9/18/2011

GB&I Retain Vivendi Seve Trophy



Great Britain & Ireland’s lower order clung on as they retained the Vivendi Seve Trophy at St-Nom-La-Bretèche - but only after a magnificent fightback from the Continental Europeans.

Trailing 11½-6½ overnight, Jean Van de Velde’s side won the first five single contests to square the match.

It looked as if they might end their 11-year wait for the title when Nicolas Colsaerts took a half off David Horsey late on, but rookie Scott Jamieson held firm to win a first point for Paul McGinley’s side.

And when Ian Poulter snatched victory from Matteo Manassero on the final green and Mark Foster went one up on the 17th, it guaranteed the 14 1/2 points needed for victory.

It finished 15½-12½ but it was a tremendous effort by the Continental Europeans to take it to the wire after being thoroughly outplayed on the first and third days.

Van de Velde had loaded his top order with form players, and it immediately paid off as recent back-to-back winner Thomas Björn came from three down to beat World Number Two Lee Westwood 2 and 1.

Westwood had looked unstoppable as he birdied the first from ten feet, the third from 30 feet and played his approach shot within inches of the cup at the fifth.

But Björn used all his experience to hang tough and errors crept into Westwood’s game after he three-putted the sixth.

The Dane, captain when Continental Europe lost two years ago, holed a 30 foot putt on the 14th to lead for the first time and when Westwood pulled his approach left in to thick rough on the 17th and duffed his first chip it was all over.

“Lee came out this morning and was sensational the first few holes,” said Björn.

“It was just a case of hanging on and hanging on, but a couple of mistakes let me back in. I played some nice stuff near the end but it was a hard-fought battle.”

A wave of blue was sweeping over the leaderboard at that stage and Björn’s compatriot Anders Hansen secured a gritty one up win over Simon Dyson.

The Englishman had won three and a half points out of four over the first three days, but went three down after seven.

Dyson played a magnificent wedge approach to the next to spark a comeback, but no sooner was last week’s KLM Open winner all square than Hansen struck a hammer blow with a 30 footer at the 14th.

A 20 foot putt at the 16th put Hansen dormie two, and although Dyson took the par five next Hansen displayed nerves of steel on the final green to roll in a birdie putt from 25 feet.

Francesco Molinari tapped in a two foot birdie putt on the 15th for a 4 and 3 victory over Jamie Donaldson.

The Italian was up-and-running with a par at the second after his Welsh opponent was forced to play his approach left-handed from behind a tree and never looked back.

Alex Noren then beat Robert Rock 4 and 3 - the Englishman failed to make a single birdie - and suddenly there was only one in it.

Like Hansen before him, the Swede had birdied the first two holes - the latter from 12 feet - and a 15 footer at the eighth helped him turn five up.

Rock took the tenth and 12th with pars, but Noren won the 13th and drew the next two to make it four from four at the top of the order for Continental Europe.

McGinley might have hoped Open Champion Darren Clarke could stop the rot in game five but the Northern Irishman had a round to forget as he lost 4 and 2 to former Ryder Cup partner Miguel Angel Jiménez to leave the contest tied at 11½-11½.

At that stage both sides needed three points from the last five matches, all of which went to the final hole on a nailbiting day.

Horsey looked set to win a first point for Great Britain & Ireland as he continued his week-long putting masterclass with a 25 foot effort at the first.

He was two up with four to play, but big-hitting Belgian Colsaerts tapped in for birdie at the par five 15th, scrambled par from a bunker at the short next and levelled the contest with an eight footer at the 17th before both players parred the last for a half.

Scotland’s Jamieson added a first win for McGinley’s side with a one up victory over Pablo Larrazábal, despite a brave fightback from the Spaniard.

It was an impressive performance from the rookie, all the more so considering the drama that had been going on in the groups ahead.

Needing one and a half points from the last three groups, Poulter produced the goods as he has so many times in match play.

Having been far from his best all week, the Ryder Cup star and former WGC-Accenture Match Play champion trailed for most of his round against Italian 18 year old Manassero.

One down at the turn, he made a vital 25 foot par save on the 13th, rolled in a 12 foot birdie putt at the 16th to draw level and, after watching Manassero stiff his approach at the last to 12 feet, played a remarkable shot from the rough to five feet.

That point meant Great Britain & Ireland needed only a half, and moments later Mark Foster guaranteed exactly that by going one up against Raphaël Jacquelin at the 17th.

Veteran Foster held on at the last for a point, and Ross Fisher took a half off Peter Hanson in what had been an enthralling final contest.


US Increase PGA Cup Advantage

John Wells and Gary Brown, GB&I

Most golfers would tell you it is awkward taking turns with a partner in trying to get a ball into a hole. It’s hard enough by yourself. You are out of rhythm, and everything’s haywire.

Those critics would have a hard time convincing the United States Team of PGA club professionals that they looked anything but in complete harmony Saturday at CordeValle on the second day of the 25th PGA Cup.

The United States applied the necessary muscle in foursomes for the second day in a row, winning all but one of the four afternoon matches. That pushed the Americans’ advantage to 10½ to 5½ over Great Britain & Ireland, setting up a Sunday Singles where the hosts will need just 2½ points to retain the Llandudno International Golf Trophy.

