Monday, January 25, 2016


O'Hara brothers win £520 prize at PGA in

Scotland Winter Four-ball opener with a 64
 
By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Brothers Steven and Paul O'Hara, playing out of Clydeway Golf, won the first event of the 2016 Tartan Tour by three strokes with a seven-under-par 64 in the PGA in Scotland Winter Four-ball at a very windy Craigielaw course, East Lothian.
They dovetailed brilliantly with birdies shared between them at the first, second, fourth, sixth, seventh, 11th and 12th to head a field of 18 pairs and win the £520 first prize.
Three pairs tied for second place on 67 and earned £277 per pair.
They were Norman Huguet (Musselburgh) and Gareth Wright (West Linton), Mark Kerr (Marriott Dalmahoy) and David Patrick (Kingsfield), and Alan White (Lanark) and Chris Kelly (unatt).

PGA IN SCOTLAND WINTER FOUR-BALL SERIES
Craigielaw GC, East Lothian.
Par 71
64 Paul O'Hara and Steven O'Hara (Clydeway Golf) (£520)
67 Norman Huguet (Musselburgh) and Gareth Wright (West Linton), Mark Kerr (Marriott Dalmahoy) and David Patrick (Kingsfield), Alan White (Lanark) and Chris Kelly (unatt) (£277 each pair).
68 Alan Reid (West Lothian) and Graham Fox (Clydeway Golf) (£150).
69 Paul Brookes (Pitreavie) and Paul Jamieson (Dunblane New), Fraser Malcolm and Oliver Huish (North Berwick), Stewart Savage (Dalmuir) and Craig Everett (Caldwell) (£40 each pair).
70 Michael Patterson (Kilmacolm) and Christopher Currie (Caldwell), Jonathan Porteous (Craigielaw) and Billy Marchbank (Crieff).
71 Craig Gordon (Edinburgh GC) and Paul Malone (Braid Hills), Mark Hillson (unatt) and Gordon Hillson (Dunbar), Sam McLaren and Neil Cameron (Blairgowrie), Callum Nisbet (Duke's) and Louis Gaughan (Bathgate), David Stein (Ranfurly Castle) and Sam Binning (Mearns Castle).
72 Alistair McLean (Duddingston) and Keith Baxter (Buchanan Castle).
73 James Johnston (Lanark) and Scott Catlin (Affordable Golf). 
76 Paul Edgcombe (Forrester Park) and Colin Fairweather (Kirkintilloch).

Labels:

McLean and Law in top 10, lead Scots in Egypt

By COLIN FARQUHARSON 
Paul Lawrie Golf Centre pair Phil McLean and David Law are tied seventh in a field of 80 after the first round of the Red Sea Ain Sokhana Classic at Sokhana Golf Club, Egypt.
They both shot one-under-par 71s to be five shots off the leader by two, Austria's Bernard Neumayer.

McLean from Peterhead had birdies in halves of 37-34.
Aberdeen's Law was out in 40, having bogeyed four of the first six holes, but he came home in 31 with five birdies, including 16-17-18.
Ellon's Ross Cameron (Saltire Energy) had a double bogey 6 at the sixh but recovered to finish the day tied 16th on level par 72.
Chris Robb (Meldrum House) and Sam Kiloh (Paul Lawrie GC) are tied 28th on 74, Robb having an inward half of 33 and Kiloh two late bogeys.
Grantown's Duncan Stewart (Turnhouse) had a double bogey 6 at the 15th on his way to a 75 and a share of 36th place.
Rookie pro Alexander Culverwell (Dunbar) had a double bogey 6 at the 10th in chalking up a 77 (39-38) for joint 57th place.

