Saturday, September 13, 2014

OLDCORN SHOOTS A SECOND-ROUND 66 IN PORTUGAL

THELEN DEFIES BACK PROBLEM TO 

LEAD BUT WOOSIE HAS TO QUIT

 FROM THE EUROPEAN SENIOR TOUR WEBSITE
America’s Tim Thelen defied a serious back problem to card an eight under par 64 and claim a three-shot lead going into Sunday's final round of the Senior Open de Portugal at Vidago Palace in the north of the country.
The former US PGA Club Professional champion almost pulled out after his back went into spasm on the second hole, but went on to card nine birdies to reach twelve under par and go into the final round with a comfortable lead over Carl Mason, Des Smyth and Greg Turner.

Overnight leader Chris Williams slipped back to fifth place after dropping three shots on the par four 16th on his way to carding a one over par 73 - while Miguel Angel Martin posted a six under par 66 to join Simon P. Brown, Gary Rusnak, Jerry Smith and Steen Tinning one shot further back on 138.

Thelen arrived in Portugal having finished inside the top three in his last two starts, but the opportunity of continuing that run looked to be in danger for the American, after he aggravated an existing back injury while playing out of a bunker on the par five second hole.

“I thought I was done on the second,” Thelen admitted. “It went into spasm after the bunker shot and I seriously considered calling it a day. In the end I decided to see how bad it got and it turned out to be a good decision because I scored very well after that.”

Thelen’s birdie barrage started on the fourth, before he gained further shots on the sixth and eighth holes. Four more birdies arrived on the tenth, 11th, 13th and 15th, before the three-time European Senior Tour winner produced his shot of the day at the 16th, where he hit a six iron to an inch, before two-putting for another birdie on the 17th hole.

“It was a good day’s work but I’m exhausted now and very uncomfortable. I need to see the physio and see if she can do anything to sort me out.”

Turner carded an excellent 67 to move up from ninth place into a share of second and give himself a great chance of claiming his first title European Senior Tour title, on just his third start.
The New Zealander got his round off to a fine start thanks to birdies on the second, fourth and sixth holes. He dropped a shot when he failed to get up-and-down from just off the tenth green, before carding four birdies and a bogey over his closing seven holes to join Smyth and Mason on nine under par 135.

“It was a strange sort of round,” Turner said. “I hit a couple of loose shots over the first couple of holes and never really felt comfortable after that. I have putted well over the last two days. I haven’t holes a lot of long ones but haven’t missed much from medium range and that’s what you have to do to make your score."

Smyth would have started the final round alone in second place, but for missing a 2ft par putt on his final hole of the day.

“It leaves a bit of a sour taste in the mouth,” he said after posting a four under par 68. “I played some terrific golf and holed a lot of good putts but that miss on the last is what I’m going to remember when I’m thinking about the round this evening. I mishit it and it dived straight left on me. It never had a chance of going in.”

Mason meanwhile, added a 69 to his opening 66 and still has an excellent opportunity to add to his record haul of 25 European Senior Tour victories.

The Englishman played the first 11 holes of his round in level par before battling back with birdies on the 13th, 14th and 17th.

“It was tricky out there today,” Mason said. “The wind was stronger than yesterday and there are a lot of holes out there where you have to be very careful. I don’t think I played quite as well as yesterday but I’m still in contention and that’s all that matters at this stage in the tournament.”

One player who no longer has a chance to win this year’s Senior Open de Portugal is former Ryder Cup Captain Ian Woosnam.

 He played twelve holes of his second round in one under par, but then had to pull out one hole later suffering from a back problem.   

Andrew Oldcorn (pictured by Cal Carson Golf Agency) carded a superb six under par 66 to storm up the leaderboard and finish the day in joint 11th position on 139 - seven behind leader Thelen
The Scot started the day ten shots off the pace after an opening round 73, but carded five birdies over his opening seven holes and another on the par five 17th to finish the round on five under par 139.

“I can’t believe how well I played today,” he said. “When I got here at the start of the week I felt lousy. I think I had some sort of man flu. I had no energy at all on Thursday and Friday but I’m feeling a bit better today.

“I played terrible yesterday so last night I decided I’d go out today and just free-wheel it and see what happened. I played awesome for the first seven holes but then missed three or four chances coming home when I could have shot a really low number.

