6/27/2012

Irish Open Totally Sold Out in Portrush


The Irish Open has made European Tour history by becoming the first regular Tour event to sell out completely over all four days of this year’s championship at Royal Portrush Golf Club.

In recent weeks, the Tour has closed the sale of tickets, firstly for the weekend’s play, then Friday’s second round. Now the sale of tickets on the gate for tomorrow’s opening round has ceased, creating an unprecedented sell-out.

A total of 27,000 people each day will descend on Royal Portrush between Thursday and Sunday as Northern Ireland welcomes an Irish Open to its shores for the first time since 1953. Spectators are advised that no tickets will be sold at the gate for the duration for the tournament.

The combination of the sell-out and one of the strongest fields on The European Tour Schedule has resulted in a Major-like atmosphere at the County Antrim links course, even before a competitive ball has been struck.

Over 4,000 people attended the opening practice round at the Dunluce Links while a crowd of 14,225 added an exciting dimension to the star-studded Wednesday Pro-Am.

“The 2012 Irish Open has exceeded all expectations in terms of advance ticket sales. Following the announcement that the last three days were sold out, we had a considerable up-take for Thursday which has culminated in us putting up the ‘sold out’ signs,” said Championship Director Antonia Beggs.

“We urge spectators not to arrive at the gate in hope of purchasing tickets, as there will be no further sales for the 2012 Irish Open.”

The European Tour hope to make an announcement later this week about the sale of tickets for the 2013 Irish Open at Carton House near Dublin from June 27-30.



Portrush Gives GMAC Great Pride



Graeme McDowell, runner-up at the US Open a fortnight ago, does not want to be swept up by what is happening in his home town this week.

Portrush stages the first Irish Open in Northern Ireland for 59 years, but McDowell said on Wednesday: “It would be easy to get lost in the whole emotion of it. I want to enjoy it, but I want to enjoy it at the business end of things on Sunday.

“I would rate winning this just outside the majors. It’s about winning in front of your home fans. Northern Ireland has had its problems, but the town’s buzzing and there’s a sense of pride to see this great event here.”

After narrowly missing out to Webb Simpson two weeks ago at The Olympic Club, McDowell has certainly received a welcome boost from returning to his homeland.

“When I got here Monday morning, just driving to the golf course I got a sense of pride to see this great event here,” he added.

“It’s been a great run the last couple of years for Northern Irish golf, and I guess to be part of the reason why this tournament is here is very humbling. Growing up in this town, you dream of having a big type of event here, and it’s a culmination of a lot of hard work from a lot of people.

“There’s been a huge amount of excitement in the town since the announcement that we were coming here. The town has been buzzing, and there’s been a lot of work done around the area. I think we are all very, very excited.

“Personally, I’m proud to be able to have The European Tour come to my part of the world, and the golf course is it in great condition. The weather forecast wasn’t great this morning, but we got away with it and fingers crossed for a great weekend.

“It’s exciting – 15,000 people out there watching a Pro-Am this morning was incredible. It’s really good for all of the players, and just gives us a sense of what people have thought of what we have achieved the last few years.

“There’s no doubt that people are proud of this golf course and they are proud of this part of the world, and they are coming out in masses to welcome a great European Tour field to this golf course.”



Portrush Open Move Works for Clarke


Darren Clarke believes Royal Portrush could be the perfect place to rediscover his form at this week’s Irish Open.

The Northern Irishman moved back to Portrush four years ago, and believes the switch was a major factor in his Open Championship victory at Sandwich last year.

“The Irish Open has always been one of my favourite tournaments and to have it here in Royal Portrush with this amount of people here already coming to the tournament – sold out for the first time in European Tour history – makes me very, very proud,” said Clarke.

“It’s not just me, everybody at Royal Portrush and the locals are right behind it.

“It’s all worked out unbelievably well. The players love it – it’s almost got an Open feel, which is what I think the course deserves. It’s fantastic to look out there and see all of the locals and what everybody has achieved.

