Tuesday, October 22, 2013

KUCHAR AND STREELMAN ARE UNITED STATES' PAIR TO DEFEND WORLD CUP















 


















You can put down the pens, halt the resumes, and stop dialing the fax machines. The personnel department is closed. Matt Kuchar has called off the search for a World Cup of Golf partner. Kevin Streelman has accepted the task of going Down Under to try and help Kuchar defend America’s title in this biennial competition.
What might have been a no-brainer –- simply let Kuchar and Gary Woodland defend what they won in China in 2011 –- turned into a lengthier exercise than anticipated. With officials having altered the qualifying process for the World Cup, a player such as Kuchar was no longer allowed to simply pick his partner; instead, he had to go down the list of candidates based on the Official World Golf Ranking.
And sitting 81st, Woodland is behind a long list of countrymen.
Problem is, those Americans who have loftier status kept turning down the chance to play in a championship that dates back to 1953. For weeks, it appeared as if the Americans weren’t even going to field a team in an effort to win a 25th title.
Now before you think that Kuchar was starting to wonder if “it was something I said,” the notable list of candidates offered a variety of reasons for turning down the invite. The time of year (Nov. 21-24, just before Thanksgiving), the travel (Royal Melbourne in Australia) and the desire to get some time off were the reasons why a healthy list of Americans said no, including Jason Dufner, Zach Johnson, Jim Furyk, Keegan Bradley, Webb Simpson, Dustin Johnson, Hunter Mahan, Bubba Watson, Nick Watney, Billy Haas, and Rickie Fowler.
(Kuchar, ranked eighth, actually got the first nod only after higher-ranked Americans, Tiger Woods, No. 1; Phil Mickelson, No. 3; and Steve Stricker No. 7, said no.)
Finally, Streelman said yes, so Kuchar will head Down Under with a guy who had his best PGA Tour season in 2013. Streelman won the Tampa Bay Classic, finished second at The Players, third at the RBC Heritage, and T-12 in the PGA, and sits 37th in the world order.
Now had Kuchar not secured a playing partner, his World Cup participation would have gone on as planned. That’s because officials have revamped the World Cup so that the greater emphasis is on individual play. There will be a $7 million purse up for grabs in the 72-hole stroke-play competition. The team scores will be the sum total of the two scores, with a $1 million purse available.
The field will be 60 players and a country could have been allowed to have as many as four if they were ranked within the top 15. (In theory, the U.S. could have had Woods, Mickelson, Stricker and Kuchar.) For the first time, world ranking points will be offered, but for all the enticements, players have not hesitated to turn down the invite.
Not that they didn’t have plausible explanations.
Zach Johnson said he declined the chance to play, but it’s not out of indifference to representing his country. He took part in the 2005 World Cup (with Stewart Cink) and, in fact, it’s his strong desire to be with the American contingent for next fall at Gleneagles that sits at the heart of his bypass of the World Cup.
“The Ryder Cup is my priority,” said Johnson. “The starts here (in the U.S. with Ryder Cup points) are my focus. It’s just that important.”
That’s why Johnson played in Las Vegas and will tee it up Nov. 7-10 in Sea Island, Ga., at the McGladrey. He then wants a break to prepare for the resumption of the 2013-14 season.
At 37, Johnson’s priorities have changed, too.
“I’m not putting down traveling abroad to play, or being away for Thanksgiving,” he said. “I played in a tournament in Korea (a few years ago) and missed Thanksgiving, but there were no kids then. Now, I have three kids 6 and under so it’s different.”
Watney also turned down the chance, even though he enjoyed his 2009 World Cup experience alongside John Merrick. But Watney has dates in Malaysia and China the next two weeks and going back to Australia three weeks later didn’t make sense.
To Kuchar, the World Cup at Royal Melbourne made nothing but sense. One of the world’s great courses, Royal Melbourne will host the Australian Masters the week before and Kuchar has signed on for that one, too.
So with wife, Sybi, their two young boys, and two weeks at the famed Sandbelt golf course, Kuchar has what he thinks is a marvelous way to spend the lead-up to Thanksgiving.
And best of all, he now has a partner.

