Sunday, June 21, 2015

 

Scott Jamieson eyes return of early pro promise

FROM BBC SPORT.COM
Scott Jamieson, pictured above, admits he has struggled to come to terms with being unable to build on his early successes as a professional golfer.
The 31-year-old Scot has not won on the European Tour since the Nelson Mandela Championship in December 2012.
"The last two years, I've probably not handled not having the results that I was having in my first two years," he told BBC Scotland.
"Hopefully, I am going to iron those out this year and press on."
From a world-ranking high of 71st in 2013, Jamieson is presently at 277 and says that, although he is showing great consistency this season, it has not yet translated into monetary gains.
"It has been a very solid year but a very different year for me," he said.
"My first four years, I would probably make as many cuts as I would miss, but the cuts I made I would feature and I would have four or five top-10s.
"I have yet to have a top-10 this year, but I think I have made 12 out of 15 cuts, so it has been a bit different, a bit more consistent, but it is not as lucrative that way.
"You are better off missing three cuts and then having a top five."
Jamieson won the 2012 Nelson Mandela Championship in South Africa
In his first season as a professional, Jamieson topped the EuroPro Tour rankings and then qualified for the European Tour after finishing in the top 15 after his one year on the intermediate Challenge Tour.
"The last two years for me have been a bit of a downturn after my first three years, which I couldn't have imagined going any better," he said.
"Getting a win under my belt reasonably early in my European Tour career, I wouldn't say it came earlier than I expected, but the momentum kept rolling.
"You either keep expecting or look for the same level of improvement all the time and in golf that's maybe unrealistic because there obviously has to be a pinnacle at some point."
Jamieson's form slump coincided with the birth of his daughter, Zoe, a year and a half ago, but he has no regrets about starting a family.
"It is the best thing that's ever happened to me," he said. "Fortunately, I've always been a morning person, so getting up early doesn't bother me too much.
"I do remember my first couple of years on tour. You just assumed that everyone you're competing against is 100% prepared for every day, they've had a great night's sleep, their practice at home's been going perfectly.
"And then, all of a sudden, if my wife and Zoe come with me to a tournament, you maybe don't have a great night's sleep, you are maybe feeling a bit groggy in the morning.
"But then you look around and think, well, I'm not the only guy here who is married with a kid. Everyone else has had to deal with this."

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US Open: Kirk posts 10 on first hole at Chambers Bay after just off green in 2 shots

It'll definitely be a weekend to forget for Chris Kirk.
A day after posting a 10-over 80 to fall way off the pace at the U.S. Open, Kirk started his final round with a 10 on the opening par-4 first hole en route to an 8-over 78.
Kirk is currently 75th at 21 over for the tournament – last among those that made the cut at Chambers Bay.
The 10 on Sunday morning (local Washington State time) happened mostly due to poor short-game play. Kirk was just off the green in two shots, but was on the downslope side. His first chip didn't make it to the green, and came back to nearly where he was. He suffered the same result again with his fourth shot. And again on his fifth, sixth and seventh shots.
He'd finally get it on the green with his eighth pitch and two-putted to sit at 6 over through one hole.

