Monday, February 02, 2015







PATRICK REED REPLIES TO DAMAGING PERSONAL 

ACCUSATIONS, WILL 'SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT'
 

FROM GOLF CHANNEL.COM
Patrick Reed issued a statement to Golf Channel today after a book excerpt was released last week that depicted the 24-year-old as a win-at-all-costs competitor who was accused of stealing and cheating by former college team-mates.
In a statement released by his management team at IMG, Reed said, “The accusations that were made against me are serious and were intended to damage my reputation and character. They will not be taken lightly. My team and my representatives are looking into all aspects of this matter, and we look forward to setting the record straight.
“For now, I’m staying focused on my life in the present and being the best husband, father and golfer I can be.”
In the upcoming book, slated for a May release, author Shane Ryan wrote that the four-time US PGA Tour winner would openly challenge others’ talents upon meeting them and was so unpopular among his Augusta State team-mates that they hoped he lost his match in the NCAA Championship final.
Most damaging in Ryan’s story, however, were the allegations that Reed cheated during (domestic university) team qualifying rounds and stole from team-mates during his time at Georgia.
Reed is not entered in this week’s Farmers Insurance Open field.

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Link to today's scores in Algarve Pro Tour 54-holer

CLICK HERE

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CHRIS ROBB MOVES INTO MOROCCO TOP 10

Rookie pro Chris Robb (Meldrum House), winner of last year's Scottish amateur championship, has moved into the top 10 of the German PGA Developmental Tour's Samanah Open at Marrakech, Morocco, writes Colin Farquharson.

Robb, pictured, has had rounds of 72 and 71 for 143 - six shots behind Dutch leader Reinier Saxton, winner of the British amateur title at Turnberry in 2008. The Banchory man birdied the 10th, 12th and 16th.
Ross Cameron and David Law slipped out of the top 10 with second rounds of 76 and 77 respectively.
Cameron is T25  on 147 after an inward half that included a 7 at the 13th.
Law, now T33, did not get a 4 at any of the par-5s, having birdied them all in the first round. He had a poor finish of bogeys at the 13th, 14th, 15th and 18th and made the cut on the limit mark of 148. 
 Sam Kiloh and Philip McLean both missed the cut by three shots although, ironically, their respective rounds of 73 and 74 reflected improvements of several shots on their first-day efforts.
SAMANAH OPEN
Samanah CC, Marrakech, Morocco
LEADING SECOND-ROUND SCORES
137 R Saxton (Net) 69 68
139 P Mejow (Ger) 73 66, F Osther (Net) 66 74.

SCOTS' SCORES
143 C Robb 72 71 (8th)
147 R Cameron 71 76 (T25)
148 D Law 71 77 (T33)

MISSED THE CUT (148 and better qualified)
151 S Kiloh 78 73, P McLean 77 74 

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 SENIOR SCOTS STRUGGLE AT FINAL Q SCHOOL

There was little cheer for the Scots on the opening day of the European Senior Tour Final Qualifying School over the Pinta course at Pestana Golf Resort, Lagoa on the Algarve today (Monday), writes Colin Farquharson
Only the leading six in a field of 80 gain full playing rights on the Senior Tour after four rounds, and even the leading Scot in the first round, Alan Saddington, is in joint 46th position after a four-over 76
Amateur Nicky Gold is joint 55th with a 77.
Downfield's Kenny Hutton, originally from Muir of Ord, finished with a 78 and joint 64th place after birdieing the third and sixth but marking up seven bogeys between the fourth and 13th, and also a double bogey 6 at the 17th.
Meldrum House amateur Nick Robson and David James from Dumfries both hit the 79 mark to be joint 69th. Robson took 41 shots - seven over par - to the turn, while James came home in 43 with a triple bogey 8 at the 12th and a double bogey 5 at the short 15th.
Magnus Atlevi (Sweden) has a two-shot lead after a six-under 65.

SCROLL DOWN TO READ THE EUROPEAN TOUR 
COMMUNICATIONS SUMMARY OF DAY ONE

LEADING FIRST-ROUND SCORES
Par 71
65 M Atlevi (Swe)
67 G Bell (Eng), K Tarling (Can).

