Monday, February 10, 2014

THANKS FOR THE MEMORY: Murcar and the Northern Open




            Eric Brown in action at Murcar in the 1961 Northern Open won by Harry Weetman.
                                      Picture by courtesy of The Press and Journal

MURCAR CAPTAIN DAVID GRANT (when he was a boy!) CADDIED FOR ERIC BROWN, THE 1955 WINNER
By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Colin@scottishgolfview.com
The announcement that the Paul Lawrie Golf Centre is going to sponsor the Northern Open at Murcar Links from June 17 to 19 brought memories flooding back, not only to myself but also to David Grant, the present club captain.
I can remember the days when Bill Connon and Jack Hall ran the Northern Open - long before the Scottish PGA took it over.
Bill and Jack would raise each year's prizemoney from the original rota of host clubs, such as Royal Aberdeen, Murcar, Nairn, Inverness, Royal Dornoch and Moray, as well as from golf-minded
businessmen in the Aberdeen area.
The tournament, until the Scottish PGA took over, was played, usually in a bitterly-cold wind, in early April.
I can remember the tournament's great rivals, John Panton (record-setting seven wins) and Eric Brown (five), dominating the scene with 12 wins between them from 1948 to 1962.
Panton, pictured right at his peak, the master of ball control, I saw playing  long irons down the shaft and with a half to threequarter swing,  low and straight into the teeth of a gale-force wind for shots of little more than 100 yards at Lossiemouth.
I can remember Open champion-to-be New Zealand left hander Bob Charles and South African star Harold Henning playing in the Northern Open at Murcar in 1961.
Harry Bannerman (pictured left) I saw win the Northern Open three times in the space of six years. Harry a golf writer's dream with his quotes, win or lose. 
Then there was Brian Barnes with his can of beer placed beside the tee marker while he drove. That would not be tolerated nowadays!
And I was there in 1992 at Murcar when Peter Smith (pictured left) set a Northern Open and  Tartan Tour record low 72-hole aggregate of 264.
And I was there at Meldrum House last year when James Byrne, the first man to win the Northern Open two years in a row since Colin Brooks (1989-90), eventually lowered Smith's record to 261 (19 under par for Meldrum House). I suppose that Peter still holds the under-par record because 264 at Murcar equates to 20 under par.
And so it goes on.
But I was merely a golf writer, a paid onlooker.
David Grant was actively involved in the Northern Open, first as a caddie and later as a low handicap amateur entrant.
David caddied for Eric Brown when he won the Northern Open at David's home club, Murcar, in 1955.
            David Grant, captain of Murcar Links Golf Club with the Northern Open trophy.
Here is David Grant's story:
"I was a 15 year old schoolboy and had just become a junior member at Murcar. The Northern Open was played in the Easter school holidays at that time and I cycled out to Murcar as I stayed in Sunnyside Road, Aberdeen.
"In the first two rounds I caddied for a lesser known player from the Central Belt somewhere, I can't remember his name, and Eric Brown had a local, semi-pro caddie, a lazy kind of guy who stayed in the Spittal and who worked at Murcar and Royal Aberdeen  at the weekends. 
"In the second round Brown played the wrong ball for his second shot at the 11th, the drive being blind. Eric blamed his caddie for not checking the ball and sacked him.
"My man did not make the cut so Bill McHardy, the Murcar club pro at the time, thought I was the right person for Brown in the last two rounds, which traditionally were played over one day, the Thursday. 
"I used a caddie car that day and at the end of 72 holes it was a tie between Eric Brown and his great rival John Panton.
"It was an 18-hole play-off for the title and Eric Brown wanted me to carry his bag for this round but he discarded any unwanted items from it to make it lighter. 
"We won, note the 'we,' but the only thing I can remember about it is at the fourth green, I was standing at the edge of the green and it was Brown's putt. Panton's full time caddie said to me 
'Get up there, laddie, and hold the flag for your man.'
"I can't remember what Eric Brown (pictured right) paid me but it was quite generous and he took me into the pro's shop and told me to pick any club I wanted. I had a mixed set of hickories and should have taken a driver but I was still using my mother's 1920s Rubber Shop putter so I chose a John Letter's Golden Goose which was fairly new on the market. I still have both putters to this day.
"I played in the Northern Open in the early 1960s as a three-handicapper, you will have to check which year it was. Harry Bannerman and I played with Bob Charles and Bob Tuohy, an Australian, in a practice round. 
"Charles, pictured right in his prime, was trying out a new set of John Letters clubs so he played a nine-iron at the par 3 fifth to see how strong it was and reached it OK! 
"They were both immaculately dressed and Charles had his hair well Brylcreamed. We were more impressed with Bob Touhy as he hit the ball so straight whereas Charles hit everthing with a draw. But the New Zealand left hander was a marvellous putter.
"Harry Weetman and Harold Henning both played at the Northern Open at Murcar in 1961 when Weetman was the winner.
Editor's note: Weetman (pictured right) was suspended by the PGA at the time - for publicly criticising the body's hierarchy - and unable to play in their events but because the Northern Open was an independent tournament, the Selsdon Park pro was able to play in it.
David Grant continues:
"Weetman was an extremely powerful player and Henning, with his Bulls Eye putter, was thought to be the best putter in the world.
"Eric Brown, the ex-fireman in a British Rail engine, was a heavy smoker and he liked his dram, a complete contrast to 'Gentleman John' Panton."
WINNERS OF NORTHERN OPENS AT MURCAR AND THEIR TOTALS
1933 Jack McLean (Hayston) (am) 294
1946 W S Forrester (Belgium) 305
1955 Eric Brown (Buchanan Castle) 283 (after play-off v John Panton).
1961 Harry Weetman (Selsdon Park) 282
1968 David Webster (Lundin Links) 278
1974 Willie Milne (Crieff) 277
1985 Brian Barnes (Ellersley House Hotel) 274
1992 Peter Smith (Kings Links) 264 (record low).
2001 Graham Rankin (Drumpellier) 203 (reduced to three rounds by bad weather) 
Another flashback - courtesy of The P and J - to the1961 Northern Open at Murcar with Nairn's Kenny Cameron, who later became the Tournament Director before the Scottish PGA took over, displaying the fisherman's catch, from the turn that traverses the seventh and 15th fairways. Also in the picture Harold Henning and others you might recognise. For instance that is J Iver McGee, who would later become club captain, is the man on the extreme right of the picture.
Iver's widow, son and grandson are still members of the Murcar club.
The man to the immediate right of Kenny Cameron is either Hugh or Bill Livingston from Peterhead. Can't remember which one!
Interesting to note in this picture and the one at the start of the article, that golf-watchers wore their "normal" street clothes out on the links. Nowadays they would have on their golf gear, waterproof jackets, etc. Not to mention the golf caps that came in to replace bonnets and hats.
If you have any memories of the Northern Open - especially the ones at Murcar - Email Colin Farquharson at Colin@scottishgolfview.com

