Showing posts with label Billy Mayfair. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Billy Mayfair. Show all posts

5/17/2014

Harrington Consistent at Byron Nelson

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Pádraig Harrington suffered two penalty drops on Friday at the Byron Nelson Championship and still managed to sign for a two under par 68 and remain two shots off a cluttered leader board with eight players on 6 under.

The Dubliner doubled the third aftre finding water and then again at the 18th. But recovered without loss, and then birdied the next, along with the sixth and ninth to turn in 34 strokes. 

At the par-four 11th he carded a fourth birdie.

Paul Casey came within one stroke of the PGA Tour scoring record for nine holes when he stormed home in 27 shots to vault into an early share of the lead in the Byron Nelson Championship second round in Irving, Texas.

Casey was in danger of missing the cut after a mediocre front nine, but he turned on the afterburners at the turn and picked up eight strokes on the inward half, thanks to an eagle and six birdies at the TPC Four Seasons Resort.

“I’m loving my golf right now,” Casey told Golf Channel after shooting a seven-under-par 63 for a six-under total of 134. Only American Corey Pavin, who shot an eight-under 26 on the front nine at Brown Deer Park during the 2006 US Bank Championship in Milwaukee, has posted a better nine-hole score on the PGA Tour.

Casey’s 27 matches the tour record for a back nine, emulating Nick Watney (2011 AT&T National), Brandt Snedeker (2007 Buick Invitational), Billy Mayfair (2001 Buick Open), Andy North (1975 BC Open) and Mike Souchak (1955 Texas Open).

He shared the early lead at the TPC Four Seasons Resort with German Martin Kaymer(67), Canadians Mike Weir (66) and Graham DeLaet (66) and American Morgan Hoffman (66) with half the field back in the clubhouse.

Pádraig Harrington survived two penalty drops to card a 68 and lie two shots off their scores.

The Dubliner found water on the third and the 18th but avoided dropping shots at the last to sign for a second 68.

At the third he took a double-bogey having found water off the tee but he recovered well to birdie the next, the sixth and ninth to turn in 34.

At the par-four 11th, he dropped his approach within five feet of the hole and took a fourth birdie.

He looked in trouble on 18 when he again found water off the tee, but after taking a drop his approach was precise once more and from 15 feet he saved par.

Kaymer showed no signs of a victory hangover following his Players Championship win on Sunday, though he did reveal that he did not sleep well overnight.

“Today there’s not much wind and especially in the morning we had lovely greens, and I could take advantage of a couple of long putts here and there,” Kaymer said. “I played very solid and didn’t make many mistakes. I like to play brave and if you hit a bad shot here and there, it’s OK.”


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11/20/2013

Grant Starts Out Level

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Stephen Grant opened with a birdie on the par 5 first hole at the PGA Tour Second Stage Qualifying on the Plantation Golf and Country Club in Florida on Tuesday.

A series of dropped shots on the way to the turn - two bogeys and a double at the par four 6th - left Grant 3 at the halfway mark. But  recoveries on holes 12 and 14th brought him back level for the round at 71 - for a share of 50th place.

Nick Lindheim is the early leader after carding a 65

The second stage is an all-or-nothing affair for most of the participants. Players who advance to the third and final stage are guaranteed at least conditional status on the Web.com Tour, which is the only pathway to the PGA TOUR. Most who miss out at second stage will start 2014 without status on that circuit.

Q-school’s second stage concludes this week at four sites that will be played Tuesday-Friday. Two sites were held last week (click here for results). The second stage always features a mix of young up-and-comers and former PGA TOUR winners.

Billy Mayfair, Arjun Atwal, Eric Axley, Frank Lickliter, Peter Lonard, Chris Smith, Marc Turnesa are among the former PGA TOUR winners competing this week.

The q-school fields also are full of players just starting their pro careers.

