Sunday, January 13, 2013

ROOKIE RUSSELL HENLEY WINS SONY OPEN IN HAWAII

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
By Wire reports, PGATOUR.COM 
HONOLULU -- Russell Henley only felt like a rookie at the Sony Open in Hawaii. He sure didn't play like one.

Henley, pictured with the trophy by courtesy of Getty Images(c), was so nervous Sunday afternoon that he couldn't feel his arms and legs, and everything around him seemed to be moving at warp speed.
SONY OPEN

Only when the 23-year-old (and nine months), who played in the losing US Walker Cup at Royal Aberdeen in 2011, finished his record-setting performance with one last birdie did he realise what happened. And even then, he didn't know what to say.
Henley, who made two prior starts on the US PGA Tour as an amateur, became the first player in 12 years to win in his debut as a Tour rookie member.
He recorded the third-best score for a 72-hole tournament in US Tour history, and a record score at the Sony Open in Hawaii by four shots en route to tying Dustin Johnson atop the FedExCup standings with 500 points.
Henley finished with five straight birdies -- only one of them inside 10 feet -- for a 29 on the back nine and a 7-under 63, the lowest finish by a Sony Open winner. His cash prize amounted to $1,008,000.
And yes, he has a tee time reserved for him at the Masters in April.
"I'm pretty speechless," Henley said. "I was trying not to think about Augusta out there because I just kept telling myself, `This is a long year, you're going to play this game a long time, and be patient, it doesn't have to happen now.' Everything I could to psyche myself out of thinking about winning. It worked."
The back nine was simply surreal.
Henley won by three shots from South African Tim Clark, who birdied seven of his last 11 holes and still made up only one shot on the rookie from Georgia.
"When you get up close and watch a guy play ... if that's how he putts all the time, whew! It's over," Clark said.
And it was.
Tied for the lead with fellow rookie Scott Langley to start the final round, Henley seized control with a birdie on the opening hole and then poured it on at the end.
Henley had a two-shot lead with seven holes to play when he calmly sank a 10-foot par putt on the 12th, and he began to pull away with a 45-foot birdie putt on the 14th.
When the rookie rolled in an 18-foot birdie putt on the 17th to stay three shots ahead, Clark started laughing. There wasn't anything else he could do.
"He just never seemed to put a foot wrong, and when he did, he made those par putts," Clark said. "That's when you know a guy is comfortable, when he's making those 8- to 10-footer for par. But I still got on the 15th hole and said, `Well, let's finish with four birdies and see what happens.' And sure enough, he birdied the last four, too. When a guy plays that well and beats you, you just have to be happy for them." 
Henley finished at 24-under 256, breaking by four shots the Sony Open scoring record held by Brad Faxon in 2001 and John Huston in 1998. It was the third-lowest score for a 72-hole tournament in US Tour history, two shots behind Tommy Armour III in 2003 at the Valero Texas Open and a shot back of Steve Stricker’s 255 at the 2009 Bob Hope Classic.
And that wasn't the only mark Henley left on Waialae Country Club. He set tournament records for the low 36-hole score after his 63-63 start, he shared the 54-hole record with Langley and set another tournament record with the lowest final round by a champion.
He became the first US PGA Tour rookie to win his debut since Garrett Willis did in Tucson in 2001, which was held the same week as the winners-only event in Kapalua. And the way he putts, there's no telling where this will lead.
For starters, the 23-year-old from Macon, Georgia can add a local event to his schedule -- he's going to the Masters in April.
"I don't really know what happened, honestly," Henley said. "This is the most nervous I've ever been. That's the hardest thing I've ever done. It's been my goal to make it to the Masters my whole life. I'm kind of speechless right now."
He then acknowledged his parents and his girlfriend, watching from home. Henley spent his first week as a tour member on his own, and that's about how he looked on Sunday. No one was particularly close to him.
Clark, finally feeling healthy after an elbow injury after his runner-up finish at the Sony Open in 2011, shot 63. Charles Howell III closed with a 66 to tie for third with Langley, who birdied his last two holes for a 70.
"I wish I would have played a little bit better today and made some more putts," said Langley, who missed three birdie putts of 5 feet on the front nine. "But Russell played so awesome. I don't even know if I could have caught him." Henley only looked to be in big trouble when he hooked his tee shot well left on the 16th, flirting with out of bounds.
No problem. He hammered a pitching wedge from 160 yards over a large tree and a row of royal pines to 12 feet and turned trouble into a birdie. On the strength of his Web.com Tour season last year -- two wins and No. 3 on the money list -- the win allowed Henley to crack the top 50 in the world ranking. That should be enough to get him into the Accenture-Match Play Championship for the top 64 in the world, with the qualifying date only a month away, and he should be set for the other WGC at the Cadillac Championship.
 The win qualifies him for the Bridgestone Invitational in August, along with the US PGA Championship
The Georgia kid has been on a roll. In his past five tournaments dating to end of September -- four of those on the Web.com Tour -- Henley is 73-under par. His scoring average in those five events is 67.15. Henley seized control immediately with an approach that barely cleared the bunker and settled 3 feet away for birdie. 
For Langley, it was a struggle from the start. He went over the green and into the rough with a lie that looked as if it might jump on him.
Instead, he decelerated and moved it only about 10 feet, chipped to 5 feet and watched the bogey putt swirl into the cup. 
At least that one went in. Despite falling two behind after one hole, Langley had ample opportunity to make up ground, except that his stroke was quick and he missed short birdie chance. 
When they made the turn, Henley had a two-shot lead. Clark got in the game by running off three straight birdies around the turn to get within two shots. No one else came particularly close. 
Howell, twice a runner-up at the Sony Open, made a 15-foot eagle putt on the ninth to get within one shot, but only as long as it took Henley to two-putt for birdie on the ninth and smash a drive on the 10th that set up a pitch-and-putt birdie.
Pat Perez and Matt Kuchar also put themselves in good position in case Henley was to fold. That never materialised, and never looked as if it even would -- not with that putting stroke. 
Henley had 33 one-putt greens for the tournament, seven of them over the final nine holes.
 "I can't imagine what people at home watching this tournament saw," Clark said. "That's kind of what we were feeling out there."

LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 280 (4x70) Yardage 7,068
Players from USA unless stated
256 Russell Henley 63 63 67 63
259 Tim Clark (South Africa) 64 66 66 63
263 Charles Howell III 66 64 67 66, Scott Langley 62 66 65 70
264 Matt Kuchar 66 63 70 65, Brian Stuard 66 68 65 65.
265 Jeff Overton 65 68 67 65
266 Harris English 69 69 62 66, Marc Leishman (Australia) 67 68 64 67, Dicky Pryde 68 67 64 67, Pat Perez 68 63 67 68
     
TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS

CLICK HERE 

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McILROY WANTS McGINLEY TO BE RYDER CUP CAPTAIN AT GLENEAGLES 2014

FROM THE BELFAST TELEGRAPH
Rory McIlroy wants Colin Montgomerie to leave the way clear for Paul McGinley to become Europe's new Ryder Cup captain.The world number one, who returns to action in Abu Dhabi this week and is expected to announce a 10-year deal with Nike worth well over £100million on Monday, made his thoughts known again 48 hours before Europe should name their man for Gleneagles next year.
"Ryder Cup captaincy should be a one-time thing," Northern Irishman McIlroy said on Twitter. 
 "Everybody deserving gets their chance and moves on. Would love to play under Paul McGinley in '14."
With Darren Clarke expected to confirm to the European Tour's tournament committee that he does not think the time is right for him, it appears to come down to McGinley or Montgomerie for next year's match at Gleneagles.
Last September's captain Jose Maria Olazabal also thinks there are enough good candidates not to have to recall his predecessor Montgomerie.
Olazabal, 46, still insists he will never take the job on again - not even in his home country of Spain one day.
He, of course, led Europe to a thrilling comeback victory in Chicago after they had trailed 10-4.
"I would never do it again," Olazabal told Press Association Sport in Durban, where he was competing in the Volvo Golf Champions event. "First of all it's a lot of energy and time, a huge demand and the pressure is quite big. It's a different pressure, not one we are used to out there playing on the course. The media scrutinise everything you say and every possibility.
"On top of that, I've done it and it couldn't have been any better.
"Even if it was held in Spain again somewhere down the line I wouldn't do it."

