Showing posts with label Hong Kong Open. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hong Kong Open. Show all posts

10/23/2014

Maybin and Lawrie Facing Q School

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Gareth Maybin edged closer to a visit to the European Tour School after an opening 71 left him sharing 53rd spot at the Perth International.

Maybin needs to finish in the top seven in the Australian event to have any chance of retaining his tour card.

He went into this week's event 122nd in the Race to Dubai - some £25,000 off the 111th spot that will ensure safety.

Ballyclare man Maybin is seven behind leaders Denmark's Thorbjorn Olesen and Australian veteran John Wade.

Damien McGrane is the leading Irishman on two under which leaves him sharing 25th spot.

McGrane has already secured his tour card for next season as he is currently 94th in the order of merit.

Kevin Phelan, third at last week's Hong Kong Open, shot an opening 72 but only a top-three finish is likely to be enough for him to retain his card as he is 130th in the standings.

Peter Lawrie looks certain to have to make a trip to the tour school as his opening 75 left him 11 shots off the pace.

Lawrie is currently 174th in the Race to Dubai after a second successive poor season and went into this week's event needing a win to hold on to his card.

His opening round left him sharing 124th place.

Olesen and Wade have a two-shot lead over a quartet which includes England's Tom Lewis and Australian's Michael Sim.

10/19/2014

Hong Kong Third for Deise Phelan

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Kevin Phelan hit three birdies in a row from the 16th to the 18th on the final day of the Hong Kong Open to finish on 11 under - two shots behind Hend and Que - to secure third place.

Australian Scott Hend edged Angelo Que in a play-off to clinch his maiden European Tour title with a par on the first extra hole enough to steer the 41-year-old past the Filipino, who missed the green on the 18th and then over-hit his chip.

Que's fourth-round 66 forced the play-off after an intense back-nine battle, which ended with his birdie on the 18th tying things up with Hend at 13 under par.

But the 35-year-old will be left lamenting the fact that his three bogeys on the day - to Hend's two - and a costly second-round 69 ultimately cost him victory.

Aged 41, Hend is the oldest first-time European Tour title winner since Cesar Monasterio, who was 42 when he won the 2006 As St Omer Open.

He was understandably thrilled to secure victory, but he felt bad for Que after his bogey sealed the play-off.

"I felt quite calm, the only thing is that hole at the end you never want to have a go at the pin because you can make a bogey quite easily so I wasn't really sure how to play it," Hend told the European Tour website.

"Unfortunately Angelo made a bogey, I would have rather one of us made a birdie because he's a great guy and it would be nice to earn the win on a positive note. But I'll take the win and I'm ecstatic."

Overnight leader Marcus Fraser's double bogey on the opening hole blew the title race open and he struggled to get back in the mix with back-to-back bogeys on the 14th and 15th holes.

Englishman Mark Foster's double-bogey on the ninth dented his progress and he finished one shot behind Phelan, while Fraser ended up in a four-strong cluster four shots off the pace after a disappointing final round of 72.

12/06/2013

Higgins Hangs Tough in HK

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David Higgins overcame a difficult start in Round 2 of the Hong Kong Open on Friday and fell all to a level par round, which was disappointing for the Waterville golfer after his opening 64. A couple of late birdies though helped Higgins back to two under. 

Kevin Phelan however missed the cut by a stroke after a two over par second round in Fanling.

With Peter Lawrie always outside the cut mark following an opening round of 77 on Thursday

Jbe Kruger leads aftre he came home in just 30 shots to grab the halfway lead at the Hong Kong Open.

As the world mourned the loss of Nelson Mandela, it was fitting that a South African should lead and Kruger’s 66 was enough to ensure he held a one shot advantage on seven under par.

There was little sign of what was to come when the 27 year old turned in a two over par 36, but six birdies in seven holes from the 11th propelled Kruger to the top of the leaderboard, with Stuart Manley his nearest challenger.

“Our country lost a real-life hero,” former Avantha Masters winner Kruger said of Mandela’s death on Thursday night.

“I played well, I probably swung it the best I’ve swung it in a long time. 

“I’m excited and I’m playing better for a change. It’s fun to play relaxed golf for a change and see what unfolds.”

Kruger’s scoring burst started with an eight foot putt at the 11th, before converting from 25 feet at the next and completing a hat-trick of gains with a simple putt at the par five 13th.

A 20 footer at the 14th kept the run going and, after a par at the 15th, an approach to five feet at the 16th and six feet at the next highlighted some wonderful iron play.

Manley was on course for a share of the lead until he hit his approach into the water at the tenth, his last, and bogeyed.