SCOTS' SCORES
76 A Saddington (T46)
77 N Gold (T55)
78 K Hutton (T64)
79 N Robson (am), D James (T69)
Field of 80 players

ATLEVI LEADS WITH A SIX-UNDER 65

REPORT FROM EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
Sweden’s Magnus Persson Atlevi the youngest player in European Tour history to earn a card via the Qualifying School, made an impressive start to his first attempt at the European Senior Tour’s equivalent, establishing a two stroke advantage after the opening round in Portugal’s Algarve.
 At the 1982 European Tour Qualifying School, Atlevi claimed a European Tour card at the age of 17 years 116 days, beating Alan Evans’ record set five years previously by 128 days, with Italian Renato Paratore, the latest teen-sensation, 225 days older when he came through the most recent contest in November. 
Now Atlevi, who does not turn 50 until July 26, finds himself one of the ‘youngest’ players trying to earn a spot on the Senior Tour for the 2015 season, and he fired a six under par opening round of 65 to set the first-round pace, finishing the opening day two shots clear of Canada’s Ken Tarling and Englishman Graeme Bell at Pestana Resort’s Vale da Pinta course. 
 “I’m delighted with that start,” he said. “Obviously it is a marathon, but it is a fantastic way to start. I couldn’t be happier. To have a start like that in any tournament is good, but especially in the winter, and when you don’t play full time anymore.
" That makes it even more fun. I played pretty well all the way round. I just made the one bogey when I three putted from long distance on the seventh, but the rest was good and I got on to most of the par fives in two.
"I was inside ten feet on each of the last three holes too, but the putts slipped by, so it could have been even better. Let’s hope I can keep it up.” 
Twice a runner up on The European Tour, Atlevi finished inside the top 90 on The European Tour Order of Merit for eight consecutive seasons after securing his card, and won three-times on the European Challenge Tour in the 1990s.
 Atlevi is looking to make an immediate impact on his return to competitive action after spending the past five years as a teaching professional and tournament director in his native Sweden, having ended his regular playing career in 2008. 
 “If my game was in good shape, I thought I would give the Senior Tour a go,” he said. “I didn’t win on The European Tour and I want to win. I don’t want to just be finishing 30th.
 My game has been really solid over the last couple of years, mainly because of my teaching. I’ve been trying things on myself and it’s been good fun seeing how it all works out.” While naturally a different player to the precocious talent who burst on to the scene as part of the pioneering Swedish generation at the start of 1980s, Atlevi can still draw up on that memorable experience as he begins a new chapter this week. “It was obviously a long time ago that I first got my card on The European Tour as a 17 year old but all that experience helps,” said the veteran of 17 European Tour Qualifying School campaigns. 
“Qualifying School is a mind game. I’ve probably been to Qualifying School about 20 times over the years in Europe and Asia. You have to draw on each of those experiences. 
"Unfortunately most of them are bad ones in the sense I didn’t make it, but you can reflect on those too and learn from them. I just approach it as another tournament and don’t allow crazy thoughts to creep in. 
"To shoot 65 on the opening day just shows my preparation was right and I now need to continue playing well.” Tarling also has plenty of Qualifying School experience to fall back on as he embarks on his seventh campaign at Vale da Pinta. 
The 56 year old opened with back-to-back birdies followed by consecutive bogeys at the third and fourth holes to reach the turn in level par 34, before four birdies in six holes at the start of his back nine for a round of 67.
 “It’s my best start here, so I have to be happy with that,” he said.
"I got some putts going today, which was the difference. I hit every green on the back nine, which was nice as the wind got up too. 
 “I was at the final of Champions Tour Qualifying School in November and didn’t pick up a club until I came here, as we have had snow back in Canada, so it’s great to get off to such a good start.”
 Bell, who is competing in his third Senior Tour Qualifying School, had four birdies in his round of 67 to share second place with Tarling, while French duo Roger Sabbaros and Jean Pierre Sallat are a further two shots back on two under par, along with Englishman Bernard White. 
The leading six players at the conclusion of Thursday’s final round will receive full cards for the 2015 Senior Tour season. Those finishing in positions seven to 14 will earn conditional cards. 

