Showing posts with label Leona Maguire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leona Maguire. 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.


4/03/2016

Maguire and Meadows Miss Inspiration

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Leona Maguire and Stephanie Meadows missed the cut after they hit respective second rounds of 76 and 78.

The Irish duo had left themselves with considerable work to do after poor opening rounds on Thursday, yet Maguire hit four more bogeys in her second round to finish seven over for the tournament - three shots better off than Meadows who struggled with six bogeys on Friday.

Lexi Thompson’s putter switch helped her surge up the leaderboard to grab a share of the lead at the halfway mark of the ANA Inspiration in Rancho Mirage, California on Friday.

Thompson carded four birdies in her last seven holes, including three in a row from the 12th, to shoot a four-under-68 and jump to seven-under for the tournament in the first major championship of the year.

The 21-year-old joined overnight leader Ai Miyazato atop the leaderboard at Mission Hills Country Club after the Japanese former world number one mixed five birdies and three bogeys on her way to a round of 70.

Six players sit just one shot off the pace, including New Zealand’s world number one Lydia Ko, who shot a 68 to go with her first round 70.

American Lizette Salas (67), Norway’s Suzann Pettersen (67), Koreans Park Sung-hyun (67) and Chun In-gee (69) and South African Lee-Anne Pace (70) also shared third place on a packed leaderboard with 19 players within three shots of the lead.

Thompson, who sat in a similar position in 2014 before going on to win the title, changed putters in the lead up to the tournament after a poor result in last week’s Kia Classic.

“I started practising with it Tuesday and putted with it an hour and a half a day to get comfortable with it but honestly 20 minutes into it I knew it was good,” Thompson told reporters.

“Coming off last week, just how it went for me and I knew where my confidence was I needed a change. It couldn’t get any worse. I tried it here and it felt amazing.”

The seven-times LPGA tour winner was particularly impressed with her finish in tough conditions.

“The rough is the highest I have ever seen it but that is what majors call for, tight fairways, thick rough and firm greens,” she said.

“That’s what you get here. I hit a few wayward shots but I recovered well and that’s what you have to do at majors.”

Spain’s Azahara Munoz, who held the overnight lead with Miyazato, tumbled down the boards with a 78 to drop to one-over and a share of 48th.


7/02/2015

Leona Maguire Makes Strong Start


Leona Maguire that she was talking of the chances that slipped by after opening with a three-under 69 in the first round of the ISPS HANDA Ladies European Masters.

Playing on a sponsor’s invite, the 20-year-old from Cavan hit 16 greens in her opening round at The Buckinghamshire Golf Club near London, carding four birdies and a single bogey for a place in the clubhouse top 10.

The Duke University golfer made the brightest of starts with a birdie at the par-five 10th before successive birdies on the 13th and 14th holes got her to three under early in her round.
Four straight pars saw her to the turn in 33 strokes and the consistency in her play saw her continue her back nine with another five pars from the first.

She got to four under with a birdie three at the par-four sixth before giving up her only shot to par of the round with a bogey five at the eighth to finish on three under, three shots behind France’s Sophie Giquel-Bettan, who carded a 66.

“I’m really happy because I got off to a great start and made a few birdies in the first few holes, so I was three under though nine,” said Maguire.

“I had quite a few chances on the back nine but a few putts didn’t drop. I hit 16 greens, so it was pretty steady. I birdied a couple of the par fives and hit all the ones on the back nine, starting on the 10th.”

Maguire’s only bogey came on her penultimate hole, which at 425 yards was the longest of the par-fours.

“I made a bogey on eight after hitting a good drive but my second was left of the green in the hay so I had to hack at it to get on the green and then had two putts from there so it was a good bogey really, because the pin was long and the hole was playing tricky,” added Maguire.

“I’d have taken a three under going out this morning and it’s a good score. I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”


6/10/2015

Leona Maguire Opens with 67


Leona Maguire showed why she is the number one amateur woman golfer in the world as she made a stunning start to her bid for the Ladies British Open Amateur title at Portstewart yesterday.

The 20-year-old Curtis Cup star from Slieve Russell, who is now a student at Duke University in North Carolina, produced some brilliant golf over the last six holes of her first qualifying round, collecting three birdies, an eagle and two pars on her way to a six-under-par 67.

“I think I have had a six under par at Portstewart before in the Irish Close Championship but the course the LGU have us playing on today is not quite the same as we played then,” Maguire said.