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Gros breaks losing sequence for Frenchmen at St Omer in Challenge Tour event
EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
Sébastien Gros became the first Frenchman to win the Najeti Open in 11 years as he cruised to a six shot victory on home turf at Saint Omer.
The 25 year old led the field by seven shots heading into the final round in northern France and he continued in that imperious vein of form to march to a convincing victory, setting the mark for the biggest winning margin this season.
Gros shook off any fears of nerves on the final day as he birdied the opening hole and, with his playing partners Terry Pilkidaris and Ryan Fox both carding bogeys, the lead was extended to nine.
The two Australians eventually fell back and it was another Frenchman, Thomas Linard, who emerged as the most viable candidate to topple his compatriot.
It was not to be, however, and it was the man from Lyon who strolled to the most comfortable of victories courtesy of a two under final round 69 and a 14 under cumulative total - moving to second place in the Road to Oman Rankings in the process.
“On paper, it seemed that it was easy but it was not,” said Gros, who gained his Challenge Tour card having negotiated his way through the First and Second Stages of Qualifying School last year. 
“I am a very emotional person and I did not sleep well last night - I barely ate. I missed some shorts putts in the middle of the round today and my caddie helped me to improve on my stroke.
“I had thoughts about winning during the round but honestly, I was only sure after my first putt on the 17th. Believe me, it was only at this moment that I finally told myself that it could no longer go wrong for me.
“There are no small or big titles, you have to learn to win. If your golf is in bad shape, even winning in a pro-am can help. But I am so happy even if I don't think it has really sunk in yet. What I am sure of is that I deserved this win.”
With his victory coming on Father’s Day, Gros was quick to point out the part his family have played in his rise to the brink of European Tour qualification – he is now just €21,000 shy of the figure which clinched the last graduation spot in the Race to Oman Rankings last year, having previously racked up two top five finishes this season.
“I want to thank my caddie for the support this week as well as my coach (former European Tour player) Benoit Telleria," said the two-time Alps Tour winner. "Benoit never managed to play well here so I took revenge for him.
“Finally, I want to thank my parents and my sister who came to support me this week. I did not manage to win for my mother on Mother’s Day in Czech Republic, but today is Father's Day so this win is for them.”
Linard, meanwhile, feels like he is back on the right track, having struggled to build on the momentum of winning a first Challenge Tour title of his own last year, after an impressive five under par final round 66 earned him the outright runner-up spot.
“I have tried to enjoy being on the golf course more and it has worked this week,” said the 27 year old, who won the D+D REAL Czech Challenge last year. "I had some issues living up to my new status of tournament winner last year.
“My goal now is to win more tournaments and to play on The European Tour so this second place makes me feel I am on the right path.”

Another former Challenge Tour winner Roope Kakko of Finland, finished in third place on his own after a three under 68 earned him a seven under total.

ALL THE FINAL TOTALS
270 S Gros (Fra) 68 66 67 69,
276 T Linard (Fra) 69 69 72 66,
277 R Kakko  (Fin) 67 71 71 68,
279 T Pilkadaris (Aus) 66 72 70 71,
280 R Fox (Nzl) 67 73 68 72, J Walters (RSA) 71 70 68 71,
281 O Bekker (RSA) 71 73 67 70,
282 M Bremner (RSA) 72 70 69 71, B Stone (RSA) 71 70 69 72, J Hansen  (Den) 70 71 72 69,
283 R Santos  (Por) 73 69 70 71,
284 P Meesawat  (Tha) 70 72 72 70, S Hodgson (Eng) 69 67 73 75, R Coles (Eng) 71 74 70 69, H Joannes  (Bel) 66 73 71 74, F Calmels  (Fra) 74 67 72 71, D Gaunt (Eng) 73 69 71 71,
285 J Ballesteros (Esp) 74 68 69 74, J Heath  (Eng) 76 68 70 71, G Murray  (Sco) 72 72 71 70, S Einhaus (Ger) 71 71 71 72, S Walker (Eng) 71 72 73 69, J Guerrier  (Fra) 74 71 70 70,
286 L Gagli  (Ita) 73 70 70 73, F Andersson Hed (Swe) 68 73 74 71, C Aguilar  (Esp) 72 71 68 75, J Doherty  (Sco) 69 74 69 74, J Dantorp (Swe) 71 68 74 73, S Manley (Wal) 72 72 67 75, D Stewart (Sco) 73 72 70 71,
287 C Brazillier  (Fra) 70 71 73 73, C Hanson (Eng) 71 74 73 69, M Orrin (Eng) 71 71 72 73, D Woltman (USA) 75 70 72 70,
288 A Kaleka  (Fra) 73 68 74 73, E Saltman  (Sco) 72 73 72 71, C Shinkwin (Eng) 72 72 72 72, R Gouveia (Por) 70 74 72 72, S Kim (USA) 69 72 73 74, J Fahrbring (Swe) 68 74 70 76, D Vancsik (Arg) 73 72 71 72, C Selfridge  (Nir) 71 73 73 71,
289 C Gloet  (Den) 70 72 72 75, S Henry  (Sco) 68 74 73 74, E Dubois (Fra) 69 71 74 75, R Davies (Wal) 75 70 70 74, J Rutherford (Eng) 70 73 69 77, D Huizing (Ned) 74 71 66 78, J Glennemo (Swe) 73 70 73 73,
290 G Maybin (Nir) 74 71 70 75, J Gonnet  (Fra) 73 72 73 72, B Chapellan (Fra) 69 70 77 74, A Grenier  (Fra) 71 72 72 75, J Billing (Swe) 74 71 72 73, P Dwyer (Eng) 72 72 75 71, P Whiteford (Sco) 67 74 74 75,
291 W Harrold (Eng) 72 72 72 75,
292 B Hafthorsson (Isl) 72 72 74 74, V Riu  (Fra) 71 73 76 72, J Watts (Eng) 72 71 73 76, M Schneider (Ger) 69 73 79 71, A Snobeck  (Fra) 70 74 69 79, J Senior (Eng) 74 71 71 76, T Remkes (Ned) 68 75 76 73, G Woolgar (Eng) 73 71 77 71,
293 A Gee  (Eng) 77 68 73 75, S Garcia Rodriguez (Esp) 74 71 75 73, N Elvira  (Esp) 75 70 70 78, T Sluiter  (Ned) 72 67 73 81,
294 J Garcia Pinto (Esp) 77 68 73 76,
295 N Ravano (Ita) 67 75 79 74, N Quintarelli (Ita) 74 69 74 78, S Fernoux (Fra) 71 73 75 76,
297 P Widegren  (Swe) 74 69 79 75, D Law (Sco) 74 71 82 70,



EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS

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Royal Aberdeen through to Aberdeen Junior Pennant Final at Inverurie

Royal Aberdeen beat Portlethen 4.5 to 0.5 in the delayed Paul Lawrie Foundation Aberdeen Junior Pennant League semi-final at Inverurie today.
The course was closed soon after the match finished with heavy rain flooding the greens.
Royal Aberdeen will now play Kemnay in the final next Sunday (June 28) at Inverurie again. Tee off at 11.30am

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Larry Mize replaced by Tommy Armour in US Senior Open

Larry Mize has withdrawn from the 2015 U.S. Senior Open Championship due to a rib injury. Mize, who was fully exempt into the championship, has been replaced by Tommy Armour III, of Dallas, who was the first alternate from the South Bend, Indiana sectional qualifying site.

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MacDougall makes all the running to win  

Tennant Cup for second year in a row


Defending champion Alasdair MacDougall (Elderslie)  led from wire to wire for an impressive four-stroke repeat victory in the Tennant Cup at Glasgow Golf Club, Killermont today (Sunday).
 The 2012 British boys championship semi-finalist shot Saturday scores of 71 and 70 at Glasgow Gailes and stayed in the pole position with third and fourth round efforts of 68 and 67 for an aggregate of 276 - six shots lower than his winnng total 12 months ago and 16 strokes under the combined CSS of 292 (74-74-72-72)
Jamie Savage (Cawder) moved into second place after a third-round 68 but was unable to close the gap with a repeat score in the final round..
McDougall had an eagle 2 at the 17th in his third round and cruised to victory on the back of birdies at the ninth, 10th, 11th and 13th in his last circuit. His only bogey came at the 16th but he was out of Savage's reach by then.


LEADING FINAL TOTALS
 Glasgow Gailes SS 74, CSS 74 74
 Killermont SS 69, CSS 72 72

276 A MacDougall (Elderslie) 71 70 68 67
280 J Savage (Cawder) 73 71 68 68
282 K Godsman (Moray) 72 73 70 70
283 E Wood (Crow Wood) 68 75 71  69
285 J Jamieson (St Andrews New) 70 76 68  71, C Low (Tantallon) 70 76 69 70, A Campbell (Dumbarton) 73 75 70 67
286 G Duncan (Windyhill) 72 71 73 70
287 R Campbell (Falkirk) 74 70 71 72, M Clark (Kilmacolm) 70 78 68 71, S Rennie (Drumpellier) 71 77 68 71
288 C MacLean (Balmore) 69 74 71 74
289 F Davren (Williamwood) 71 74 69 75
291 B Hume (Haggs Castle) 76 72 71 72, N Gold (Bonnyton) 74 75 70 73
292 P Gault (Haggs Castle) 74 71 73 74, A Blaney (Liberton) 73 76 70 73, S Manning (Pollok) 77 75 72 68
293 C Baird (Bothwell Castle) 75 70 77 71
295 K Hamilton (Ayr Belleisle) 81 68 72 74, J P Brown (Haggs Castle) 76 75 71 73, C Edgar (Cochrane Castle) 73 75 74 783