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NORTH-EAST ALLIANCE TEE TIMES FOR PETERHEAD



WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18



08.30 B Harper - C Cassie - K Watson - free                                   

08.38 D McKay - G Mitchell - A Campbell - free                                                 

08.46 free - free - free - free                                  

08.54 free - free - free - free                                                         


09.02 M Rendall - H Roulston - L Roger - J Borthwick
09.10 M Merchant - C Lamb - R Lamb - M Forster.

09.18 C Dempster - R Fitzpatrick - S McNeil - E Allan            

09.26 M Brown - R Brown - S Davidson - I Bratton                   
09.34 L Prowse - J Dalgarno - C Nelson - D C Clark
09.42 D Lawrie - free - free - free
09.50 D Fleming - L Fowler - J Emslie - free
09.58 A Dunton - B Mitchell - John Duff - K Duncan      

10.06 G Milne - J Duncan - J Hopwood - P Murray
10.14 M Winton - S Finnie - S Thomson - D McKay
10.22 P McLean - N Stewart - J Forrest - L Vannet
10.30 J Findlay - Justin Duff - free - free10.38 B Lumsden - P Adam - P Cheyne - D Wright
10.46 D Leslie - W Shaw - G Homer - H McNaughton

10.54 D Law - C Lawrie - K Zeynlove - free

11.02 P Cornfield - G Allen - P Leech - M Booth

11.10 R McConnochie - M Lawrence - N Parker - free
11.18 D Bisset - F Bisset - J Murray - D Randall

11.26 W Skene - A Clark - R Duncan - G Thom

11.34 A Graham - K Beveridge - Laura Murray - M Rogers
11.42 - free - free - free - free

11.50 - free- free- free- free

+If you want to fill one of the "free" times, call the NE Alliance
phone: 07801 819746 

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OOSTHUIZEN PIPS JAMIESON BY ONE SHOT WITH A CLOSING 66

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Louis Oosthuizen overhauled Scott Jamieson on with a brilliant final round 66 to win the Volvo Golf Champions.
The 29 year old Jamieson just missed out on earning his second win in Durban in six weeks when home star Oosthuizen came from five shots back.

The 2010 Open Champion’s joint best-of-the-day 66 at Durban Country Club gave him the €350,000 first prize by one shot - his sixth European Tour title and one that elevates him to a career-high fourth in the Official World Golf Ranking.

Jamieson, who was looking to add the trophy to his Nelson Mandela Championship presented by ISPS Handa win at Royal Durban last month, almost forced a play-off, but his chip for eagle on the 273 yard last stopped two inches from the hole.

Instead he became the first player since Hennie Otto five years ago to lose a European Tour event from five clear with a round to go.

Jamieson still held that advantage after picking up shots at the third and fourth, but double-bogeyed the next after driving into the bushes and did not have another birdie until the 18th.

"Louis's a Major Champion - there's no shame in losing to him," said the World Number 100. "I gave it my all, but it wasn't to be."

He can content himself with the fact that he has started the season first, third and second, and is the early front-runner in The Race to Dubai.

"I'll take that - absolutely," he added.

"The double bogey was a kick in the stones, to put it politely, but I had tons of chances and couldn't take them."

Jamieson will move up to around 70th in the new ranking on Monday - a personal best for him too - and if he can make it into the top 50 by the end of March there will be the reward of a Masters Tournament debut.

That has been his dream ever since he was a student at Augusta State University and was allowed to play the world famous course once a year.

Oosthuizen lost a play-off to Bubba Watson there last April, of course, and in his last eight starts has had seven top-ten finishes to push Justin Rose down to fifth in the world.