ALL THE FIRST-ROUND SCORES
Par 71
65 M Atlevi (Swe)
67 K Tarling (Can) , G Bell (Eng)
69 B White (Eng) , J Sallat (Fra) , R Sabarros (Fra) 
70 R Fish (Eng) , J Harrison (Eng) , M Wharton (Eng) 
71 D Narveson (USA) , J Nougues (Arg) , F Lamare (Fra) , T Elliott (Aus) 
72 B Conser (USA) , C Grenier (Aut) , G Joyner (Aus) , Y Nilsson (Swe) , J Laforce (Can) , S Cipa (Eng) , S East (am) (Eng) , 73 M Bianco (Ita) , L Perrins (RSA) , J Sanchez (Mex) , I Lyner (Eng) , A Macdonald (Eng) , P Scott (Eng) , M Guzman (Arg) , K Hinton (Eng) , J Murphy (Eng)
74 R Ellis (Eng) , D Westermark (Swe) , P Parker (USA) , P Martinez (Par) , J Drummond (Eng) , J Berendt (Arg) , K Spurgeon (Eng) , D Wettlaufer (Can) , F Grosset-Grange (Fra) 
75 G Marks (Eng) , D Ray (Eng) , S McNally (Eng) , T Söderberg (Swe) , G Norquist (USA) , K Smith (Can) , M Hallberg (Swe) 
76 G Milne (Eng) , S Bennett (Eng) , P Gresswell (Eng) , R Adams (Eng) , P Dahlberg (Swe) , R Franco (Par) , A Saddington (Sco) , C Milne (USA) , A George (Eng)  

77 M Deboub (Alg) , A Mori (Ita) , P Romero (Esp) , B James (USA) , P Dugeny (Fra) , D Pearce (Eng) , M Belsham (Eng), T Cooper (am) (Eng), N Gold (am) (Sco) 
78 J Evans (Eng) , K Hutton (Sco) , A Firman (Eng) , J Davila (Esp) , M Reynard (Eng) 
79 R Roper (Eng) , R Tlhabanyane (RSA) , J Lubieniecki (Pol) , D James (Sco) , N Robson (am) (Sco) 
80 N Terry (Eng) , T Tirkkonen (am) (Fin)
81 D Berry (Eng) , M McLean (Eng) 
82 A Jarrett (Eng) , R Briars (Eng) 
 ** K Tenmark (Swe) DISQ

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ELMWOOD STUDENT TOP OF CLASS AT DRUMOIG
 
FROM WALTER BURNS
Scottish Junior Tour
Results from the Scottish Junior Golf Tour event at Drumoig yesterday. It was a level 4 and 5 event. The weather turned out much better than expected. Drumoig was in great condition with just a few frozen greens causing unlucky bounces. 
Lanark Golf Club member Andrew Thompson, a golf student at nearby Elmwood College, Cupar, had the best score of the day - a one under par 72.

LEADING SCORES
Under 18yrs
72 Andrew Thompson (Lanark)
74 Matthew Dalrymple (Lochwinnoch)
78 Euan Gill (Inverness)
79 Andrew McColl (Erskine), Luke Murdoch (Loudoun Gowf)
Under 16yrs
77 Greg Dalziel (Airdrie)
78 Lewis Brown (Tobermory), Jack Williams (Sandyhills)
79 Jack Broun (Belleisle)

Euan English (Erskine) won the short game skill challenges.


Walter Burns
Scottish Junior Golf Tour
Mob: 07951 103 827
Email: walter@scottishjuniorgolftour.co.uk
Web: www.scottishjuniorgolftour.co.uk

 

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FOX AND REID WIN BETTER-BALL AT CRAIGIELAW

Graham Fox (Clydeway Golf) and West Lothian's Alan Reid won today's  PGA in Scotland four-ball, better-ball 18-hole competition at a snow-free Craigielaw links in East Lothian. writes Colin Farquharson.
They headed the field of 16 pairs with a five-under-par 66, having gone out in three-under 32 and home in two-under 34.
Reid was a late substitute for Paul McKechnie as Fox's partner.
The Colville Park partnership of Ian Anderson and Sam Cairns were runners-up with a 67 and third place on 68 was claimed by Craig Everett (Caldwell) and Stewart Savage (Dalmuir)

