Showing posts with label Boo Weekley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boo Weekley. Show all posts

5/15/2015

Hoey Trails Espana in El Prat

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Michael Hoey carded a second round 68 at the Open de España in El Prat, Barcelona, to reaching the half-way stage two strokes behind Edouard Espana.

Hoey got his day off to a perfect start with a birdie three at the first hole before adding two more at the fifth and the seventh to go out in 33.

Another birdie at the 10th and it looked like the Northern Irishman might catch first round leader Trevor Fisher at the top of the leaderboard. However his good run was stunted by consecutive bogies at the 11th and 12th holes.

A strong finish gave way to birdies at the 15th and 16th to post 68 and leave him tied third on five under par, with Argentina’s Ricardo Gonzalez one shot better off in second spot.

France’s Espana overcame strong winds which sent scores soaring in the afternoon to card a second round of 69 and finish seven under par at El Prat.

Jimenez had been four under following birdies on the second and fifth with his ninth European Tour ace – equalling the record of Colin Montgomerie – on the eighth, but came home in 39 to card a 71 and finish one under.

The 51-year-old, who is known for his love of cigars and red wine, at least had the consolation of winning 288 bottles of beer for his hole-in-one, which came when his six-iron pitched around 15 feet short of the pin and rolled perfectly into the hole.

Espana, 25, who graduated from the Challenge Tour last season, told European Tour Radio: “Leading the open with my name everywhere is very cool.

“I played really good today, it was very windy so it was tough to control distance and the putting was tough too but I played very well and I am really happy. My family is from Spain so that’s why my name is Espana. My cousins are here this week so it’s really good.

“It’s completely different (on the European Tour), the level of tournaments are higher so I have to improve my game, my level to play good on tour and I try but it’s difficult so we will see at the end of the week if I keep going.

“It’s tough because there are a lot of good players, the courses are really good and difficult so you have to play well and focus on your game.”

The strong afternoon winds meant pre-tournament favourite Sergio Garcia avoided a first missed cut in 11 appearances in the event, the world number seven having added a second round of 72 to his opening 75.

“I didn’t feel I played that badly,” said Garcia, who was a shot outside the projected cut after finishing his round with two birdies in the last six holes and a par save from a greenside bunker on the last.

“It was a great week last week with everything that happened (losing a play-off in the Players Championship). It takes it out of you, but it’s no excuse. You just try your best and hope it’s good enough.”

After discovering he had survived with a shot to spare, the 35-year-old later wrote on Twitter: “2 tough days to start the #OpendeEspana but at least I’ll have the opportunity to play the weekend and have a chance! Will need great golf!”

Gonzalez had set the early clubhouse target on six under par thanks to a second consecutive 69, the 45-year-old bouncing back from a double bogey on the 17th with a birdie on the last.

“I hit a bad tee shot on 17 and then I tried to hit the green, which was a big mistake, so I paid for it,” Gonzalez said. “I made a good six and then I said to my caddie: ‘I need to make a good birdie on 18’. I played two great shots to the green and and that gives me a lot of confidence for tomorrow.”

South Africa’s Darren Fichardt is alongside Hoey on five under after a disappointing 73.

Fichardt carded a superb 66 in the tougher afternoon conditions on Thursday and moved into a two-shot lead with a hat-trick of birdies from the fifth, but dropped four shots in the space of six holes from the 10th to come home in 40.

Overnight leader and fellow South African Trevor Fisher fared even worse, carding a 78 to drop back to one under.

Peter Lawrie signed for a three-over 75 to finish on five over, and outside the mark.

2/19/2014

Rory to Attack Dove Mountain

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Rory McIlroy is preparing to attack right from the word go when he begins his WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship campaign against Boo Weekley in the first round on Wednesday. 

The Northern Irishman has declared that he is hitting the ball better than he has for a long time, and he is hoping to go one better at The Golf Club at Dove Mountain than two years ago, when he lost to Hunter Mahan in the final.

“You have to get off to a fast start,” said the 24 year old. “You have to be ready to go from the get go. If it’s a 72 hole stroke play event, the first six holes to nine holes you can just try to play your way into the round and there's a long way to go. 

“But in 18 hole match play, you have to attack from the very start and be aggressive. Obviously you have to choose the right time to be aggressive, but you have to try to make as many birdies as you can.”

After near-misses in the Middle East last month – a tied runner-up finish in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship and tied ninth in the Omega Dubai Desert Classic – the two-time Major Champion has many reasons to fancy his chances in Arizona.

Comparing his form now to 12 months ago, when he was struggling with new clubs and lost in the first round to Shane Lowry, McIlroy said: “My game is much more settled. Everything is in a good place. The game is in great shape and I haven't hit the ball as well for a long time. 

“I was a little disappointed with how I putted at the weekend in Dubai, so I’ve spent a couple of days with Dave Stockton here. We’ve tried to keep it as simple as possible and it feels really good.

“It was a good start to the season and I guess I've just tried to continue that over the last couple of weeks and practised hard. This is such a different format from what we’re used to, and it’s nice to have a change. I’m really looking forward to it and hopefully I can get past Boo tomorrow.”

McIlroy’s distance will be an advantage at Dove Mountain, particularly on the driveable par four 15th, but he warned that a razor sharp short game is required to succeed.

“The greens are a little firmer, so you’re going to have to chip the ball really well,” he said. “You’re going to have shots that bounce through the green. There’ll be times when you feel like you’ve hit a good shot but it might not be on the putting surface. So a good chipper will have an advantage this week.

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11/01/2013

A Tale of Two MAC's

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Rory McIlroy birdied holes 6-8 at Sheshan International to become the first player this week to reach 10 under and looked like he was ready to cruise to a comfortable 54-hole advantage.

Then the bogeys hit. First on No. 11. Then No. 15. Then on the par-5 18th when an aggressive second shot from a sidehill lie splashed in the water short of the green and led to a third bogey.

McIlroy finished the round at even par and in the same 7-under position in which he opened the round.

"Disappointing, frustrating," he said. "Obviously played nicely the front nine and then started to hit a lot of sloppy shots on the back. Missed the last six greens in a row. Missed seven greens on the back nine, so a bit of work needed on the range this afternoon."

While he was dropping shots on the back nine, McIlroy wasn't falling far down the leaderboard. He left the course in a second-place tie with Bubba Watson and Boo Weekley, behind only leader Dustin Johnson.

"It would have been nice to play a bit better and start tomorrow with a few more shots in hand but I guess I'm in a decent position going into the weekend, and still have a great chance at winning this tournament," McIlroy said.

A victory in this tournament would be McIlroy's first on TOUR since 2012 when he won the PGA Championship, Deutsche Bank Championship and BMW Championship in the span of five weeks.

Graeme McDowell trails Henrik Stenson by €443,725 on the money list, with Gonzalo Fernández-Castaño leaping from 35th to fourth with last week’s BMW Masters triumph.

“There are big repercussions for me to play well this week, especially with what Gonzo did last week,” said McDowell. “I played him last week and he’s the kind of guy who gets his eye in using the putter, he can be a pretty dangerous player, as he is a quality iron player. 

“So while Henrik still leads the Race to Dubai there are players like Gonzo behind me and I need to do my best that they don’t go past me. 

“Also I am not playing Turkey next week so I have to make the most of this week before Dubai and the final event.”

A three under par round of 69 keeps McDowell in a share of fifth place alongside Fernández-Castaño, Sergio Garcia, Ian Poulter and Ernie Els.


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