Showing posts with label Jumeirah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jumeirah. Show all posts

11/20/2014

Lowry and McIlroy Joint Earth Leaders

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Rory McIlroy displayed the quality of golf that has made him Race to Dubai champion as the World Number One joined friend Shane Lowry in a share of the lead on day one of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai.

McIlroy carded six birdies and no bogeys in a flawless 66 on the Earth Course at Jumeirah Golf Estates to finish alongside Ireland's Lowry in the climax of The European Tour Final series.

That took the 25 year old to an amazing 80 under par for his 21 rounds to date in this event, after previous finishes of third, fifth, 11th, first and fifth.

McIlroy, who wrapped up The Race to Dubai title for the second time in three years with a week to spare, certainly looked ready as he birdied four of his first five holes, the only aberration coming when he missed from eight feet on the third.

A surprising run of nine successive pars followed before birdies at the 15th and 16th ensured he delivered on his promise not to rest on his laurels at the end of a phenomenal season.

“It was a great way to start,” said McIlroy. “You never expect to start like that, but I've been hitting the ball well for the last couple of weeks that I've been practicing and it was just a matter of trying to take that good range play on to the course, and I was able to do that today, which I'm really happy about. 

“I feel like it really suits my style of play. I can be aggressive with the driver, and that can set me up to hit shorter irons into greens and obviously give myself a lot of birdie opportunities like I did today. 

“I didn't feel like I took as many of them as I could have but it still added up to six under and I'm very happy with that.”

Lowry birdied four of the last six holes as he looked to make amends for his collapse in the final round in Turkey on Sunday, when he eagled the fourth to claim a share of the lead only to triple bogey the next hole and make a double bogey on the sixth.

"The whole day Sunday and the flight down here you're thinking about it," Lowry admitted. "It's one of those things. But I gave myself a chance to win last week. If I can give myself a chance to win again this week, maybe I'll do it.

"I have been playing well for most of the year. I've been very consistent. I've been shooting some great scores, making a lot of birdies and I did that today again."

Scotland's Richie Ramsay and Denmark's Thorbjørn Olesen were a shot off the pace on five under, with defending champion Henrik Stenson another stroke back alongside Argentina's Emiliano Grillo.

Ramsay said: "I'm really happy. Obviously it was a great start, three birdies on the spin, and then played lovely in the middle, had a lot of chances but just didn't take a few.

"But most important was I stayed patient, stayed with it. I kept on hitting good shots and then took a couple of chances on 14 and 15 and then finished off pretty solid coming down the stretch.

"I played great in the middle part of the season. I know the game is there. (It's) just a matter of staying out of my own way and committing to it."

Olesen had reached seven under par at one stage, but double bogeyed the 16th to miss out on the overnight lead.

“It feels like a second home golf course for me really,” said the recent ISPS Handa Perth International winner.

“I played lovely, hit a lot of fairways and a lot of greens. Hit a few really close, and the putter was working nicely. It was a really solid day.

“When you're seven under going to 16, and you know you have 18 which is a possible birdie chance, also, of course it's a little bit disappointing, but I took a chance and it didn't work out very well. 

“I felt like it was going so well and I felt like I could pull it off - that's what happens in golf.”



11/16/2013

GMAC Battles Reliable Swede

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Graeme McDowell carded a third round 68 and still believes in his bid to become European number one as he battled to keep pace with Henrik Stenson at the DP World Tour Championship.

Only a win for McDowell will see him overhaul the FeDex Cup winner, Stenson, from his perch at the top of the Race to Dubai on the Earth Course at Jumeirah Golf Estates.

The former US Open champion is eight under par and five shots behind Stenson, who had seven holes of his round to play.

"I think there is a weak pulse still there," said McDowell, who carded two bogeys, four birdies and an eagle. "Hats off to Henrik, he came here this week and is doing exactly what he needs to do.

"He has been the best player in the world the last six months and he needs to slip up tomorrow and I need to mount a massive challenge. I have not done much better than 68 round here before and I will need to do so tomorrow.

"I have not played my best the last three rounds but I am proud of how I have hung tough. I am still alive and kicking."

Ian Poulter is also in with a chance of preventing Stenson from becoming the first player to win the FedEx Cup and Race to Dubai in the same season, although he needs to win and for Stenson to finish third or worse.

He began the day five shots behind Stenson but had closed the gap to one with a front nine of 33 and birdies at the 10th and 14th, the Ryder Cup star moving to 12 under par and joint second with France's Victor Dubuisson.

Stenson had briefly held a three-shot lead following birdies at the fifth and seventh, but gave the chasing pack hope with a bogey on the 10th.

