Showing posts with label Curtis Cup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curtis Cup. Show all posts

5/03/2016

Maguire, Mehaffey and Dunne in Curtis Cup

Leona Maguire 
Three Irish players and five from England, including world number one Leona Maguire, have been selected for Great Britain and Ireland’s Curtis Cup team.

Maguire is joined by Olivia Mehaffey and Maria Dunne, with England represented by Bronte Law, Alice Hewson, Meghan MacLaren, Rochelle Morris and Charlotte Thomas.

Maguire, Law, Mehaffey and Hewson were selected automatically as the top players in the world amateur golf ranking, with MacLaren and Morris earning their places as the top players not otherwise exempt from the LGU order of merit.

Thomas and Dunne were chosen by selectors for the 39th staging of the event between the top female amateurs from Great Britain and Ireland and the United States, which will be staged at Dun Laoghaire Golf Club from June 10th-12th.

The team will be captained by Aberdeen solicitor Elaine Farquharson-Black, who played in the contest in 1990 and 1992.

“We have an extremely talented team which has considerable experience of playing amateur golf at the highest level,” Farquharson-Black said. 

“I am looking forward to meeting up with the team at The Castle Golf Club to prepare for the match.

“With some of the best players in the world on both sides, it is going to be a really exciting Curtis Cup.”

The United States has won eight of the last nine contests, although Great Britain and Ireland did taste victory in the last home tie at Nairn in 2012


The stunning Dun Laoghaire Golf Club is in fact situated close to Enniskerry in Co. Wicklow, but resides on the Dublin side of the Dublin Wicklow border, with the majestic Wicklow Mountains as its nearest neighbours. 

The course decamped the seaside town of Dun Laoghaire in 2007, after ninety-seven years, for the picturesque Ballyman Glen, nestled at the foot of the spectacular Sugarloaf Mountain.

The origins of the Club date back as far as 1909, when a number of Kingstown (as Dun Laoghaire was then known) residents assembled at the town’s Royal Marine Hotel on December 9th for the inaugural meeting of Kingstown Golf Club.

The Curtis Cup Match is played every two years. The players are selected by their respective golf associations, with the USGA selecting the United States team and the Ladies Golf Union naming the GB&I players.

The Curtis sisters, Harriot and Margaret, had competed in the 1905 British Ladies Amateur at Royal Cromer Golf Club, where an informal match had occurred between teams of American and British golfers, and they wanted to promote the international friendships in the world of women's golf.

In 1927, the sisters, winners of the US Women's Amateur four times between them, presented a cup to begin the Women's International Cup. The trophy, a silver bowl of Paul Revere design, is inscribed, "To stimulate friendly rivalry among the women golfers of many lands".

Discussions between various golf associations had been underway since 1924, but it was not until 1931 that the USGA and LGU agreed to co-sponsor the event. It was hoped that the French Golf Union would eventually participate, but that never occurred.

The first Curtis Cup match was held in 1932, at the Wentworth Club in England. A United States team defeated a team from Great Britain and Ireland 5 1/2 to 3 1/2 in this inaugural event.

In winning the 2014 match, the USA team took their overall record in the Curtis Cup series to 28 wins, 7 losses, and 3 drawn matches.

The 2016 Match, the 39th in the history of the event, to be held at Dun Laoghaire Golf Club which is situated just outside of Dublin Ireland, will have the GB&I team looking for only their 8th win in the series.

Throughout the event's long history, some of the best women amateur's from the six countries involved have competed on the GB&I and USA teams and this will be no different in the 39th Curtis Cup match.


6/23/2014

Meadow Clinches Third at Pinehurst

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Stephanie Meadow, in her first professional tournament, finished third in the US Women's Open on Sunday - three shots behind tournament winner Michelle Wie - thanks to a final-round 69.

Ahead of the event Meadow, originally from Jordanstown,  called upon advice from Rory McIlroy on how to play Pinehurst after he competed in the men's US Open on the course last week.

On Saturday Meadow forced her way into the penultimate group for Sundays final round on the notoriously difficult Pinehurst No 2 course. Tied third with Julie Inkster on two-over through 54 holes, Meadow teed it up with the seven-times Major Champion and Solheim Cup veteran for the final round.

Though Inkster faded out of contention, Meadow recovered from a couple of bogeys on her outward nine by landing a fabulous eagle three at 10. A phenomenally successful start to her new career, ensuring Meadow will hit the ground running in professional golf.

Meadow completed a glittering amateur career a fortnight ago by finishing as the joint top-scorer on the British and Irish team beaten in the Curtis Cup at St Louis Country Club.

A record-breaking nine-time winner during her four years on scholarship at the University of Alabama and a leading member of the Crimson Tide's National Championship-winning team two years ago, Meadow made it through to the US Women's Open as a first-alternative in a recent qualifier.

"I waited probably three weeks when we were at a training camp in Atlanta for the Curtis Cup and I got a phone call," she explained. "It was from New Jersey, and I'm thinking, 'Okay, this is the USGA'. And I'm thinking, please don't be about Curtis Cup, please be about US Open. To start my professional career here is so amazing. I'm so blessed that it happened.''

Meadow has been based in the States since age 14, when she joined the Hank Haney Junior Golf Academy in Sea Island, Georgia. She's accompanied at Pinehurst by her dad Robert and mother Louise.

After opening with a one-over-par 71 last Thursday, Meadow followed up with a 72 on Friday before Saturday's 69 propelled her to within four strokes of 54-hole leaders Michelle Wie and Korea's Amy Yang.

"I didn't really have expectations," said Meadow of her mission at the US Open. "I just wanted to go out and see where I was. I knew I was playing well.''

"I knew that my game could be up here against the best in the world and I've proven that, obviously."