“We’re just really happy with the way it all came together,” said USA Captain Jim Remy, The PGA honorary president from Ludlow, Vt. “We made the pairings early in the week to try to get the players comfortable with each other, and similar players were paired together. And, I don’t know whether it was luck or not, but we seem to have done really well.

“We have been able to keep the pairings together for the entire week, practice sessions all the way straight through to singles tomorrow.”

It was a difficult day for Great Britain & Ireland Captain Russell Weir of Dunoon, Scotland, whose team could not gain any precious ground in a bid to become the first to defeat the Americans on their home soil.

“As the sun got up to its peak, it was quite sapping strength wise but the guys gave everything,” said Weir. “(David) Shacklady and (Simon) Edwards, those guys brought tears to my eyes today while (John) Wells and (Gary) Brown were pure Yorkshire grit. They gave everything but there’s more to give tomorrow. We need points early, to make it very interesting. The spirit is fine, the guys know there are still 10 points to play for and they are going to give it a go.”

Weir has never played on a winning PGA Cup Team, despite his record-tying eight trips to the event from 1986 to 2000. He also has competed in more matches (40) than any player in event history.

“This has been the experience of my life,” he said. “I feel more pressure actually than when I played because you can’t hit the shots. I’ve been thinking about this for a long time and it’s been great.”

The United States had a host of solid performances, but rookies Rob McClellan of Butler, Pa., and Marty Jertson of Phoenix, Ariz., have been stellar together, winning all three of their matches, including a 2 and 1 victory over Edwards and Shacklady of England, in which they rallied from a 2-hole deficit with a four-hole stretch of wins to ease to the grabbing a point.

“I think that we’re just so comfortable and our games are so similar,” said McClellan, the PGA head professional at Butler (Pa.) Country Club. “We hit the same clubs pretty much. And, we talk a lot. When we are walking, if we have the layup shot, we tell each other what shot we want to hit and we want to play to that shot. We talk about where we want to be and what shots we want to hit. And it’s been working.”

Though he didn’t cash in on a match victory in the process, Danny Balin of Greenwich, Conn., gave the United States a spark in the Morning Four-Balls, recording a hole-in-on the seventh hole at CordeValle for what is believed to be the second hole-in-one in PGA Cup history.

Balin, who is playing alongside partner Scott Erdmann of Tigard, Ore., used a 7-iron to ace the 183-yard hole. It was the second career hole-in-one for the 29-year-old PGA assistant professional at Burning Tree Country Club in Greenwich, Conn. Coincidentally, the first PGA Cup ace recorded was by current GB&I Captain Weir during his Cup debut in 1986 at Knollwood Country Club in Lake Forest, Ill.

Balin’s ace allowed the U.S. duo to trim its deficit in the match to two holes against Stuart Little and Robert Giles. However, Giles soon got his team back in front by three holes, by driving the 286-yard, par-4 eighth green and making the eagle putt.

The PGA Cup concludes Sunday with 10 singles matches that begin at 9:30 a.m. PDT.

Great Britain & Ireland posted a 2 ½ to 1 ½ Morning Four-Ball advantage, tempered by the U.S. duo of Sonny Skinner of Sylvester, Ga., and Brad Lardon of College Station, Texas, earning a half-point against England’s Craig Goodfellow and Ireland’s David Mortimer.

“That was a big, big half-point,” said Remy. “You have to work hard for those halves many times in this competition, and that was one of those moments that could have been a swing in momentum. I was so proud of how Sonny and Brad played to earn that halve.”

The United States owns a 16-5-3 advantage in the Ryder Cup-style competition, which began in 1973 at Pinehurst (N.C.) Country Club.

SATURDAY MORNING FOUR-BALLS
David Shacklady, Lancashire, England & Simon Edwards, Cumbria, England def. David Hutsell, Baltimore, Md. & Mark Sheftic, Blue Bell, Pa. (USA), 2 and 1
Mike Small, Champaign, Ill. & Faber Jamerson, Appomattox, Va. (USA) def. John Wells, Yorkshire, England & Gary Brown, N. Yorkshire, England (USA), 3 & 2
Stuart Little, Gloucestershire, England & Robert Giles, Newry, County Down, Ireland def. Danny Balin, Greenwich, Conn. & Scott Erdmann, Tigard, Ore. 5 & 4
Sonny Skinner, Sylvester, Ga. & Brad Lardon, College Station, Texas (USA) halved with David Mortimer, Knocknacarra, Ireland & Craig Goodfellow, Cumbria, England
Great Britain & Ireland 2½ United States 1½

SATURDAY AFTERNOON FOURSOMES
Rob McClellan, Butler, Pa. & Marty Jertson, Phoenix, Ariz. (USA) def. Edwards & Shacklady, 2 and 1
John Wells & Gary Brown def. Hutsell & Sheftic, 2-up
Small & Jamerson def. John Kennedy, Oxford, England & Christopher Gill, Devon, England, 4 & 3
Skinner & Lardon def. Mortimer & Little, 2 & 1
USA 3 Great Britain & Ireland 1