The Cavan star put herself in line for a good match-play draw by finishing the day just one stroke off the pace set by Swede Elin Esborn.

Her twin sister Lisa was off colour and is outside the qualifying positions with another round today.

Lisburn’s Paula Grant and Chloe Ryan of Castleroy after scores of 74 are in strong positions to make the knock-out phase. And in the last group to finish Olivia Mehaffey, the Royal County teenager who has swept the board in stroke-play events this season in Ireland,Wales and Scotland, also handed in a 74.

Mehaffey who had one blackspot, a double bogey on the ninth, birdied two of the last five holes to put herself in contention for a match-play berth.

Maria Dunne of Skerries and Lahinch’s Sinead Sexton need to improve following scores of 77 yesterday which put them in joint 74th place.


7/27/2013

Lisa Leaves Leona Trailing

Lisa Maguire kept alive her hopes of a medal in the European Amateur Championship in Finland with another steady round.

The 18-year-old Irish international from Slieve Russell returned a level-par 71 over the Aura course in Turku for a 54-hole aggregate of 212 to keep her in a tie for sixth place.

While her chances of the title and the gold medal appear dead – she is eight strokes behind leader Emily Pedersen of Denmark, who stretched the field with a stunning 64 – Maguire is only one stroke adrift of those tying for second spot.

She was solid yesterday, with birdies on nine and 14, bogeys on eight and 18 and pars on the rest. Maguire's form is the only Irish bright spot as all our other representatives missed the 54-hole cut.

Her twin sister Leona, who had moved up the field on Thursday with a brilliant 69, fell back again, taking 76 for 227. Jessica Carty missed out by just one on 225. Paula Grant totalled 228 after three rounds, Chloe Ryan 229 and Maria Dunne 230.

Meanwhile, Ireland are struggling in the European Young Masters, slipping down the field yesterday to lie in 12th place on nine-over-par. They are 16 strokes behind joint leaders Spain and England.

Rory Williamson improved to level par, but Olivia Mehaffey and Kevin Le Blanc were four and five-over respectively.


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7/26/2013

Lisa Maguire in Finnish Medaa Mix


Lisa Maguire held her nerve in Finland to stay on course for a medal in the European Amateur Individual Championship.

The 18-year-old international from Slieve Russell fired a second-round 72 to add to her 69 on Wednesday for a half-way total of one-under-par 141 to lie just four strokes off the pace set by Tonje Daffinrud but, more crucially, only one behind a group of players who share second spot.

Maguire was steady, with 15 pars, bogeys at five and six and a birdie at 13.

Her twin sister Leona improved dramatically, knocking 13 strokes off her Wednesday round by returning a 69. She had three birdies in the last four holes.

Maria Dunne went the other way, slumping to an 82, which was four strokes worse than her opening-day efforts.

Irish champion Paula Grant had a double-bogey five on the seventh on her way to a 74 and a 36-hole total of 152, while Jessica Carty produced some excellent golf to shoot 73 after an opening 78, her round being slightly spoiled by a double-bogey six on the 17th.

Chloe Ryan's round was rescued by two birdies in the last three holes, which helped her to a 76 and a 151 aggregate.

Meanwhile, at the European Young Masters in Hamburger, Ireland improved late in the day to secure seventh place in the opening round, albeit a long way adrift of leaders England.

With three of the four cards counting, Ireland finished the day on seven-over-par, with England on four-under.

Ireland stroke play champion Olivia Mehaffey was level par, with Niamh McSherry three-over and Kevin Le Blanc four-over.


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6/21/2013

Meadow Tames Ballybunion

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Stephanie Meadow battled the wind and rain at Ballybunion to lead the qualifiers into the match play stage of the Irish women's close championship.

The 21-year-old 2012 British Ladies champion, and star member of the Alabama University team, fired a six- under-par 67 in her second round on one of Ireland's toughest links courses.

That gave her a 36-hole aggregate of 139, all of 10 strokes fewer than Slieve Russell teenager Leona Maguire, who beat her in last year's Irish final. 

Leona's twin sister Lisa had a disastrous opening round of 86, but a second-round 77 for an aggregate of 163 gave Lisa a spot among the 32 qualifiers.

Maria Dunne, who was disqualified from last week's British Amateur Open for using a distance-measuring device, also made it through.



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