FOOTNOTE FROM MURCAR LINKS CAPTAIN DAVID GRANT:
Sorry I can't remember what that building was (see picture at top of article)  but it is on the sand hill which belonged to Joss the haulage contractor at the Bridge of Don and where the tip was later built in the 80's or 90's. 
In the other photo of Harold Henning etc it is Iver McGee and Bill Livingston of Peterhead. His brother Hugh was a member of Murcar for a couple of years about 1960 and I played with him quite a lot. I once played in the three or four-day tournament a Peterhead during the Trades fortnight about the same time, qualified for the match play, beat Hugh in the first round in the morning and was narrowly beaten by Bill in the afternoon. 
Eric Buthlay, the Aberdeen solicitor who ran the event, warned me if I had beaten both Livingston brothers on the same day I would have been run out of town!
In the Eric Brown photo at the start of the article, the chap with the long coat and bonnet next to the caddie is Murcar member Douglas Murray who was a killer at the slaughter house in Hutcheon Street, as was his brother Tom, both of whom were dance teachers in the evenings I believe.
Harry Weetman won the Northern Open in 1961 and the joke among members was that he was so powerful that he didn't go over the hill at the 13th with his drive, he went through it!

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FINDLAY LEADING SCOT AT MOGADOR

OPEN IN MOROCCO .. B UT WITH A 75


Fraserburgh's Jordan Findlay (pictured) shot a three-over-par 75 for joint 16th place,  seven shots behind leader Marcel Sneider (Germany) at the end of the first round of the German PGA Developmental Tour event, the Mogador Open, at Essaouira Golf Club, Morocco today.
Findlay, playing out of the Paul Lawrie Golf Centre had birdies a the long second, ninth, short 13th and long 16th but seven bogeys - four before the turn, three after - dragged his score down.
Team-mate Philip McLean from Peterhead is sharing 33rd place on 77 with only one birdie, at the short fifth, and six birdies.
Conor O'Neil (Pollok) had a bad day at the office, a round of eight-over 80 (42-38) leaving him in joint 70th place. He had one birdie, at the long 12th, plus a double bogey at the short fifth and four bogeys.
At the top of the leaderboard, Sneider had a bag of seven birdies in his 68 to lead by two shots from 2013 Walker Cup player, Nathan Kimsey (Woodhall Spa) who turned pro in mid-December and is making his debut in the paid ranks.  

