Showing posts with label Adare Manor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adare Manor. Show all posts

3/17/2015

Phelan Hopes for Lucky Madeira

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Kevin Phelan is hoping he will be touched by the luck of the Irish at the Madeira Islands Open – BPI – Portugal and, after making a new friend in the shape of Ryder Cup Captain Darren Clarke, the 24 year old is in buoyant mood.

The former amateur star earned the best European Tour finish of his career three weeks ago at the Joburg Open, where he shared second place with three others, two shots behind winner Anny Sullivan of England.

That result has given the former Walker Cup player a timely shot in the arm after he missed out on retaining his European Tour card last season, and suddenly the man who impressed at the US Open Championship in 2013 as an amateur is finding friends in high places.

“I met Clarkey (Darren Clarke) in Turkey and had dinner with him at a pro-am there and he’s been very helpful,” said the Waterford native. “There were a couple of young lads from ISM there and he was really helpful and nice with us, giving us advice, so he’s been good.

“He has such a wide knowledge base, he’s been playing for a really long time now and been very successfully all that time so he’s a great lad to know.

“He helped me with my yardage book in Joburg and he’s been really willing to help. It definitely helped me on one of the holes, on one of the par fives where he told me to get past pin high on the green - that was really good to know.

“He gave me a good bit of general advice, that whenever I learn something from certain players, to write it down and take note of everything and that way you can look back on it down the road so I’ve started doing that and that could be very helpful in future.

“He’s the perfect fit for the Ryder Cup captaincy, he’s obviously very willing to help and he has such a good record, individually and in Ryder Cups, he’s been on plenty of winning teams so he knows what he’s doing.”

Given that the world is celebrating his home nation this week, Phelan is hoping that he can follow in the footsteps Northern Irishman Michael Hoey and Ireland’s Des Smyth by etching his name on the trophy this week, and he feels the Clube de Golf do Santo da Serra course suits his eye.

“The course is good,” he said. “It’s firm again, like it was last. It was really windy during practice but we’re so high up you kind of expect that to be the case. The course is in good nick, the greens are really nice so it’s all good.

“I played well in Joburg and played well in parts in East London so it’s been good. I saw my coach there for a few days last week too so I’m trying to kick on this week and have a good one.

“My game is good in the wind, I have a lot of practice in it obviously so I’m well used to it at this stage. 

“Michael (Hoey) won this tournament a few years ago alright, although it was a different course, so I’ll do my best to make it another Irish winner here.”

Phelan is joined by fellow Irishmen Peter Lawrie, Ruaidhri McGee and Simon Thornton while Gareth Maybin is Northern Ireland’s sole representative on the picturesque Portuguese island.

A plethora of former champions of the event have returned for the 2015 edition, including home champion in 2012 Ricardo Santos, two-time European Tour winners Bradley Dredge and Alastair Forsyth as well as former Ryder Cup player Jarmo Sandelin.

The field also includes many of Portugal’s most promising young players, including Ricardo Gouveia, who won in his seventh event on the Challenge Tour last year before coming agonisingly close to earning a European Tour card at the Qualifying School Final Stage.

Scott Henry, meanwhile, returns hoping to go one better than last year, when he was beaten to the title by England’s Daniel Brooks on the first hole of a play-off.


10/30/2014

Past Winners - Padraig Harrington 2007

O'Leary with Harrington in 2007

An Irishman captured the European PGA Tour's 2007 Irish Open Sunday for the first time in 25 years and follows in the footsteps of John O'Leary, who won the event in Portmanock in 1982

Padraig Harrington survived a sudden-death playoff against Bradley Dredge of Wales to take home the title at the Irish Open at Adare Manor Hotel and Golf Resort.

Harrington needed just one hole in the playoff: He made par to Dredge's bogey. Both players finished at 5-under-par for the tournament, four ahead of the rest of the field.

"I felt the pressure. It was probably the most nervous I've been for many a tournament," Harrington told Reuters. "I've always said that after the four Majors this is the next event I've wanted to win. The crowd was fantastic. Even when I saved for bogey they cheered and the applause definitely gave me a boost."

The win puts Harrington in third play on the European PGA Tour's Order of Merit; only Henrik Stenson and Retief Goosen are above him. the win also puts Harrington back into the world's top 10 rankings.

Harrington's Sunday started off slowly, with bogeys at the par-4 second and fifth. But Harrington rebounded, going birdie-birdie-eagle on the seventh, eighth and ninth.

