Showing posts with label Masters Tournament. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Masters Tournament. Show all posts

5/20/2016

Warren Makes Marc at K Club

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Marc Warren rediscovered his form in spectacular fashion at the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open Hosted by the Rory Foundation on Friday and will head into the weekend battling it out with Rory McIlroy and Danny Willett.

With Willett making his first European Tour appearance since his victory at the Masters Tournament and McIlroy playing host for the week, all eyes were on the two highest ranked players in the field in the build up to play at the K Club.

That continued on day one as the pair moved to the top of the leaderboard, with Willett and McIlroy continuing to engage in a nip-and-tuck battle throughout the second morning before Warren made a brilliant move.

The Scotsman had made just three cuts in his nine starts so far this season but birdied three of his last four holes - with a brilliant chip-in coming on the eighth - to register a 66 and move to eight under.

That was good enough to give him a share of the lead alongside Willett who signed for a 71, with McIlroy just a shot further back after his round of 70.

Willett's triumph at Augusta was his second of the season while McIlroy has yet to finish outside the top ten, but Warren is a three-time winner himself and felt he was due a low score.

"I felt, especially the last three events, I felt as if I was close to some decent form," he said.

"The first few months of the season were a little bit of stop-start scheduling-wise.

I feel as if I'm starting to get into a little bit more of a run now, so hopefully that's the reason for the good form and hopefully it continues - Marc Warren

The 35 year old carded seven birdies to a single bogey in the calmer morning conditions - with the wind and rain arriving for the afternoon starters - and was delighted with his performance.

"I think everything was pretty solid overall," he added. "I kept the ball in play off the tee, which is obviously important in these conditions, and the short game is good."

Willett came into the day with a two-shot lead over McIlroy and while he was caught twice by the Northern Irishman, five birdies and four bogeys just kept him at the top of the leaderboard with Warren.

"A little bit scrappy but grinding out quite nicely," he said. "Marc's score today is a fantastic round of golf.

England's Matthew Southgate coped wonderfully with the more difficult later conditions to record a 69 and sit at five under, a shot clear of Tyrrell Hatton, who went one better in the afternoon.

South African duo Richard Sterne and Jaco Van Zyl were also at four under after rounds of 68 and 72 respectively.

Jorge Campillo, Jamie Donaldson, Bradley Dredge, Sébastien Gros, Russell Knox, Eddie Pepperell, Richie Ramsay, Brett Rumford, Callum Shinkwin and Chris Wood were then a further shot back.


McIlroy the Hostest with Mostest

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Rory McIlroy put himself in an excellent position heading into the weekend at the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open Hosted by the Rory Foundation and then declared he was confident he could go on to win his home event.

The Northern Irishman is playing host to the tournament for the second consecutive season but had missed the cut three years in a row before rounds of 67-70 saw him make a good start at the K Club.

His previous best finish was seventh in 2008 and the four-time Major Championship winner said before the start this week and after the first round how eager he was to at last taste victory on home soil.

To do that he must overcome an elite field, with Masters Tournament champion Danny Willett and three-time European tour winner Marc Warren both a shot ahead of him at eight under heading into the weekend.

But after striking the ball beautifully over days one and two, McIlroy believes if he can cut out the mistakes, he will be right in the mix come Sunday afternoon.

"I'm making enough birdies," he said. "I think I made six birdies yesterday. I made six birdies today. So the birdies are there. I just need to limit the mistakes. Four bogeys today, a couple of really soft bogeys as well.

"I know that I'm hitting enough good shots and I'm holing enough putts. If I can live with the mistakes, I feel like I'll be right there.

"Obviously I haven't made the cut here for a while, and to be in for the weekend and play a solid two rounds of golf, I'm right there in the mix. I'm excited for the weekend."

McIlroy came into the second round two shots behind Willett and while he twice reined him in, he twice fell two shots behind again with a closing birdie from 20 feet on the ninth - his last - cutting the gap to one.

"I was getting quite frustrated there," he added. "Especially the end of the round, I felt I was giving myself chances and wasn't converting, and any time I did make a mistake, I wasn't saving par.

"To hole that birdie putt on the last, it was nice. It gives me a little bit of momentum going into the weekend, and I'll need it."

Willett is playing his first European Tour event since his maiden Major triumph at Augusta and McIlroy is delighted to have the man he beat to the Race to Dubai title last term in contention.

"I don't think anyone was happier than me last night because of what Danny shot, and then obviously me being up there," he said. "Both up there for the weekend, the Masters Champion and myself, it's a good leaderboard.

"It's great to see Danny up there, as well. I was very pleased that he committed to come and play here."