Low scores remained possible, with former world number one Lee Westwoodcarding a 65 that threatened to be even better to set the clubhouse target on 11 under.

Westwood was seven under for his first 11 holes but bogeyed the 12th and was able to find just one more birdie after that, although he did save par on the 18th after driving into the water.

"I got in my own way a little bit around the back nine there," Westwood said. "It's a good 65 but seven under through 11, you're looking for a few less than that.

"My swing hasn't been in sync all year, I'm sort of fumbling my way around the golf course and it's something I'm going to work on over the winter."

Dubuisson moved into the lead with birdies on the 13th and 14th and when Stenson responded with his own birdie on the 14th, the Frenchman promptly birdied the 15th as well.

At 15 under par he led by one from Stenson, with Poulter two shots back after a costly three-putt bogey on the par-three 17th.

Rory McIlroy signed for a round of 68 and shares 8th place.

Shane Lowry came home in 74 strokes on Saturday.


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11/15/2013

GMAC Falters on Earth

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Graeme McDowell carded a second 68 and share of 21st place that brought an end his chase on the Earth Course for The Race to Dubai title after Henrik Stenson claimed the halfway stage lead of the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai with a round of 64.

Stenson finished at Jumeirah Golf Estates on 12 under par, one shot ahead of Spain's Alejandro Cañizares, who added a 67 to his opening 66.

The 37 year old is looking to become the first man to win The Race to Dubai and FedEx Cup in the same season and is on course to clinch them both in the same imperious fashion.

He went into the Tour Championship in September as one of five players who could claim the FedEx Cup by winning the tournament, and did exactly that.

And this week the Swede is one of three players in similar control of their own destiny, knowing that a win on Sunday would secure overall victory in The Race to Dubai, status as European Number One and a US$1,000,000 bonus.

Justin Rose and Graeme McDowell could still deny Stenson the title with victory in Dubai, with Rose best placed on seven under after a 67.

A win for Ian Poulter would leave Stenson needing to finish second to claim the Harry Vardon trophy, with Poulter alongside Rose on seven under following a 68.

"I have my game plan cemented on this course and it's been working out great the first two days," said Stenson, who carded eight birdies and no bogeys. "It could have been a bit better but there is no point being greedy. I am delighted with the first two days' work.

"I keep track of what's happening with the other players, I'm too curious not to. I saw both Justin and Ian are seven under so they are chasing me as hard as they can.

"They are not going to back down so I better keep my foot and my head down, play another two good rounds and see where that takes me. I am in a great position to have a shot at winning and hopefully I will be there on Sunday afternoon."

Stenson admitted he is battling fatigue from a long season as well as an ongoing wrist injury, but added: "The two days I had off on Monday and Tuesday have helped. I got the club stuck in the ground on the sixth tee and felt it there but thankfully I don't think that made it flare up."

Cañizares has won just once on The European Tour - the Russian Open in 2006 - but boosted his chances of a second title with a brilliant par save on the 18th, where he botched his second shot into a stream before pitching to 12 feet and holing then resulting putt.

“I pull hooked it in the water - it was a terrible shot,” said the 30 year old.

“I gave myself a chance and I really wanted to make that putt, because I haven't dropped a shot in the whole day and I didn't feel like I should have. I made that putt and it felt great.

“I played with Henrik on Sunday, and he's a fun guy to play with, and tomorrow I'm just going to go out there and enjoy it and focus on my game. That's all I can do.” 

Rose and Poulter have not given up their pursuit of Stenson, but Rose admitted the 7,600-yard course is "tailor-made" for the likes of Stenson and defending champion Rory McIlroy thanks to their length off the tee.

McIlroy had eagle putts on all four par fives and made one on the 14th in a 67 that left the former World Number One six off the pace on six under.

"I think somewhere around 20 under par will win so I will need a couple of 65s," said McIlroy, who shot back-to-back rounds of 66 to win here 12 months ago. "I finally feel I have got to the stage now when I can contend week in, week out and on the rare times I have got into contention this year I feel like I have played my best golf."

The man McIlroy succeeded as European Number One, Luke Donald, is a shot further back after a 66 that contained six birdies in succession from the second.

Shane Lowry completed his second round in one under par 71 for 29th place.


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No Irish Fireworks in Dubai

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Graeme McDowell was happy to get himself back into contention at the DP World Tour Championship lying three over par after 13 holes before rolling in a hat-trick of birdies from the 14th and signing for a 72.

With it too the chance of hauling back the gap with Race to Dubai leader Henrik Stenson.

Rory McIlroy carded four birdies on the way to the turn but lost two of those gains on holes five and eight, with another bogey on the last leaving him one under par 72 for the day. 

Shane Lowry finished in a similar fashion with two bogeys undoing the birdies on holes 3,7 and 17.

