Sunday, February 09, 2014

SCOT EARNS $46,860 FOR TIED 27th FINISH AT PEBBLE BEACH

RUSSELL KNOX CAN'T KEEP THE 

BOGEY MAN AT BAY IN FINAL ROUND

Russell Knox blew his chances of a lucrative top 20 finish in the AT and T national pro-am at Pebble Beach, California by bogeying four of his first 15 holes in the final round today.
He also birdied the long second and long sixth but two over par figures in the final round of a US PGA Tour event sends the player in only one direction - down the field and down the prizemoney allocation.
Russell did birdie the last hole for a 73 and a total of 285 to finish joint 27th alongside Padraig Harrington, one shot behind Phil Mickelson.
The Scot's four scores were 70, 72, 70 and 73.
Knox earned $46,860 - his third highest on the US 
PGA Tour and is now in 50th place on the money table with earnings of $425,178.
He has missed one cut in eight starts.

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OCTOBER DATE MIGHT NOT SUIT BIG-NAME AMERICANS OR EUROPEANS

HOW MANY WORLD STARS WILL WANT TO PLAY IN RETURN OF WORLD MATCH-PLAY TO ENGLAND?


FROM GOLFWEEK
By ALISTAIR TAIT
The return of the Volvo World Match Play Championship to England is great news for British golf. Let’s hope it gets a quality field to help celebrate the 50th anniversary of this tournament.
Persuading the world’s best to turn up could prove difficult.
Sponsors Volvo and organisers IMG used the luxurious Savoy Hotel to announce the World Match Play would be returning to England after a four-year absence. The London Golf Club in Kent will host the event over the Jack Nicklaus designed International Course Oct. 15-19, three weeks after the Ryder Cup.
That date might not suit big-name Americans. It might not suit Europe’s elite either.
The prize fund has been set at €2.5 million, with €650,000 going to the champion, and €50,000 to those knocked out early. Defending champion Graeme McDowell and Race to Dubai and FedEx Cup winner Henrik Stenson have already confirmed their participation.
It’s going to be interesting to see who else joins them.
October is the World Match Play’s traditional date. This Mark McCormack inspired event began in 1964 when IMG client Arnold Palmer won the inaugural event. Palmer is one of a group of winners that reads like a Hall-of-Fame list. Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus, Greg Norman, Seve Ballesteros, Ian Woosnam, Sandy Lyle, Sir Nick Faldo, Ernie Els, Vijay Singh, Colin Montgomerie, Lee Westwood, Paul Casey, Ian Poulter and McDowell are just some of the prestigious champions.
The Wentworth Club played host to the event until 2009, when Volvo took it to Spain. Last year it was held in Bulgaria. The London Club will likely not stage the event in 2015, since Volvo is keen to take it to other destinations.
The World Match Play was once knick-named the IMG World Match Play because it resembled an IMG invitational to help boost clients’ wallets. Volvo demanded a qualification format when it assumed sponsorship in 2009.
Aside from defending champion McDowell and Race to Dubai winner Stenson, the other 12 players must also qualify.
The qualification places include winners of the four major championships, and the leading three players on the Official World Golf ranking after the Open Championship.
Getting those players to turn up is going to be problematic. Tiger Woods has only played in the event twice. He lost to Mark O’Meara in the 1998 final, and went out to Shaun Micheel in the first round in 2006. Phil Mickelson has never made an appearance. Bo Van Pelt was the only American in last year’s field.
“Hopeful” was all IMG’s global head of golf Guy Kinnings would say when asked about the possibility of securing World No. 1 Woods.
Getting top Americans to return to the United Kingdom three weeks after the Ryder Cup is a big ask, especially considering the event won’t be played in summer conditions. 
Given that it comes just two weeks before the European Tour’s Final Series, when top European players have to play in three of the four big end-of-season money events is also expecting a lot.
However, English players like Lee Westwood, Paul Casey, Ian Poulter and Luke Donald have been calling for more tournaments in England.
In 2003 there were five English tournaments. Scroll forward 10 years and there was only one last season. With the Open Championship and BMW Match Play Championship, there will be three this year.
So the pressure is on Europe’s elite to tee it up and support their home tour. The venue is likely to draw big crowds. Whether it brings a big field is another matter.