“66 was by far the most I could have shot today.”


SECOND-ROUND LEADERBOARD
 Par 144 (2x72)
132 Tim  Thelen (USA) 68 64]
135 Carl Mason (England) 66 69, Des Smyth (Ireland) 67 68, Greg Turner (NZ) 68 67
136 Chris Williams 63 73

SCOTS' SCORES
139 Andrew Oldcorn 73 66 (T11)
141 Bill Longmuir 71 70 (T20)
142 Stephen McAllister 74 68 (T22)
149 David James 75 74 (T55)
162 Brian Marchbank 81 81 (70th)


TO VIEW ALL THE SCORES


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ALPS TOUR FOUR-ROUND EVENT SHAPING FOR EXCITING CLIMAX

COOLEY TWO OFF THE PACE IN FRANCE

England's Andrew Cooley is in third place, two shots off the pace, with one round to go in this weekend's 72-hole Alps Tour event on the French-Luxemburg border, the Citadelle Trophy International.
Cooley, picture by courtesy of the Alps Tour, has shot rounds of 67, 72, 70 for seven-under 209.
Leading the field by one is Spain's Alfonso Gutierrez

THIRD-ROUND LEADERBOARD
Par 216 (3x72)
207 Alfonso Gutierrex (Spain) 69 70 68
208 Sebastian Heiselle (Germany) 71 67 70
209 Andrew Cooley (England) 67 72 70

SELECTED SCORES
211 Tom Shadbolt (England) 72 69 70 (T6)
213 Tom Wilde (England) 69 75 69 (T13)

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VERY GOOD PERFORMANCE BY NEIL, FORREST AND ROBB

Scots finish ninth at Eisenhower Trophy 

in Japan after another 65 by Bradley Neil


 Left to right: Chris Robb (Meldrum House), Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie), SGU Performance Manager Steve Paulding and Grant Forrest (Craigielaw).


NEWS RELEASE FROM THE SCOTTISH GOLF UNION
The trio of Bradley Neil, Grant Forrest and Chris Robb today secured an impressive top-10 finish for Scotland at the World Amateur Team Championships in Japan.
The biennial 72-hole stroke-play tournament  is one of the most prestigious in amateur golf, with the Scots finishing in ninth place in the 67-team competition.
British Amateur champion Neil (Blairgowrie) continued his fine 2014 season by posting a superb closing seven-under-par 65. 
It was his second 65 of the tournament and featured nine birdies, with Meldrum House’s Robb, the Fairstone Scottish Amateur champion, adding a bogey-free 68 to take the team score to 30 under par.
"It was a fun couple of weeks," said Banchory-based Robb. My golf could have been better though; definitely felt we could have won."
The USA posted a winning best-two-from-three total  of 38 under par to retain their title, finishing two shots ahead of Canada. Spain, Sweden and Argentina came third, fourth and fifth respectively.
France, Australia and England tied for sixth spot on 32 under, with the Scots finishing ninth, ahead of the likes of Switzerland, Ireland, Germany, Italy, Denmark, Wales and South Africa.
Scotland, who won the event in Australia in 2008 but shared 44th spot in Turkey two years ago, can be pleased with their efforts, building on the European Nations Cup, won in March in Sotogrande.
Scottish Golf Academy member Neil finished in a share of 15th in the individual standings on 13 under par 273 (72-65-7-65), ahead of returning to Perthshire to compete for Europe in the forthcoming Junior Ryder Cup over his home course at Blairgowrie. 
Craigielaw’s Forrest, the St Andrews Links champion, tied for 46th individually on seven-under-par 279 (68-68-69-74), with Scottish champion Robb sharing 60th on five-under-par 281 (70-74-69-68). 
Three of the Banchory man's four rounds counted under the best two from three daily format; Forrest did likewise and, strangely enough, it was only Neil's two 65s that counted from his four rounds..
Scottish Golf Performance Manager Steve Paulding, who captained the team in Karuizawa, said: “The boys have played great as a team, each playing a significant part in getting a good top-10 finish.
“Our third day score (four under as a team), was always going to make it tough, but an 11 under total today was just what we needed. This team was right in the mix, putting Scottish golf back up where it should be.
“It’s on to Mexico in two years, with the work starting now on preparation for the next team.”
Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods have both featured in winning Eisenhower Trophy sides in the past, while Rory McIlroy, Luke Donald, Francesco Molinari, Rickie Fowler and Martin Kaymer have also competed. 
Notable recent individual winners include Joost Luiten (Netherlands, 2006) and Romain Wattel (France, 2010).
In 2018, the world amateur team championship will be played at Carton House in Ireland.
The Scotland Team is sponsored by Aberdeen Asset Management and TaylorMade-adidas Golf.
For Chris Robb the future now lies in professional golf. He tackles Stage 1 of the European Tour Q School at Frilford Heath, Oxfordshire in a fornight.
"I'm still an amateur for the moment and looking forward to advancing to Stage 2 and then the Final School," he said.

