Tuesday, December 10, 2013

FOX SETS THE PACE IN SCOTLAND TITLE DEFENCE ON ALGARVE

Scotland, spearheaded by Graham Fox made a satisfactory start to their defence of the PGAs of Europe international team title at Palmares on the Algarve today (Tuesday).
Fox, pictured, led the individual standings with a par 72, a great score in the high winds and despite finishing with a double bogey.
He had marked up an eagle at the 17th.
 Team-mates David Orr and Greg McBain had scores of 78 and 79 respectively. With only two of a team's three individual scores to count daily, McBain's score was discarded.
At the end of the first day, Scotland were lying third on 150, one shot behind joint leaders Netherlands and Denmark.
LEADING INDIVIDUAL SCORES
Par 72
72 Graham Fox (Sco)
73 Ralph Miller (Ned), Jacob Nordesgaard (Den)
74 Magnus Atlevi (Swe), Jose Lara (Spa).
75 Justin Brink (Austria), Emanuele Canonica (Italy), Benjamin Nicolay (France).
76 Knut Schiager (Norway), Peer Martin (Germany), Robin Swan (Netherlands), Michiel Vyncke (Belgium), Morten Hedegaard (Denmark), Brendon McGovern (Ireland), Thomas Jusko (Slovakia).

SELECTED OTHER SCORES
77 Cian McNamara (Ireland), Lee Rooke (Wales) (T16)
78 David Orr (Scotland), Nick Brennan (England) (T20)
79 Greg McBain (Scotland), Jon Bevan (Wales), Stuart Runcie (Wales) (T25).
80 David Greenwood (England) (T36)
81 John Kelly (Ireland) (T42)
85 David Callaway (England) 64th.
Field of 78 playes.
 
LEADING TEAM TOTALS
149 Netherlands, Denmark
150 Scotland
153 Sweden, Spain,France, Ireland
154 Italy
155 Portugal
156 Wales, Austria 
157 Germany, South Africa, Belgium.
158 England  

BRUTAL WIND BLOWS SCORES SKY HIGH ON THE ALGARVE

FROM THE PGAs OF EUROPE WEBSITE

Brutal, tough and a struggle were some of the more restrained reactions at the end of a wind-ravaged opening round of The PGAs of Europe International Team Championship on Portugal’s Algarve.

Wind-fuelled turbulence on the adjacent Mediterranean was replicated on the Alvor Course at the Onyria Palmares Beach and Golf Resort and reflected by the scores after the first of four rounds.
The tournament is supported by Glenmuir, the Associaçäo Turismo do Algarve and Ryder Cup European Development Trust and that Holland and Denmark head the 26-strong field with a score of five-over is testament to the havoc wrought by Mother Nature.
Likewise the fact that Scotland, the defending champions who lie third on six-over, posted an opening return of seven-under at the same venue 12 months ago.
PGAs of Europe ITC - Scotland - Graham FoxCaptained again by David Orr, the Scottish trio was indebted to one of its two new members – Graham Fox (picture right) – for an impressive start.
His level par round of 72 was the best of the day. Nevertheless Fox, who is attached to Clydeway Golf, Glasgow, was left to rue what might have been after a double bogey at the final hole. And that that followed an eagle at the par five 17th only served to compound his frustration.
“It was a good start but the double bogey was a real disappointment,” he said. “It was pretty tough out there – we were having to take four irons for shots of 160 yards.”
Similarly, Ralph Miller (pictured above) and Jacob Nordestgaard, the key contributors for Holland and Denmark respectively, were left to ponder ifs, buts and maybes.
Miller, the Dutch-based English PGA Professional, was two-under at the turn but, with the wind even more malevolent on the back nine, ended what he described as a ‘brutal’ round one-over.
PGAs of Europe - ITC - Denmark - Jacob NordestgaardNordestgaard (pictured left), also finished one-over after a round that featured five birdies but was pock-marked with a double and four single bogeys.
He, too, found the going difficult and said: “Every hole was a real struggle. Thankfully I putted well and my iron play was good. It needed to be in those conditions.”
Nordestgaard, who is making his first appearance in a tournament which his nation has yet to win, was supported by Morten Hedergaard. He completed his round in four-over, the same as Holland’s Robin Swane.
Fox, meanwhile, was supported by Orr who finished on six-over, a round that ensured a three-stroke advantage over France, Ireland, Spain and Sweden who share fourth place.
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