“It’s just a very special place. I moved up here when I was young, and I played an awful lot of my golf here and moved back a couple of years ago.

“Winning The Open last year, a lot of it was due to the fact that I was living here again playing in Royal Portrush. Some of my fellow Tour pros have not been here before, and every one bar none has been full of praise already. The course is looking fantastic.”

Since his emotional Open Championship triumph Clarke has, by his own admission, struggled for consistency.

The 43 year old has not finished better than 20th, and has missed four cuts in his last five stroke play events.

But after a month off, the former Ryder Cup star feels ready to produce his best form on home soil.

“I’ve been down here quite a lot just practicing,” he added. “I’m feeling not too bad, and looking forward to getting back.

“The forecast this week is for some pretty normal Portrush weather which might not be too good, might not be to everybody’s liking – but it is to mine!

“I’ve played the course in some pretty horrific conditions, so hopefully that will be a little bit of an advantage, as it will be to most of the Irish guys that have played here before. It’s a golf course that you need to know a little bit, and definitely in bad weather.

“As for myself, I’ve been working away and hopefully things will turn around pretty soon and get back to where it’s been.

“I think it’s going to be wonderful pictures going around the world of Royal Portrush and the whole area. It’s a huge boost for the area that can only be a good thing. It’s wonderful to see a major tournament back here again at one of the best courses that we’ve got. I doubt we’ll play a better course on The European Tour this year, and that’s the feeling amongst most of the pros.

“For guys to come along here and say, looking around, everything about it, it feels like an Open Championship, is about as big of praise as anybody can give it.”


Rory Looking for Royal Advantage


Rory McIlroy hopes to embrace home advantage when he bids to win the Irish Open for the first time at Royal Portrush this week.

The Northern Irishman has finished in the top ten twice in four appearances in his National Open, but admits that the pressure of being the home favourite has got to him in recent years.

But with the tournament moving north of the border to a course where McIlroy once shot 61 as a teenager, the former US Open Champion is aiming to take full advantage of the huge gallery’s support – with Friday, Saturday and Sunday selling out in advance for the first time in European Tour history.

“To be honest the last couple of years, I didn’t really enjoy the tag of the home favourite,” McIlroy admitted.

“I just didn’t feel very comfortable with it – this year I really want to embrace that. You look at so many people and when they have got a home advantage, it is an advantage, and it should be not just me, but also for the other guys from here as well. It’s something that you really have to embrace, and that’s what I'm going to try and do this week.

“I think everyone has waited a long time for the Irish Open to come back up north and to have it played at one of the best golf courses in the world, Royal Portrush, is fantastic.

“The first ever European Tour event to sell out is something that’s obviously got a lot of people very excited, and it’s shaping up to be a great week.

“It's going to be fantastic. Yesterday I played an early practice round and the people who came out to watch really created a great atmosphere. I’m looking forward to playing in front of all of them this week, and hopefully I can put on a good show.

“The golf course is in great shape – the rough’s thick and greens are running well. Hopefully the weather cooperates a little bit, and it should be a great week of golf.”

After finishing in the top five in his first four European Tour events of the year, McIlroy’s form has tailed off slightly in recent months.

But the 23 year old is confident he is on the right track to return to his world-beating best.

“I’ve put ten days of really good work in,” said the World Number Two. “My game feels good. It actually felt pretty good at the US Open.

“I felt like it was starting to come around. In a way it couldn’t be a better time to come back here and play Portrush. It brings back so many good memories, and you can feed off that, and that gives you some confidence.”


Hoey Not Short on Portrush Praise


Michael Hoey also compared the atmosphere at the 2012 Iris Open at Royal Portrush to that of The Open Championship, and he is delighted with the changes that have been made to the course in preparation for the first Irish Open in Northern Ireland in 65 years.