But he slipped back to the field on his homestretch, with bogeys at the par-3 11th and 17th.

Meanwhile, Dredge was making a charge, with birdies on seven of his last 12 holes, making up a four-stroke deficit on the back nine to force a playoff.

"My long game wasn't great but I hit enough good iron shots close and putted well," said Dredge. "I had a chip in on 14th and knew I had to stay focused. I knew my short game was good enough to battle it out and hope he made a few bogeys as well. In the end it was just one of those things on the last.

"Before I went out I knew I had to shoot a good score and had a good run at the end of the front nine, kept my head down and played my own game. It is just frustrating to give it to him the way I did in the end."

Simon Wakefield of England drained a 30-foot birdie put on his last hole to move into sole possession of third place, at 1-under-par, the only other player to finish under par this week.

May 21, 2007

8/09/2012

Back Tees Class at Adare Manor


Play the Irish Open / JP McManus Pro Am course from the very back tees this Sunday or test yourself in our Open Seniors Day (50+), Teams of Two Challenge or Open Singles all being played between the 12th and 17th of August. 

Ireland’s number one Parkland Course at Adare Manor Hotel is delighted to welcome GUI players to Adare for our Summer Open Week, to book tee times or for any enquiries contact (061) 605274 or golf@adaremanor.com 

Details also available on our Facebook page - Adare Golf Club Ireland. 

Also, enjoy the final round of the USPGA Championship in our Clubhouse after golf on Sunday, meals also available throughout the week in the Clubhouse.

Please note staff at Adare Golf Club cannot be held responsible for extra wear and tear that may occur in players’ fairway woods / utility clubs while playing in the Back Tees Classic… 


3/30/2012

Padraig Hopes for Adare Moment


Padraig Harrington is hoping the move to his “favourite course” will inspire him to capture his second Irish Open title. 

Two months before sealing his maiden Major victory at The 136th Open Championship, Harrington prevailed in a play-off with Bradley Dredge to win the 2007 Irish Open and spark jubilant scenes at Adare Manor, in Co. Limerick.

Five years on, Harrington is a three-time Major Champion and, for the first time since 1953, Ireland’s National Open is being held north of the border, at Royal Portrush Golf Club in Portrush, Co. Antrim.

Harrington believes the 6,843 yards, par 72 course is the ideal venue to host the 57th edition of the historic event, which takes place from June 28-July 1.

He said: “There are a lot of things which make Portrush so special. It’s a very fair test of golf – if you hit good shots you’ll be rewarded with birdies, but hit bad ones and you’ll run up bogeys or double bogeys. You always feel like you can make a score round there, but it’s not as easy as you think, so you’ve just got to try to be fearless.

“It’s also a very scenic place to play golf, with some stunning views. Over the years I played a lot of amateur tournaments there, and the atmosphere was always second to none. The course is right in the town which is usually buzzing, so as a venue it’s got everything going for it.”

With Darren Clarke, Graeme McDowell and World Number One Rory McIlroy also confirmed there will be four Major Champions from the host nation in attendance at Royal Portrush Golf Club, and Harrington is expecting the Irish golfing public to stage their traditional show of support.

He said: “The people of Northern Ireland have always loved their golf. They always turned up in great numbers to support amateur events, so in some ways taking the Irish Open to Portrush is a reward for their support and loyalty. I can guarantee this year’s Irish Open will be as well-attended as any in the past, which should guarantee a great atmosphere.

“I understand that most of the tickets have been sold already and you can’t get a hotel room in the town, which tells you everything you need to know about how well-received it’s been. It’s also easily accessible from Belfast, so I’m expecting very big crowds during the tournament week.”

Harrington will be one of the favourites to succeed Simon Dyson as champion, and the 40 year old is hopeful of delivering Ireland’s first home winner since then-amateur Shane Lowry’s triumph in 2009.

He said: “I came close to winning the North of Ireland Amateur Open a fair few times but never quite managed it, so to win the first Irish Open to be held in Northern Ireland in my lifetime would be very special.

“But with the quality of the field, winning certainly won’t be easy. The Irish Open is in the middle of a really big run of events, with the BMW International Open the week before and the French Open the week after. I’m expecting a very strong turn-out from the European players, especially with The Open Championship being played three weeks later. The opportunity to test yourself on a links golf course in the run-up to The Open is a definite advantage, and I’m sure you’ll see many of the big guns from Europe heading over to Portrush.”