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CLARKE LUTTON LEADING SECOND AFTER TWO ROUNDS IN ABU DHABI

Clarke Lutton outshone the better known Scots to move into a share of second place in the Abu Dhabi Golf Citizen Open with a three-under-par 69 for a two-round tally of four-under 140 today.
Lutton highlighted his halves of 34-35 with an eagle 3 at the long 11th, backed up with birdies at the first, seventh and 13th. On the
downside, he bogeyed the 14th and 15th to finish a windy day at Saadiyat Golf Club, Abu Dhabi sharing second place with Welshman Stephen Dodd (72-68), three shots behind the pacemaking English rookie pro, Craig Hinton (68-69 for 137).
Tom Buchanan is the second best Scot with one round to to after shooting a 68 for 143 and a share of seventh place.
Buchanana had an eagle at the second and birdies at the fourth, ninth, 11th and 18th in halves of 33 and 35. He bogeyed the seventh and 16th.
David Law, runner-up in the two most recent MENA Tour events, took closer order on the leaders by shaving four shots off his first-day effort with a 71 for 146 and joint 16th place.
The Aberdonian birdied the par-5 second and 11th but bogeys at the 13th and 14th knocked him back until he finished birdie-birdie (2-3) for halves of 36-35.
Said Law: "It was windier than on the first day so a one-under 71 it was a pretty good score. My putting was pretty poor but I managed to hit it close on 17 and 18 and salvage a decent score. Hopefully a good score in the third and last round  and a top 10 finish - I'd be happy with that."
 
SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 144 (2x72)
137 Craig Hinton (Eng) 68 69
140 Clarke Lutton (Sco) 71 69, Stephen Dodd (Wal) 72 68
141 Stuart Archibald (Eng) 69 72, Matthew Turner (Eng) 73 68

OTHER SCOTS' SCORES
143 Tom Buchanan 75 68 (T7)
146 David Law 75 71 (T16)
148 Conor O'Neil 74 74 (T30)
149 Fraser McKenna 73 76 (T39)
150 Ted Innes Ker 78 72 (T50)
155 Greg Nicolson 80 75 (T70).

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R AND A VENUES FOR 2016

NEWS RELEASE FROM THE R AND A

The R and A has announced the venues for its amateur championships in 2016 which include some of the most prestigious courses in Great Britain and Ireland.
Royal Porthcawl in Wales will host the Amateur Championship for the seventh time and the first occasion since 2002 when Spain’s Alejandro Larrazabal triumphed over Englishman Martin Sell by one hole in the 36 hole final. The preliminary stroke play rounds will also be played at Pyle & Kenfig on the South Wales coast.
It will be the 121st staging of the Amateur Championship which features a field of 288 world-ranked amateur players with the winner earning a place in The Open Championship and the following year’s US Open. Traditionally the winner also receives an invitation to The Masters.
Former Major Champions such as Jack Nicklaus, Sir Nick Faldo, Jose Maria Olazabal, Ernie Els, Padraig Harrington, Darren Clarke and Louis Oosthuizen have all played in the Amateur Championship.
Muirfield, which hosted The Open Championship for the 16th time this year, and its neighbouring course, The Renaissance, will welcome the world’s leading boy golfers when they host the Boys Amateur Championship for the first time in 2016.
In recent years more than half of the 252-strong field has come from across Europe, America, South America, Africa and Asia and the 90th staging of the championship will attract a strong international field once again.
Some of the game’s leading players including Sandy Lyle, Jose Maria Olazabal, Sergio Garcia, Padraig Harrington, Lee Westwood, Graeme McDowell and Luke Donald have played in the Boys Amateur over the years. The 2012 champion, Matthew Fitzpatrick, went on to win the Silver Medal as the leading amateur at this year’s Open Championship and the McCormack Medal as the world’s leading male amateur player.
Peter Dawson, the Chief Executive of The R and A, said, “We are delighted to have such excellent championship venues in 2016. Royal Porthcawl and Pyle and Kenfig will be wonderful venues for the Amateur Championship and we expect the Welsh galleries will relish the opportunity to see leading amateur players in action.
“Muirfield is one of the finest links courses in the world and will provide a stern challenge for the leading boy golfers in the Boys Amateur Championship.”
Elsewhere, the St Andrews and Jacques Leglise trophy matches between Great Britain and Ireland and the Continent of Europe will be played at former Open Championship venue Prince’s in Kent for the first time.
It will also be a first visit for the Boys Home Internationals to Ireland’s most northerly golf course, Ballyliffin (Glashedy Links), which has hosted European Tour and Ladies’ European Tour events.
The Seniors Open Amateur Championship will return to Merseyside at Formby, which hosted the inaugural event in 1969.
The dates for the championships in 2016 are as follows:
June 13 to 18: The Amateur Championship at Royal Porthcawl and Pyle and Kenfig
August 2 to 4: Boys Home Internationals, Ballyliffin (Glashedy Links), Northern Ireland.
August 3 to 5: The Seniors Open Amateur Championship, Formby
August 9 to 14: The Boys Amateur Championship, Muirfield and The Renaissance
August 26 and 27: St Andrews and Jacques Leglise Trophies, Prince’s




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