 LEADING FIRST ROUND SCORES
Par 72
68 Marcel Sneider (Ger)
70 Nathan Kimsey (Eng).
71 Max Kramer (Ger).
72 Reinier Saxton (Net), Philip Mejow (Ger), Ramon Mestre (Spa), Alexander Knappe (Ger)

SELECTED OTHER SCORES
75 Jordan Findlay (Sco), Max Orrin (Eng) (T16)
77 Philip McLean (Sco), Neil Raymond (Eng), James Wilson (Eng) (T33)
80 Conor O'Neil (T70).

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

CLICK HERE

GERMAN PGA DEVELOPMENTAL TOUR EVENT

FINDLAY LEADING SCOT AT MOGADOR

OPEN IN MOROCCO .. B UT WITH A 75


Fraserburgh's Jordan Findlay (pictured) shot a three-over-par 75 for joint 21st place,  seven shots behind leader Marcel Sneider (Germany) at the end of the first round of the German PGA Developmental Tour event, the Mogador Open, at Essaouira Golf Club, Morocco today.
Findlay, playing out of the Paul Lawrie Golf Centre had birdies a the long second, nint6h, short 13th and long 16th but seven bogeys - four before the turn, three after - dragged his score down.
Team-mate Philip McLean from Peterhead is sharing 40th place on 77 with only one birdie, at the short fifth, and six birdies.
Conor O'Neil (Pollok) had a bad day at the office, a round of eight-over 80 (42-38) leaving him in joint 80th place. He had one birdie, at the long 12th, plus a double bogey at the short fifth and four bogeys.
At the top of the leaderboard, Sneider had a bag of seven birdies in his 68 to lead by two shots from 2013 Walker Cup player, Nathan Kimsey (Woodhall Spa) who turned pro in mid-December and is making his debut in the paid ranks.  

 LEADING FIRST ROUND SCORES
Par 72
68 Marcel Sneider (Ger)
70 Nathan Kimsey (Eng).
71 Max Kramer (Ger).
72 Reinier Saxton (Net), Philip Mejow (Ger), Ramon Mestre (Spa).
SCOTS' SCORES
75 Jordan Findlay (T21)
77 Philip McLean (T40)
80 Conor O'Neil (T80).

TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES

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HAGGS CASTLE BOY TAMES GALE AT GULLANE ON SJT


FROM WALTER BURNS
Scottish Junior Golf Tour
Here are the results from the Scottish Junior Golf Tour event at Gullane yesterday on the No. 3 course. 
It was a day when perhaps golf should not have been attempted. The wind was much stronger than forecast and afternoon rain made the challenge even more interesting. It was extremely cold and many of the juniors lost sensation in their hands. Completing the round was an achievement regardless of score. 
Stoically, Aidan Husenne from Haggs Castle stuck to his task and gave a masterly display of ball control in the gale-force winds. His three over par 71 was a fantastic outcome in such conditions. Also to be congratulated was 12 year old Ewan Wheat’s 83 which was good enough to win the Under-14 section.
 
LEADING SCORES
 
Under-16 years
71 Aidan Husenne (Haggs Castle)
79 Graeme Greer (Carluke)
80 Graeme Winney (Dunfermline)
81 Matthew Dalrymple (Lochwinnoch)
83 Jack Williams (Sandyhills)

Under-14 years  
83 Ewan Wheat (Royal Montrose)
84 Ben McKay (Crail Golfing Society)
91 Jorg Irvine (Elderslie)
 
Graeme Winney won the handicap prize with nett 66.

Next event Level 5 at Dalmahoy East.
 


Walter Burns
Scottish Junior Golf Tour
 
Mob: 07951 103 827
 
 

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ULSTERMAN WILL BE STAR ATTRACTION AT BALGOWNIE


               Rory McIlroy: Has not played in Scottish Open for five years. Picture by courtesy
                                                        of Getty Images(c)
 

Rory McIlroy is aiming to mimic Mickelson at Royal Aberdeen in July

 

Rory McIlroy is aiming to follow the example set by Phil Mickelson last year after confirming he will play in the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open, at Royal Aberdeen Golf Club, from July 10-13.


