4/20/2012

Hoey Magic Makes China Cut


Michael Hoey went about his business on the second day of the Volvo China Open on Friday and carded a second round 68 to get inside the cut, ensuring a weekend stay in Tianjan - following an opening day 2 over par 74.

Damien McGrane slipped five shots off the lead with a second round 71 and two strokes ahead of Shane Lowry and Peter Lawrie - both on 4 under in 29th place.

Gareth Maybin signed for a two under par 70 to finish 3 under ahead of the weekend.

At the top of the leader board France’s Jean-Baptiste Gonnet and England’s Gary Boyd will be vying for a maiden European Tour title this weekend after moving into a share of the halfway lead at the Volvo China Open.

Boyd, who has recorded two runner-up finishes during his three seasons on The European Tour, recorded a five under par 67 to reach 11 under.

Gonnet, whose only top-three finish came during his rookie 2007 season when he was second in Sweden, was also round in 67 after six birdies and a single bogey.

They are a shot clear of South African Branden Grace, already a two-time winner on The Race to Dubai this year, with defending champion Nicolas Colsaerts in fourth on nine under par.

Gonnet’s performance continues the good form that has seen him finish 12th in Abu Dhabi, sixth in India and fifth in Qatar this season.

“I played very well again today, even off the tee which is really good for me,” he said. 

“It’s good to be in the lead and the game is in good shape so I have a very good chance to win but I have to try and not think about it. 

“My confidence levels are high because I have been playing well for the last two months. I had a lot of fun out there today and that is very important for me on the course, to try and have fun and enjoy it because the last two years have been very tough for me. 

“It wasn’t tough to keep my card but I wasn’t getting too much enjoyment out of the game and I was bringing too much pressure on myself. I know this is a job but, for me, I have to enjoy it and remember why I started playing this game. 

“I have to go back to the five year old kid and try to play for fun. That will be the main aim for the weekend – to go out there and try to enjoy it because there is no point in playing the game if you are not having fun.”

Boyd’s round started on the back nine and his start was far from ideal, a bogey at the 12th not cancelled out until the par five 18th as he turned in 36.

But the 25 year old birdied five of his last eight holes, including a 12 foot putt at the fifth.

“It was good out there,” he said. “I had to stay patient on the front nine and was one over playing my ninth hole but managed to get on in two and two putt for birdie and really get my round going. 

“The back nine I managed to take a few more chances and finished it off with a three wood to eight feet on the ninth - it was the shot of the year so far for me. I hit the driver off the tee and it went left into the bunker and I didn’t know if it was a five or three wood but I went for the three and it just came out perfectly and I managed to make the putt. 

“I have been playing pretty well and I have just trusted what I have been working on with my old coach since two weeks ago. I was a bit lost in too many thoughts and trying too many different things for a while and that is not something that you want to be doing in tournament golf. It is starting to pay off this week. 

“It has been a long while since I was properly up there – probably Czech Republic or Switzerland round about September last year – but I am going to draw on those experiences going into the weekend.”

Grace, who won back-to-back titles in South Africa at the start of the year after coming through Qualifying School, had three birdies and an eagle two at the seventh after hitting his tee shot to five feet as he carded a second-straight 67.

“There are opportunities out there,” he said. “It wasn’t easy because you still had to hit the shots and get it going. 

“The most important thing I did today was to play the difficult holes for me sensibly. I didn’t take any chances on the holes that could cause me real trouble and then I managed to birdie the ones where I can make chances.”

Belgian Colsaerts, looking to become the first player in the history of the event to successfully defend the title, carded five birdies and two bogeys in his round, but for the second day running, the highlight of the biggest hitter on The European Tour’s round came at the par five second.

The 29 year old needed only an iron into the 575 yard hole, and struck it to two feet before holing the eagle putt.

“It was pretty good for the first two days,” he said. “Funnily enough I probably played better yesterday and shot four under and then went one better today in the tougher conditions. 

“I made one or two mistakes today but you just have to accept that on a day like this. It got really tough out there about halfway through the round. The wind really started to blow and the temperature went down about ten degrees.”


Clones Cyclone CLIC's for Irish Open



The European Tour and its charitable arm, the Tour Players Foundation, have announced CLIC Sargent Northern Ireland as the Official Charity of the 2012 Irish Open, which will be held at Royal Portrush Golf Club from June 28 – July 1.

