Showing posts with label Greg Chalmers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greg Chalmers. Show all posts

11/30/2014

G''Day for Spieth as McIlroy Slips

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy signed for a final round 72 and had to settle for fifteenth place at the Emirates Australian Open Golf in Sydney on Sunday. The costly battle with the fescue grass on Saturday the damage on his card and leaving him well out of contention after he finished with a 76.

Jordan Spieth played the best round of an already impressive career with an 8-under 63 on Sunday to win the Australian Open by six strokes, making his first trip Down Under a successful one.

Spieth's 72-hole total of 13-under 271 on the tough, windy Australian Golf Club made him the first American to win the Australian Open since Brad Faxon in 1993, when the 21-year-old Spieth was four months old.

"It's the best round I have ever played, especially considering the conditions," Spieth said. "It was just kind of one of those rounds when you're in the zone and you're not sure what you're at. It's nice that it came on a Sunday."

Spieth birdied four holes on the front nine -- three of them in a row -- to lead by three strokes after nine holes, then made light of the challenging, windy conditions by adding four more on the back nine, never threatening to lose his lead.

"You don't want any kind of crack in the door to be open and I felt like we kept it shut from the front nine on," Spieth said.

Spieth's score was a record for the revamped Jack Nicklaus-designed layout which was being played as a par 71 for the first time. On Friday, Jamie Lovemarkof the United States shot 65.

Adam Scott shot 71 and finished fifth, nine strokes behind. Defending champion Rory McIlroy, who shot 76 on Saturday, finished with a 72 and was 2-over, 15 strokes behind Spieth.

Three Australians who finished closest to Spieth earned trips to next July's British Open. The Australian Open is the first qualifying tournament for the 2015 Open Championship and offers three spots to the top finishers not already exempt.

Rod Pampling shot 68 to finish second, while former two-time Australian Open champion Greg Chalmers (71) and Brett Rumford (70) were third and fourth, respectively. All three will play at St. Andrews next year.

Gusty northeasterly breezes played havoc all week with scores, and only eight players finished under par.

Chalmers and Spieth were tied for the lead at 6-under after four holes, but Spieth birdied the par-5 fifth where Chalmers made bogey for a two-shot swing. The American also birdied the sixth and seventh holes, made a fine par save on the ninth, then did the same on the 10th from about five feet, pumping his fist as he edged closer to the title and the Stonehaven Cup trophy.

It was Spieth's first win of 2014, and second of his pro career -- he won on the John Deere Classic in a playoff on the PGA Tour in 2013. Although he hadn't won this year, he was runner-up in the Masters and had eight top-10 finishes in 24 PGA tournaments.

He was reminded that last year's Australian Open win by McIlroy was his only victory that year, and the Northern Irishman went on to win two majors and have an outstanding 2014.

"If I had the follow-up year that Rory had this year, I'd be pleased this time next year," Spieth said.

McIlroy's 76 all but ended the defense of the title he memorably won in 2014 with a birdie on the last hole to deny Scott the Australian Triple Crown.

"It's been tough all weekend," McIlroy said. "I was trying to get something going but with the pin positions and the wind, it was just very hard to get the ball close to the hole. It just wasn't meant to be this year."

There were tributes around the golf course Saturday and Sunday for Australian cricketer Phillip Hughes, who died Thursday after being hit by a ball during a match at the nearby Sydney Cricket Ground.

The number 63 was used in many of them, as that was the number of runs Hughes had scored before he was fatally injured. Spieth provided the final reminder -- and an unintentional tribute -- by finishing with a round of 63.


11/29/2014

McIlroy Defence Suffers in Sydney

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy's defence of his Emirates Australian Open title - to join Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and Greg Norman as the only players to win back-to-back opens - took a enormous jolt today after a round of 76.

The Northern Irishman, who was tied at the top of the leaderboard with Rod Pampling, American Jordan Spieth, Brett Rumford and Greg Chalmers as he played the ninth of the third round, blocked his drive in the thick fescue grass on the right side of the fairway.

He could have declared his ball unplayable, but he attempted the possible of a challenge that looked impossible. 

An enormous swipe at the ball failed to dislodge, in fact, it became even deeper in the mulga.

Then, he finally took his medicine and took a two club-length penalty drop. It didn’t give him full relief off the wood chip surround of the fescue but he got it back into play.

So, four shots (one a penalty) already played. 

His next shot, a wedge from 60 metres, found the green about six metres from the pin. He two-putted for a triple bogey seven.

Suddenly, inexplicably, he was three shots off the lead. It is understood rules officials will review the incident before a triple bogey is confirmed.

Scott picked up two shots on the front nine to be four-under-par for the championship, just one behind Spieth and Pampling, who holed out for a spectacular eagle two at the par-4 10th.

Spieth collected back-to-back birdies early in his round to lead for much of his front nine before Pampling joined him with his pinpoint wedge.

After starting moving day three behind Chalmers, Scott bookended his front nine with birdies to close to within one of the lead, while McIlroy was slower to get going.

The defending champion was unable to get up and down after hitting over the green on the tough par-3 fourth hole, but bounced back with a birdie on the par-4 fifth after almost holing his sand shot for an eagle.

Conditions at The Australian Golf Club were more difficult on Saturday, with blustery winds proving troublesome.

The biggest movers came from the morning wave, with Daniel Nisbet charging up the leaderboard into equal 12th position at even par for the championship with a bogey-free four-under 67.


11/28/2014

McIlroy Stays In Mix Down Under

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy stayed bang in contention and Adam Scott made a big move on the second day of the Emirates Australian Open.

McIlroy sits tied for second behind halfway leader Greg Chalmers at The Australian Golf Club in Sydney but it was Scott who made the headlines after a poor start to the tournament on Thursday.

The world No 3 carded three birdies and an eagle in his round of 66 and that was enough to move him into a tie for ninth, just three shots off the pace being set by left-hander Chalmers.

"Yesterday I got off to a bad start, and I didn't scramble well when I had to and it started to get away from me," Scott said. "Today a couple of good shots coming up 14 and I made an eagle and momentum is on your side."

Chalmers, a dual winner of the event, also shot a second-round 66 which mixed in a couple of dropped shots with seven birdies and was just one worse than the best round of the day, a 65 from American Jamie Lovemark.

McIlroy played in tougher conditions in the afternoon group, and he had more than his share of problems in shooting a topsy-turvy round of 69.

The Open champion had three bogeys in his first seven holes and dropped three more shots on the way back to the clubhouse, but three birdies and an eagle in his last five saved the day.

"I felt like I had an opportunity today to maybe shoot a good one and put a little bit of space between myself and the rest of the field, but it didn't really pan out that way," said McIlroy, who twice found the water on his way around.

He sits in a four-way tie for second on four-under alongside Australia's Adam Crawford, Conrad Shindler from the Unitd States and home amateur Todd Sinnott, who was one of the day's stars with a round of 67.

First-round leader Jordan Spieth, who was in the same group as Scott, failed to take advantage of the better scoring conditions in a round of 72 that leaves him in a tie for sixth, one shot ahead of his playing partner - he had four bogeys and only saved his day with birdies at his final two holes.

"It was a struggle, big-time struggle," Spieth said. "I wasn't hitting it well. If I wasn't putting well I may have shot 45 on the back nine."