The two-time Major Champion admits that watching Mickelson triumph at Castle Stuart Golf Links in 2013 and then go on to win The Open Championship at Muirfield the following week helped make up his mind to return to the event for the first time in five years.


With the tournament moving to the historic Royal Aberdeen Golf Club for the first time this year, McIlroy believes that taking on one of the most renowned links courses in Scotland  as part of a strong international field that also includes defending champion Mickelson, will be the perfect preparation ahead of attempting to win his first Claret Jug at Royal Liverpool Golf Club.
 “It’ll be my first time playing Royal Aberdeen”, said McIlroy. “I believe it’s a great links with lots of golfing history. I’m really looking forward to the challenge it’ll present”.
McIlroy’s previous appearances in the tournament both came at Loch Lomond, in 2008 and 2009. He added: 
“To play some competitive golf on a links course will be great preparation for The Open Championship the following week”.


“The field is going to be very strong. Aberdeen 

Asset Management has done a great job in

promoting the event and bringing some of the best 

players in the world there. And Phil (Mickelson) 

will be back, of course, to defend his title”.

“I can think of no better preparation for The Open, 

especially on a respected course like Royal 

 Aberdeen. There will also be so many similarities 

I can bring to the following week’s Open 

Championship”.

The former World Number One will be hoping his first visit to Aberdeen – home of the tournament title sponsors – is a precursor to him returning to Scottish soil two months later as part of Paul McGinley’s European Ryder Cup team at Gleneagles.

McIlroy has made a strong start to 2014, finishing joint runner-up with Mickelson in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship and tied ninth in last week’s Omega Dubai Desert Classic, following on from a winning end to 2013 at the Emirates Australian Open. 


He will be hoping to continue that form into the summer and believes it is possible to match Mickelson’s achievement of back-to-backs wins in the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open and The Open Championship.

 

“Phil winning the double last year made me 

realise that the Scottish Open is more than good 

preparation for The Open - he showed it was 

possible to win both weeks.” he said. “The 

Scottish Open going back to a traditional links 

course was something that made a lot of sense”.

“Yet you can play as much golf on links courses as 

you want, but until that’s in a competitive 

environment you can never tell how ready your 

game will be. It really is so important, then, to get 

some competitive golf on a true, challenging 

links”.

Golf fans can now book their ticket to see Major champions McIlroy and Mickelson in the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open, with advanced discounts currently on offer.

 

A season ticket for the 2014 Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open can be purchased for £60 in advance of the tournament - saving £20 on admission at the gate. Adult day tickets are currently priced at £25, rising to £35 on the gate.

 

Concessions (60 and over) start at £40 for a season ticket and £15 for any one day tickets if purchased in advance. Under-16s accompanied by an adult are admitted free of charge and all car parking is also free. Entrance to the Pro-Am on Wednesday is £8 in advance and £15 on the day.

 

Full ticket information can be found at:  www.aamscottishopen.com or www.europeantour.com/tickets or via the telephone Ticket Hotline on:  +440800 023 2557. Postal enquiries should be sent to: European Tour Tickets, Mirren Court Three, 123 Renfrew Court Three, Paisley, PA3 4EA.

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REPORT AND SCORES FROM US PGA TOUR IN CALIFORNIA

JIMMY WALKER SCORES THIRD WIN OF 2014 - BUT HE NEEDED ALL OF HIS SIX-SHOT LEAD

Jimmy Walker acknowledges the last-green cheers at Pebble Beach. Picture by n   courtesy of Getty Images(c)

