Craig and Neil Irvine
IRVINE FATHER AND SON FIRST AND SECOND IN
STONEHAVEN CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP
By HARRY ROULSTON
IT’S
a common problem in golfing families deciding who is top dog on the
course -- but it has been solved, albeit temporarily, in one such family
in Stonehaven.
Neil Irvine, 56-years-old, has clear bragging rights
in his household at present, having just won the Stonehaven Golf Club
championship for the sixth time, beating son Craig, who is 24, by five
shots.
This was actually the second time (more of that later) in
Stonehaven GC’s 126-year history that a father and son have finished
first and second in the championship, which is played over four
stroke-play rounds.
More than 130 members teed off in the competition
and, when the cut was made after two rounds, Neil was lying second, one
shot back from leader Barry McGillivray, with Craig, who was champion
in 2009, in fourth place, two shots behind his dad.
Strong winds
rendered the exposed clifftop course all but unplayable in the third
round, with balls being blown off the fifth and sixth greens, but play
continued and Neil Irvine went into the final round two shots ahead of
McGillivray and five ahead of his son.
The three played the last
round together, this time much of it in heavy rain, and, despite the
greens starting to flood, the Irvines both scored creditable 69s, with
McGillivray returning a 74, giving totals of 279 (Neil), 284 (Craig) and
286 (Barry).
Neil Irvine, who plays off two, is thought to be the
oldest winner of the Stonehaven championship and the only senior member
to have won.
According to club records, which only go back to 1923,
three players have won seven times -- Willie Watt between 1928-1935;
Charlie Nicol between 1960-1968; and Bobby Forbes between 1978-1988.
Bryan Innes, one of the North-east’s top players, now at Murcar Links, was Stonehaven champion six times between 1992 and 1998.
It
was Bobby Forbes who was involved in Stonehaven’s first father/son
title challenge. His father Sandy, champion in 1977, played the final
round in 1978 with Bobby as his partner. Bobby was a stroke ahead
playing the last hole and Sandy had a putt on the last green to tie.
He can’t remember now how long the putt was — perhaps seven to eight feet — but he missed it and Bobby clinched his first title.
Said
Sandy, who still lives in Stonehaven: “People were saying that I missed
it deliberately to let Bobby win — but that’s rubbish. Of course I was
trying to hole it.”
So Neil Irvine needs two more to become the top
multiple winner. He has, however, already surpassed all the others in
his longevity -- his six wins span 30 years from his first in 1984, a
remarkable generational spread.
And quite a target to set for Craig
if he is to continue the Irvine golfing dynasty in Stonehaven. However,
Craig could argue he is already ahead of the game. He was champion at
age 19 -- his old man didn’t win it until he was 26.
Stonehaven Golf Club Championship 2014:
279 Neil Irvine 68 68 73 69
284 Craig Irvine 69 70 76 69
286 Barry McGillivray 68 68 76 74
Other totals:
290 Keith Douglas
296 Josh Halliday, Neil Robertson
298
Kiefer Brown, Harry Roulston
299 Stuart Dempster, Chris Taylor
300
Mason Jenkins, Michael Wood, Gary Graham 305 Kevin Riddell, Craig
Mackay
307 Steve McGhie
308 Alan Cruickshank
309 Paul Kelly
318 Ian
MacLeod.
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