PGA IN SCOTLAND FOUR-BALL BETTER-BALL
Craigielaw Golf Club, East Lothian
SCORES
Par 71
66 G Fox (Clydeway Golf) and A Reid (West Lothian)
67 I Anderson and S Cairns (Colville Park).
68 C Everett (Caldwell) and S Savage (Dalmuir).
69 K McNicoll (Gullane) and J Cliff (Murrayfield), P Brookes (Pitreavie) and P Wytrazek (Burntisland).
70 M Loftus (Mearns Castle) and S Payne (Cowglen), A Oldcorn (Kings Acre) and D Russell (Archerfield Links).
71 C Billows and M Galley (Gleneagles).
72 N Fenwick (Dunbar) and I Colquhoun (Loch Lomond), J Porteous and D Laing (Craigielaw), A White (Lanark) and R Rafferty (Monte Rei).
73 G Lister (Alness) and S Gray (Hayston).
75 M Allan (Elgin) and B Mason (Callaway Golf), P Walker (Ballumbie Castle) and C Lawson (Wellsgreen), P Wardell (North Berwick) and F Mann (Carnoustie GC).
76 R Dixon and J Fraser (Renaissance Club).

ends

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MONTROSE LINKS OK FOR WEDNESDAY'S 

NORTH-EAST ALLIANCE

Wednesday's North-east Golfers' Alliance at Montrose Links is in no doubt unless the weather takes a turn for the worse. There is no snow on the links and winter greens are being used.

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SCOTTISH STROKE-PLAY CHAMPION BEATEN IN  

PLAY-OFF

PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa - Western Province amateur Ian Snyman defeated reigning Carrick Neil Scottish Open Stroke Play champion Gavin Moynihan with a perfectly timed flop-shot to end a dramatic four-hole play-off for the Eastern Province/Border Stroke Play title on Sunday.
Snyman carded rounds of 68 and 69 at Port Elizabeth Golf Club to take the 36-hole lead at seven-under-par 137, while first round leader Moynihan from Ireland followed an opening 67 with a 73 to lag three shots off the pace going into the final round.
Moynihan, a member of the 2013 Walker Cup and 2014 Eisenhower Trophy team, scorched the course in 66 strokes to set the clubhouse target at 10-under-par 206. However, Snyman answered with a 69 to tie the world number 35 at the end of regulation play.
In three extra trips down the par-five closing hole, the pair were still at a stalemate.
Snyman’s fourth tee shot found the rough on the right, while Moynihan finished just off the 18th fairway. Both players hit their approaches into the right greenside bunker.
Moynihan splashed out to leave himself a 12-footer for birdie, but Snyman’s trap shot flew the green.
“I had 10 metres to the pin, but I couldn’t chip because I had very little green to work with,” the Ernie Els and Fancourt Foundation player explained.
“I hit a flop-shot to make sure the ball would stop, but it hit the center of the cup and dropped for birdie. Gavin’s putt looked like it was going to drop all the way to the hole, but it died just on the lip. I must thank my coach, Paul MacKenzie.
“We worked really hard on my game last year and that flop-shot is all down to his short-game drills.”
Snyman won the 2014 Western Province Premier Tour Order of Merit with four victories and a clutch of top five finishes and lifted the Sanlam Cape Province Open Championship in March.
He was absolutely delighted to kick off his season with victory at the Srixon/Cleveland sponsored event.
“I only played five of provincial events on the national circuit, because I had to concentrate on my studies,” explained Snyman, who leaves for Indian Hills Junior College in Iowa this August.
“That’s why it’s really nice to start the season with a bang. I plan to play as many of the national and provincial tournaments as possible this year to prepare for college.
“Hopefully I can carry my form into the SA Stroke Play this week, but you start every tournament with a clean slate, so I’m not setting my expectations too high. I just want to get through each round as best I can and hopefully I can give myself a chance to challenge in the final round.”
Fellow Western Province golfer Gerlou Roux fired a 67 to finish four strokes back in third, while reigning SA Stroke Play champion Jason Smith from Gauteng North and North West Province’s Aubrey Beckley closed with 70s to tie for fourth on five under 211.
Gary Hurley was the second highest finishers of the Irish squad in the field. He tied for ninth place on 213 - seven shots behind the play-off participants.
 
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72)
206 Ian Snynan 68 69 69, Gavin Moynihan IRE 67 73 66 (Snynan won sudden-death play-off at fourth extra hole).
210 Gerlou Roux 72 71 67
211 Jason Smith 68 73 70; Aubrey Beckley 72 69 70
212 Andre Nel 69 71 72; Luke Trocado 69 75 68; Tristen Strydom 72 72 68
213 Gary Hurley IRE 69 70 74; Herman Loubser 73 70 70; Keegan de Lange 72 73 68
214 Jovan Rebula 72 72 70
215 James du Preez 73 71 71; Jack Hume IRE 71 75 69; Jade Buitendag 73 73 69
216 Sean Bradley 71 74 71; Romain Langasque FRA 73 72 71; Cormac Sharvin IRE 74 73 69
217 Ugo Coussard FRA 72 73 72
218 Teaghan Gauche 74 71 73; Rupert Kaminski 72 78 68
 
SELECTEDTOTAL
220 Dermot McElroy (Ireland) 75 72 73 (T31).