Three 2013 first-team All-Americans are taking part in second stage this week – Daniel Berger, James Erkenbeck and Michael Kim. They’re looking to join fellow first-teamers Max Homa and Justin Thomas at q-school’s final stage; Homa and Thomas advanced last week.

Thomas was the 2012 NCAA player of the year. Kim, a junior at Cal, won that award this year; he is competing in second stage as an amateur. He earned an exemption into second stage by finishing 17th at this year’s U.S. Open. Kim, Homa and Thomas were teammates on this year's victorious U.S. Walker Cup squad.

Erkenbeck and Kim are competing at Bear Creek Golf Club in Murrieta, California, Berger, runner-up to Homa at this year’s NCAA Championship, is playing at Plantation (Fla.) Preserve. He turned pro earlier this year after his sophomore season at Cal.

Kim is not the only collegian competing at Bear Creek. University of Southern California junior Anthony Paolucci also is competing at Bear Creek; he finished 29th in the 2011 Farmers Insurance Open while still in high school. Chris Williams, who turned pro earlier this year as the world’s No. 1 amateur, also is playing at Bear Creek.

Australia’s Brady Watt, the world’s No. 8 amateur and a semifinalist at this year’s U.S. Amateur, is playing second stage in Gautier, Mississippi,  as is Tadd Fujikawa, who made the cut in the 2007 Sony Open in Hawaii as a 16-year-old.






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11/18/2013

Grant Tees off PGA Q-School


Stephen Grant returns to action this week in the PGA Tour Qualifying School Second Stage in Florida on Tuesday, just weeks after a disappointing card chase in Spain at Stage 2 of the European Tour Q School.

At Plantation Preserve Golf and Country Club this week the Birr golfer, now based in Flroida. has four rounds to battle for a place at the PGA Tour Final Qualifying at La Quinta in California scheduled for mid December

The second stage of q-school is an important step in most players’ careers. Few are fortunate enough to avoid it.

The second stage is an all-or-nothing affair for most of the participants. Players who advance to the third and final stage are guaranteed at least conditional status on the Web.com Tour, which is the only pathway to the PGA TOUR. Most who miss out at second stage will start 2014 without status on that circuit.

Q-school’s second stage concludes this week at four sites that will be played Tuesday-Friday. Two sites were held last week. The second stage always features a mix of young up-and-comers and former PGA TOUR winners.

Billy Mayfair, Arjun Atwal, Eric Axley, Frank Lickliter, Peter Lonard, Chris Smith, Marc Turnesa are among the former PGA TOUR winners competing this week.

The q-school fields also are full of players just starting their pro careers.

Three 2013 first-team All-Americans are taking part in second stage this week – Daniel Berger, James Erkenbeck and Michael Kim. They’re looking to join fellow first-teamers Max Homa and Justin Thomas at q-school’s final stage; Homa and Thomas advanced last week.

Thomas was the 2012 NCAA player of the year. Kim, a junior at Cal, won that award this year; he is competing in second stage as an amateur. He earned an exemption into second stage by finishing 17th at this year’s U.S. Open. Kim, Homa and Thomas were teammates on this year's victorious U.S. Walker Cup squad.

Erkenbeck and Kim are competing at Bear Creek Golf Club in Murrieta, Calif. Berger, runner-up to Homa at this year’s NCAA Championship, is playing at Plantation (Fla.) Preserve. He turned pro earlier this year after his sophomore season at Cal.

Kim is not the only collegian competing at Bear Creek. University of Southern California junior Anthony Paolucci also is competing at Bear Creek; he finished 29th in the 2011 Farmers Insurance Open while still in high school. Chris Williams, who turned pro earlier this year as the world’s No. 1 amateur, also is playing at Bear Creek.

Australia’s Brady Watt, the world’s No. 8 amateur and a semifinalist at this year’s U.S. Amateur, is playing second stage in Gautier, Miss., as is Tadd Fujikawa, who made the cut in the 2007 Sony Open in Hawaii as a 16-year-old.


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