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STEPHEN EAST FROM LEEDS WINS SPANISH SENIOR CHAMPIONSHIP

      Stephen East from Leeds (on right) is presented with the individual championship trophy by a
                           Royal Spanish Federation offical at La Manga Resort.

DUMFRIES SENIOR BROTHERSTON 
FINISHES GALLANT 3rd AT LA MANGA

Dumfries player Ian Brotherston, who had won the Spanish senior men's amateur doubles championship with a German playing partner earlier in the week at La Manga, came with a late rush in a bid to complete the double in the individual championship at La Manga Resort.
Brotherston, pictured, trailing after opening rounds of 85 and 80, found his true form over the final 18 holes and shot the tournament low score of 72.
But he had left himself just a bit too much leeway to make up and an aggregate of 237 saw him finish a gallant third.
Stephen East from Moortown Golf Club, Leeds was the winner with scores of 84, 76 and 74 for 234.
Runner-up was another Englishman, John Ambridge from Moor Park GC, Hertfordshire, with 80, 81 and 74 for 235.

LEADING TOTALS
234 Stephen East (Eng) 84 76 74
235 John Ambridge (Eng) 80 81 74
237 Ian Brotherston (Sco) 85 80 72
239 Angel Macias Romero (Spa) 79 83 77
240 Mike Ready (Eng) 78 80 82, Tomas Persson (Swe) 83 81 76, Gianluca Bolla (Ita) 80 82 88
241 Douglas Cameron (Eng) 74 85 82, Adrian Morrow (Ire) 76 86 79.
SELECTED TOTALS
242 Maurice Kelly (Ire) 83 84 75 (T10)
243 James McIlwaine (Ire) 79 82 82 (12th)
244 Michael Ahern (Ire) 84 83 77 (13th)
249 Glynn Rees (Wal) 82 86 81 (19th).
250 John Smith (Eng) 86 82 82 (20th)
251 Ian Anderson (Eng) 84 87 80 (T21).
260 James Johnston (Sco) 85 87 88, Iain Jeen (Sco) 84 80 86, John Johnston (Sco) 82 92 86.
Retired - Keith Bruce (Sco)
Field of 63 players.

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HARROWER, CAMPBELL AND CAMERON TIE IN INVERNESS

 THREE SHARE SCRATCH HONOURS AT
   
NSGA FIXTURE AT TORVEAN

Saturday's North Scottish Golfers'  Alliance fixture at Torvean Golf Club, Inverness produced a three-way tie for first place in the scratch section and a runaway winner of Class 2 Handicap.
Boat of Garten professsional Ross Harrower and amateurs Allan  Cameron (Fortrose and Rosemarkie) and John Campbell (Grantown on Spey) shared the scratch honours on the two-under-par 67 mark.
Harrower had the best outward half of two-under-par 32 with birdies at the second, third, sixth and eighth, offset by bogeys at the first and fourth and when he notched an eagle 2 at the 10th and a birdie 4 at the 11th, he was in the driving seat.
But bogeys at the 14th, 15th and 16th by the Boat of Garten man allowed his amateur rivals to close the gap.
Cameron and Campbell had matching halves of 33-34 with the first-named birdieing the third, fourth, 10th, 11th and, vitally, the 18th, while Campbell had birdies at the fourth, sixth 10th and 11th.
Campbell had the fewest bogeys but it was his second and last one at the 18th which cost him outright victory.
Leading handicap players were Davie Johnston (Moray), who won Class 1 with a net 66 off five and Mike Lyall of the host club who spreadeagled the field with a net 60 off 13.


NORTH SCOTTISH ALLIANCE
Torvean GC, Inverness.
LEADING SCRATCH
Par 69
67 R A L Cameron (Fortrose and Rosemarkie), J S D Campbell (Grantown), R Harrower (Boat of Garten) p.
70 J A Grant (Grantown), G H Hay (Grantown).
71 D Johnston (Moray).
72 B J Thomson (Torvean), K Mackay (Inverness), G Mackenzie (Moray).
73 D McGrouther (Inverness), M Lyall (Torvean), G A Hay (Nairn Dunbar) p, B Fotheringham (Inverness), J Shaw (Boat of Garten).
74 D D Bunker (Nairn Dunbar), S Chisholm (Fortrose and Rosemarkie), S Dingwall (Grantown), N McWilliam (Elgin), R Stewart (Nairn Dunbar), D F Sharp (Boat of Garten), J Simpson (Forres).
75 L Reid (Fortrose and Rosemarkie), J Wright (Forres), W Donnelly (Fortrose and Rosemarkie), S Mullen (Elgin), W R Duncan (Moray), D Joel (Inverness), R Fraser (Inverness).
76 D Gordon (Inverness), G Allan (Nairn Dunbar), I Murray (Boat of Garten).
77 S Wilson (Inverness), K Williamson (Fortrose and Rosemarkie), J Treasurer (Inverness), D Hector (Elgin), A Imrie (Muir of Ord).
78  D Pitchforth (Nairn Dunbar), P Matheson (Grantown), A W Mair (Moray), G Hamilton (Moray).
79 W B Johnston (Moray), J K England (Moray), A Macintosh (Torvean), R H Stewart (Torvean).
80 J Glass (Torvean), A Waterson (Boat of Garten), R Mackie (Rothes).

