Showing posts with label DonaldsonJamie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DonaldsonJamie. Show all posts

6/25/2013

Donaldson Returns to Defend Irish Title

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A year ago Jamie Donaldson had not won on The European Tour, but 12 months on he arrives at Carton House as the defending Irish Open Champion.

The Welshman started last year at Royal Portrush in ideal fashion with a hole in one on the par three sixth, and his week got better and better en route to an impressive closing 66 and a four shot victory over a trio of quality players.

Since then Donaldson has also added Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship glory to his résumé after an impressive display in the desert that saw him hold off the likes of Thorbjørn Olesen and recent US Open Champion Justin Rose by a stroke.

That win saw him jump up to 29th in the Official World Golf Ranking, and having earned his place in the world’s elite top 50, he returns to Carton House as a different player and a strong contender this week on a course that is set up a little easier than seven years ago, when the event was last held at the Maynooth venue.

“It’s great to be back in Ireland,” admitted Donaldson. “It’s also great to be back at Carton House as it’s a great golf course and it is set up very well. It's favouring lower scoring than last time I came here too, so I'm slightly happier about that, as the rough is not as brutal as it was.

“Reflecting on Portrush, it was a very special week for me. To play in front of 130,000 people through the gates during the week, massive crowds on what was a tough and fantastic golf course, Portrush, and to have a hole-in-one at the start of the week was pretty amazing. It was a Cinderella story, wasn't it.”

Donaldson missed the cut the last two times the Irish Open was held on the Montgomerie Course at Carton House, but in the seven years since the defending champion has clearly matured as a player, and as such, is confident of putting up a stern defence.

He said: “My record's not that good the two times I've been here before, but I wasn't as good a golfer as I am now the last time I came here. What's important is the fact that I'm playing well now and looking forward to it.

“I can see last time I came here that I wasn't seeing the shots, now I can see them and I'm playing them, which is very important. It will be a good week.”

The defending champion gets his defence underway alongside Irishmen Padraig Harrington and Graeme McDowell from the first at 12.50pm on Thursday, in what promises to be one of the marquee three balls of the day.



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5/14/2013

Donaldson Eyes Irish Open

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Jamie Donaldson will again hope to hold off the formidable challenge of Ireland’s Major Champions, when he defends his Irish Open title at Carton House, in Co. Kildare, from June 27-30.

The Welshman claimed his maiden European Tour victory with a dominant performance at Royal Portrush last year, with Darren Clarke, Padraig Harrington, Graeme McDowell and Rory McIlroy among those left trailing in his wake.

Donaldson then defeated another world-class field, which included current World Number Two McIlroy, as well as 14-time Major Champion Tiger Woods, to clinch his second European Tour title with an equally impressive performance in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship in January.

With Ireland’s quartet of Major Champions already confirmed as part of the field for the 2013 Irish Open, Donaldson will have to be at his very best again if he is to become the first player to successfully defend the title since Scotland’s Colin Montgomerie in 1997.

It is the Montgomerie Course at Carton House that awaits The European Tour players in June, and despite it being a different challenge to the links of Royal Portrush, Donaldson cannot wait to defend his title there at the end of a big month for European golf, starting with next week’s BMW PGA Championship.

“It’s a different golf course, but Carton House is a tough test as well,” he said. “They are all tough, the courses we play in Ireland. Carton House is particularly hard, but I’m looking forward to it and it will be great to defend my title there.”

Donaldson’s career was at a crossroads the last time The European Tour visited Carton House in 2006, but the Welshman will not be short of confidence when he returns to Co. Kildare to defend his Irish Open title.

The 37 year old, whose game at the time was affected by a back injury, missed the cut on both previous occasions the Irish Open visited Carton House, in 2005 and 2006, and was forced to rebuild his game on the Challenge Tour.

But his career has been on an upward trajectory since regaining his playing rights for the 2008 season, and his victory at Royal Portrush last year helped him to a career best 19th place finish in The Race to Dubai.

His win in Abu Dhabi moved him into the World’s top 30, meaning he played in both the WGC-Accenture Match Play and the WGC-Cadillac Championship, before he made his debut in the Masters Tournament at Augusta National in April.