Alejandro Cañizares took the first round lead at the DP World Tour Championship as Stenson strengthened his position at the top of The Race to Dubai.

Spain’s Cañizares won on only his third European Tour start in 2006, but seven years and almost 200 events later is yet to add to his trophy haul.

A six under par 66 at Jumeirah Golf Estates saw the 30 year old lead by one from Thailand's Kiradech Aphibarnrat and Australia's Marcus Fraser, with Race to Dubai leader Stenson a shot further back alongside Jamie Donaldson and Rafael Cabrera-Bello.

Stenson admitted he lost focus to three-putt the 18th for his only bogey of the day, but did enough to suggest his nearest challengers for the Race to Dubai title will be hard pressed to overhaul him despite continuing to battle a wrist injury.

Playing partner Justin Rose, who needs to finish fifth or better, carded a two under par 70, while third-placed Graeme McDowell returned a 72 and fourth-placed Ian Poulter a 69.

"It has been a lot of hard work all season and I just let my focus slip on the last," said Stenson, who is looking to become the first player to win the US PGA Tour's FedEx Cup and Race to Dubai in the same year.

"That sucks, but I am still in good shape and playing nicely. The guys are running on fumes so everybody is looking forward to getting done.

"You can't win a tournament on Thursday but you can certainly play your way out of it. I would have taken four under at the start of the day so I just have to let the disappointment of the last slip away."

Poulter believes he is playing the best golf of his career after finishes of 15th, second and fifth in the first three events of the inaugural Final Series, results which have given him a chance of overhauling Stenson and beating his rival and neighbour in Lake Nona in Orlando.

The Ryder Cup star carded four birdies and one bogey in his opening 69, but was frustrated at missing a number of chances to be higher up the leaderboard.

"I am annoyed," Poulter said. "I made two putts which were outside birdie chances and took a couple more but the rest were missed. I am frustrated but happy to be only three behind (the lead).

"I need to continue to be aggressive and see if I can nick it at the end. It's a good mix to be really angry being three under par and still being in there for the next three days."

Rose proved Stenson's point about the players "running on fumes", the US Open champion revealing he is suffering from an inflamed shoulder that required an MRI scan recently.

But the 33 year old is happy to have control of his destiny, with a victory here giving him a second money list title - he won it in 2007 - regardless of other results.

"Henrik is making it hard for the rest of us but that's why I wanted it in my own hands and that's still the case, so my goal remains the same for the rest of the week," Rose said.

McDowell was happy to get himself back into contention, the Northern Irishman lying three over par after 13 holes before rolling in a hat-trick of birdies from the 14th.

Cañizares carded seven birdies and one bogey in his 66 before revealing his relief at being in Dubai at all after problems with his girlfriend's visa.

"My girlfriend is from the Czech Republic and I always forget she doesn't have a Spanish passport and needs a visa," Cañizares explained. "I only remembered when we got to the check-in desk at the airport in Turkey on Sunday evening and handed over the passports.

"Fortunately we had help from a lot of people and the tournament director Nick Tarratt was waiting with Dubai's captain of immigration when we got to Dubai at 3am on Monday morning."

Former World Number One Rory McIlroy had to settle for a one under 71 after being three under for his first four holes, but the 24 year old defending champion could at least report better news in terms of his focus on the course.

"It's much better than it has been the last few months and I am playing better, which is important," said McIlroy.

"It's good that the game is back on track. I have this event and two more so it would be great to get a win before the end of the season."


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1/08/2013

Rory Will Jumeirah No More

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Rory McIlroy's path to a new lucrative sponsorship deal has been cleared after Jumeirah Group announced it was not renewing a five-year deal with the world No 1.

The global luxury hotel company based in the United Arab Emirates signed up McIlroy when he was 18, becoming one of his first corporate sponsors.

McIlroy has been linked with Nike for some time with industry observers estimating that he could secure a deal worth $20million (£12.4m) per year.

That would give Nike two of golf's biggest stars as the multinational sportswear manufacturer has been backing Tiger Woods since he turned professional in 1996.

"We are extremely proud of Rory's rise to the No 1 spot with Jumeirah as his principal sponsor since he turned professional. We are delighted with his consistent support of Jumeirah hotels and resorts around the world," said Jumeirah Group president and CEO Gerald Lawless.

McIlroy said: "Jumeirah became my first corporate sponsor when I turned professional back in 2007, and I would like to thank everyone at the company for their support in helping me become the player I am today.

"I have enjoyed five very exciting and successful years with Jumeirah and will always have great memories of my time with the company. Celebrating my first professional win at the 2009 Dubai Desert Classic with the Jumeirah team was a particular highlight."




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