Showing posts with label @Hassan2trophy @europeantour @pLawriegolf @rgdesofficiel @bmcdaidgolf @pga_catalunya @newstalkfm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label @Hassan2trophy @europeantour @pLawriegolf @rgdesofficiel @bmcdaidgolf @pga_catalunya @newstalkfm. Show all posts

5/07/2016

Mixed Fortunes in Morocco Four Irish

Peter Lawrie Round 3 - Getty Images
Paul Dunne finished three under par in the third round of the Trophée Hassan II with a score of 69 on Saturday to lead the Irish contingent on moving day. His round started with a pair of birdies and bogeys on the front nine and was followed by birdies on holes 10, 11 and 13 on the way back to the clubhouse.

The Greystones golfer lies eight strokes off the lead ahead of the final round on a one over par total along with Peter Lawrie.

Lawrie opened his account with a bogey and it was to prove a contrasting day to the good fortunes of Friday as he signed for his first double bogey in seven rounds. The par 3 ninth hole throwing up that particular bad news and seeing him reach the turn in 40 strokes. 

The back nine coughed up three birdies in a fight back that continued to the last green. But having already bogeyed 12, 13 and 16 the level par 37 could not improve on the +5 round of 77.

Gary Hurley ended three over for the day and a round of 75 the result of three dropped shots on the back nine having reached half way level par.

Kevin Phelan suffered double trouble on the Royal Golf Dar as Salam Red Course with two coming on the eighth and fourteenth to finish on 78 strokes. 

Having started with three straight pars Phelan then dropped shots on the way to the turn and carded those further losses on the back nine in the tough conditions.

On top of the leader board the troubles were of a different kind as Chris Hanson faces probably the most important round of his golfing career on Sunday as he takes a one shot lead into the final round after a five under par 67. 

The 30-year-old Qualifying School graduate a one shot leader on six under for the week.

Hanson, who finished fourth in a Challenge Tour event in Madrid last week, has never finished higher than 39th on The European Tour, but carded five birdies, two bogeys and an eagle on the par-five 12th to sit a shot clear of compatriot David Dixon and Clément Berardo of France.

Dixon came home in 33 to card a round of 67, with playing partner Berardo shooting a 68 after chipping in at the 13th.

Another Englishman, Joshua White, lies fourth after dropping two shots late on, with in-form Korean Jeunghun Wang fifth on three under.



5/06/2016

Peter Lawrie Fires 69 in Morocco

Lawrie, Round 2 in Rabat - Getty Images 
Peter Lawrie fired a round of 69 in the second of the Trophée Hassan II in Morocco on Friday to take a three way share of fifth Rabat after carding five birdies on the Royal Golf Dar es Salam.

Lawrie reached the 13th before any loss and was three under par by the halfway mark following his afternoon start. The Dubliner then birdied the tenth to go five under and take a share of second place before the par four thirteenth took its toll. With another birdie at fifteen the run for home was level except for a slip up on the 16th.

"It was a good day and I played solid golf from start to finish," said Peter Lawrie afterwards, "Have good memories of this course from a few years ago and that was a help in some ways."

"But it's still a tough place to scramble a decent score and were only half way through."

"Yesterday probably didn't get the rub of the green as we had a few chances," continued Lawrie, "But today was different and a few things clicked. So very happy to see the work I have been doing bear fruit."


Kevin Phelan signed for a two over par second round on Friday losing some of the ground gained in round one at the Royal Golf Dar es Salam in Rabat.

There were bogeys on the third and eighth followed by a birdie on the par four seventh to recover a stroke. After the turn the West Waterford man traded a bogey and birdie on his last two holes to end the day with a round of 74.

Gary Hurley ended day four over par and a stroke inside the cut line to earn a weekend stay on =3 overall, after carding a double bogey, four bogeys and two birdies for a total of 76.

Paul Dunne drifted down the leaderboard with a four over par 76 on a day which saw the Greystones man open with a birdie - only to lose it on the second hole – with another dropped shot on the par four 16th. A mixed patch on the run for the clubhouse saw Dunne exchange bogeys and birdies with the 16th then damaging his day’s work when he double bogeyed.

Cormac Sharvin shot 78 on Friday to miss the cut after a double bogey on the par 5 eighteenth followed 6 dropped shots – with only two birdies to limit the damage.