5/19/2016

Rory Relishes Willett Master Battle

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Rory McIlroy is relishing another battle against Danny Willett after the Race to Dubai champion and the Masters Tournament champion stole the show on day one of the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open Hosted by the Rory Foundation.

Willett pushed McIlroy all the way to the final day of last season before the Northern Irishman finished as Europe's Number One for the second consecutive year with his victory at the DP World Tour Championship, Dubai.

In 2016 it has been the Englishman who has stolen a march, with a first Major Championship victory at Augusta added to his win at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic to give Willett a lead over McIlroy of over a million points in the season-long battle.

The 28 year old also took the upper hand on Thursday, establishing a two-shot lead over McIlroy at the K Club, and the four-time Major winner is hopeful the two can continue to duel it out over the weekend.

"It's a great day one," said McIlroy. "Hopefully it entices people to come out and watch the golf over the next three days.

Having Danny here is a huge help, and him playing like he did today, and me playing like I did, it would be great if we could have a battle over the weekend and get the crowds to flock in - Rory McIlroy

"It would be one that I'd be looking forward to."

A victory for McIlroy would be his first at his home Open after missing the cut the last three seasons, and he admits he is excited by the thought of getting his hands on the trophy.

"I just get goosebumps thinking about it, so I can't really think about it too much now," he added.

"To win here, no matter what the circumstances are, whether I've won the week before or whether I haven't won in six months, to win The Irish Open would be something that would be very special, and I've got off to a great start towards doing that this week. I just have to keep playing the way I did today.

"It's a big thing, especially with how I've played here the last few years, it's been very disappointing.

"It's day one. There's a lot of golf to play but it's a very encouraging start.

"I think there was more out there. I thought it was a very comfortable 67. Get to go five under par after 13 with a couple of par fives to come in, had a bit of a blip on 14 with a three-putt. But apart from that, I felt like I played pretty well.

"It was nice to get an opening round like that and get a score like that under my belt, because I know what's out there now. I know if I go out and play well and the conditions are similar that I can go even better than that."



3/05/2016

McIlroy Back in Mix After 65

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Rory McIlroy hailed a "big improvement" in his putting during a superb round of 65 that lifted him into contention in the Cadillac Championship at Doral.

The Northern Irishman has switched to a "crosshanded" putting method after missing the cut at the Honda Classic.

The 26-year-old needed just 25 putts in a seven-under round to go eight under - two shots behind leader Adam Scott.

"I did some work on the putting green last night and it paid off today," said world number three McIlroy.

"It's great to see putts like that go in. Those are the one I have not been holing over the last few months and today I saw a big improvement.

"I saw Adam had got to 10 under so I did not want to be too far behind going into the weekend."

McIlroy carded eight birdies and a bogey in his second round and is tied for second with defending champion Dustin Johnson, who hit a bogey-free 64.

Scott, who last week won his first title in nearly two years, hit a six-under 66 to lead the field.

England's Danny Willett carded a 69 to go fourth on seven under, a stroke ahead of Charley Hoffman (70) and Bubba Watson (69) of the United States and two in front of compatriot Paul Casey (68) and another American, Phil Mickelson (72).

Shane Lowry will have been disappointed to finish with a closing bogey to sign for a 73 and a level par total. Starting on the 10th, he turned in one over but a birdie on the eighth, his 17th, was undone on the par-three ninth.

Graeme McDowell signed for a 71 to his opening 74 to be one over at the halfway stage.

3/04/2016

McIlroy Fails to Tame Blue Monster

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Rory McIlroy refused to blame his new putting technique for a disappointing opening round in the WGC-Cadillac Championship after the new approach initially promised to pay instant dividends.

After missing the cut in the Honda Classic last week, McIlroy changed to a “crosshanded” putting method – with his left hand below the right on the grip – and vowed to stick with it regardless of the short-term outcome, with his bid to complete the career Grand Slam at the Masters just five weeks away.

The early signs were promising as McIlroy carded five birdies in his first 10 holes on the famed ‘Blue Monster’ course alongside world number one Jordan Spieth and US PGA champion Jason Day.

But the 26-year-old then three-putted the eighth – his penultimate hole – for par and found water with his tee shot on the ninth, the resulting double bogey meaning he had to settle for an opening 71, five shots behind clubhouse leaders Marcus Fraser and Scott Piercy.

McIlroy had jokingly threatened to throw his putter in the water on the eighth, a reference to last year’s incident when his three iron was despatched to a watery grave on the same hole in frustration at an errant shot.

“One club in the water here is enough, I think,” the Northern Irishman joked.

Asked about taking 33 putts and holing just one outside 10 feet (a 14-footer on the 17th), McIlroy told reporters: “My speed wasn’t too good on the greens. I was leaving a lot of putts short.