A leading cancer charity for children and young people and their families, CLIC Sargent NI provides clinical, practical, financial and emotional support. 

From diagnosis onwards, the charity’s aim is to help the whole family deal with the impact of cancer and its treatment, life after treatment and, in some cases, bereavement.

The appointment is aimed at raising the profile of CLIC Sargent, as well as offering the opportunity to raise significant funds for the charity’s recently-launched ‘Homes from Home Appeal’.

The Appeal’s goal is to build Homes from Home accommodation in close proximity to Belfast’s two cancer specialist treatment centres - The Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children and The Belfast City and Northern Ireland Cancer Centre.

CLIC Sargent Patrons, former WBA World Featherweight boxing champion Barry McGuigan and his wife Sandra, joined Tour Players Foundation Trustees and staff from The European Tour at Wentworth Golf Club for the announcement.

McGuigan said: “CLIC Sargent research tells us that, on average, families in Northern Ireland travel 95 miles up to five times a week to access the cancer treatment their child needs. The Homes from Home will ease that financial and emotional burden and most importantly, will create a place for families to stay together away from the hospital.

“We are proud to be associated with such an important event for Northern Ireland and we hope the generous public will get behind our campaign to raise much-needed funds for two Homes from Home.”

Jonathan Orr, Tour Players Foundation Trustee, said: “CLIC Sargent was chosen by the Irish Open and Tour Players Foundation due to its great reputation for the support it offers children with cancer and their families. The Homes from Home Appeal allows the Irish Open to leave a lasting legacy in Northern Ireland.”

Innovative fundraising initiatives for CLIC Sargent will take place in the run up to and during the week of the Irish Open, which takes place in Northern Ireland for the first time in almost 60 years.



China Fortune Continues for McGrane

AFP PHOTO / Paul Lakatos / OneAsia

Damien McGane is just two shots behind leader Matthew Baldwin following the first round of the Volvo China Open at Binhai Lake Golf Club in Tianjin.

McGrane, a former winner of the tournament, shot a five-under-par 67 and lies in eighth place. Baldwin (65) is one shot clear of a group of six players.

Peter Lawrie signed for a three under 69, Shane Lowry and Gareth Maybin, both 71 in a share of 62nd place.

Michael Hoey will need to shoot a sub-par round on Friday after a two-over 74.

Matthew Baldwin enjoyed one of his best days yet since joining the European Tour to take a one-shot lead. The 26-year-old Englishman fired a seven-under-par 65 to sit ahead of a five-way tie for second, with compatriot Gary Boyd, Dutchman Joost Luiten, Australian Scott Strange, France’s Jean-Baptiste Gonnet and Swede Fredrik Andersson-Hed, all on 66.

Baldwin enjoyed seven birdies on a blemish-free scorecard, picking up shots on the first, fifth and seventh before three in a row on nine, 10 and 11.

He then birdied the 17th to separate himself from the pack.

“It was very good today, so I am happy with that,” said Baldwin, whose best finish to date on the European Tour was a tie for 10th at the season-opening Africa Open.

“I just tried to keep everything as simple as I could. It turned out to be one of those days where there were a lot of chances and I managed to take a few of them.”

Boyd, who is also hunting a maiden European Tour win, helped his cause with an eagle on the 12th and five birdies, although he bogeyed the sixth to cost himself a share of the lead.

“I am usually a very slow starter but there have been encouraging signs recently,” he said. “I went back to see my old coach a few weeks ago to see what thoughts he had on the state of my game and I have done some good practice at home on the back of that.

“Then to come out to Asia and play well last week and make a good start this week is good.”

Dutchman Luiten had eight birdies in his round, but undid much of his good work with a double bogey on the fourth.

England’s Graeme Storm was among a host of players two strokes off the pace, while Sweden’s Alexander Noren went five under through the first 10 holes but dropped back into a tie for 15th after back-to-back bogeys on the 11th and 12th.

Among those joining him on four-under 68 were Paul Casey, winner of this tournament when it was at Shenzen in 2006, and former Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie. Ian Poulter and Peter Hanson, two weeks removed from top-10 finishes at the Masters, were on one-under par.

Thirteen-year-old Chinese Guan Tian-lang shot a five-over-par 77 when he became the youngest golfer to play in a European Tour event. Guan, who bogeyed his first hole and quickly slipped to five over par before making a birdie at the seventh, was 107 days younger than his compatriot Lo Shik-kai at the 2003 Hong Kong Open.