Michael Hoey suffered in Rabat with three double bogeys. The first of which was on the 12th followed by the 16th and 18th. A round of 79 the final result with another two dropped strokes despite birdies on his first, fifth and fifteenth holes.

Rory McNamara teed off in the afternoon and was well outside the running from the outset but battled through day two despite eight bogeys and only one birdie on the par five fifth. However, a double bogey at 17 and then a triple on the last saw him signing for a second round of 84

He will miss the cut along with Sharvin and Hoey.

Francesco Laporta will take a one-shot lead into the weekend his round of 70 on the tough Red Course at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam.

The Italian rookie came into day two with a share of the lead at four under and followed his opening 68 with another impressive effort to move a shot ahead of Australia's Jason Scrivener, Spaniard Borja Virto Astudillo and South Korea's Jeunghun Wang.

Laporta claimed the 15th card at Qualifying School in November but made just one of his first six cuts on the European Tour in 2016 and played in the Challenge de Madrid on the Challenge Tour last week.

The 25-year-old finished in a tie for fourth in the Spanish capital and admitted after his opening round that that had served as a major confidence boost, and he carried that confidence into Friday's play.

Virto Astudillo had set the clubhouse target at five under in the morning but Laporta soon moved past that with birdies on the tenth and 12th. A bogey on the 13th was followed by a double on the 14th but he then made three birdies in four holes to turn in 35 and take the lead.

Another gain on the second opened up a two-shot lead and he then missed birdie chances in a run of five pars before a missed short par putt on the eighth saw him drop to six under.

"It's going to be exciting at the weekend," he said. "It should be a great experience and I'm looking forward to it.

"It was just a really solid display and I enjoyed it."

Earlier, back-to-back birdies on the 14th and 15th saw Virto Astudillo hit the top of the leaderboard early but he gave those shots back with bogeys on the first and the third. He then bounced back with a long putt for birdie on the fifth and another gain on the seventh handed him a 70.

Scrivener ground out a round of 71 with three birdies and two bogeys as he goes in the hunt for a first European Tour title, with just two previous winners in the top ten.

Wang turned in 34 and then kick-started his round with a monster birdie putt on the 11th as he picked up three shots in four holes before a bogey-birdie finish in his 68.

American Daniel Im, and South African Zander Lombard were then at four under, a single shot clear of Englishman Gary King and France's Adrien Saddier.

Im also recorded a 69 with four birdies, while Lombard had got to seven under in his round before he dropped three shots in his last three holes and had to settle for a 70.

Saddier opened with an eagle on the tenth but could not maintain that pace in a 72, while King had four birdies in a round of 70.

Christiaan Bezuidenhout, Nacho Elvira, Scott Henry, José-Filipe Lima, Kristopher Mueck, Jack Senior and Joshua White were then all at two under, with just 24 players under par.


5/05/2016

Kevin Phelan Leads Irish in Morocco

Kevin Phelan - Getty Images
Kevin Phelan was the leading Irish player at the Trophée Hassan II in Rabat, Morocco on Thursday signing for a two under par round of 70 to trail the tournament leaders by just two strokes.

Gary Hurley ended his opening day one under after losing one of his had earned birdies on the final nine holes. He is joined overnight by Peter Lawrie who also carded a round of 71 with two birdies and a bogey on the par four third hole – and then seeing two putts lip out on the back nine.

Paul Dunne finished with a level par 72 after dropping a shot on the homeward leg at seventeen.

Cormac Sharvin finished one over par with a 73 after a steady round that just saw him drop two shots with a birdie three on his second hole.

Michael Hoey the 2012 winner in Agadir saw hopes slip when he rounded the Rabat course in 77 strokes. After missing two cuts in China in Shenzen and then Beijing at the Volvo China Open – in as many weeks - Hoey would have been looking for inspiration in a return to Morocco.

Rory McNamara ended his first European Tour event +8 and signing for a round of 80.

Jason Scrivener and Francesco Laporta set the clubhouse target as golfing history was made on day one at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam. 

The European Tour and the Ladies European Tour playing at the same venue concurrently for the first time with the men playing the Red Course and the women playing the Blue Course 50 miles up the coast from Casablanca.

The European Tour was returning to the venue in Rabat for the first time since 2010 and the Red Course layout was proving a major test as Scrivener and Laporta carded four under par rounds of 68 to take a one-shot advantage over home favourite Younes El Hassani and Frenchman Adrien Saddier.