“I would have laid odds they would have made the golf course a bit short, but they have produced some really good course design,” said the reigning Alfred Dunhill Links Champion.

“They have put a few tees just far enough back, and it’s soft conditions at the minute, which means it’s playing long. So I think this course is now set up just perfectly, and visually it’s great. It’s just pure, great links – a bit like St Andrews. It’s really good.”

Michael will tee off from the 10th at 07:50hrs on Thursday with Thongchai Jaidee and Gonzalo  Fernández-Castaño




Profile - Bill Murray



William James "Bill" Murray is an American actor and comedian who gained national exposure on Saturday Night Live and later went on to star in a number of critically and commercially successful comedic films, including Caddyshack (1980), Ghostbusters (1984), and Groundhog Day (1993). 

Murray gained additional critical acclaim later in his career, starring in Lost in Translation (2003), for which he was nominated for an Academy Award, and a series of films directed by Wes Anderson, including Rushmore (1998), The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004) and Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009).

Born and raised in Wilmette, Illinois, a northern suburb of Chicago, the son of Lucille (née Collins), a mail room clerk, and Edward Joseph Murray II, a lumber salesman. 

Murray's father died in 1967 from complications from diabetes when Bill was just seventeen years old and Murray, along with his eight siblings, grew up in an Irish Catholic family. Three of his siblings are actors: John Murray, Joel Murray, and Brian Doyle-Murray. His sister, Nancy, is an Adrian Dominican Sister in Michigan, traveling around the country portraying St. Catherine of Siena.

The family did not have much money, and Lucille Murray pressed her children to work.

As a youth, Murray read children's biographies of American heroes like Kit Carson, Wild Bill Hickok and Davy Crockett. He attended St. Joseph grade school and Loyola Academy, and during his teen years worked as a caddy to fund his education at the Jesuit High School. One of his sisters had polio and his mother had several miscarriages.

During his teen years he was the lead singer of a rock band called the Dutch Masters and took part in high school and community theatre. Murray also conducted the George Mason University pep band, Green Machine, during the Charleston Classic.

After graduating, Murray attended Regis University in Denver, Colorado, taking premedical courses. However, he quickly dropped out and returned to Illinois. In 2007 though, Regis University awarded him an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree.

With an invitation from his older brother, Brian, Murray got his start at Second City Chicago, an improvisational comedy troupe, studying under Del Close. In 1974, he moved to New York City and was recruited by John Belushi as a featured player on The National Lampoon Radio Hour, which aired on some 600 stations from 1973 to 1974.

In 1975, an Off Broadway version of a Lampoon show led to his first television role as a cast member of the ABC variety show Saturday Night Live with Howard Cosell that featured animal acts and little kids with loud voices. 

After working in Los Angeles with the "guerrilla video" commune TVTV on a number of projects, Murray rose to prominence in 1976. He joined the cast of NBC's Saturday Night Live for the show's second season, following the departure of Chevy Chase.

As the cult film had originated from a Rutland Weekend Television sketch that Eric Idle had brought for his appearance on SNL, Murray as part of the cast of SNL also appeared next to Idle, Dan Aykroyd, John Belushi, Michael Palin, and Neil Innes in the 1978 mockumentary All You Need Is Cash as "Bill Murray the K", a send-up of New York radio host Murray the K, in a segment of the film that is an obvious parody of the Maysles Brothers's documentary The Beatles: The First U.S. Visit.

Murray landed his first starring role with the film Meatballs in 1979 and followed this up with his portrayal of famed writer Hunter S. Thompson in 1980's Where the Buffalo Roam. In the early 1980s, he starred in a string of box-office hits including Caddyshack, Stripes, and Tootsie.

Murray became the first guest on NBC's Late Night with David Letterman on February 1, 1982 and would later appear on the first episode of The Late Show with David Letterman in August 1993, when the show moved to CBS.