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LANCS' PAUL HOWARD THROUGH TO NSW FINAL

Paul Howard (Southport and Ainsdale) is through to the final of the New South Wales Amateur match-play championship at Avondale Golf Club, writes Colin Farquharson.
The No 2 seed, Howard will play the 28th qualifier, David Micheluzzi in Tuesday's final.

The top seed, Cameron Davis (New South Wales) lost to Brayden Petersen, the No 8 qualifier, in the quarter-finals. Micheluzzi topplef Davis in the semi-finals.
Howard, pictured, won the South American amateur championship last year.

FROM THE NSW WEBSITE
The morning rounds for the Men’s Quarter Finals found some upsets with the Number 9 seed, Brayden Petersen (NSW) defeating top seed Cameron Davis (NSW) by one hole.
Victoria’s David Micheluzzi (28th seed) defeated South Korea’s Sung-jae Im (29th seed) also by one hole.
Number 2 seed, England’s Paul Howard came through with a 2/1 win. Andrew Tharle (ACT) and 22nd seed defeated young gun Justin Warren (NSW) 4/3.
In the Semi Finals  Micheluzzi defeated Brayden Petersen (NSW) 3/1 to secure his position in the final. Another close match for the second spot in tomorrow’s final was between England’s Paul Howard and Andrew Tharle (ACT) with Howard winning 3 and 2
Quarter finals for the Women’s matchplay also saw number one seed So-young Lee (S Korea) go down to her team mate Eun-bin Lim (S Korea) in a tough match on the 19th. Celina Yuan (NSW) defeated her opponent A-eun Cho (S Korea) on the 18th, 1up. Queenslander’s Robyn Choi and Eunice Kim battled it out for Kim to win 2/1. Korea’s Eun-jeong Seong upset Olivia Wilson (NSW) on the 19th.
It will be an all- South Korean final for the Women’s NSW Amateur Championship with both semi-final matches going to extra holes. Eun-bin Lim defeated Celina Yuan (NSW) on the 19th. Eun-jeong Seong beat Queenslander Eunice Kim also at the first extra hole.
 
COMPLETE DRAW (MEN)
 
COMPLETE DRAW (WOMEN)

NSW MEN'S RESULTS

QUARTER-FINALS
Brayden Petersen (No 8 seed) bt Cameron Davis (1) 1 hole.
David Micheluzzi (28) bt Sung-jae Im (29) 1 hole.
Paul Howard (2) bt Nicholas Curnow (7) 2 and 1.
Andrew Tharle (22) bt Justin Warren (3) 4 and 3.
SEMI-FINALS
Micheluzzi bt Petersen 3 and 2.
Howard bt Tharle 3 and 2.

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TASMANIAN TIGER GOGGIN WINS ON WEB.COM 

TOUR  IN PANAMA
 
Mathew Goggin is off to a flying start for 2015, claiming
his fifth Web.com Tour title at the first event of the season in
Panama (From the Australian PGA website).

Goggin cruised to a four-shot win on the back of a 3-under-par round on Sunday to win the Panama Claro Championship for the second time.
The 40-year-old Tasmanian, pictured with the trophy, also claimed this tournament in 2011, his last win on the secondary US Tour.

Goggin was in complete control of his game Sunday, his final round of 67 bettered by only five players.There were 12 Australians in the opening event of the season including several teeing up for the first time on the Tour.
 Goss, Brett Drewitt and Bryden Macpherson all made their Web.com debuts with Goss (T12) finishing next best Australian behind Goggin while  Drewitt (T34) was mid field and Macpherson missed the cut.

Ash  Hall (T15), Steve Allan (T28), Rod Pampling (T40) and Aron Price (T68) were the others to make the weekend while Adam Crawford, Alistair Presnell, Bronson La'Cassie and Scott Gardiner missed the cut.
James Nitties was entered in the field but unfortunately had to withdraw due to injury.