FINAL TOTALS
Par 572 (Two courses, a par 72 and a par 71 were used: 4x72, 4x71)
534 UNITED STATES 136 133 127 137 (1st)
267 Denny McCarthy 68 68 67 64
270 Bryson DeChambeau 69 67 61 73
277 Beau Hussley 68 66 68 75 
536 CANADA        134 135 133 133 (2nd)
537 SPAIN              138 133 132 134 (3rd)
538 SWEDEN        134 135 131 138  (4th)
539 ARGENTINA 135 133 136 135  (5th)
540 FRANCE        140 134 135 131   (T6)
540 ENGLAND     136 135 137 132   (T6)
270 Ben Stow 67 67 68 68
273 Ryan Evans 72 68 69 64
282 Ashley Chesters 69 72 69 72
540 AUSTRALIA  137 136 132 135   (T6)
542 SCOTLAND   138 133 138 133   (9th) 
273 Bradley Neil 72 65 71 65
279 Grant Forrest 68 68 69 74
281 Chris Robb 70 74 69 68 
544 SWITZERLAND 133 135 140 135 (10th)
545 IRELAND            138 138 132 137 (11th)
273 Gavin Moynihan 69 70 64 70
275 Paul Dunne 70 70 68 67
281 Gary Hurley 69 68 74 70
546 GERMANY (12th)
548 BELGIUM, ITALY, DENMARK (T13)
549 CHINESE TAIPEI (16th)
550 MEXICO (17th)
551 SOUTH KOREA (18th)
554 CHILE, AUSTRIA (T19)
555 COLOMBIA (21st)
557 NEW ZEALAND, POLAND, CZECH REPUBLIC (T22)
558 FINLAND, SINGAPORE, SLOVENIA, NORWAY (T25)
560 INDIA, JAPAN (T29)
561 PUERTO RICO, VENEZUELA (T31)
562 BRAZIL, THAILAND (T33)
564 PORTUGAL, MALAYSIA (T35)
564 WALES 138 145 136 145  (T35)
281 David Boote 70 73 65 73
286 Matthew Hearne 68 72 71 75
287 Rhys Pugh 70 73 72 72
565 CHINA (38)
567 HONG KONG, NETHERLANDS (T39)
570 SLOVAKIA (41st)
571 GUATEMALA (42nd)
573 SOUTH AFRICA (43rd)
575 COSTA RICA (44th)
579 BERMUDA (45th)
587 TURKEY (46th)
594 PHILIPPINES (47th)
595 URUGUAY, GUAM (T48th)
596 ITAN MALTA(T50th)
597 FIJI (52nd)
598 RUSSIA (53rd)
603 SERBIA, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC (T54th)
608 JAMAICA (56th)
611 UNITED ARAB EMIRATES, ESTONIA (T57)
613 MAURITIUS (59th)
619 GREECE (60th)
623 BAHRAIN (61st)
627 QATAR (62nd)
657 GHANA (63rd)
673 UKRAINE (64th)
679 EL SALVADORE (65th)
684 GABON (66th)
730 KYRGYZSTAN (67th)


View final scores from the World Amateur Team Championships

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ASIAN TOUR REPORT AND LEADING SCORES

 FILIPINO GRABS THIRD-ROUND TAIPEI 

LEAD WITH A 65

NEWS RELEASE FROM ASIAN TOUR
Taipei: Filipino talent Miguel Tabuena grabbed the third-round lead with a seven-under-par 65, but has Asian Tour stars Thaworn Wiratchant and Anirban Lahiri hot on his heels at the Yeangder Tournament Players Championship (TPC)
The 19-year-old Tabuena tied for the low round courtesy of two closing birdies to hold a one-shot lead with a 10-under-par 206 total at the Linkou International Golf and Country Club.
Title holder Thaworn, who birdied the last hole, and Lahiri, ranked second on the Order of Merit, posted matching 68s to tie in second place at the US$500,000 Asian Tour event.
Home hero Yeh Wei-tze, a one-time Asian Tour winner, opened with five straight birdies before posting a 65 to share fourth place with Prom Meesawat of Thailand (68) and two-time US PGA Tour winner Daniel Chopra (69) of Sweden on a 208 total.  
 