In Ghostbusters, a role originally written for John Belushi, was a deal Murray made with Columbia Pictures in order to gain financing for his own films. Ironically Ghostbusters became the highest-grossing film of 1984 and his movue, The Razor's Edge, which was filmed before Ghostbusters  was a box-office flop.

Upset over the failure of Razor's Edge, Murray took four years off from acting to study philosophy and history at the Sorbonne, frequented the Cinematheque in Paris, and spend time with his family in their Hudson River Valley home.

Murray returned to films in 1988 with Scrooged and the sequel Ghostbusters II in 1989. 

In 1990, Murray made his first and only attempt at directing when he co-directed Quick Change with producer Howard Franklin. His subsequent films What About Bob? (1991) and Groundhog Day (1993) were box-office hits and critically acclaimed.

After a string of films that did not do well with audiences (one of the exceptions being his role in the 1996 comedy Kingpin), he received much critical acclaim for Wes Anderson's Rushmore for which he won Best Supporting Actor awards from the New York Film Critics Circle, National Society of Film Critics, and the Los Angeles Film Critics Association (tying with Billy Bob Thornton). 

Murray decided to take a turn towards more dramatic roles. Murray then experienced a resurgence in his career as a dramatic actor, taking on roles in Wild Things, Cradle Will Rock, Hamlet (as Polonius), and The Royal Tenenbaums.

In 2003, he garnered considerable acclaim for Sofia Coppola's Lost in Translation, and went on to earn a Golden Globe Award, a BAFTA Award, and an Independent Spirit Award, as well as Best Actor awards from a number of film critic organizations.

In 2005, Murray announced that he would take a break from acting, as he had not had the time to relax since his new breakthrough in the late 1990s. 

He did return to the big screen, however, for brief cameos in Wes Anderson's The Darjeeling Limited and in Get Smart as Agent 13, the agent in the tree. In 2008, he played an important role in the post-apocalyptic film City of Ember, and in 2009, played himself in a cameo role in the zombie comedy Zombieland.

Murray has homes in Los Angeles, Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts, Charleston, South Carolina, and Rockland County, New York, just outside of New York City. 

Murray is a fan of Chicago pro sports teams, especially the Chicago Cubs, Chicago Bears, and the Chicago Bulls.

Murray is a keen golfer and plays in the Irish Opbe Pro_am at Royal Portrish 0b Wedensdya Juen 27th.



Friday Sell Out at Royal Portrush


The success of this year’s Irish Open continued today with the news that the second day’s play on Friday June 29 at Royal Portrush Golf Club is now also a complete sell-out.

Last Thursday, The European Tour announced that Saturday June 30 and Sunday July 1 had officially sold out, the Tour, for the first time in its 40 year history, having to close tickets sales for a tournament with the 27,000 limit for each day reached.

But now, with three days to go to the start of the championship proper, tournament organisers have confirmed that Friday is now also in the same situation as expectation surrounding the first staging of the Irish Open in Northern Ireland since 1953 reaches fever pitch.

Spectators without tickets can still pay on the gate to watch the action in Tuesday’s first official practice day, Wednesday’s Pro-Am featuring stars from the worlds of showbusiness and sport and the first round play on Thursday, but after that, to gain entry to the action on the world-famous Dunluce Course, spectators need to be in possession of a valid ticket.

Spectators are also reminded that due to the close proximity of the start of the tournament on Thursday, there is no ability now to buy advance tickets from the Tour’s ticket website.

“When we announced, in January, that the Irish Open was coming to Royal Portrush we were told to expect a hugely positive reaction from golfing public but this has exceeded all our expectations and is fantastic news for the tournament. We are well on course for in excess of 100,000 spectators here over the week,” said Championship Director Antonia Beggs.

“We have planned for this and our traffic management is in place, however we remind spectators that it is vitally important to follow the official Automobile Association event signage to and from the tournament rather than rely on ‘SatNav technology’ as the signs will direct spectators to the best available car park at the time.