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SPANISH STUDENT JON RAHM KEEPING FEET ON 

GROUND AFTER T5 FINISH IN PHOENIX OPEN



SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – What a weekend for Jon Rahm at the  Phoenix Open. The Arizona State third-year student from Spain carded a 3-under 68 en route to a tie for fifth place at 12-under 272, three strokes behind winner Brooks Koepka, writes Adam Schupak (GolfWeek).
“Lifetime experience,” said Rahm, 20, of Barrika, Spain. “It just shows me that I’m a lot better than I thought.”
Rahm, who received a sponsor exemption into the field, made par on TPC Scottsdale's first eight holes Sunday before a bogey at No. 9 to make the turn in 36. “I was kind of mad,” he said. “On 10, I said, ‘It’s a new day, so really start over again.’ ”
He did just that, rolling in a 16-foot birdie putt there and then circling the card three more times, at Nos. 13, 15 and 17. Just as he did every day, Rahm donned a Sun Devils football jersey with his nickname – Rahmbo – on the back when he arrived at the stadium par-3 16th.
“It’s like being a gladiator,” Rahm said of playing the famed hole with its Colosseum-like setting.
Rahm battled nerves early and got off to a sluggish start in his first round. He was 3 over through his first six holes.
“I don’t think my heart has ever beaten that fast,” Rahm said. “I honestly thought I was going to pass out right on the tee.”
The whole complexion of his tournament changed at the 17th hole when he nearly aced the drivable par 4.
“If I don’t eagle that hole, I don’t know how anything would have been,” he said.
Rahm topped Phil Mickelson, who finished T-32 in 1991, for the best finish by a current member of the Sun Devils golf team in the  Phoenix Open. Rahm also is the first amateur to finish in the top 5 of a Tour event since Englishman Chris Wood placed fifth at the 2008 Open Championship.

If Rahm, pictured, were a professional, he would have earned $239,400 for his lofty Phoenix Open finish, alongside Martin Laird.
However, amateurs can’t top-10 their way into the next Tour event, so Rahm is scheduled to catch a flight today (Monday) to Hawaii to meet his college team-mates for the Amer Ari Invitational, which begins February 5.
By making the cut at a Tour event, Rahm is exempt into the first stage of Web.com Tour Qualifying School in the autumn. Despite proving this week that his game stacks up against the pros, Rahm hasn’t lost sight of his goal to stay in school and graduate.
“My mom and dad always preached the importance of getting an education,” Rahm said. “You have to have a career, just in case. The US PGA Tour isn’t going anywhere.”









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BROOKS KOEPKA VICTORY CONFIRMS ARRIVAL OF 

THE YOUNG GUNS ON US PGA TOUR

SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – Don’t believe the headlines. Don’t give in to clichéd opinion. Don’t buy all the hype about the weekend’s US PGA Tour event representing some sort of “changing of the guard” or “young gun uprising” or “end of an era” or “the future of golf," writes Jason Sobel (Golf.com)
What happened at the Phoenix Open – where a 24-year-old prevailed over a 22-year-old, with a 21-year-old and a 20-year-old in hot pursuit after two other 21-year-olds had stolen the spotlight during first two days, which also featured a 44-year-old superstar and 39-year-old mega-superstar looking stiff and tired and fragile in a few different ways – isn’t the future. This is the here and now.

On a weekend when 25-year-old Rory McIlroy reaffirmed that he’s far and away the world’s best golfer with a seemingly easy win in Dubai, and 17-year-old Lydia Ko reached No. 1 in the women’s rankings, Brooks Koepka’s victory doesn’t symbolise a new world in the game and it isn’t emblematic of any seismic shift.
No, this is the present. This is golf 2015. Deal with it – or get left behind like so many seasoned US PGA Tour veterans have lately.


