Friday, February 07, 2014

JOBURG OPEN REPORT AND SCORES

EDOARDO MOLINARI JOINS CRAIG 

LEAD IN HALFWAY LEAD

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Edoardo Molinari feels his game is in a good place as the Italian continued his return to form by claiming a share of the halfway lead at the Joburg Open.
The 32 year old has been plagued by injury problems since making his Ryder Cup debut alongside brother Francesco in 2010, slipping from the Official World Golf Ranking’s top 20 to World Number 220 as a result.

However, having finished inside the top ten in Dubai last week, the former US Amateur Champion is once more impressing in South Africa as a second round 68 left him tied at the top of the leaderboard with Scotland’s Craig Lee on 11 under par.

“It was another very good round of golf, and I hit the ball very well,” said Molinari, who carded four birdies over the Royal Johannesburg and Kensington West Course following a 64 on the easier East lay-out yesterday; the field have played both courses over the first two days and will now revert to the East Course for the weekend.
“Maybe not as well as yesterday, but I gave myself a lot of chances, which is what you have to do around the East Course. I am very pleased with four under today.
“You just have to play your best. There are a few less birdie chances on the East Course, but all of the par fives are reachable, so you can make a good score.
“I think I drove the ball really well. I’ve been driving the ball like that for the last few months and it’s making a big difference, because I am hitting a couple of clubs less than I am used to and most times I am on the fairway.
“It’s still two rounds to go, but I like the way I am hitting the ball. I made a few putts today, but the most important thing is to keep hitting the ball like this.
“I’m very happy with pretty much everything. I am very happy with my position and my game right now.”
Lee made 67 on the West Course, having impressed with a 65 on the East set-up on day one, as he chases a maiden European Tour title.
“The goal was to not fall back and there’s a strong field behind you, so it was important that I didn’t slip back,” said Lee, who had missed the cut on his last five visits to South Africa. 
“I had a pretty good chance early on to distance myself from the rest of the field, but I didn’t really capitalise on the back nine.”
England’s David Horsey and home favourite George Coetzee share third on ten under, and the former was delighted with his work on the greens after an eight under par 63 on the West Course.

The two-time European Tour winner had six unanswered birdies over his opening 14 holes, and rolled in a five footer at the 15th and 30 foot effort at the next to complete his scoring in a flawless round.

“The conditions were a bit breezier than yesterday, but they were made for scoring out there today,” he said. “I’m very pleased with the day’s work. I was a little bit more aggressive, but I made a whole lot of putts and that was it, hey presto!

Horsey, like the majority of the field, is chasing not only the €206,050 first prize but also one of three Open Championship places on offer for to those not already exempt and finishing in the top ten.

“It’s an added bonus,” he added. “I think it’s a good system, a good change from the R&A to do that. It makes the qualifying a bit fairer and spreads it out over a longer period rather than making it a 36-hole sprint.

"It’s at the back of my mind at the moment, but it’s certainly a bonus to consider near the end of the week.”
Coetzee has had 24 top-ten finishes on The European Tour, but is hoping to land his first victory on home soil this weekend.
"I know what to expect and tomorrow I’ll try to stay patient and make a few putts on the way home,” he said.”

Seven players sit two shots from the top of a congested leaderboard, with Finland’s Roope Kakko most prominent after a brilliant eight under par 64 on the tricky East Course that featured a chip-in birdie on the 14th.

SCOTSWATCH. Only three Scots survived the halfway cut at 139 - Craig Lee (132, Alastair Forsyth (jt 4th with 64-70 for 134) and David Drysdale who shot 71-67 for 138 and qualified in joint 35th place.
Scott Henry (69), Chris Doak (68) and Peter Whiteford (71) all failed to make it by one stroke on the 140 mark.
Scott Jamieson had a disastrous second-round 75 which ruined his good first-day effort of 67.
Jack Doherty (73-70), Marc Warren (72-71), Alan McLean (73-70) and Jamie McLeary (72-71) missed out on 143.
Near the bottom of a huge field around the 200 mark came Clydeside-born South African Doug McGuigan on 148 (72-76) and Duncan Stewart who crashed to a second-round 82, after a first-day 73, for 155.

SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 144 (2x72)
132 Edoardo Molinari (Italy) 64 68, Craig Lee (Scotland) 65 67
133 David Horsey (England) 70 73, George Coetzee (S Africa) 65 68
134 Jin Jeong (S Korea) 65 69, Justin Walters (S Africa) 64 70, James Heath (England) 66 68, Alastair Forsyth (Scotland) 64 70, Roope Kakko (Finland) 70 64, Danny Willett (England) 69 65.

OTHER SCOTS' SCORES
138 David Drysdale 71 67 (T35)

MISSED THE CUT (139 and better qualified)
140 Scott Henry 71 69, Chris Doak 72 68, Peter Whiteford 69 71
142 Scott Jamieson 67 75
145 Jack Doherty 73 70, Marc Warren 72 71, Alan McLean 73 70, Jamie McLeary 72 71
148 Doug McGuigan 72 76
155 Duncan Stewart 73 82

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES, CHECK
THE CARDS

CLICK HERE


Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home

Copyright © Colin Farquharson

If you can't find what you are looking for.... please check the Archive List or search this site with Google