“We also ask spectators to remember that this is a major sporting occasion and to exercise patience in their journeys to and from the event.”

As outlined last week and since consultation began on the tournament six months ago, public transport will play a huge part in moving spectators in and out of Portrush.

• In addition to normal scheduled services, extra trains will run from Belfast and Derry–Londonderry to Portrush with tickets available to book online or purchase in advance from main train stations.

• Dedicated golf coach services will depart locations across Northern Ireland and are available to book online only. Ulsterbus Tours is also offering both travel and Irish Open ticket packages.

• Golf rail service online ticket bookings will close at 2pm three days prior to travel. However, additional rail tickets will also be available to purchase from selected stations on day of travel.

• Golf coach ticket bookings will close at 5pm on day prior to travel and are only available to purchase online

• Golf coach and train return services are £15 per adult and £7.50 per child. Ulsterbus Tours packages are £40 per person,” he added.

For travel information including bus and rail ticket bookings, click here or call the Translink contact centre on 00 44 (0) 28 9066 6630.


Where are they Now? - David Feherty


The 2012 Masters passes with David Feherty holding a place on CBS team for their tournament - alongside Sir Nick Faldo, Jim Nantz, Peter Osterhuis and Ian Baker Finch. The Augusta National Golf Club has consistently chosen CBS as its U.S. broadcast partner, it has done so on successive one-year contracts. 

Although it is widely held that CBS allows Augusta National greater control over the content of the broadcast in order to maintain future rights, the club insists it makes no demands in return.

However there are some curious items in the coverage as the gallery is referred to as "patrons" rather than spectators or fans. They also use the term "second cut" instead of "rough". 

In the past commentators who have been deemed not to have acted with the decorum expected by the club have been removed, notably Jack Whitaker and analyst Gary McCord. 

David Feherty was in full form on Sunday, starting with his unusual call of Oosthuizen's double-eagle at the second hole: "This one could be very nice...could be very nice...oh, come to papa, yes!"


There was no television - and therefore no commentary - when Gene Sarazen made his double-eagle at 15 in the 1935 Masters. But even if there had there been, it is safe to say that it would not have resembled Feherty's description - or come close.

Feherty was born in Bangor, Northern Ireland and spent most of his playing career in Europe, where he won five times and finished in the top ten of the European Tour's Order of Merit twice, coming tenth in 1989 and eighth in 1990. 

He spent 1994 and 1995 playing mainly on the PGA Tour, and the best result on the tour was a second place finish at the 1994 New England Classic. His combined career prize money exceeded $3 million. 

Feherty represented Ireland in international competition including captaining the victorious 1990 Alfred Dunhill Cup team. Feherty played for Europe on the 1991 Ryder Cup team.

In 1997, Feherty retired from both the European and PGA Tour and joined CBS Sports as an on-course reporter and golf analyst. Feherty is a contributor to Golf Magazine and has his own column in the back of the magazine called Sidespin. He has also published a number of books A Nasty Bit of Rough, Somewhere in Ireland a Village Is Missing an Idiot, An Idiot for All Seasons, and David Feherty's Totally Subjective History of the Ryder Cup.

Feherty lives with his wife, Anita and five children in Dallas, Texas.

He appears in advertisements for the Cobra golf company, showing off his trampolining and cheer leading skills in the advert.

In 2008, Feherty was hit by a truck, while cycling suffering three broken ribs, which punctured his lung and was hospitalised for a few days with a tube in his chest. He resumed his broadcast duties at the 2008 Masters.

Never far from controversy, Feherty was one of five writers to comment on George W. Bush's move to Dallas using the article to express his support of Bush and to speak on politics. At the time it caused CBS to distance themselves from Feherty's comments.