But it was his victory in the Irish Open that began Donaldson’s remarkable ascent, as he ended a 255 tournament wait for a European Tour title courtesy of a wire-to-wire, four stroke win in front of a sell-out crowd at Royal Portrush.

Donaldson hopes the support of Irish golf fans can again inspire him to a successful defence.

“It was a massive thrill to win last year,” he said. “Portrush is an incredible golf course and the crowds were massive all week. I love playing links courses by the ocean and it was great to win on one.

“The crowds were fantastic, the support was immense and there was great buzz about the place. Everyone was cheering and there was noise all over the golf course. It was a really good day. I played well from the word go and it was great to win in style like that.

“The crowds are important and they are always good for the Irish Open. If they are anywhere near as good as they were last year, they will be immense. But there will be big crowds as there were last year and I’m sure they will build on it at Carton House.”


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4/11/2013

Irish Open Champ in Masters Debut

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Jamie Donaldson will make his Masters debut on Thursday, giving Wales two competitors in the Augusta field for the first time in nine years.

The 37-year-old secured his invitation by finishing inside the top 50 in the world rankings at the end of 2012.

He will join Ian Woosnam, who is invited to play each year having won the tournament in 1991 and will be making his 25th appearance in total.

"It's going to be a tough week," Donaldson conceded.

"But if the course suits my eye and I play great you never know what's going to happen.

"I'm not putting too much pressure on myself but I'll be going through my normal procedures and doing the best I can."

Donaldson's victory at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship in January propelled him into the world's top 30 for the first time in his career.

His form has been "up and down" since, he admits, his tied-seventh finish at the 2012 USPGA Championship proved he has the appetite for the major stage.

Two Welsh golfers last appeared in a Masters in 2004 when Phil Price joined Woosnam.

"It's nice to say there's another Welshman playing," said Woosnam, whose withdrawal with a back injury in 2007 left Bradley Dredge to make his debut as that year's sole Welshman.

"Jamie's played some great golf recently and it's been great to be able to pass on a bit of experience."

While Woosnam relishes returning each year to the scene of his only major triumph, the 55-year-old has found the undulating course to be an increasingly strenuous challenge.

Back problems make completing the course a minor victory, and a lack of competitive golf adds to the difficulty.

Woosnam has failed to make the halfway cut in 11 out of this last 12 outings, and arrives at Augusta having not played tournament golf since December.

"It's my own personal battle to make the cut now," he said. "Over the last few years there's only one thing that's been letting me down, and that's my putting.

"If I can putt a bit better I've got a chance."

Woosnam will be in the third group out at 13:22 BST when play starts on Thursday, alongside England's David Lynn and American Kevin Na.

Some three hours later, Donaldson will stand on the first tee for the first time with Mark O'Meara, the 1998 champion from America, and Scotsman Martin Laird.

Woosnam well remembers his Masters debut in 1988, when he missed the cut, and said nerves will inevitably be a factor for his fellow countryman.

"Everyone will be feeling some nerves, it's a just a question of trying to control them and the adrenaline," he said.

"It's a pretty wide-open fairway on the first and you've just got to stand there and enjoy the moment."

Tiger Woods is favourite to collect a fifth Green Jacket and win his first major title since 2008. No British player has taken the prize since Nick Faldo in 1996.


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1/20/2013

Donaldson Adds to Irish Title

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Jamie Donaldson collected his second European Tour title in dramatic fashion at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship.

The Welshman went two clear with five birdies in his first 17 holes, but three-putted the par five last and bogeyed.

That left overnight leader Justin Rose and Dane Thorbjørn Olesen in the final group needing a birdie at the 18th to force a play-off, but Olesen’s 15 foot effort slid by before World Number Five Rose lipped out from 12 feet.

“It’s pretty surreal really, I’ve played really good all week although I’ve got away with murder up the last,” said Donaldson.

“I thought one of them would hole if not both, but when both putts slipped by it was my week.

“I’m very happy to be stood here holding the trophy.”

Donaldson’s victory at the Irish Open last year was his first in 255 European Tour events, but it has taken him only 13 starts to double his trophy haul.

“It’s like buses isn’t it?” he joked.