LEADNG HANDICAP
Class 1 - D Johnston (Moray) (5) 66; D McGrouther (Inverness) (6) 67;  W R Duncan (Moray) (6), D F Sharp (Boat of Garten) (5) , G Mackenzie (Moray) (3) 69.
Class 2 - M Lyall (Torvean) (13) 60; W B Johnston (Moray) (10), G Hamilton (Moray) (9) 69; C Small (Nairn) (12) 70; I Turner (Boat of Garten) (14), R Mackie (Rothes) (9) 71.



TORVEAN Par 69
OUT: 3-4-4-4-5-4-3-4-3 =34
    IN: 4-5-4-4-4-3-4-3-4 =35
BEST SCORECARDS
Allan Cameron 67
OUT: 3 4 3 3 6 4 3 4 3 = 33
    IN: 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 3 3 = 34
John Campbell 67
OUT: 3 4 4 3 6 3 3 4 3 = 33
    IN: 3 4 4 4 4 3 4 3 5 = 34
Ross Harrower 67
OUT: 4 3 3 5 5 3 3 3 3 = 32
    IN: 2 4 4 4 5 4 5 3 4 = 35

+Postponed North Scottish Alliances have been rearranged as follows:
February 22 - Spey Bay
March 15 - Forres.

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GEORGE COETZEE COMES WITH LAST-DAY SURGE FOR VICTORY

George Coetzee, sixth South African winner in last eight Joburg Opens, in action over final round. Picture by courtesy of Getty Images(c)

SOUTH AFRICAN WINS JOBURG OPEN - 

BUT NOT ONE OF OVERNIGHT

LEADERS

FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
After 24 top-ten finishes, George Coetzee finally secured his maiden European Tour title at the Joburg Open today.
A closing six-under-par 66 saw the 27-year-old South African finish on 19 under, three shots ahead of compatriot Justin Walters, England’s Tyrell Hatton from Buckinghamshire and Melbourne-based South Korean Jin Jeong.
With three Open Championship places on offer, Challenge Tour graduate Hatton was the unlucky player to miss out on an invite to Royal Liverpool – his position of 276th in the Official World Golf Ranking being lower than that of Jeong and Walters.
“I don’t know what I’m feeling,” said Coetzee, whose victory came at the 107th time of asking. “I’m lost for words.  I’ve been waiting a while and I started doubting, so I’m very happy.
“I got to share this with my family and my friends. It was my mum’s birthday yesterday and I wanted to do it for her as I forgot to buy her a present!”
Coetzee becomes the sixth South African winner in the eighth staging of the event and there were four of them in the top nine and seven in the leading 20 of the final totals.

But, at the start of the day, Coetzee's Springbok compatriots Thomas Aiken and Walters looked the more likely contenders to continue the home nation’s remarkable run as they began two clear.
Coetzee birdied all three par fives on the way out, holed a ten footer at the fourth to turn in 33 and knocked in from six feet at the tenth to move in front for the first time.
The World Number 74 then did well to save par from rough on the 11th and a bunker at the next, before a crucial piece of luck on the 15th proved decisive.
Having driven left towards a stream, his ball ricocheted off a tree and back onto the fairway before a 20 foot putt secured an unlikely birdie.
Three closing pars provided a nervous wait as Walters reached the final tee needing an eagle on the reachable par five to force a play-off, but he drove into the sand and eventually bogeyed - handing Coetzee the €206,050 winner’s cheque.
Johannesburg-born Walters’ search for a first European Tour title goes on after a closing 73, but the 33 year old has the consolation of a first Major Championship appearance at Hoylake in July.
Jeong, who beat James Byrne in the 2010 British amateur championship final at Muirfield and scored his first European Tour win in Perth, Australia at the end of 2013, closed with a 71 to earn a return to The Open, where he finished an impressive tied for 14th to win the leading amateur medal in 2010, while Hatton’s 66 secured a best European Tour finish of his fledgling career.