"It was a great week - a lot of things happened," said the 30 year old, who on Friday won a new excavator for his farm when he was part of the winning team in the day's pro-am format.

He followed that 64 with a 74, but was back to his best with six birdies in the first 11 holes today.

Another came when he two-putted from just over the green of the long 14th, but from two in front he missed a three foot par putt on the 16th.

When Jamieson came to the hole, however, he pushed his approach into a plugged lie in the bunker and took five as well.

The closing birdie for a 15 under par total of 273 merely moved him out of a tie for second with Thailand's Thongchai Jaidee, while Ireland's Padraig Harrington shot 68 to climb to fourth in the 33-man winners-only field.
He and most of the others now move on to Abu Dhabi, where world top two Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods play for the first time in 2013 - McIlroy with new clubs.

SCOTSWATCH
Three Scots in the top 10 finishers is a rare enough event at the best of time but for it to happen a winners-only select field merits some
celebration North of the Border.
Jamieson won 226,300 Euros and Aberdonians Paul Lawrie (joint seventh) and Richie Ramsay (joint ninth) earned 66,400 and 45.457 Euros apiece respectively.   


FINAL TOTALS



Pos
Name
To Par
Hole
Today
1
2
3
4
Total
1
OOSTHUIZEN, Louis
-16
18
-6
68
64
74
66
272
2
JAMIESON, Scott
-15
18
Par
69
64
68
72
273
3
JAIDEE, Thongchai
-14
18
-4
65
68
73
68
274
4
HARRINGTON, Padraig
-12
18
-4
70
71
67
68
276
T5
WILLETT, Danny
-11
18
-4
69
70
70
68
277
T5
QUESNE, Julien
-11
18
-1
72
67
67
71
277
T7
GRACE, Branden
-10
18
-5
75
67
69
67
278
T7
LAWRIE, Paul
-10
18
-3
69
70
70
69
278
T9
RAMSAY, Richie
-9
18
-5
69
73
70
67
279
T9
BJÖRN, Thomas
-9
18
-4
69
70
72
68
279
T9
COLSAERTS, Nicolas
-9
18
-4
73
67
71
68
279
T9
CABRERA-BELLO, Rafa
-9
18
-4
72
69
70
68
279
T9
LOWRY, Shane
-9
18
-2
70
69
70
70
279
T9
MANASSERO, Matteo
-9
18
-3
75
69
66
69
279
T9
MOLINARI, Francesco
-9
18
-1
70
70
68
71
279
T16
DONALDSON, Jamie
-8
18
-6
69
72
73
66
280
T16
SINGH, Jeev Milkha
-8
18
-3
69
70
72
69
280
T18
CASEY, Paul
-7
18
-3
74
69
69
69
281
T18
ELS, Ernie
-7
18
-2
68
72
71
70
281
T20
FDEZ-CASTAÑO, Gonzalo
-6
18
-4
75
70
69
68
282
T20
GOOSEN, Retief
-6
18
-2
72
70
70
70
282
T22
CLARKE, Darren
-5
18
-3
75
68
71
69
283
T22
STENSON, Henrik
-5
18
-1
72
70
70
71
283
24
ROCK, Robert
-4
18
-2
70
74
70
70
284
25
HOEY, Michael
-3
18
+1
72
74
66
73
285
26
SIEM, Marcel
-2
18
-6
74
74
72
66
286
27
WIESBERGER, Bernd
Par
18
-4
76
71
73
68
288
28
SANTOS, Ricardo
+1
18
Par
76
76
65
72
289
T29
FICHARDT, Darren
+2
18
-5
78
70
75
67
290

MONTGOMERIE, Colin
+2
18
-2
72
78
70
70
290

OLESEN, Thorbjørn
+4
18
-1
75
72
74
71
292

KRUGER, Jbe
+5
18
+3
75
73
70
75
293

OLAZÁBAL, José María
+5
18
+3
74
72
72
75
293

 

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