BROWN LEADS BY ONE IN RUSSIAN SENIORS' OPEN
SENIOR TOUR REPORT FROM
EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
A
superb display of scrambling golf kept England’s Simon P Brown
bogey-free through 36 holes and one shot clear of the field as he
attempts to become the latest first-time Senior Tour winner at the
Russian Open Golf Championship (Senior).
The
50 year old got up and down for par four holes in a row from the ninth
while three birdies coming in saw the Qualifying School graduate claim a
narrow lead over Spain’s Miguel Angel Martin (69) and Dane Steen
Tinning (68).
But
lurking one shot further back on eight under par following an excellent
67 is Scotland’s Colin Montgomerie, this week looking to capture a
second victory in successive starts after his triumph at Woburn two
weeks ago.
On a
damp, autumnal day at Moscow Country Club, rookie Brown started solidly
enough with six pars and a birdie in his first seven holes before the
fun started around the turn.
Four
consecutive missed greens from the ninth forced Germany-based Brown to
show a deft short game but, having recovered successfully at each to
save par, he found birdies at the 13th, 15th and 17th holes to remain
flawless through 36 and
top of the pile with one round to come.
“That
run really kept the momentum going,” said Brown, who finished runner-up
at the Qualifying School in January to seize his 2013 card. “I was
playing nicely but just got a little off on my approaches in that period
so to keep it together
was pleasing.
“And then I went down the next hole (the 13th) and made birdie so that kicked me on and I managed to finish strong.
Out
of the ten events thus far on the 2013 Senior Tour schedule, six have
been claimed by first-time winners, while three of the last four have
been won by rookies in Tinning (Berenberg Masters), Santiago Luna (SSE
Scottish Senior Open)
and Montgomerie (Travis Perkins plc Senior Masters), but Brown said he
was not going to overthink his chances of joining that club with one
round to come.
“I
can’t control what others do but I’ll just stick to my own game,” he
continued. “I’m not a bomber, I plot my way around so I’ll just try to
do the same and not get too overexcited.”
Martin had held a share of first place
overnight and he quickly moved into a three-shot lead earlier on
Saturday thanks to a front nine of 32 which included a hat-trick of
gains from the sixth.
But after overshooting the green at the
short 11th, a mistake which led to a double bogey five, numerous birdie
putts refused to drop except at the par five 17th and the Madrid man
had to settle for a 69 and share of second place.
He
said: “I actually played much better than yesterday. There was only the
one hole where I just picked the wrong club and that was my only mistake
of the day.
“I
was putting for birdie on every hole after that and only managed to make
one of them. But hopefully I can play like that tomorrow but with some
better putting and we’ll see where that gets us.”
It
was Groundhog Day for Tinning, meanwhile, as for the second round
running he struggled at the start before firing five birdies in a back
nine 31 to get within one of the lead.
Despite
admitting to somewhat of a psychological battle with himself on
Saturday, the man renowned for his ironman stamina remained strong.
“I’m a person who thinks a lot,” he
said. “And today not all of those thoughts were constructive so I had to
fight that and try to remain positive.
“I was just thinking, ‘shoot below par on the back nine’ and to end up with a 68, well, that’s Christmas!”
There
were six birdies and just the one dropped shot for Montgomerie, to move
seven places up the leaderboard on Moving Day into a share of fourth
place as he looks to become the first Senior Tour rookie to win twice
since Boonchu Ruangkit
in 2010.
He
reflected: “I’m in contention and that’s what I wanted, to give myself
another chance. I didn’t play all that well today, and there is lots of
room for improvement, but in a way it is quite satisfying to not play my
best golf yet still
find a 67 to be in with a shot again.”
Scores after round 2:
134 S Brown (Eng) 66 68,
135 M Martin (Esp) 66 69, S Tinning (Den) 67 68,
136 C Montgomerie (Sco) 69 67,
137 B Lane (Eng) 68 69, P Wesselingh (Eng) 69 68,
138 M Harwood (Aus) 67 71, C Mason (Eng) 70 68, A Oldcorn (Sco) 70 68,
139 G Brand Jnr (Sco) 71 68, T Thelen (USA) 71 68, B Ruangkit (Tha) 68 71, G Wolstenholme (Eng) 70 69,
140 P Golding (Eng) 73 67, D Russell (Eng) 72 68, M Kuramoto (Jpn) 69 71, P Fowler (Aus) 68 72, G Manson (Aut) 73 67,
141 P Eales (Eng) 70 71, G Turner (Nzl) 71 70, J Laforce (Can) 72 69, A Franco (Par) 69 72,
142 A Sherborne (Eng) 71 71, J Bruner
(USA) 70 72, G Ryall (Eng) 71 71, I Woosnam (Wal) 72 70, C Williams
(RSA) 69 73, B Cameron (Eng) 71 71, W Grant (Eng) 71 71, J Gould (Eng)
72 70,
143 B Longmuir (Sco) 68 75, R Drummond (Sco) 74 69,
144
J Carriles (Esp) 74 70, R Gibson (Can) 68 76, P Linhart (Esp) 73 71, H
Buhrmann (RSA) 72 72, D O'Sullivan (Irl) 72 72, R Thompson (USA) 72 72, K
Tomori (Jpn) 73 71, S Bennett (Eng) 70 74,
145 S McAllister (Sco) 72 73, M McLean (Eng) 68 77, K Spurgeon (Eng) 76 69, T Price (Aus) 72 73, M Farry (Fra) 78 67,
146 M Cunning (USA) 74 72, M Belsham (Eng) 71 75, N Job (Eng) 72 74,
147 G Norquist (USA) 75 72,
148 J Quiros (Esp) 75 73, J Harrison (Eng) 74 74, P Walton (Irl) 76 72, T Elliott (Aus) 74 74,
149 S Cipa (Eng) 76 73, D Hospital (Esp) 73 76, P Jonas (Can) 71 78,
150 L Carbonetti (Arg) 73 77, J Lindberg (Swe) 79 71, P Mitchell (Eng) 77 73, S Torrance (Sco) 79 71,
151 R Sabarros (Fra) 78 73, A Fernandez (Chi) 78 73, G Brand (Eng) 75 76,
152 B Lincoln (RSA) 77 75, S Van Vuuren (RSA) 76 76, N Ratcliffe (Aus) 76 76,
153 G Ralph (Eng) 77 76,
157 D Durnian (Eng) 80 77, G Banister (Aus) 81 76,
158 T Charnley (Eng) 79 79,
160 D James (Sco) 81 79,
175 I Zatravkin (Rus) 90 85,
EUROPEAN TOUR COMMUNICATIONS
Wentworth Drive | Virginia Water | Surrey | GU25 4LX | UNITED KINGDOM
Tel : +44 (0)1344 840400
Fax: + 44 (0) 1344 840444
Email :
media@europeantour.comLabels: SENIOR PROS
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home