“Just playing against each other for years and years, since about 14,” explained Koepka (pictured above) about their collective knack for appearing so comfortable. 
“We have played against these guys for years and years, and it's fun. We enjoy it and they are all really good players.
If the last three weeks had been the US PGA Tour's soft launch to this calendar year, this tournament was to be its grand opening, a celebrated ribbon-cutting that represented hope-springs-eternal optimism at the game's biggest keg party.
Tiger Woods was returning to TPC Scottsdale for the first time in 14 years; favourite son and three-time champion Phil Mickelson was here, too. Before the weekend, though, each had been relegated to slamming his trunk after a missed cut.
And yet, the optimism didn't subside. It just shifted.
The old stalwarts were replaced by young upstarts all over the leaderboard. 
For two rounds, rookies Justin Thomas and Daniel Berger lingered atop the leaderboard. They gave way to more experienced youngsters. Jordan Spieth notched a share of seventh place. Hideki Matsuyama was in it until the final hole. Even an Arizona State amateur named Jon Rahm impressively navigated himself to a T-5 result.
Then there was Koepka, who used brute strength to overpower TPC Scottsdale, including a 331yd drive that split the fairway on the final hole.
So much for nerves. So much for inexperience. So much for toiling amongst the rank-and-file, learning the ropes before contending and, finally, winning.
There’s no statistic to measure this, but this generation’s young stars are more fearless than ever before. Koepka appeared as comfortable in the final group as fellow 24-year-old Patrick Reed was inspired during his fourth career win just three weeks ago.
The amount of young players with serious game is so significant that even one of the game’s so-called “up-and-comers” already sees himself in a different light.
“I don't know if [I’m] considered to be a vet yet or if I'm still young,” Rickie Fowler, 26, philosophised earlier in the week. “I guess I'm kind of in the middle. Yeah, last year and this year I have had a couple groups where I have been the oldest player. Maybe that's veteran territory. I don't know.”
It’s not just that this next generation of players is talented. It’s that they’ve changed their goals. They’re reaching higher. It’s not enough for them to treat the first few years of PGA Tour life as graduate school. They want to skip right to the real world and take over the corner office.
It wasn’t so long ago that players in Koepka’s situation – he was technically a rookie last season, while playing most of his golf on the European Tour – would speak of keeping their cards as a major goal. Now those objectives have been elevated.
“Winning on the PGA Tour was the one thing that I wanted to accomplish,” he said afterward. “I wanted to come out this year, get a win, make Presidents Cup and further down the road make the Ryder Cup
"That's the goal. I don't see why I can't. I feel like my game is ready for that. I was ready to compete for majors and win them.”
It’s one thing to aim high. It’s another to reach those goals.
Koepka certainly appears to be on the right track so far, with his first US PGA Tour title now matching his one from the European circuit just three months ago. He’s not alone, either.
This isn’t the future of golf. It’s already the present. Get used to it.

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TWO POOR SHOTS UNDER PRESSURE KO'd LAIRD
 
SCOTTSDALE, Arizona – Martin Laird held a share of the lead through 70 holes of the Phoenix Open, but after two poor tee shots his chances for a fourth UIS PGA Tour win were doomed, writes Will Gray (Golf.com).
Laird began the final round with a three-shot lead but that position was reversed by the end of the day, as the Scot finished three shots behind winner Brooks Koepka after a 1-over 72. It was the fourth time Laird (pictured below) has held a 54-hole lead on Tour, but only once has he left with the trophy in hand.
“Standing on 17 and tied for the lead is kind of where you want to be,” Laird said later. 
“It’s obviously going to be a hard one to take the way the last two holes went.”


The issue for Laird came at No. 17, where an errant 5-wood bounded into the gallery down the right side of the short par-4. He was forced to play away from the pin with his chip, and took three putts from 53 feet for a bogey that dropped him behind Koepka.
Down by a shot and with Koepka already on the final fairway, Laird then pulled a 5-wood into the lake left of the fairway at No. 18. 
The error led to a closing double bogey, and Laird ultimately finished in a tie for fifth at 12 under alongside amateur Jon Rahm.
“For me it’s a perfect 5-wood, 9-iron like I did the second time. Gives me as good a chance making birdie as hitting driver. That was my mindset,” Laird said. “Didn’t go as planned.”
This is the second time Laird has watched a lead slip away over the weekend during the 2014-15 season. The 32-year-old from Glasgow and a former Scottish youths champion who turned pro in America after four years at Colorado State University, held the top spot at the halfway point of the season-opening Frys.com Open in October, but finished T-3. 
As Laird heads to this week’s Farmers Insurance Open, though, he sees reason for optimism. 
“I’ll think of this tonight and tomorrow for sure, but come next Thursday I will be ready to go,” said Laird, whose last victory came at the 2013 Valero Texas Open. 
“You’ve got to take positives out of it and look at somebody like Billy Horschel last year. Everybody was kind of on him about what he did the one tournament, and he came back and won the next two events. 
“I don’t see why I can’t  get in contention at the next one  and hopefully get a win.”

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