RED SEA AIN SOKHANA CLASSIC
Sokhana GC, Egypt
LEADING FIRST ROUND SCORES
Par 72
66 Bernard Neunater (Aut)
68 Michael Kraaij (Net), Jonas Kolbing (Ger)

SCOTS' SCORES
71 David Law, Phil McLean (T7)
72 Ross Cameron (T16)
74 Chris Robb, Sam Kiloh (T28)
75 Duncan Stewart (T36)
77 Alexander Culverwell (T57)
Field of 80 players 

Labels:

Lingmerth's rally again ends in play-off loss







For the second time in the last four years, David Lingmerth left Palm Springs with a play-off loss.
Lingmerth began the day five shots behind Jason Dufner, but after shooting a final-round 65 the Swede forced extra holes at the CareerBuilder Challenge
Lingmerth appeared poised to earn his second career victory on the first extra hole, but Dufner made a 12-foot putt to save par and extend the proceedings.
Lingmerth's approach on the next hole found the water, letting Dufner two-putt for par and the win.
"It wasn't really a bad swing, I don't think," Lingmerth said. "I should have probably choked up a little bit more on the grip, that would have probably helped me not have the grass grab it so much. "So it turned the ball over and it was a really not a bad swing, just a small mistake that was very costly."
US PGA Tour starts. He defeated Justin Rose in sudden death to earn his maiden win at the Memorial, then followed with a play-off loss to Danny Lee at The Greenbrier Classic in July.
He also lost in a play-off at this weekend's event in 2013, when he fired a 62 in the final round before ultimately losing to Brian Gay.
"It's nice to come out here. The weather is always perfect for golf," he said. "If you're feeling good, if you're swinging it well and everything, it's pretty good. You can shoot some numbers out here, which is fun."
While Lingmerth leaves the desert with a healthy, six-figure paycheck, he also can take solace in the fact that he took a large step toward representing Sweden in the upcoming Olympics. Lingmerth began the week at No. 52 in the world rankings, 14 spots ahead of Kristoffer Broberg for the second and final potential roster slot for Sweden next to Henrik Stenson
After another overtime appearance, that gap should widen considerably.
 Scot Martin Laird made the cut in this low scoring tournament but did not improve substantially over the last two rounds and tied for 49th place.

 Mickelson's new swing passes test
  FROM GOLFWEEK.COM
Phil Mickelson showed off his new swing this week at the CareerBuilder Challenge – and it passed the test.
"This is an A," Mickelson said Sunday after shooting 21 under and tying for third in his first competitive round since the Presidents Cup. "This is a great week for me. ... I'm playing the way I wanted."
Mickelson made 22 birdies and an eagle this week in La Quinta, Calif. He also carded just three bogeys, including none in the final round on PGA West's TPC Stadium Course.
As for that 21-under total, it was Mickelson's lowest 72-hole score in relation to par in an event he didn't win since 2005.
"I needed to get off on the right foot, know that what I'm doing is the right way, and continue to trust it," Mickelson said. "I just feel like each day I hit balls, each day that I practice, I continue to improve and get better and better touch. … That's coming back quickly."
Mickelson started working with new swing coach Andrew Getson last October. The two got Mickelson's swing back on plane – Mickelson's old swing had been too flat at the top and too steep coming down. Mickelson called it "a very difficult three or four months" to get his swing to its current state.
"I'm starting to manoeuvre the ball the way I want to," Mickelson said. "My divot entry point is the way I want it. It's actually a straight line. It had been toe deep for so long because I came in so steep the toe was entering first. … The divots this week were great. There was one bad divot all week.
"So the touch and the feel and the face awareness is slowly starting to come back and as that comes back, as my swing stays on plane, my game's going to come right back with it."
Mickelson might have dug into the golf dictionary with terms like "divot entry point" and "face awareness," but to put things in simpler terms, his swing feels good, is easier, and he's excited as he looks ahead to his next two starts, next week's Farmers Insurance Open and the following week's Waste Management Phoenix Open.
"I had a lot of fun this week," Mickelson said, "and I'm looking forward to playing some more golf, because I know that I'm on the right track now."