Scrivener finished 117th in the Race to Dubai last season in his rookie year and had to come through Qualifying School for the second consecutive campaign but he has made a very consistent start to 2016, missing just one cut in nine events.

He continued that impressive form in Morocco, making birdies on the second, fourth, 11th, 14th and 15th, with a single bogey on the 13th.

Laporta recovered brilliantly from two early bogeys to join Scrivener in the clubhouse at four under with the help of an eagle on the 12th.

The rookie claimed the 15th card at Q-School in November but has made just one cut so far this season and began his round with bogeys on the second and third. He bounced back with birdies on the fifth, ninth and tenth before a three on the par five 12th and a birdie on the last catapulted him up the leaderboard.

Moroccan Faycal Serghini was also at four under after a flying start to his round, picking up birdies on the 11th, 12th, 13th and 15th.

El Hassani, the World Number 1117, began his round with 11 straight pars but then picked up a birdie on the third before he delighted the home fans with a chip-in on the seventh. Another gain was to follow on the ninth and he signed for a blemish-free opening 69.

Saddier also signed for a 69 with birdies on the fifth, tenth, 12th and 17th and a single bogey on the 14th.

Andrew Johnston proved he can handle tough courses as he won the Real Club Valderrama Open de España, Hosted by the Sergio Garcia Foundation last time out and he was in contention once again on Thursday.

The Englishman turned in level par 37 after starting on the tenth but back-to-back birdies on the fourth and fifth kick-started his round and, although he gave a shot back on the sixth, a brilliant approach to the seventh yielded another birdie.

Clément Berardo was also at two under alongside Ben Eccles, Renato Paratore and Romain Wattel.

Over on the Blue Course, Norway's Marianne Skarpnord had set the target at four under but unfortunately the news was not as good for fiancé Richard Green who opened with a ten over par 82.

The Moroccan Seven in Trophee Hassan

Trophee Hassan - Getty Images
Rory McNamara will tee it up at the Trophée Hassan II in Morocco this week after booking himself a place by winning the Tony Jacklin Classic on the EDP Tour – a mini tour based in Munich.

The 26-year-old joins the Irish contingent alongside veteran Peter Lawrie, Michale Hoey  and four of this season’s Team Ireland Grant recipients in Cormac Sharvin, Gary Hurley, Paul Dunne and Kevin Phelan.

Meanwhile, Andrew Johnston has vowed not to rest on his laurels despite fully enjoying the aftermath of his first European Tour title in the Spanish Open last month.

Johnston hit the headlines following his victory at Valderrama by admitting in a television interview that he could not wait to get home to see friends and family and “get hammered”.

Judging by subsequent posts on social media he certainly achieved those goals, but the 27-year-old is determined to prove his success was not a flash in the pan as he returns to action at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam.

“I’m still getting flashbacks and good vibes from the week in Spain and everyone has come up and said ‘Well done’, but I’ve got to move on and try and do it again,” said Johnston, whose victory made him the first winner of a regular European Tour event with an over-par total since Ian Woosnam in the Scottish Open at Carnoustie in 1996.

“I have to knuckle down and keep going. My win hasn’t changed anything in terms of my game. There are so many good players out here, so you’ve just got to just keep working hard and build on it.

“I’ve got to use the win as a stepping stone and not slack off. I think, if anything, it almost puts more pressure on me to do it again. Winning once is hard enough, but it’s probably even harder to win again so you’ve got to prove to yourself and others you can do it.”

Looking back on the fortnight after his breakthrough win, Johnston added: “I flew back from Spain on the Monday and popped into my home club (North Middlesex) that night to see a few of my mates. They put a massive banner up outside the golf club and I nearly crashed the car when I saw it.

“We had such a good night though. Then the next morning we went to my favourite cafe and had a few bacon sandwiches to aid the recovery.

“We had the big party at the club on the Friday, which was so good. I couldn’t believe how many people turned up, it was such a laugh and a great event.

“I was also lucky enough to get invited into the Arsenal director’s box thanks to a member at the club. I had to go and get a few bits for that because I didn’t have a suit. I also had to go and get a haircut and get the beard trimmed so I looked kind of presentable.”

Johnston, whose win lifted him from 224th in the world rankings to 125th, is among the favourites to win in Morocco with South Africa’s Dean Burmester (97th) and France’s Alexander Levy (100) the only players in the field ranked inside the world’s top 100.