SCOTSWATCH. It was a bad last day for the three Scots who made the cut. Alastair Forsyth, in with a victory chance if he could reproduce a first-round 64, instead could do no better than a closing 76.
That disappointing effort saw him plummet to joint 31st place with a reward of 10,400 Euros, a lot less than he seemed heading for at the start of the day.
Craig Lee, who never seems to play well in the final round of a European Tour event, again could not get near par at the last time of asking. He had a 75, like Forsyth his worst round of the four, and a total of 281 saw him finished joint 49th and earned 5,850 Euros.
Funnily enough, Edoardo Molinari who was bracketed at the top of the leaderboard with Lee at halfway also had a mediocre third and fourth rounds - 72 and 75 for 279 and joint 37th place.
David Drysdale shot 74 in both his last rounds and finished nearly last of the qualifiers - T69 - on 286 top earn 2,234 Euros.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 286 (2x72, 2x 71) Players from South Africa unless stated, prizemoney in Euros.
268 George Coetze 65 68 69 66 (206,050).
271 Tyrrell Hatton (England) 67 69 69 66, Jin Jeong (South Korea) 65 69 66 71, Justin Walters 64 70 64 73 (101,097)
272 Thomas Aiken 70 65 63 74, Matthew Baldwin (England) 68 69 68 67, Alvaro Quiros 69 68 69 66, Andy Sullivan 66 72 69 65 (42,510)
273 Danie Van Tonder 65 72 69 67 (28,080)
274 Seve Benson (England) 68 68 70 68, Robert-Jan Derksen (Netherlands) 65 74 67 6 8, David Horsey (England) 70 63 70 71, Roope Kakko (Finland) 70  64 67 73, Anthony Wall (England) 69 70 66 69 (21,407)
275 Gregory Bourdy (France) 68 67 70 70, Jorge Campillo (Spain) 67 69 71 68, Justin Harding 66 72 69 68, Brandon Stone 68 67 70 70, Danny Willett (England) 69 65 71 70 (16,250)

SELECTED TOTALS
278 Alastair Forsyth (Scotland) 64 70 68 76 (T31) (10,400)
279 Edoardo Molinari (Italy) 64 68 72 75 (T37) (8,970)
281 Craig Lee (Scotland) 65 67 74 75 (T49) (5,850)
286 David Drysdale (Scotland) 71 67 74 74 (T69) (2,234) (2,234).

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS

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AYRSHIRE WINTER GOLF ASSOCIATION TEE TIMES FOR TUESDAY







TROON PORTLAND       TUESDAY FEB 11
    David Addison   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
8.15 1 Pat Walsh   Ardeer
         
    Alistair Brown   Archerfield
8.22 2 Gary McIntosh   East Renfrewshire GC
    David Wordsworth   Irvine GC
    Derek Watters   Gourock GC
8.30 3 Blair Harvey   Gordon Sherry Golf
    Johnny O'Neil   North Beach
    Alan Todd   Prestwick GC
8.38 4 Ciar Porciani   Turnberry
  4 Scott McIntosh   Cowglen GC
         
8.46 5      
         
    Paul Wilson   Cawder GC
8.54 6 Mike Patterson   Kilmacolm GC
    Robert Kerr   Welbeck Troon
    Graham Fox   Clydeway Golf
9.02 7 John Rushbury   Rowallan Castle
    John Watt   St Cuthbert GC
    Callum Beveridge   West Kilbride GC
9.10 8 Tommy Farren   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
    Allan Paterson   Glasgow GC
    Alastair Forrow   Whitecraigs
9.18 9 Ian McConnochie   Western Gailes
    Tom Rogers   Caldwell
    Scott Garrett   Fereneze GC
9.26 10 Peter J Boyd   Glasgow GC
    Colin McLatchie   West Kilbride GC
    Nick Walton   Glasgow GC
9.34 11 Ron Punton   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
    Cammy Glennie   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
    Jamie Mackay    
9.42 12 Eric Ewart   Royal Troon GC
    Leslie Quin   Western Gailes GC
    Bill Rae   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
9.50 13 Gordon Clark   Irvine GC
    Alistair Kerr   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
    Jason McCreadie   Buchanan Castle
9.58 14 Blair Anderson   Royal Troon GC
    Paul Robinson   Largs GC

