9/13/2012

Maybin Maybe in the Italian Mix

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There were five birdies for Gareth Maybin on the final  nine holes on Friday at The BMW Open to ensure a tie for third place, and only one shot dropped on the sixth hole of the day that could have ensured the Ballyclare man a share of second place after Round 1. An encouraging return to form.

Eight birdies put Sweden’s Joel Sjoholm one stroke clear with a round of 64 in the opening round of the BMW Italian Open presented by CartaSi. The 27-year-old had eight birdies in his flawless round at Royal Park I Roveri as defending champion Robert Rock could only shoot two under.

Italian Francesco Molinari was the best placed of the Ryder Cup-bound trio in the field as he shot four under, with Germany’s Martin Kaymer carding two under and Belgium’s Nicolas Colsaerts firing a one under 71. 

Sjoholm, who was born in Chile but adopted as a baby and took up the game at the age of three, did not drop a shot as he finished one ahead of England’s Lee Slattery who moved to seven under in one of the final rounds to be completed. 

Two of Slattery’s seven birdies came on the final two holes to put him one stroke ahead of a group of seven. 

A late charge by David Howell had seen him join Richard McEvoy and Richard Bland, South Africans Keith Horne and Garth Mulroy, France’s Victor Dubuisson and Northern Ireland’s Gareth Maybin on six under. 

Despite his score, Sjoholm felt he had not necessarily produced his best golf. 

“It’s more fun now I’ve finished,” he said. “I hit it basically everywhere. I was in the woods a lot and made some funny birdies today. It was a big, fighting 64 rather than a solid 64, but it’s great fun to be eight under. 

“I want revenge because the last two weeks I actually played quite good golf. Normally when I score well, I have to putt well. 

“The last few weeks I’ve putted quite poorly and missed the cut by one stroke. Both times I felt like I had a good chance to make the cut, but you have to forget and keep moving on.” 

Molinari’s brother Edoardo made his return after three months out following wrist surgery and scored two under with fives birdies and three bogeys in his native Turin. 

He said: “The wrist is feeling good. I’m very happy with it. There is absolutely no pain at all. It’s an okay start. I was very rusty. I hit the ball quite poorly to be honest, but it’s more than two months since I last played in competition. It’s going to be a long way back to the top but I’ll get there.”







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Rory Relaxes Before Atlanta Play-off

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Rory McIlroy plans a little "chill out" time in New York before his crack at the FedEx Cup jackpot a week on Thursday.

Having captured the second and third legs of the FedEx Cup play-offs McIlroy will head into the 30-man Tour Championship in Atlanta as firm favourite for the £6.25million bonus that goes to the winner of the four-tournament series.

Add in the £900,000 on offer for winning the event and the 23-year-old Northern Irishman has a golden opportunity to secure a staggering payday of over £7.15million.

Golf's undisputed world number one has already banked more than £2.7million in the past month and that works out at over £2,500 for each shot.

McIlroy now has six victories in the United States to his name - the same number that Nick Faldo and Seve Ballesteros managed in their entire careers.

Four have come this season, the latest a two-stroke triumph over cup team-mate Lee Westwood and Phil Mickelson at the BMW Championship in Indiana on Sunday night.

This week will mostly be about recharging his batteries, but he also has planned a training session with the New York Knicks basketball team.

"I'm making the right decisions out there and everything is really just going to plan at the minute," McIlroy said.

Those decisions included simply playing at Crooked Stick.

"Some suggested that I could have taken a week off and still could have been in the top five in the FedEx Cup standings going into Atlanta.

"But I felt like I was playing really well and didn't want to stop. I sort of picked up where I left off in Boston.

"It's a nice run to be on and I want to try and keep it going for as long as possible.

"I'm confident in my ability and confident with the shots that I'm hitting and confident on the greens."

Tiger Woods, third and fourth the past fortnight and up to second in the world as a result, commented: "He's doing the things he needs to do.

"Right now he's just really playing well and he's making a ton of putts. That's a great combo.

"He's a great player, he's playing great and he's going to be tough at East Lake. But we'll see - we've got 11 days or so to prepare."

The FedEx Cup system means that the top five in the points standings - McIlroy, Woods, Nick Watney, Phil Mickelson and Brandt Snedeker - still go into the final play-off event knowing that a victory will make them the overall champion.

That seems slightly unfair on McIlroy, who actually built a lead of 3,232 points this weekend, but has it slashed to 250 points to make the series climax more exciting.

All 30 qualifiers still have a chance and last year saw Bill Haas come from 25th to take both the tournament and the FedEx Cup.

McIlroy is one of six Europeans left in. The others are Westwood, Luke Donald, Justin Rose, Sergio Garcia and Carl Pettersson.

Failing to make it into the 30, however, means two weeks off for Graeme McDowell and Ian Poulter before the Ryder Cup, whereas American captain Davis Love will see all 12 of his side in action in Atlanta.



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Mark Staunton Top of the Q Class


Mark Staunton doubled his lead on day two of the first stage of qualifying for the European Tour at the Roxburghe Hotel in Scotland on Wednesday.

The Ballinasloe-based 30-year-old turned his three-shot advantage after the first round into a six-stroke lead to put even more daylight between him and the rest of the field.

He fired a 68 to go with an opening 67, starting out with four birdies in his first six holes before dropping a shot at the short eighth. Two more birdies and another bogey followed after the turn to leave the Irishman on nine-under-par.

Scotland's Neil Fenwick is his closest challenger on three-under.

Muskerry's Peter O'Keeffe is in joint fourth, eight shots behind Staunton, following a round of 70, while Kerry's Mark Murphy and Damian Mooney of Ballyliffin are in a tie for 11th place.

It was an up-and-down round for Mooney, with the 44-year-old coming home in 74, while Murphy, a former US Tour caddie for Rocco Mediate, produced a level-par 72, which included one birdie and one bogey.

There will be a cut at the end of today's third round and then the top nine finishers plus ties after the fourth round will go forward to the second qualifying stage at one of four venues across Spain in early November.