  THIRD-ROUND SCOREBOARD
  Par 216 (3x72) Yardage: 7,125
206 - Miguel TABUENA (PHI) 73-68-65.
207 - Thaworn WIRATCHANT (THA) 70-69-68, Anirban LAHIRI (IND) 73-66-68.
208 - YEH Wei-tze (TPE) 72-71-65, Prom MEESAWAT (THA) 67-73-68, Daniel CHOPRA (SWE) 71-68-69.
209 - Antonio LASCUNA (PHI) 68-69-72.
210 - Thanyakon KHRONGPHA (THA) 72-71-67, Ryan YIP (CAN) 71-69-70, Cameron SMITH (AUS) 70-67-73.
211 - Wolmer MURILLO (VEN) 78-68-65, Paul PETERSON (USA) 71-71-69.
212 - Rikard KARLBERG (SWE) 72-72-68, Rahil GANGJEE (IND) 70-73-69, LIEN Lu-sen (TPE) 67-71-74.
213 - Jack MUNRO (AUS) 70-74-69, Danny CHIA (MAS) 68-74-71, HSU Hao-sheng (TPE) 68-73-72, Rashid KHAN (IND) 71-70-72.

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FRENCHMAN LEADS KLM OPEN IN THE NETHERLANDS

RICHIE RAMSAY THREE BEHIND 

WATTEL AFTER A THIRD-ROUND 65

EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
Romain Wattel will take a three-shot cushion into the final round of the KLM Open, after firing a six under par 64 at Kennemer Golf and Country Club in The Netherlands today.


The 23-year-old Frenchman, pictured, who is bidding for a maiden European Tour title, posted seven birdies in his opening 16 holes, with his only bogey of the day coming on the 17th.
Wattel is 14 under par for the tournament, with Aberdeen’s Richie Ramsay his nearest challenger on 11 under par following a round of 65. Ramsay nearly aced the par three 11th hole for a second consecutive day, stopping his tee shot four feet from the pin.

There was also plenty of drama provided by Englishman Paul Casey, who needed to hole his second shot on his final hole – the ninth - for the first round of 59 on The European Tour.
The former Ryder Cup player’s approach landed an inch from the cup, but then spun off the green and he could only make bogey, signing for a round of 62 and a ten under par total, leaving him four shots back in third place.
Defending champion, and home favourite Joost Luiten made an impressive fightback from a quadruple-bogey 9 on the second hole, carding eight birdies and one bogey in a round of 67.

 He is six shots adrift in a share of sixth position with Frenchman Gary Stal and Englishman Simon Dyson, the three-time KLM Open Champion.
Key player quotes
Romain Wattel: “I know that if I play well enough I will win one day. Maybe that will be tomorrow, maybe it will be in two years. The most important thing for me is to play some good golf. I’m not in the top 100 in the world so I can’t play the majors or the WGCs. 

So I’m just trying to improve my game week after week. I’m feeling confident, but even if I don’t win tomorrow it will have been a good week for me and I will try to keep doing the same, and maybe it will be next week, or the one after.
“The good thing for me this week has been the start. Normally I’ve not started the tournament well, certainly this year. I was in a good position after two rounds. This hasn’t happened very often to me. It is the first time I’ve led after three days, so it’s great. It won’t be easy tomorrow.”
Richie Ramsay: “My attitude pleased me today. It was good fun playing with Søren (Hansen) and Peter (Uihlein) and I tried to treat it like I was playing with my mates and stay patient because it is a tricky golf course out there. I stayed committed to my shots and executed them well. So five under is a good score.
“I nearly got a hole in one on 11 again. It was playing tough, a front pin and it was a seven iron to four feet, so three shots in two days on the hole is a good effort.”
Paul Casey: “I played some good golf today which was wonderful. To throw in a bunch of birdies was great. I wasn’t aware of the 59 chance until the ball skirted past the cup and rolled off the green. I didn’t realise I was close to a 59 until Gary, my caddie, told me.