       
    Craig Ronald   Carluke GC
10.06 15 John Lappin   Portland (Royal Troon)
    Jim McEwan   Elderslie GC
    Robin Slater   Abbotsford
10.14 16 Reg Short   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
    Tom Crozier   Abbotsford
    Fraser Thomson   Turnberry
10.22 17 Ian Wallace   Royal Troon GC
    Sandy Paterson   Abbotsford
    Callum Macaulay   Tulliallan
10.30 18 Scott Miller   Royal Troon GC
    Frank Craig   Hamilton/Cawder
    Stephen Gray   Hayston
10.38 19 Liam McGuigan   East Kilbride GC
    Mark Lironi   Cathkin Braes GC
    Robert Arnott   Bishopbriggs D R
10.46 20 Colin Peddie   Kirkintilloch GC
    Steve Forrest   East Kilbride GC
    George Jenkinson   Cathkin Braes GC
10.54 21 Scott Ritchie   Cathcart Castle GC
    Joe Devlin   West Kilbride GC
    Alistair Connell   Crow wood
11..02 22 Gordon Cree   Welbeck Troon
    Peter Miller   Milngavie GC
    David-Ross Nicol   Dundonald Links
11.10 23 David Robertson   Cochrane Castle GC
    John Rice   Cawder GC
    Joe McBrearty   Haggs Castle GC
11.18 24 George Higgins   West Kilbride GC
    George Hanson   Rothesay
    Campbell Elliott   Haggs Castle GC
11.26 25 John Cameron   Cathkin Braes GC
    Jonathan d'Aguilar   Glasgow GC
    Paul McKechnie   Braid Hills
11.34 26 John Jones   Royal Troon GC
    Alex Robertson   Cowal GC
    Iain McNab   Dundonald Links
11.42 27 Steven Shaw   Loch Lomond
    Tom McGill   Glasgow GC
    Jonny Mullaney   unattached
11.50 28 Gerry Smith   Royal Troon GC
    Paul Moultrie   Royal Troon GC
    Chris McManus   Kilmarnock (Barassie) GC
11.58 29 David Cooper   Cowal GC
    Tom Harwood   Kilmacolm GC

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RUSSELL KNOX IN TOP 20 WITH ROUND TO GO IN CALIFORNIA



 Jimmy Walker: Bidding for third win in eight starts. Picture by courtesy of Getty Images(c) 