296 J Harling (Banchory) 76 77 73 70
297 C W Nelson (Glasgow) 71 72 76 78
SELECTED TOTAL
299 J Wright (Forres) 71 74 74 80


TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS


CLICK HERE


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Bathgate's Bryce finshes runner-up to impressive Sir Henry Cooper Junior Masters winner Penge

  Halfway leader Joseph Bryce (Bathgate) finished runner-up to Marco Penge (Goodwood), an impressive second-time winner of the Sir Henry Cooper Junior Masters at Nizels Golf Club, Tonbridge in Kent.
Bryce had rounds of 66, 71, 73 -oand 71 for a total of one-over-par 281 round the par-70 course.
Penge, who won this event as a 12-year-old five years ago, shot a professional-class aggregate of 14-under-par 274 with rounds of 71, 70, 66 and 67. He finished seven strokes ahead of Bryce who had three strokes to spare over a cluster of players in joint third place on 284
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
Par 280 (4x70)BOYS
274 M Penge (Goodwood) 71 70 66 67
281 J Bryce (Bathgate) 66 71 73 71
284 R-N Wharton (Sandiway) 69 72 69 74, W Enefer (Wrekin) 72 67 73 72, G Saunders (Meon Valley) 70 69 73 72, N Longley (Worthing) 69 69 74 72, C Purcel (Nizels) 71 67 74 72
285  Keaton Lowe (Wheatley) 70 72 69 74

OTHER SCOTS' SCORES
289 R Watson (Muckhart) 71 73 72 73 (T13)
297 S Scott (Nairn) 70 73 79 75 (T32)

MISSED CUT
149 M Napier (Turnhouse) 75 74
152 R Franssen (Inverness) 73 74
153 K Bowman (St Andrews New) 78 75
156 L Reid (Longniddry) 78 78
157 D McNeill (Powfoot) 82 75
159 M McCulloch (Portpatrick Dunskey) 81 78
162 S Locke (Banchory) 73 89
170 B Henderson (Deeside) 89 81 


 

TO VIEW ALL THE FINAL TOTALS


CLICK HERE

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 Irishman Lowry has US Open victory chance
 
FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR WEBSITE
Irishman Shane Lowry believes his positive mental attitude has carried him into contention to land his maiden Major in the US Open Championship.
Despite a level par round of 70, the two-time European Tour champion made stealthy progress up the leaderboard as Chambers Bay bared its teeth on day three.  
Currently inside the top five on one under par, Lowry is confident he is coming to terms with Robert Trent Jones’ quirky layout, which has come in for some heavy criticism – much of it unfair, according to the genial Irishman. 
He said: “It’s very tough, but I think it’s playable. It’s been getting a lot of slack, especially the greens. They’re not the best surfaces, but if you hit a good putt nine times out of ten it goes in. 
" Sometimes you do hit a good putt and it misses, but you have to accept it and move on, rather than dwell on it.
“And it’s very tough to hit greens, but at the end of the day it’s the US Open so you can’t expect it to be easy. The leader is on four under, which you don’t normally get at a US Open. So it’s tough, but it’s not unfair. At Pinehurst last year, if you missed the green sometimes you couldn’t chip. So I think that was a little more unfair than this course is.
“A couple of months ago, some guys came and played here and I saw a few comments on Twitter. Criticising the golf course before you get here isn’t necessarily the right thing to do. When I got here on Monday I thought a few holes were a bit funky, but the more you play it, the more this course grows on you. And I think that’s one of the reasons I’m in the position I am toda
y.”
 