FINAL TOTALS


1 --

64 65 64 70 263 (won play-off)

2 2

68 68 62 65 263
T3 2

66 66 67 68 267
T3 2

68 65 66 68 267

T3 2

71 66 62 68 267
T6 7 -20 F -6 68 68 66 66 268
T6 4 -20 F 1 65 65 65 73 268
T6 3 -20 F E 66 66 64 72 268
T9 4 -19 F -5 67 71 64 67 269
T9 1 -19 F -4 66 66 69 68 269
T11 24 -18 F -7 67 66 72 65 270
T11 8 -18 F -5 68 69 66 67 270
T11 1 -18 F -3 68 67 66 69 270
T14 15 -17 F -5 68 69 67 67 271
T14 15 -17 F -5 69 68 67 67 271
T14 5 -17 F -4 72 65 66 68 271
T17 2 -16 F -3 69 67 67 69 272
T17 12 -16 F -4 68 64 72 68 272
T17 31 -16 F* -6 70 71 65 66 272
T17 2 -16 F -3 70 65 68 69 272
T17 4 -16 F -2 66 71 65 70 272
T17 4 -16 F -2 68 69 65 70 272
T17 12 -16 F 1 67 66 66 73 272
T24 11 -15 F* -4 68 72 65 68 273
T24 11 -15 F -1 66 69 67 71 273
T24 11 -15 F -1 65 69 68 71 273
T24 19 -15 F 2 69 64 66 74 273
T28 7 -14 F -3 70 67 68 69 274
T28 1 -14 F -2 66 71 67 70 274
T28 20 -14 F* -4 69 69 68 68 274
T28 20 -14 F* -4 66 67 73 68 274
T28 9 -14 F -1 64 68 71 71 274
T28 20 -14 F* -4 71 69 66 68 274
T34 1 -13 F -2 66 70 69 70 275
T34 5 -13 F -1 70 67 67 71 275
T34 5 -13 F -1 66 70 68 71 275
T34 14 -13 F* -3 67 71 68 69 275
T34 15 -13 F E 66 70 67 72 275
T34 24 -13 F 2 68 65 68 74 275
T34 29 -13 F* -4 73 68 66 68 275
T34 29 -13 F* -4 67 71 69 68 275
T42 7 -12 F* -1 67 69 69 71 276
T42 7 -12 F* -1 67 66 72 71 276
T42 6 -12 F* -2 67 69 70 70 276
T42 23 -12 F 1 71 67 65 73 276
T42 23 -12 F 1 64 70 69 73 276
T42 6 -12 F* -2 67 73 66 70 276
T42 21 -12 F* -3 71 67 69 69 276
T49 14 -11 F E 71 66 68 72 277
T49 1 -11 F* -1 67 67 72 71 277
T49 30 -11 F 2 69 66 68 74 277
T49 1 -11 F* -1 70 71 65 71 277
T49 30 -11 F 2 70 67 66 74 277

T49

70 67 69 71 277
T49 14 -11 F* -2 74 66 67 70 277
T56 21 -10 F* 1 64 71 70 73 278
T56 21 -10 F* 1 72 66 67 73 278
T56 8 -10 F* E 71 69 66 72 278
T56 8 -10 F* E 69 69 68 72 278
T56 8 -10 F* E 69 69 68 72 278
T56 7 -10 F* -1 69 70 68 71 278
T62 27 -9 F* 2 69 67 69 74 279
T62 27 -9 F 2 69 68 68 74 279
T62 27 -9 F* 2 71 65 69 74 279
T62 14 -9 F* 1 67 67 72 73 279
T66 31 -7 F* 4 73 66 66 76 281
T66 18 -7 F* 3 67 72 67 75 281
68 5 -6 F* 3 74 67 66 75 282
69 6 -4 F* 5 69 67 71 77 284
70 7 -3 F* 6 70 68 69 78 28

Labels:

Copyright © Colin Farquharson

If you can't find what you are looking for.... please check the Archive List or search this site with Google