The Welshman hit the headlines recently by following a hole-in-one with an 11 on the next hole during the ISPS HANDA World Cup of Golf at Royal Melbourne.

Manley, who thought he had won a car for his ace before being told it was only on offer during the final round, signed for a second consecutive 67 in Fanling.

“It’s really enjoyable,” said the Qualifying School graduate. “I started a bit scrappily but after the first few holes I played lovely.

“It’s 36 holes, there’s a lot of golf to go and a lot of good players around me so I’ll have to play well this weekend.”

Germany’s Alex Cejka, India’s Shiv Kapur and Australian Wade Ormsby are tied for third on five under, with defending champion Miguel Angel Jiménez just outside the top ten.

The Spaniard Jimenez can join Hsieh Yung-yo of Taiwan as a four-time winner of the event after previous wins in 2005, 2008 and 2012, the latter when he became the oldest winner in European Tour history aged 48 years and 318 days.

A first round of 70 left the veteran Spaniard six shots off the lead, but five birdies in his first six holes and another on the third had Jiménez right back in contention at Hong Kong Golf Club.

However, the 49 year old then dropped shots at the fifth, ninth and tenth - his final hole after starting at the 11th - to card a 67 and finish three under par.

"I played very well with birdies on the 12th, 13th, 14th, 16th and 17th and a birdie on number three, but then the magic stopped," Jimenez said.

"The greens are very fast, you have to take care. I three-putted the fifth, but I am happy, I don't feel like I putted badly but it happens.

"I thought about a low score after the first few holes, but you have to respect this golf course. It's not very long but you have to get the ball in place every single time and you have to be very careful with the greens because they are firm and fast."


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12/04/2013

Fanling for Higgins Lawrie and Phelan

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David Higgins, Peter Lawrie and Kevin Phelan are in actiuon at the Hong Kong Open joining defending champion Miguel Angel Jiménez and Chinese players Zhang Lianwei, Guan Tianlang and Jason Hak at Fanling.

Jiménez last year became the oldest winner in European Tour history when he won at Hong Kong Golf Club aged 48 years and 318 days, in doing so completing a Hong Kong hat-trick by adding to the titles he claimed in 2005 and 2008.

The charismatic Spaniard had already begun amassing his 19 European Tour trophies by the time 15 year old Guan was born in 1998, and the teenager is one of China’s most promising talents, becoming the youngest player to make the cut in a Major Championship when he finished 58th at the Masters Tournament in April at the age of 14 years and 169 days.

Hak was also a teenage prodigy, setting a new record at the 2008 Hong Kong Open for the youngest player to make the cut in a European Tour event, aged 14 years and 304 days, which Guan’s effort at Augusta National bettered.

The pair will hope to follow in the footsteps of 48 year old Zhang, who blazed a trail for Chinese golf, becoming the first player from his country to play in the Masters, to break into the top 100 in the Official World Golf Ranking and to win a European Tour event, the 2003 Singapore Masters.

The quartet kicked off the 55th edition of the Hong Kong Open, which boasts a rich history and is one of few golf tournaments to have been played at the same venue - Hong Kong Golf Club - every year since its inception in 1959.

The US$1.3million event is tri-sanctioned by The European Tour, the Asian Tour and the Hong Kong Golf Association.

Tom Phillips, Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Golf Association, said: “Looking at our panel of star players this afternoon, we not only have stars of Hong Kong Opens past but also potential stars of the future in the form of Tianlang and Jason. 

“I would like to express my thanks and gratitude to the captain and committee of the Hong Kong Golf Club and its members for playing such an important role in hosting and supporting the championship this year. Their support has been vital in bringing the tournament to fruition.

“I would also like to thank the M-mark committee for their continued support and recognition of the Hong Kong Open as one of Hong Kong’s premier sporting events.”

Sidney Cheng, captain of Hong Kong Golf Club, added: “We are very proud of the rich traditions and history surrounding the Open and we look forward to celebrating those traditions here this week.

“We are all delighted to see defending champion Miguel Angel Jiménez return to Hong Kong and we wish him the best of luck in adding a fourth Hong Kong Open title to his list of victories. He would become just the second player to achieve this if he prevails this week.”

Jiménez, who hopes to follow Hsieh Yung-yo in winning the Hong Kong Open four times – the Taiwanese player triumphed in 1963, 64, 75 and 77 – said: “I came here for the first time in 2004 (at the beginning of the 2005 season) and won. I love the city and I especially like the golf course.

“It’s an old fashioned course and you have to have a very intelligent and precise game here. It’s in super shape this year – the greens are firm and the fairways are immaculate.”


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