JIMMY WALKER LEADS BY SIX WITH A 
ROUND TO GO AT PEBBLE BEACH

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE
In the third round of the 2014 AT and T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, Jimmy Walker is the solo leader after 54 holes.
PEBBLE BEACH, California -- The wind was so strong, the conditions so demanding, that Jimmy Walker felt like Saturday he was competing against the golf course instead of the rest of the field.
Walker, the FedExCup leader -- and arguably the hottest player in golf -- wound up beating them both.
Walker finally made his first bogey of the tournament, and that was only a nuisance. He ran off five birdies at Monterey Peninsula for a 4-under 67, the best score of a blustery day, giving him a six-shot lead going into the final round.
Walker went 187 starts on the US PGA Tour without winning. He now has a chance to win for the third time in his last eight tournaments. He won the Frys.com Open last fall about an hour away at CordeValle.
 He won for the second time this season last month in Honolulu. In both those tournaments, Walker was trailing going into the last day.
This time, he has the largest 54-hole lead at Pebble Beach since Phil Mickelson led by seven in 2005. Mickelson went on to win by four shots.
"I've never had whatever big lead this is going into the last round," Walker said. "Just go out and hit good shots and play good golf and see what happens."
He was at 13-under 202.
Tim Wilkinson of New Zealand had a 69 and Hunter Mahan had a 72, both at Monterey Peninsula. They were at 208.
Havoc happened on Saturday on all three courses, particularly at Pebble Beach.
The third round was not completed because of a delay lasting 2 hours, 19 minutes due to gusts at 30 mph that made golf balls roll off the greens, mostly at Pebble Beach. In a three-course rotation, play has to be stopped at all three courses.
The average score at Pebble Beach was just over 75.
Jordan Spieth caught the brunt of it. Tied with Walker going into the third round, Spieth was 5-over through 15 holes when the round was halted by darkness. 
That included a pair of three-putts on the front nine when he went out in 40, and another three-putt from 18 feet. Spieth missed an 8-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, and then chose to mark the 5-foot par putt he had coming back.
Walker opened with a 66 at Pebble Beach when it was calm, the best time to play it. That doesn't mean he was off the hook on the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula. He just had to play his best, and he did.
On the par-3 ninth, typically a 6-iron, Walker smashed a 5-wood into the wind and couldn't reach the green. He made one birdie with an 8-iron from 140 yards, and was hitting 4-iron that went only about 165 yards.
"It just feels like a battle," Walker said. "You're not battling really anybody else. You're not battling the field or a tournament. You're just out there trying. The golf course is trying to beat you up."
Richard Lee had a 72 at Spyglass Hill and was alone in fourth at 209. Phil Mickelson had a 71 at Spyglass and was among those eight shots behind. Only three players broke par at Pebble -- none better than Dustin Johnson's 70. Brendon Todd looked as if he might have one of those rounds until bogeys on the last two holes.
"Nine and 10 are par 5s today. I couldn't reach either one," Todd said. "There were no birdie holes out there."
Play was stopped about an hour after the last group teed off. It was a peculiar sight to see clouds gathering on the Pacific horizon, and officials trying to spray water on the greens to help balls stay on the putting surface.
It didn't work.
And when play resumed, Brian Gay was given relief on the fourth green at Pebble Beach because of standing water left from hosing down the greens. He was able to move his ball some 15 feet to the other side of the green.
But the big trouble was the wind.
Kevin Chappell's approach to the par-3 fifth sailed over the cliff, and he ambled down toward the beach to play the shot. 
The par-5 sixth at Pebble, usually reachable with a long iron, was a true three-shot hole. On the 109-yard, downhill seventh hole into the wind, the club of choice was a chip 8-iron.
It was most difficult with the putting -- being able to stand over the ball, trying to hit it as it wobbled and judging the speed. Geoff Ogilvy three-putted from 3 feet twice in a three-hole stretch on his way to an 81. Spieth had a pair of three-putts that sent him tumbling out of contention. 
The worst was on the ninth, when he gunned his 12-footer for par about 4 feet by the hole, sent the next one 5 feet by on the other side and raised his arms in mock triumph when he made the third one.
D.A. Points might have had the best time. His score didn't count.
Points was disqualified Friday for using a sponge ball as a training device while waiting on the 18th tee.
 He returned Saturday to contribute to the pro-am side of the competition with former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. The team shot 77 and missed the cut.
"It meant an enormous amount to me," Rice said. "He didn't have to do that. It speaks really well for him and for the tour that he came out played, anyway."

SCOTSWATCH: Russell Knox is joint 18th alongside England's Brian Davis. The Scot from Inverness has had rounds of 70, 72 and 70. His third round was over the Monterey Peninsula par-71 course.
Knox bogeyed the first but birdied the fourth and short ninth before dropping his second shot at the short 14th. He birdied the 17th to return a one-under-par score.

LEADING THIRD ROUND TOTALS
Par 215 (2x72, 1x71) Players from USA unless statede
202 Jimmy Walker 66 69 67
208 Tim Wilkinson (New Zealand) 67 72 69, Hunter Mahan 68 68 72
209 Richard H Lee 65 72 72
210 Phil Mickelson 66 73 71, Blake Adams 69 6 72, Kevin Na 72 68 70, Ryan Palmer 72 66 72, Pat Perez 69 70 71, Jim Renner 65 73 72

SELECTED SCORES
212 Brian Davis (England) 68 74 70, Russell Knox (Scotland) 70 72 70 (T18
213 Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 72 69 72 (T31)
214 Graeme McDowell (N Ireland) 71 71 72 (T39)
215 Greg Owen (England) 67 74 74 (T53)

MISSED THE CUT (215 and better qualified)
216 Retief Goosen (South Africa) 71 73 72, Jason Day (Australia) 68 77 71, Raf Cabrera-Bello (Spain) 74 74 71
221 Paul McGinley (Ireland) 67 76 78
228 John Daly 73 79 76

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

CLICK HERE

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