“But I guess that’s to be expected. It’s the first day competitively with a bit of a new grip. But I felt like it was pretty good.”

Piercy was seven under par after 11 holes but eventually carded a 66 after a bogey on the last when his ball plugged in a grass bank on the edge of a lake, while Fraser also reached seven under before dropping his only shot of the day on the eighth.

It was nevertheless a superb effort from the 37-year-old Australian, who won in Malaysia a fortnight ago and was 15th in the Perth International last week before making the 11,000-mile journey to Miami.

Phil Mickelson, who has not won since claiming his fifth Major title in the 2013 British Open at Muirfield, was a shot off the lead, with Danny Willett, Jason Dufner, Charley Hoffman and Honda Classic winner Adam Scott all on four under.

“I hit a lot of good shots, I was really pleased with the way the round went,” Mickelson told Sky Sports. “I probably let a few shots go early on, but I hit a lot of good shots, I was patient with the round and on my second nine I was able to make some birdies and capitalise on some of the shots.”

Spieth carded five birdies and two bogeys to finish three under, with world number two Day faring the worst of the marquee group with a level-par 72.

Asked about playing alongside Day and McIlroy, Spieth said: “We had fun and for a while there were feeding off each other, turning in two, two and three under.

“It was nice to try and get into a rhythm together because the last few weeks have been a little rough on all three of us.

“I’ve been doing quite a bit of work. I don’t feel great about the way I am striking the ball. I’m working really hard trying to develop patience through my swing and get into my right side. I have been transitioning a little quick and that leads to a shorter swing and more inconsistent ball striking.”

Shane Lowry recovered from two bogeys in his opening seven holes to turn his round around and sign for a round of 71. 

Although he suffered a bogey on the 11th after his tee shot found the left rough, Lowry’s approach play on the 17th – where he was left with a tap-in – brought him back to one under and a safe par on the treacherous 18th.

Graeme McDowell shot an opening 74 with a lot of ground to make up on Friday.


9/24/2015

McIlroy Not Moved by Fedex Cheque


Rory McIlroy has said he does not care about the $10m bonus that could come with victory at the Tour Championship.

The 26-year-old, whose season has been interrupted by injury, just wants to get back to winning and is more motivated by adding the FedExCup to his list of trophies.

"Luckily, that amount of money doesn't sort of mean much to me anymore," said McIlroy on the eve of the season-ending Tour Championship in Atlanta that caps the FedExCup playoffs and awards the bonus to the points leader.

"It will go in the bank and if I want to buy something nice, I will. I mean, like, it's nice to think that you could win $10m this week, but that's not what excites me.

"It excites me to play well and to try and win. And the FedExCup is... one of the only things that I haven't put on my golf CV and that would be more exciting to do that rather than walk away with a cheque."

The young Northern Irishman has already won financial security for generations of family to come.

In 2013, McIlroy signed a multi-year endorsement deal with Nike Golf worth a reported $200m, and he's earned more than $28m in his PGA Tour career, not counting tens of millions more from European Tour earnings and more still from other endorsements.

However, the 26-year-old Northern Irishman regrets the loss of a chunk of his year after he injured his ankle playing football with friends.

McIlroy said he had learned some lessons from 2015, including that he should avoid putting extra pressure on himself as he believes he did when he was trying to extend his run to three majors in a row at the Masters in April.

"I'll still work as hard as ever in trying to get prepared and trying to get my shape in the best place possible to play those (major) tournaments, but not work at it for the reason of 'I can make history here'.

"There was just this expectation of and knowing what was at stake, what could happen, instead of just going out and playing and trying not to think about all that stuff."

There is another lesson McIlroy said he learned.

"Don't play football in the middle of the season."


4/24/2015

Padraig Open to Pinehurst


Padraig Harrington reckons a top-five finish in one of four upcoming tour events will be enough to secure him a spot in the US Open for the 14th consecutive year.

A missed cut at The Masters in Augusta earlier this month did the three-time major winner no favours in the world rankings and he is in the 80s, rather than the top 60 where he needs to be to automatically qualify.

However, in Thurles for the opening of the LIT campus Sportslab, the Dubliner was optimistic about his chances.

“Because my points are back-ended at the moment it actually means I only need a reasonable performance in my next four events,” he said. “A top five or something would probably do the job.”

The last of those four tournaments is Irish Open at Royal County Down at the end of May, but Harrington said he would have no problem going to England and down the pre-qualifying route for the US Open.

“An opportunity to get in, I don’t care how I have to get there. It wouldn’t bother me. “I’ve no pride,” he added with a laugh. “There’s no embarrassment in me!”