FROM THE US PGA TOUR WEBSITE

In the final round of the 2014 AT and T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, Jimmy Walker was able to hold onto his lead - six shots clear with a round to play - to claim victory by a single stroke
Even with his high-powered telescope, Jimmy Walker might have had a hard time finding himself among the stars. Just four months ago, Walker began his eighth season on the US PGA Tour with no wins in 187 attempts. With a little more drama than he wanted on Sunday in the AT and T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am in California, he held on for his third victory in his last eight tournaments and increased his lead in the FedExCup chase to an impressive 757 points.
In the last 20 years on the US PGA Tour, only Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson and David Duval have won so often so early in a season.
"I don't know if it was just a matter of doing it once and then having it happen again and then happen again," Walker said after holing a 5-foot par putt on the 18th at Pebble Beach for a 2-over 74. "I've always felt like I could win out here, and I think that's what you have to believe to be out here -- that you belong and that you can win. And finally, it happened. And it's cool that it's happened a couple more times. Quickly."
He was feeling a little more heat than he needed on another cool, cloudy afternoon on the Monterey Peninsula.
Walker had a six-shot lead at the start of the final round. He was still five shots clear when he made the turn, and he was two shots ahead with two to play. 
With two putts for the win from 25 feet, he ran his birdie attempt about 5 feet by the hole and had to make that to avoid a play-off with Dustin Johnson and Jim Renner.
"It's drama, man," Walker said on the 18th green. "It was too much for me."
The finish wasn't what he wanted. The result was what Walker has come to expect.
He was never seriously challenged until Johnson, and then Renner, put together a strong finish. Johnson, a two-time winner at Pebble Beach, closed with a 66 on a card that included three bogeys. Renner, who had yet to make a cut all year, made five birdies on the back nine for a 67.
Walker made a 10-foot birdie on the 11th hole and was seemingly on his way.
But he hit a poor chip on the par-3 12th for a bogey. He three-putted the 13th for a bogey. He three-putted the 17th for bogey, missing his par putt from 3 feet.
"I hate three-putting," Walker said. "I had two of them back there, and definitely didn't want another one on the last."
Walker finished on 11-under 277 and earned 500 more FedExCup points for his efforts. He expanded his lead in the Ryder Cup standings to more than $1 million over Mickelson in second place. The US Ryder Cup team selection is based on US PGA Tour earnings, though there are still four majors (which count double), three World Golf Championships and THE PLAYERS Championship remaining.
For now, the stars are aligned for Walker.
"I just go out and play golf," Walker said. "This is what I want to do and I've worked really hard to do it, to be here, and to be in this position and it's really cool."
Jordan Spieth had to return Sunday morning to complete his third round, which ended with his sixth three-putt of the round for a 78. He faced Pebble at its most vicious throughout the third round, though he bounced back with a bogey-free 67 to at least tie for fourth with Kevin Na (69).
And he hasn't lost his sense of humor.
"Yesterday was a day where you want to play Pebble Beach in that weather once in your life," Spieth said. "You just don't want it be Saturday when you're in the lead."
Chalk it up to another learning experience for Spieth, who said his 36 putts were more a product of not having the speed than the less-than-smooth quality.
"I felt like I needed birdies when I didn't," he said.
Another strong finish belonged to Graeme McDowell, returning to Pebble for the first time since his U.S. Open title in 2010. 
He closed with a 67, happy with a week in which he would have settled for just knocking some rust off his game before heading to Riviera next week.
Outside of Walker, however, the big winner was Renner.
He was among the Web.com Tour graduates who played poorly in the four Finals event that determine priority ranking, and struggled to get into tournaments.
 In his fifth start, he not only made his first cut, Renner earned a spot at the Northern Trust Open next week and will be in better position to get into events over the next couple of months.
"It was pretty big," Renner said. "I just knew I needed a good week. My back was up against the wall, and that's something I'm familiar with and I don't mind it. But I'm happy that I freed myself up a little bit for the rest of the year."
DIVOTS: Renner and John Harkey Jr., the CEO of Consolidated Restaurant Operations, Inc., won the pro-am portion of the tournament. ... Tim Wilkinson, playing in the final group with Jimmy Walker, closed with a 73 and tied for seventh. That gets him into the Northern Trust Open next week at Riviera. ... Walker was the fourth Pebble Beach winner since 1994 to shoot 74 in the final round -- Johnny Miller in 1994, Dustin Johnson in 2010, and Graeme McDowell in the 2010 U.S. Open.
 LEADING FINAL TOTALS
 Par 287 (3x72, 1x71) Players from USA unless stated
276 Jimmy Walker 66 69 67 74
277 Dustin Johnson 68 73 70 66, Jim Renner 65 73 72 67
279 Jordan Spieth 67 67 78 67, Kevin Na 72 68 70 69
280 Hunter Mahan 68 68 72 72
281 Graeme McDowell (N Ireland) 71 71 72 67, Pat Perez 69 70 7171, Tim Wilkinson (NZ) 67 72 69 73 
SELECTED TOTALS
283 Brian Davis (England) 68 74 70 71(T73)
284 Phil Mickelson 66 73 71 74 71 (T19)
285 Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 72 69 72 72, Russell Knox (Scotland) 70 72 70 73 (T27)

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS

CLICK HERE

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