Scotland’s Richie Ramsay, who was sixth in the Volvo China Open on Sunday, has opted not to defend the title he won in Agadir last year, writing on Twitter: “All the best to players competing in Morocco this week.

“I would love to defend over such a great course in Rabat but my baby daughter Olivia is only 2months and haven’t seen her for 3 1/2 weeks.”

5/04/2016

The Return to Rabat - Brendan McDaid

Peter Lawrie in Agadir - Getty Images
Peter Lawrie fired a round of 66 at the Trophée Hassan to help him on his way to share of tenth place at the Royal Dar es Salam Course in Morocco in 2010. Following five years in Agadir the European Tour event returns to Rabat where it will stay for the next few years. The Dubliner returns this week to that same venue armed with positive memories despite missing the cut four consecutive times at the Royal Palais du Golf in Agadir. 

In 2011 Lawrie carded a superb round of 64 to establish a three shot lead after the opening round. The Dubliner’s eight under par on the Golf Du Palais Royal giving him top leaderboard position over England’s John Bickerton, defending champion Rhys Davies and India’s Shiv Kapur on the first day.

The 2012 champion Michael Hoey returns to Morocco and is part of a strong Irish field that includes Cormac Sharvin, Garry Hurley, Rory McNamara, Paul Dunne and Kevin Phelan. 

Last season in Agadir Phelan finished in share of third place with Richie Ramsey winning the event on ten under par, and Hoey signing off in share of 34th place. In contrast Lawrie carded an opening 78 and was amongst those Irish players who missed the cut. A group that included Damien McGrane and Gareth Maybin - neither of whom return this year having lost their Tour cards.

This year the Trophée Hassan II is hosted on the Red Course at Royal Dar es Salam, designed by Robert Trent Jones, with a par-72 layout that stretches to almost 7,500 yards. With the kikuyu grass ensuring it plays even longer on the fairways and rough - toughening the shot-making. 

With current forecasts suggesting rain during the week the weather looks set to also play a role over the four days. Although the smallish greens might allow for some more aggressive shot making if they become softer over the weekend. 

Undoubtedly this will be a good scoring week for the players as in 2010 Rhys Davies won the title with a -25 on the card to secure his maiden victory on the European Tour on the same course. He also returns this week to a venue that offers positive memories and in search of a good result to kick start his season. 

Over the past two seasons Lawrie has found himself on the wrong side of the Race to Dubai rankings and finished 124th last year – which proved insufficient to retain his playing rights. A return to Q School last November, at the home of his sponsor PGA Catalunya, failed to offer any reprieve either. 

Ironically though Lawrie finds himself in a more relaxed frame of mind about the outlook for this season despite the supposed increased uncertainty

“Without a schedule I have had more time to work on a few things and get a sense of perspective.” said Lawrie, “The trip to Tshwane Open came too early in the season last February and I didn’t meet my own expectations.”

“But the Open de España a few weeks ago showed some progress in Valderrama. Which is a challenging place at any time”

Advanced PGA Professional coach Brendan McDaid again carries the bag for Lawrie who arrived to Rabat fresh with news that he had received a sponsor’s invitation for Dubai Duty Free Irish Open at the K Club in two weeks. 

“Having Brendan at Valderrama was helpful as making the cut was probably our first goal from the outset,” said Lawrie, “Once that was achieved on the Friday we then focused more on the golf at the weekend. All in all, it was a good weekend’s work.”

“Therefore it made sense to continue the partnership in Morocco this week and look to build momentum ahead of the Irish Open,” continued Peter, “So delighted that Brendan was able to travel for these dew days.”

“Obviously very pleased about the chance to play the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open at The K Club,” continued Peter “It’s proving a busy month considering I have a limited schedule.”

The Hassan II Golf Trophy is a golf tournament hosted by His Royal Highness Prince Moulay Rachid and was named after his father, Hassan II, who served as King of Morocco. The event was held at the Royal Golf Dar Es Salam in Rabat from 2010 until it moved to Agadir in 2011.

Previous winners include Scotland’s Richie Ramsay, German Marcel Siem, England’s David Horsey and Northern Ireland’s Michael Hoey. The event has been played since 1971, but did not take place from 1986 to 1990, 2004, and 2009. It has been a European Tour event just since 2010.

* Peter Lawrie is sponsored by NewstalkFM and PGA Catalunya