SCROLL DOWN FOR MORE NEWS FROM THE US OPEN 
AND THE THIRD-ROUND SCOREBOARD

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 Caddie pulls groggy Jason Day through to 

four-way share of US Open lead

POSITIONS WITH ONE ROUND TO GO
206 JOINT LEADERS JASON DAY, BRANDEN GRACE, DUSTIN JOHHSON, JORDAN SPIETH
 FROM ESPN.COM
  By IAN O'CONNOR
UNIVERSITY PLACE, Washington. -- Three holes  into the third round of the U.S. Open, Jason Day was ready to surrender to an opponent far more formidable than the Chambers Bay greens. He was tired, nauseous and groggy from the drugs pumped into his system to fight the vertigo that had dropped him to the canvas Friday and left him looking like he had just absorbed a Mike Tyson hook.
Day was not going to make it on his own. He needed a shepherd to guide him up and down the hills of a golf course treacherous enough to break the youngest and sturdiest of men, and he had the right one on his bag. 
Colin Swatton, his lifelong coach and caddie, stopped Day on the fourth hole to tell him this was no time to quit.
"You've got the heart of a lion," Swatton told his player. "You get to show the world today that you're going to be the greatest you can be. Look, let's do it."
So Day put his head down and took it one shot, one putt, one wobbly step at a time. The Mayo Clinic describes vertigo as "the sudden sensation that you're spinning or the inside of your head is spinning" and labels benign positional vertigo (Day's diagnosis) a condition "rarely serious, except when it increases the chances of falls."
Or when you're trying to beat the world's best golfers on a course that all but makes a player climb up and down Mount Rainier a half-dozen times.
No, Day wasn't going to get this one to the house without the right shoulder to lean on and the right voice in his ear. On Father's Day weekend, the man described as Day's father figure wouldn't let the 27-year-old Australian heed the inner voice assuring him it would be OK to give up.
Day nearly called it a day at No. 4 and again at No. 7, yet he kept staggering and lurching forward in true zombie form. He kept backing away from his ball to realign his rapidly blinking eyes. He wouldn't move a muscle or turn his head without carefully considering the consequences. The simple act of bending over to retrieve his ball or tee drained his overheated battery, and sometimes Swatton's body weight was all that separated Day from another dramatic fall to the ground.
The vertigo blitzed Day on the 13th tee, and it left him shaking at No. 16.
 "I just wanted to get it in," the golfer would say of his round, and millions of transfixed viewers were willing him across the finish line. Somehow, some way, Day wasn't just surviving out there; he was thriving. Honest to God, he was tearing up the U.S. Open, sinking putts from all over and, ultimately, birdieing three of his final four holes to shoot 68 and share the lead at 4-under.
Day's 31 on the back nine Saturday was no less impressive than Jack Nicklaus' 30 on the inward nine at the 1986 Masters. 
The U.S. Open had not seen a contender in this kind of distress since an exhausted Ken Venturi won on a 36-hole day at Congressional in 1964, after a doctor told him he'd be risking his life if he played the final 18 in the oppressive heat.
Nobody told Day he was risking any such thing after Friday's frightening fall at No. 9, yet Swatton was never sure the player he has been teaching since age 12 could summon the will to stay in the tournament. The caddie kept feeding Day food, water and words of reassurance -- whatever he felt would keep the man upright.
"Just tried to get him through," Swatton said after it was done.
 "I said to him, 'They might make a movie about that round' ... It was up there with Tiger Woods playing with a broken leg at the [2008] U.S. Open."
 Day made a long birdie putt at the 17th and recovered from a wayward drive at the 604-yard, par-5 18th to land his third shot close to the pin and draw thunderous applause from the grandstand.
He sank the putt, managed a weary wave of acknowledgement and wiped the eyes he'd been rubbing all day.
"That was the greatest round of golf I've ever watched," Swatton told him. "That was a superhuman effort."
Day said the same case of vertigo that knocked him out at Firestone last year wasn't as severe as the one that hit him over the past two days, and as the golfer sought treatment in a trailer between the players' locker room and practice range, Swatton stood inside a circle of reporters near the compound and confirmed he'd never seen Day in such a weakened state.
The 45-year-old caddie had spent the day managing his player's stress, and it took a heavy toll on him too. Day was sent to his golf academy 15 years ago, after the boy's father, Alvin, died of cancer the same year Swatton lost his own father, Alan, to the same disease. 
Day and Swatton have talked about their shared pain. No matter the outcome on Father's Day at Chambers Bay, they'll both be dealing with the worst kind of void.
"That's the biggest thing about losing your dad," Swatton said. "He can't be there for your special moments."
As a teenager, Day made himself a prospect by outworking more talented kids on Swatton's range. He read Tiger Woods' book, "How I Play Golf," and decided he wanted to someday win tournaments like the one and only.
Day hasn't won a big one yet. He has managed five top-five finishes in majors. But if he wins his first Sunday, chances are it will feel like he has won the career Grand Slam.

