Sunday, June 23, 2013

RUSSELL KNOX (tied with Justin Rose) HAS BEST US TOUR FINISH OF YEAR SO FAR

Things are looking up for Russell Knox at last on the US PGA Tour.
The Florida-based, Inverness-born player tied with new US Open champion Justin Rose as the leading European player in the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands, Cromwell in the state of Connecticut.

Russell, pictured, shot his best four rounds of the season - 69, 67, 69 and 69  for a six-under-par total of 274 over the par-70 course.
Rose matched that with scores of 67, 68, 68 and 71.
It was Knox's first top 25 finish on the US PGA Tour This season and he has now earned $222,807 from eight starts. He has jumped up from 181st to 159th on the Tour money list.
Padraig Harrington and Lee Westwood had scores so high you would have to think they had lost interest long before the finish.
The Irishman shot an 80 for four-over-par 284 which put him almost bottom of the heap in joint 72nd place. His earlier rounds were 68, 66 and 72. 
Harrington, who was using a long-handled putter earlier in the tournament, had a double bogey 7 at the 15th and eight bogeys - no birdies - in his final. Obviously, all is not well with Padraig.
The man who is bottom of the heap is England's Lee Westwood with scores of 67, 73,69 and 78 for last place among the 74 qualifiers for the last two rounds. 

SCROLL DOWN FOR THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE 
SUMMARY OF THE FINAL DAY 


LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 280 (4x70)
Players from US unless stated 
268 Ken Duke 69 68 65 66 beat Chris Stroud 66 69 66 67 at second hole of sudden-death play-off. 
269 Graham DeLaet (Canada) 65 70 65 69
270 Bubba Watson 63 67 70 70 

271 Webb Simpson 66 69 72 65, J J Henry 68 67 68 68
272 Ryan Moore 68 70 66 68

SELECTED TOTALS
274 Russell Knox (Scotland) 69 67 69 69, Justin Rose (England) 67 68 68 71 (T13)
276 Gary Christian (England) 71 69, Greg Owen (England) 70 69 69 69 (T24).
277 Brian Davis (England) 73 67 66 72 (T36)
278 Ian Poulter (England) 73 66 67 72 (T42)
284 Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 68 66 72 80 (T72)
287 Lee Westwood (England) 67 73 69 78 (last of 74).

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

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KEN DUKE SCORES FIRST US TOUR WIN
IN 187 STARTS AFTER PLAY-OFF


REPORT FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
CROMWELL, Connecticut -- Ken Duke needed 187 starts on the US PGA Tour to get his first win, securing it at a tournament that is building a reputation for such breakthroughs. 
The 44-year-old made a 2-foot birdie putt on the second play-off hole Sunday to beat Chris Stroud at the Travelers Championship.
Duke earned 500 FedExCup points for the win and moved to 20th in the standings.
Stroud, who also was looking for his first title, had chipped in from 51 feet on the 18th hole, to get to 12 under par and force the playoff.
But Duke made the better approach shot on the second extra hole, bouncing his ball in front of the flag and rolling it close.
"Yeah, it's been a long time," said Duke, who turned pro in 1994." I've been on the Canadian Tour, the mini tours, Asian Tour, South American Tour, all of them; Web.com, and it's just great to be a part of this big family on the US PGA Tour. 
Duke, who came in ranked 144th in the world, is the sixth golfer in eight years to get his first US PGA Tourwin here, joining J.J. Henry (2006), Hunter Mahan (2007), Bubba Watson (2010), Fredrik Jacobsen (2011) and Marc Leishman last year.
Canadian Graham DeLaet finished a stroke back in third place with a 269. Watson finished fourth, two shots behind, after making a 6 on the par-3 16th hole.
"You gotta believe in yourself in everything you do," Duke said. "That's why those guys at the top are winning week in, week out because they believe they can do it. It's kind of one of those things once you finally do it it might come easier the next time. That's kind of the way I feel." 
Duke wouldn't have been in position to win at all had luck not intervened on the 10th hole, when his ball ricocheted off a tree and onto the green to about 5 feet from the pin, allowing him to make birdie After a 17-foot birdie putt on the next hole, he made a 45-footer on the 13th hole, a shot that looked as though it might go past the hole to the right, before falling in.He battled Watson for the lead down the back nine, until the former Masters champion found trouble on the 16th. Watson put his drive into the water and put his next shot over the green.
"The wind affected the first shot, and the wind didn't affect the next shot," Watson said. "I flew it 3 feet past the hole, which you can't do right now because the greens are so firm."
Duke looked as though he had the tournament sewn up after saving par on 18, despite a tee shot that went well right and onto a hill, and a second shot that went just over the green. He used a putter to put the ball within 2 feet, then sank the putt as the crowd roared for what they thought was a winning shot.
It looked even more secure when Stroud's second shot hit near the stick, but then rolled well off the green. That just set up the dramatic chip shot.
Stroud hit his tee shot over the cart path and was 94 yards from the hole on the first playoff hole, while Duke's first shot jumped out of a fairway bunker and into the rough.
Duke bounced his second shot onto the green. Stroud's went into a greenside bunker.
Stroud chipped to 8 feet but had to watch as Duke almost sank a long putt that would have ended it.
The two both struck the ball well on the second playoff hole, but Stroud missed a 25-foot birdie putt, and Duke made his short putt.
"I had three shots from 94 yards on 18, the exact same yardage, and I could not figure out a way to stop that ball," Stroud said. "Regulation, luckily, I chipped it in."
Watson, Charley Hoffman and DeLaet began the day tied for the lead, but 21 other players were within five strokes.
Webb Simpson shot a 65 to finish at 271, then headed home immediately after his round despite being just a stroke behind the leaders at the time. He said he knew the score wouldn't be good enough to win.
"I'm itching to get to my family, so I'm going to head to the airport," he said.
Justin Rose followed his U.S. Open win by shooting 6 under for this tournament. He was in contention, with two birdies on his first seven holes, but didn't get another until the final hole and made three bogeys. He said fatigue was a factor.
"I'm still able to put one foot in front of the other," he said. "I still feel OK, but my guess is there's just a little bit of sharpness that I might be lacking."
No player has gone back-to-back after capturing the U.S. Open since 1997, when Ernie Els won the Buick Classic at the Westchester Country Club in New York.
Rose plans to play in the AT and T National at Congressional before taking two weeks off to prepare for the Open at Muirfield.
DeLaet a native of, Weyburn, Saskatchewan, said his thoughts this week have been with the people of Alberta, where widespread flooding is blamed for at least three deaths and forced thousands to evacuate.
He had the words "For Alberta" written on his cap Sunday.
The 2009 PGA TOUR Canada player of the year pledged to donate $1,000 for every birdie he made to help the relief efforts.
PGA TOUR Canada, a bank and a Canadian businessman all agreed to match the donation. He finished with three birdies on Sunday and nine for the weekend.
"Hopefully it puts a small dent in what they need," he said. "But our hearts are still with them."

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