Donaldson recently sent Robert Rock a picture of his Masters Tournament invitation to wind him up, and has now succeeded him as champion at Abu Dhabi Golf Club.

Against a field that had earlier in the week included world top two Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods - both missed the halfway cut - he could hardly believe what had just happened.

"I played the pro-am on Wednesday and thought the course was too difficult and I had no chance," Donaldson said. "I thought if I could get a decent finish I would be chuffed.

"To be holding this trophy is just mad."

Rose, whose last trip to the Middle East in November saw him denied by McIlroy in Dubai, shared second place with Olesen.

The biggest sympathy vote, though, went to Rose's fellow Englishman David Howell.

Now 258th in the Official World Golf Ranking - he was 569th less than three years ago - the former World Number Nine charged into the lead with five birdies in the first ten holes.

But the former Ryder Cup star bogeyed the short 12th, then on the next splashed out of sand to four feet and, incredibly, four-putted from there for a triple bogey seven.

Howell had to be content with a tie for sixth place when a first victory for seven years would have taken him comfortably back into the game's top 100.

Donaldson, who earned his place at Augusta National by climbing into the top 50 by the end of last year, will be around 30th when the new ranking is published on Monday.

The six was Donaldson's only dropped shot of the day. He had resumed two behind Rose, but birdied the first, ninth and 11th and then, following Howell's horror show, sank putts of 18 and 15 feet on the 14th and 15th to go two ahead.

His 68 gave him a 14 under par total of 274, one better than his close friend Rock managed a year ago when he beat McIlroy by one and Woods by two.

As for that Masters invite photo being sent to Rock, Donaldson said: "It's just banter. He was ill in the week and said 'Get my trophy back'."

Holding it up he added: "Here you are Rocky!"

Rose had led from his opening 67, but managed only a closing 71. There were three back-nine birdies in that, but also bogeys at the 11th and 17th after he missed both greens.

Rose, whose runners-up finish was still good enough to take him back to fourth in the world, said: "It was definitely hard work today.

"For some reason it was hard to see the breaks on the front nine, but I pulled it together really well and felt I got into a really good competitive mode.

"When I birdied 14 I didn't realise Jamie had had a hot round. I had actually expected to be one ahead at that point and I was one behind, so every credit to Jamie.

"I didn't do a lot wrong. It's hard to beat yourself up about it.

"I felt like I brought my best stuff on the back nine rather than the front nine, so that's encouraging.

"I don't think I need to do anything different - just need to keep chipping away and keep swinging well.

"But was a long, hard week to end up finishing second."

As for his closing putt his mind went back to the Ryder Cup last September.

"It reminded me exactly of the putt at 18 against Phil (Mickelson), just outside right edge. That's exactly where I hit it and unfortunately this time the putt didn't go in for me.

"Would I swap it? No, I wouldn't!"

Nor would he deny Donaldson his triumph. He had "four years in the wilderness" after being told his injury trouble was a spinal condition called Pars Disease.

One doctor told him his career could be over, but he went for another opinion and instead of it being a nightmare the story since has been the stuff of dreams.

The 22 year old Olesen had held a share of the lead after birdies at the fourth and fifth, but a double bogey six at the next ultimately left him with too much to do.

“I was trying to go for the green but I knew the lie was bad and I tried anyway,” he said. 

“Maybe I should have just laid up, but you can always say that after. I tried to make birdies today, and I didn't make that many unfortunately.”


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1/17/2013

Irish Open Champ Early Leader

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Jamie Donaldson shot a five under par 67 to claim the clubhouse lead at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

The Welshman, already looking forward to his Masters Tournament debut in April after climbing into the Official World Golf Ranking's top 50 on the back of his Irish Open victory last summer, carded six birdies and one bogey at Abu Dhabi Golf Club.

That saw the 37 year old lead by one from Dane Thorbjørn Olesen, also Augusta-bound, and Spaniard Pablo Larrazábal.

“I played some pretty good golf out there,” said Donaldson. “It's a tough day - the wind is blowing a little. Not as hard as yesterday but still a little wind here makes the golf course very difficult. 

“I hit quite a lot of good shots, and more often than not in the short stuff, which you need to be around here. The rough is very penal.”

While Donaldson impressed, Rory McIlroy’s first event of 2013 is in danger of ending after two days following an opening 75.