"I’m ecstatic with the way I played. I’m not disappointed, other than bogeying the last. It’s an opportunity now to challenge for this golf tournament.”
Joost Luiten: “It is difficult mentally when you shoot a 9, but I turned a bad day into a good day and I still have an outside chance tomorrow. So that was all I could hope for. There is a bit of anger and frustration when you have a hole like that but you just have to accept it and say let’s turn it around, make some birdies and come back.
“I’m not in a bad position. Only Romain has really gone for it, and on a course like this, anything can happen. It was nice to show the crowd some birdies after what happened, as they’ve been great.”


THIRD-ROUND TOTALS

Par 210 (3x70)
196 R Wattel  (Fra) 67 65 64

199 R Ramsay  (Sco) 69 65 65
 200 P Casey  (Eng) 68 70 62
 201 P Uihlein  (USA) 66 68 67, A Sullivan (Eng) 67 68 66
202 G Stal  (Fra) 66 71 65, J Luiten (Ned) 65 70 67, S Dyson  (Eng) 70 66 66
203 A Pavan (Ita) 66 70 67, M Kieffer (Ger) 67 68 68, E Pepperell (Eng) 69 68 66, T Pieters  (Bel) 70 66 67, E Molinari  (Ita) 66 66 71
205 P Waring  (Eng) 69 71 65, B Koepka  (USA) 69 66 70, M Ilonen  (Fin) 69 66 70, E Grillo (Arg) 72 66 67, J Hansen  (Den) 72 66 67, P Larrazábal (Esp) 68 62 75, R Rock (Eng) 73 67 65, J Morrison  (Eng) 73 67 65,
206 N Colsaerts  (Bel) 72 68 66, T Aiken (RSA) 67 68 71, J Kruger (RSA) 73 63 70, W Ormsby (Aus) 70 69 67, R Karlsson (Swe) 69 69 68, C Lee (Sco) 69 69 68, M Jiménez (Esp) 71 69 66, R Derksen (Ned) 71 67 68, S Lowry  (Irl) 70 69 67, G Fernandez-Castaño  (Esp) 71 69 66, C Wood  (Eng) 69 67 70, O Fisher  (Eng) 70 66 70

207 R Bland (Eng) 70 70 67, T Hatton (Eng) 68 67 72, M Korhonen (Fin) 71 69 67, R Jacquelin (Fra) 71 68 68, M Warren (Sco) 68 68 71, J Heath  (Eng) 69 67 71, J Hahn (USA) 71 66 70, N Elvira  (Esp) 71 67 69, C Doak (Sco) 69 70 68, D Im (USA) 67 70 70, J Carlsson (Swe) 70 67 70
208 P Harrington (Irl) 70 68 70, T Fleetwood  (Eng) 70 67 71, J Doherty  (Sco) 69 71 68, R Saxton (Ned) 71 67 70, A Gee  (Eng) 69 70 69
209 J Parry (Eng) 71 69 69, M Carlsson  (Swe) 68 71 70, T Lewis (Eng) 70 69 70, R Kakko  (Fin) 69 69 71, T Olesen (Den) 69 71 69, G Bourdy (Fra) 73 67 69, S Hansen (Den) 68 66 75 

210 M Crespi  (Ita) 71 69 70, D Clarke (Nir) 73 67 70, D Howell (Eng) 68 69 73, J Quesne  (Fra) 70 69 71, N Fasth (Swe) 70 70 70, M Foster (Eng) 70 67 73, J Krietemeijer (am) (Ned) 71 69 70
211 A Kaleka  (Fra) 72 67 72, J Lima  (Por) 70 67 74, S Kjeldsen (Den) 70 70 71, W Besseling  (Ned) 68 72 71212 D McGrane (Irl) 71 68 73, B An (SKor) 72 68 72, I Van Weerelt (Ned) 69 70 73, J Singh (Ind) 72 68 72, S Thornton (Irl) 68 69 75

213 J McLeary  (Sco) 67 72 74
214 G Bhullar (Ind) 70 69 75
216 D Huizing (Ned) 72 68 76, E Goya (Arg) 67 73 76


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