TODAY

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MARK BROWN LEADS BY THREE SHOTS IN NEW ZEALAND OPEN

FROM THE PGA OF AUSTRALIA WEBSITE
Mark Brown is in pole position to break a nine-year Kiwi drought at the New Zealand Open, forging a three-stroke lead thanks to a six-under 66 third round  – the equal lowest round of the day.
Brown was tied for 17th at the 36-hole mark but made the most of conditions to stand alone atop the leaderboard on five under.
The 37-year-old from Wellington has long dreamed of lifting the Brodie Breeze Trophy and the Clearwater Resort in Christchurch could be the place he finally collects it.
Mahal Pearce was the last Kiwi to win the event, in 2003 at Middlemore, and it is now upon Brown's shoulders to ensure the drought does not live on another year.
His nearest chasers are a pair of Australians - Peter Wilson and teenage amateur Jake Higginbottam - who are at two under the card.
Kiwi Michael Hendry joins Australians Peter O'Malley, Craig Hancock and Steven Jeffress in a share of fourth place on one under.
Hendry had been in pole position, along with Brown, at five-under for the tournament but hit the skids halfway through his round.
Both he and Brown were six-under through 10 holes on Saturday and while the latter held firm, Hendry blew up to card a two-under par 70.

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

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JIMENEZ SLAMS SPANISH GOLF FEDERATION FOR LACK OF SUPPORT

FROM THE AOL.COM WEBSITE
Miguel Angel Jimenez has hit out at the Spanish Golf Federation for failing to provide any backing in his attempt to keep the Andalucia Open on the European Tour schedule. 
Jimenez, who landed his 19th tour title when he won last week's Hong Kong Open, has been the Andalucia Open's tournament promoter since 2007. The event is not listed on the schedule for 2013 but the 48-year-old told Reuters in an interview in Dubai that he was doing everything he could to keep it going and was getting no support from Spanish federation chief Gonzaga Escauriaza. 
"I haven't had any help at all from the federation," said Jimenez after carding a one-under-par 71 for a two-under tally of 142 at the DP World Tour Championship.
"I ask him every year for help and he always says he can't. The Spanish federation don't try at all to help with my tournament."
Spain hosted seven tournaments two years ago and was considered the jewel in the European Tour crown.
However, the economic crisis in the Iberian nation has had a profound effect on top-level golf with sponsors disappearing and prize funds being withdrawn.
The Andalucia Open, Mallorca Open, Castello Masters in Valencia, Madrid Masters and Andalucia Masters have all fallen by the wayside while the World Match Play will shift to Bulgaria next year - leaving the Spanish Open to fly the flag on its own in April.
"The thing that offends me is I don't get enough from the administration to help me with my tournament," added Jimenez, one of the tour's great characters who is a lover of fine wines and enjoys puffing on a Havana cigar on the course.
"I understand we are having a hard time in Spain but I'm trying to do something for the players, something for the tour, and I need some support.
"My tournament has cost me a huge amount of money over the years but I want to be very clear that I haven't received any help from the federation. I asked him (Ezcauriaza) and he said 'no'."
World number 59 Jimenez, who became the oldest player to win on the tour when he lifted the Hong Kong Open trophy aloft last Sunday, said he was still hopeful of bringing the Andalucia Open back to life.
"I'm trying to put the tournament on," he explained. "If I get the money I will put it on, if I don't get the money I can't put it on - it's impossible.
"I've got confidence that I will get some sponsorship. I'm not sure I will get enough but I will try."
In Jimenez's opinion the best way to get out of a recession is to invest.
"We have problems in European golf at the moment, there are less tournaments held on the continent every year, not just in Spain," he said.
"Every community wants to improve itself and it is sad when you start cutting and rationalising money. When you start to cut investments people suffer.
"It doesn't matter whether it's golf or something else, when you are in the mood to cut money from things you are cutting jobs and everything," added Jimenez, one of Jose Maria Olazabal's assistant captains at the Ryder Cup in September.
"We are going through a bad recession in Spain but the less you invest the more recession you will have - simple. You need to spend money."
The Spanish Golf Federation administers amateur and professional golf, as do most Continental federations.

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