Most eyes were on the World Number One and second-ranked Tiger Woods after they had been paired together for the start of their seasons, but Woods was not much better - a level par 72 left him five behind.

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10/25/2012

Irish Open Winner Shines in Shanghai

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Jamie Donaldson struck a course-record 62 to lead the BMW Masters by four shots on 10 under par after the first round in Shanghai.

World number one Rory McIlroy is five shots back on five under, as is Europe Ryder Cup captain Jose Maria Olazabal.

England's Justin Rose, looking to overtake McIlroy in the Race to Dubai European money list, is a shot behind.

Italy's Francesco Molinari and Sweden's Peter Hanson are Donaldson's closest challengers, both on six under.

McIlroy, Rose, Molinari and Hanson are four of 11 members from Europe's victorious Ryder Cup team who are participating in China, along with skipper Olazabal, who is without a top-10 finish since January.

Rose and South African Branden Grace both have the opportunity to take the Race of Dubai lead from McIlroy, who is bidding to emulate Luke Donald's 2011 achievement of topping both the European and United States money lists in the same year.

But it was Donaldson, who won his first Tour title at the Irish Open in July, who stole a march on the field, carding birdies at 10 of the first 16 holes in benign conditions at Lake Malaren.

"It's up there with the best rounds I've ever shot," said the world number 51. "The golf course is no pushover by any stretch of the imagination."

The lack of wind made good scoring possible, according to Northern Ireland's McIlroy, who birdied the last to join Olazabal and compatriot Michael Hoey in a tie for fourth.

"Jamie has shot 10 under, which is phenomenal scoring, and I was just happy to stay somewhere within touching distance," said the two-time major winner.

"Ollie's name on the board was nice to see. A few weeks ago 12 individuals came together as part of the team and now we're back playing and trying to beat one another."

Rose, who needs a top-two finish to have a chance of overtaking McIlroy in the money list, lies alongside Germany's Martin Kaymer and South African Louis Oosthuizen on four under.

Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell and Scot Paul Lawrie are a shot further back, with Grace and English trio Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter and Luke Donald all two under.


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7/01/2012

With This Win - Jamie Donaldson


• His first European Tour International Schedule victory in his 255th European Tour event.

• Moves to €537,722 in The Race to Dubai.

• Could move to just inside the top 60 of the Official World Golf Ranking from 116th.

• This victory beats his previous best European Tour performances of second in the 2009 SAS Masters and tied second in the 2003 Algarve Open de Portugal. Has amassed an overall total of 32 European Tour top ten finishes.

• This victory beats his previous best 2012 performance of tied third in the Trophée Hassan II.

• Becomes the tenth first-time winner of the 2012 European Tour International Schedule. He would follow: Branden Grace (Joburg Open), Jbe' Kruger (Avantha Masters), Julien Quesne (Open de Andalucía Costa del Sol), Thorbjørn Olesen (Sicilian Open), Bubba Watson (Masters Tournament), Bernd Wiesberger (Ballantine's Championship), Ricardo Santos (Madeira Islands Open - Portugal), Webb Simpson (US Open Championship) and Danny Willett (BMW International Open).

• The third consecutive first-time winner, following Webb Simpson (US Open Championship) and Danny Willett (BMW International Open).

• The first time there have been three consecutive first-time winners since Rhys Davies (2010 Trophée Hassan II), Louis Oosthuizen (2010 Open de Andalucia de Golf) and James Morrisson (2010 Madeira Islands Open).

• His victory comes in his ninth appearance in the Irish Open.

• His victory beats his previous best finish in the Irish Open of tied 13th in 2009.

• Becomes the third Welshman to win the Irish Open, following Ian Woosnam (1988 and 1989) and Stephen Dodd (2005).

OTHER FACTS
• Joins Ben Crenshaw (1976), Hubert Green (1977), Ken Brown (1978), David Carter (1998), Sergio Garcia (1999), Søren Hansen (2002) and Shane Lowry (2009), to make the Irish Open their first European Tour victory.

• Only the second time he has led going into the final round of a European Tour event. The first was the 2011 Omega European Masters, where he tied for third.

• The 15th time in the 2012 season that the 54 hole leader has gone onto win.