European Tour wins 
1986 Italian Open
1986 Bell's Scottish Open
1989 BMW International Open
1991 Credit Lyonnais Cannes Open
1992 Iberia Madrid Open

Irish wins 
1980 Irish National PGA Championship
1982 Irish National PGA Championship

Other wins
1984 ICL International (South Africa)
1988 South African PGA Championship
1992 Bell's Cup (South Africa)

Ryder Cup 1991
Record: 3 matches, 1.5 points 
Alfred Dunhill Cup (representing Ireland): 1990 (winners)
Four Tours World Championship: 1990, 1991 (winners)

Fact File
Date of Birth : August 13th 1958
Birthplace: Bangor, Co. Down
Turned Professional: 1976
Original Club : Balmoral Golf Club


Presenters - Shane O'Donoghue



Shane O’Donoghue is a leading golf broadcaster and since 2004, he has been a member of the prestigious BBC TV commentary team, widely recognised as the finest broadcasters of the sport in the world. Shane moved into the role of interviewer/reporter with the team in 2008 and samples of his work are available to view in this section.


In 2010, Shane continued in the role of interviewer/reporter for the BBC’s live coverage from the Masters Tournament at Augusta National in April along with covering the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth, the Barclays Scottish Open at Loch Lomond and most notably at Open Championship at St Andrews.

Shane also commentated on a variety of women's events on the Ladies European Tour in addition to working with European Tour Productions at the 3 Irish Open at Killarney Golf & Fishing Club in County Kerry at the end of July.

Inside The Ropes
Shane is very much in-demand as a golf MC, counting the European Tour and IMG amongst his growing list of premium clients. Last May he presented at the 3-day Golf Live Show at Stoke Park in Buckinghamshire for IMG alongside  Ryder Cup Captain Colin Montgomerie,
Retief Goosen and Paul Casey.

Shane and his wife Clare Louise are directors of Niche Media, a golf PR and Communications company. 

In currently presents Living Golf  with CNN.




Harrington at Home in Portrush

Getty Images
Padraig Harrington has compared the atmosphere ahead of this year’s Irish Open to that of The Open Championship as he prepares to play a competitive round on the stunning Dunluce Links at Royal Portrush Golf Club for the first time in 17 years.

The three-time Major winner has often stated that the Northern Ireland course is his favourite in the world, and this week he joins one of the strongest fields of the season in an event that has already broken records by becoming the first European Tour tournament to completely sell out for Friday, Saturday and Sunday.The hype is unprecedented, even for a tournament which annually captures the imagination of Ireland as well as the rest of the world, and Harrington is enjoying every minute of it.

“It is special that it’s here,” said the Irishman, who beat Bradley Dredge in a play-off to win the 2007 Irish Open. “I think with the atmosphere, anybody is going to be proud to win the tournament this week on this golf course and with the people that are coming out.“Even for a player who has never played golf in Ireland, and it’s his first time here and the Irish Open has no particular significance to him, he would eventually be excited to win this tournament because of the atmosphere created. 

“There’s 27,000 people and they are all going to try to cram onto that 18th hole on Sunday. I don’t think you could surpass the atmosphere that’s going to be here during the week.“If you go to an Open Championship, you have 35,000 people or so. But to be honest, I think the atmosphere here will be just as good. It's quite a tight golf course that way. It’s quite enclosed. You can already feel a nice vibe about the place. 

“So it’s just going to be one of those weeks that anybody playing here is going to feel the pressure, and it’s going to be an exciting week to be in contention – even more so if you win it.”Having come close to winning at Royal Portrush twice as an amateur, finishing second at the North of Ireland Championship in 1993 and 1995, Harrington did admit that there is some unfinished business this week, and he believes the course could not be in better condition for him to make amends.

“I think the golf course is set up perfectly,” he said. “I think having had the rain over the last couple of weeks, it’s going to help us out a little bit that the greens are not too firm.“There are holes where you’re going to find trouble, but you definitely can hit good shots out there and I think it would be a question of trying to make as many birdies as you can and accepting a couple of mistakes here and there.”