No, it won't be easy. Jordan Spieth is chasing the second leg of that Grand Slam, and Dustin Johnson is an ultra-athletic slugger who can win in a ballpark this big. But if Jason Day was strong enough Saturday to hit the ball better than he had the first two days and drop five birdie putts on the back nine -- with his head spinning, no less -- who could possibly bet against him Sunday?
Day wouldn't even accept the offer of his fellow competitor, Kevin Kisner, to pick his golf ball out of the cups.
"When you're making birdies," Kisner said, "I don't care how bad you feel. You want to pick it out of the hole."
Day has something else on his side too. His caddie is such a dead ringer for a younger Jack Nicklaus that the Golden Bear's wife, Barbara, approached him at a Palm Springs hotel 10 years ago thinking Swatton was her spouse.
"And when I turned around, she said, 'Oh, I'm sorry,'" Swatton recalled with a laugh. "Jack came down a few minutes later."
Nicklaus won the Masters at age 46, Woods beat Rocco Mediate in that Torrey Pines playoff on one leg, and Venturi conquered his survival test at Congressional, all among the game's greatest major championship feats.
Now Day has a chance to put his name right next to theirs.
"But whatever happens tomorrow," Swatton said as the sun started to fade on an indelible Saturday at the U.S. Open, "what just happened will always be remembered as an amazing round of golf."
This is true. Win, lose or withdraw on Father's Day, nobody can take this U.S. Open moment from Jason Day and the wise man who shepherded him home.
SCOTSWATCH: Marc Warren is T25 on 214. Jimmy Gunn from Dornoch is T35 on 215.  Colin Montgomerie is T46 on 217.