• Becomes the first Welshman to win on the 2012 European Tour International Schedule.

• The first Welsh victory on The European Tour since Rhys Davies at the 2010 Trophée Hassan II.

• The 45th Welsh victory on The European Tour.

• The tenth Welsh player to win on The European Tour.

• Gains a European Tour exemption until the end of 2014.

• Gains his largest European Tour prize of €333,330.

• Moves over €4 million in European Tour Official Career Earnings.

• Gains a place in the 2012 WGC - Bridgestone Invitational, 2012 WGC - HSBC Champions and 2013 Volvo Golf Champions.

• Gains his fifth win of his professional career.

• The 15th European Tour victory by a former Challenge Tour player on the 2012 European Tour from 26 events so far. He would: Louis Oosthuizen (Africa Open and Maybank Malaysian Open), Branden Grace (Joburg Open, Volvo Golf Champions and Volvo China Open), Robert Rock (Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship), Rafael Cabrera-Bello (Omega Dubai Desert Classic), Justin Rose (WGC - Cadillac Championship), Julien Quesne (Open de Andalucía Costa del Sol), Michael Hoey (Trophée Hassan II), Thørbjorn Olesen (Sicilian Open), Bernd Wiesberger (Ballantine's Championship), Ricardo Santos (Madeira Islands Open - Portugal) and Nicolas Colsaerts (Volvo World Match Play Championship).

• The 299th European Tour victory by a former Challenge Tour player.

• The 127th different former Challenge Tour player to win on The European Tour.

Courtesy European Tour 


Maiden in Portrush for Donaldson

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Jamie Donaldson ended his long wait for a first European Tour title as he shot a final round of 66 to win the Irish Open by four shots.

Despite no fewer than 32 top-10 finishes in his career, the Welshman had never previously managed a victory in 255 Tour starts heading into this week's event.

But he finally opened his account at Royal Portrush, holding his nerve in impressive style down the stretch as he closed out what was, ultimately, a convincing triumph.

Donaldson, the only man in the field to shoot four sub-70 rounds, birdied his last two holes to finish on 18-under-par, four clear of playing partner Anthony Wall, Fabrizio Zanotti of Paraguay and Spain's Rafael Cabrera-Bello who shared second place.

Donaldson's brilliant closing 66 was only one off the low round of the week and after securing victory he told Sky Sports: "I'm buzzing and I'm so happy to have won on this course - I don't think we have played a better one on the European Tour."

Reminded of his long wait to break through, he added: "It's just been a case of keeping going. I knew that what I was doing was right. It feels a bit surreal to be honest. I don't think it will sink in till later."

The week also contained his first hole-in-one on the circuit and it began with him shooting 62 at Sunningdale to qualify for The Open at Royal Lytham in just over a fortnight.

Early on it was Sweden's Mikael Lundberg (65) who threatened most to grab the title away from overnight leader Donaldson.

From six back he covered the first 10 holes in a spectacular eight under and led by two, but he could not keep it going on the back nine and bogeys at the 16th and 18th meant he eventually finished joint-fifth alongside England's Mark Foster.

With the local "Big Three" of Rory McIlroy, Graeme McDowell and Darren Clarke finishing 10th, 16th and 39th respectively the main Irish hope was 2007 winner Padraig Harrington - he was only two behind when he teed off, but a disappointing 70 dropped him to joint seventh.

Donaldson chose not to look at leaderboards all day and it was only once he had reached the final tee that he asked caddie Mick Donaghy - new on the bag this week - for the position.

The news was good. He was two ahead and that became four when Wall, bunkered off his drive, bogeyed and Donaldson put the icing on the cake with his long birdie putt on the final green.

He had earlier had three in a row from the second, then came back from a bogey at the short 11th with three in the next four holes and after dropping a shot at the 16th - he was the one in sand there - he closed with two more.

Wall's bogey at the last was disappointing, but to be in a tie for second was remarkable given that he had gone out of bounds and taken a triple-bogey eight at the second.

Meanwhile, Thailand's Thongchai Jaidee and South African Richard Sterne - who finished 18th and 44th respectively - clinched two places in the Open Championship after topping a mini-money list that had been running on the European Tour.