Part of Harrington’s backroom team in recent years has been Dr Liam Hennessy, one of the brains behind the new €3.7 million Sportslab at the LIT campus in Thurles and a man who’s worked with top international athletes and teams.

Harrington spoke of the key role played by strength and conditioning expert Hennessy in the latter years of his career.

“I’m stronger, more powerful than I was 18 years ago, than at any stage in my career, than 10 years ago. I’ve had less injuries in the last couple of years than I’ve had before.”

Because of the near year-round nature of their profession, golfers need to be more careful than many other athletes about getting the balance right between preparation, play and rest, he said.

“Liam is very much part of guiding me – when I should take breaks, what I should do during the week. The greatest thing about Liam, which is amazing, is always it’s about finding the minimum effect of dose. Less is more, at times.”

The distance learning centre founded by Hennessy, Setanta College, is working in partnership with Limerick Institute of Technology in delivering the programmes at the Sportslab, among which is a motion-study programme which can pinpoint potential injury issues using 32 cameras and special computer software but without the need for wires and sensors attached to the body.


4/15/2015

Calling All School Children


Schoolchildren throughout Ireland are being invited to sample Irish Open history for their school as part of a nationwide competition organised by The European Tour and the Rory Foundation.

For the first time, the inaugural Irish Open Trophy Tour competition will give four lucky schools across the island of Ireland an historic opportunity to host a visit not only from the Irish Open Trophy but also Claret Jug, which, as reigning Open Champion, currently resides in the bulging trophy cabinet of World Number One Rory McIlroy.

Supported by the Confederation of Golf in Ireland (CGI), the competition invites children between the ages of 9 and 15 to tell The European Tour why their class or school deserves a visit from these two prestigious trophies.

The four winning schools will also participate in a Q&A session with representatives of The European Tour, Rory Foundation and Royal County Down Golf Club – as well as taking part in a CGI ‘Golf Awareness Clinic’ which will give children a fun introduction to the sport through a variety of golf-related games including putting games and hitting real golf balls into a blow up net, and virtual golf on the Wii console. 

Pupils will also gain an insight into the life of a professional golfer from Irish professional golfer and Dubai Duty Free golf ambassador Des Smyth, eight-time winner on the European Tour, vice-captain of Europe’s victorious 2006 and 2014 Ryder Cup teams, and twice a member of the Ryder Cup playing team in 1979 and 1981. 

Drogheda-born Smyth is also in the record books as one of the oldest winners in European Tour history, when he won the 2001 Madeira Island Open aged 48 years and 34 days, and one of just two players (alongside Mark McNulty) to win a European Tour event in each of the first four decades of the European Tour. 

The four winning schools will also receive tickets for the winners’ class to go to the Pro Am event on the Wednesday while the overall winning pupil will receive family tickets for the Pro Am and a VIP tour with a chance to meet some of the world’s top golfers.

To enter, schoolchildren should simply send an email to trophytour@irishopen.ie outlining in no more than 250 words why their class or school deserves to win this unique and historic prize – clearly stating their name, age, address and school. Closing date for entries is Thursday April 30th with the prize to be taken between May 4th and 15th.

Antonia Beggs, Championship Director of the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open Championship, said: “Professional sport can really inspire individuals and a trophy is the ultimate aim for many in sport, which is why we’ve decided to give schools in Ireland a chance to host the prestigious Irish Open trophy which has been held aloft by so many golfing legends over the years.

“Not only that, our winning schools will also get to see and have their picture taken with the world famous ‘Claret Jug’ which has been kindly donated by the current Open Champion Rory McIlroy. As the best golfer in the world at the moment, Rory is a perfect example of how top professional golfers can inspire anyone to be as good as they can in whatever they choose to be. This is a very strong message that we want to convey to children with our first ever Irish Open Trophy Tour Competition. 

“Follow your dreams, work hard and you can achieve great things!” she added.

Brian McIlroy, of the Rory Foundation, said: “Rory is very proud of where he comes from and it is very important for him to be as good an ambassador as he can for the island of Ireland, north and south. In addition, his commitment to helping children all over the world through the Rory Foundation is as strong and driven as it is to his golf. 

“Now, through the Irish Open Trophy Tour, we want to engage with schoolchildren throughout Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland to stimulate pride in their class, school, area in which they live, and their own achievements – while at the same time encouraging a love of sport, and in particular golf. 

“We really want to hear their stories and what makes themselves, their school or their region so special,” he added.

More than 80,000 spectators are expected and tens of thousands of tickets have already been sold for this year’s Dubai Duty Free Irish Open hosted by the Rory Foundation, which is supported by Tourism Northern Ireland.