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UNITED STATES OPEN THIRD ROUND SCOREBOARD

    T1    Australia                  Jason Day    -4    F    -2    68    70    68               206
    T1    United States           Dustin Johnson    -4    F    E    65    71    70         206
    T1    South Africa           Branden Grace    -4    F    E    69    67    70         206
    T1    United States          Jordan Spieth    -4    F    +1    68    67    71         206
    T5    South Africa          L Oosthuizen    -1    F    -4    77    66    66           209
    T5    Australia               Cameron Smith    -1    F    -1    70    70    69         209
    T5    Ireland                  Shane Lowry    -1    F    E    69    70    70              209
    T5    United States        J.B. Holmes    -1    F    +1    72    66    71             209
    T9    United States       Brandt Snedeker    +1    F    E    69    72    70         211
    T9    Argentina           Andres Romero    +1    F    +1    71    69    71         211
    T9    Sweden              Henrik Stenson    +1    F    +2    65    74    72         211
    T9    United States     Tony Finau    +1    F    +4    69    68    74              211
    T9    Netherlands       Joost Luiten    +1    F    +4    68    69    74             211
    T9    United States     Patrick Reed    +1    F    +6    66    69    76            211
    T15  South Africa     C Schwartzel    +2    F    -1    73    70    69            212
    T15   United States    Matt Kuchar    +2    F    +2    67    73    72             212
    T15    France             Alexander Levy    +2    F    +3    70    69    73         212
    T15    United States     Kevin Kisner    +2    F    +3    71    68    73          212
    T19    United States   Charlie Beljan    +3    F    -1    69    75    69          213
    T19    Italy                Fran Molinari    +3    F    +2    68    73    72           213
    T19    Australia           Adam Scott    +3    F    +2    70    71    72         213
    T19    Japan F            Hid Matsuyama    +3    F    +2    70    71    72         213
    T19    United States    Jason Dufner    +3    F    +3    68    72    73         213
    T19    United States     Jamie Lovemark    +3    F    +5    70    68    75         213
    T25    England            Ian Poulter    +4    F    -1    72    73    69         214
    T25    United States    Brooks Koepka    +4    F    E    72    72    70         214
    T25    N. Ireland            Rory McIlroy    +4    F    E    72    72    70         214
    T25    Australia             John Senden    +4    F    E    72    72    70         214
    T25    Scotland                   Marc Warren    +4    F    +2    68    74    72         214
    T25    United States           Kevin Na    +4    F    +2    70    72    72         214
    T25    England Flag            Justin Rose    +4    F    +2    72    70    72         214
    T25    United States          Ollie Schniederjans (a)    +4    F    +2    69    73    72         214
    T25    United States           Jack Maguire (a)    +4    F    +3    73    68    73         214
    T25    England                 Paul Casey    +4    F    +3    72    69    73         214
    T35    Spain                     Sergio Garcia    +5    F    E    70    75    70         215
    T35    Scotland                Jimmy Gunn    +5    F    E    72    73    70         215
    T35    United States        Denny McCarthy (a)    +5    F    +1    71    73    71         215
    T35    United States        Daniel Summerhays    +5    F    +8    70    67    78         215
    T39    United States Flag    Webb Simpson    +6    F    +1    72    73    71         216
    T39    England Flag            John Parry    +6    F    +1    72    73    71         216
    T39    United States Flag    Keegan Bradley    +6    F    +2    73    71    72         216
    T39    Canada Flag            Brad Fritsch    +6    F    +2    70    74    72         216
    T39    England Flag            Tommy Fleetwood    +6    F    +3    74    69    73         216
    T39    United States Flag    Beau Hossler (a)    +6    F    +3    71    72    73         216
    T39    Australia Flag            Geoff Ogilvy    +6    F    +5    69    72    75         216
    T46    Scotland Flag            Col Montgomerie    +7    F    +2    69    76    72         217
    T46    United States Flag    Troy Kelly    +7    F    +2    72    73    72         217
    T46    United States Flag    Jimmy Walker    +7    F    +2    72    73    72         217
    T46    South Africa Flag    George Coetzee    +7    F    +2    72    73    72         217
    T46    United States Flag    Jim Furyk    +7    F    +3    71    73    73         217
    T46    United States Flag    Kevin Chappell    +7    F    +3    69    75    73         217
    T46    United States Flag    Robert Streb    +7    F    +3    74    70    73         217
    T46    United States Flag    Billy Horschel    +7    F    +3    72    72    73         217
    T46    United States Flag    Ryan Palmer    +7    F    +3    74    70    73         217
    T46    England Flag            Luke Donald    +7    F    +3    73    71    73         217
    T46    United States Flag    C Tringale    +7    F    +4    75    68    74         217
    T46    United States Flag    B Campbell (a)    +7    F    +8    67    72    78         217
    T58    South Africa Flag    Thomas Aiken    +8    F    +3    74    71    73         218
    T58    United States Flag    Mark Silvers    +8    F    +5    72    71    75         218
    T58    South Africa Flag    Ernie Els    +8    F    +6    72    70    76         218
    T61    United States Flag    Morgan Hoffmann    +9    F    +4    71    74    74         219
    T61    Argentina Flag            Angel Cabrera    +9    F    +4    70    75    74         219
    T61    Chinese Taipei          Cheng-Tsung Pan    +9    F    +6    71    72    76         219
    T61    Australia Flag            Marcus Fraser    +9    F    +7    71    71    77         219
    T61    England Flag          Lee Westwood    +9    F    +7    73    69    77         219
    T66    United States Flag    Sam Saunders    +10    F    +6    72    72    76         220
    T66    United States Flag    Brad Elder    +10    F    +6    76    68    76         220
    T66    United States Flag    Phil Mickelson    +10    F    +7    69    74    77         220
    T69    United States Flag    Nick Hardy (a)    +12    F    +7    70    75    77         222
    T69    United States Flag    Andy Pope    +12    F    +7    74    71    77         222
    T69    United States Flag    D.A. Points    +12    F    +7    74    71    77         222
    T69    United States Flag    Zach Johnson    +12    F    +8    72    72    78         222
    T73    United States Flag    Chris Kirk    +13    F    +10    70    73    80         223
    T73    United States Flag    Ben Martin    +13    F    +16    67    70    86         223
    75    Colombia Flag            Camilo Villegas    +15    F    +10    72    73    80         225

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