Meanwhile Wie won her first major title with a two-stroke triumph over world number one Stacy Lewis in the US Women's Open at Pinehurst.

Joint overnight leader Wie, 24, carded a level-par 70 to see off the challenge of Lewis, who posted a 66.

South Korean Amy Yang, playing with Wie, fell away with a 74.

"I had a lot of fun," Wie said. "I walked up 18 with goose bumps and kind of had the same putt as Martin [Kaymer had to win the men's US Open last week]. I didn't hit as hard as him though.

"There were moments of doubt [during my career] but all the people around me never lost faith in me."

Wie burst on to the scene a decade ago by playing men's tournaments as a teenager. She failed to make a cut in her first seven tournaments but came back into form earlier this year with her first win in three seasons in April.

The Hawaiian's renewed confidence showed early in the final round at Pinehurst as Yang gave in to the pressure of playing in the lead group.

Wie holed out bravely for double bogey on 16 after he approach shot landed in a bush, ensuring she stayed a stroke ahead of Lewis.

However a superb birdie putt at the par-three 17th followed and, with her swagger back, Wie drilled her final drive down the last to set up a closing par and the victory.

Scotland's Catriona Matthew equalled Lewis' final-round best to finish tied-10th on five over par, though it was Meadow's stunning performance that most impressed of the British contingent.


6/22/2014

Rookie Meadow in US Open Mix

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Stephanie Meadow, who turned pro before the U.S. Women’s Open, enters Sunday’s final round at Pinehurst No. 2 tied for third, four shots off the lead.

“You couldn’t dream of a better start,” Meadow said.

A native of Northern Ireland, Meadow, 22, helped the University of Alabama win the NCAA women’s championship in 2012. She also helped Great Britain & Ireland win the Curtis Cup that year.

With a 1-under-par 69 Saturday, Meadow was just one of eight players to break par.

She isn’t overwhelmed being in the hunt in her pro debut.

“It’s awesome,” Meadow said. “I’ve worked my whole life for this.”

The 22-year-old, originally from Jordanstown, takes her first steps this week as a fully paid up member of the pro ranks after a stellar amateur career, one that included two Curtis Cup appearances.

Speaking before the US Open Meadow told the media

“I have completed my degree at the University of Alabama and it’s the perfect moment to come here and make this my first event,” said Meadow who moved with her entire family to the United States as a 14-year-old.

“This is the right time and I am definitely ready. I have waited a long time for this moment.”

When the Meadow family made the decision to emigrate to America some eight years ago it was probably considered something of a risky move but, rather like Graeme McDowell, Stephanie flourished in the Collegiate system, winning numerous awards.

A member of Royal Portrush Ladies, Stephanie has already played in a US Open as an amateur, the 2012 staging at Blackwolf Run in Kohler, Wisconsin and is in something of a hurry to get going.

“I am just excited to be a professional, I have dreamed about it for so long,” she added.

“To finally get it organised, to wake up and be able to say I am a professional, was great.

“As regards the US Open, at the end of the day, it is still golf course, a ball and a hole. Not much changes really, you just carry a bigger bag.”

Meadow had indicated that the Curtis Cup [at the start of June] would be her last event as an amateur but the official announcement was delayed by on-going administrative efforts to get her visa extended.

The issue has had a knock-on effect on her ability to make concrete plans involving signing contracts etc, but she is hopeful the matter will be addressed in a couple of weeks.

As it is, the planning process for the weeks after the US Open continues with Stephanie looking to sort out a schedule of events.

“It is very flexible at the minute,” she added.

“I will try and Monday qualify as often as I can for LPGA events and I also have an exemption into Symetra Tour event in August.

“I have written to a number of events in the hope of getting an invite. A lot of them haven’t made any decisions yet so it is really a case of waiting to see.

“I don’t think I will be playing much in Europe. I will focus on America and go to Q-School in the States.

“That’s the plan at the moment, but it could change. I have entered the final qualifying for the Women’s British Open at Royal Birkdale next month, but I will make a decision on that nearer the time.”

Sunday's final results could change things for the better.

6/20/2014

Meadow Opens Strong at Pinehurst

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Stephanie Meadow will start her second round of the US Women’s Open four shots off the lead after completing a weather interrupted opening round of 71 at Pinehurst No 2 in North Carolina.

The Royal Portrush golfer, making her debut in the professional ranks, resumed this morning on level par with two holes left to play but a dropped shot on the 17th saw her slip into a share of eighth place, four behind the overnight leader Stacy Lewis.

Meadow, who turned professional after the Curtis Cup earlier this week, made a flying start to life in the paid ranks and reached the turn in two under. And while three bogeys on the way home undid much of that good work, Meadow can be more than satisfied with her play at the challenging Pinehurst layout.

Lewis by one stroke after shooting 67 while 11-year-old Lucy Li shot an eight over 78 yesterday. The top-ranked women’s player in the world found three birdies on her way around and her fellow American Michelle Wie is a shot back after mixing five birdies with two bogeys.

Yet the main focus at the Pinehurst Resort was on the exploits of Li — at 11 the youngest qualifier to compete at the US Women’s Open after beating the record of Lexi Thompson, who qualified for the 2007 tournament aged 12.

The Californian amateur, who signed for birdies on the first and fifth holes but added three bogeys, two double bogeys and triple bogey to her card, trails Lewis by 11 shots.

“It was a lot of fun,” Li said of her round. “I kind of struggled today, but it was great.”

More than a dozen players failed to break 80. “I’m happy I broke 80,” Li added, “because I got two doubles and a triple and that can really ruin a score.”

“I guess I am glad that I got it over with, but I’m also excited for tomorrow.”

Asked what her plan was for the rest of the day, Li grinned and said, “Eat some more ice cream.”