Showing posts with label Matteo Manassero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matteo Manassero. Show all posts

3/15/2014

Padraig and Darren Valspar It

Padraig Harrington carved out a one under par second round to make the cut at the Vaslpar Championship at Innisbrook on Friday. Out early and starting on the front nine, he got off to the goof start and covered the opening nine holes in two under par. 

Three pars followed to start his back nine but he dropped his first shot of the day at the par three 13th hole. He hit back immediately with a birdie four on the next but suffered at the hands of the "snake pit" with dropped shots on the 16th and 17th holes. Needing a birdie on the last he hit a long drive followed by a approach shot to eleven feet which he holed for a pleasing finish under pressure. 

Robert Garrigus spent most of the practice days fishing in the lakes of Innisbrook, catching nearly three dozen bass. As for his day job, he bagged 10 birdies over two days and delivered the best score of the tournament, a 5-under 66 on Friday, to build a three-shot lead in the Valspar Championship.

His only other PGA TOUR victory was a little more than an hour away at Disney, and Garrigus offered a simple explanation.

"It's the fishing," he said.

Garrigus didn't play a single practice round the year he won Disney. He arrived at Innisbrook on Monday and fished that evening, most of Tuesday and then for about five hours Wednesday without ever looking at the Copperhead course.

"I think that puts me in a good frame of mind because I'm clear and not thinking about anything, just going out and having some fun," he said.

Garrigus, one of the longest hitters in golf, has made birdie on all of the par 5s both rounds. That has contributed mightily to being at 7-under 135, three shots clear of Kevin Na going into a weekend with a Masters spot potentially up for grabs.

Only five of the top 22 on the leaderboard already are eligible for the Masters.

Na had a 68, while the group four shots behind included Pat Perez (71), Matteo Manassero (70) and Justin Rose (68), who is the highest-ranked player in the field at No. 7. Matt Every shot a 71 in the afternoon and joined them at 3-under 139.

The three-shot lead is the largest through 36 holes in the 14-year history of this tournament. 

Garrigus is about the only player who has made it look easy, even though he felt as stressed as anyone on the Copperhead course, regarded by many as perhaps the best tournament course in Florida.

Even though the weather was close to perfect -- only a breeze in warm sunshine -- only 17 players broke 70.

John Daly was not among them. He was struggling with what he called the yips with his putter when he got to the 16th hole. Daly put three shots in the water, shanked a 7-iron, duffed a chip into the bunker and made a 12. With a double bogey on the last hole, he shot a 90, the highest score of his PGA TOUR career.

"I probably hit one of the top-five shots of my life there on 16 out of the trees," he said. "Hit a low, cut 5-iron, then rose it up over the pine tree and cut it 40 yards and hit to 10 feet. That's just one of those shots that when you're playing good and everything is rolling, you kind of expect it. It was a lot of fun to try it, and to pull it off was even better. I've spent half my life in the trees. I've had a lot of practice."

He missed the putt, but was more than happy with par.

As for the rest of the golf course, he picked up another birdie on the par-3 15th with a long putt, and one on the par-4 ninth with a 20-foot birdie down the hill.

Rose feels as if his shoulder injury is in the past, except for answering questions about it. He loves the Florida swing because the courses demand so many different shots, and Innisbrook might require the most.

The U.S. Open champion was struggling in the first round until he finished birdie-birdie to salvage a 71. He carried that momentum into the second round, and despite a bogey on No. 6 from being out of position off the tee, and a soft bogey on the par-3 eighth, he felt much better ending with a birdie.

"I got some momentum going today," Rose said. "I worked my way into the tournament early. To finish strong with my round yesterday I think helped give me some momentum into day. ... It's exactly how I needed to flow into the tournament."

Perez was the first player to reach 5 under for the tournament until he missed two drives well to the left. One was in the trees at No. 6, the other went out of bounds on No. 7. Both led to double bogeys, though Perez didn't get down on himself.

"Just move on and keep going," he said.

Darren Clarke made his first cut of 2014 on the PGA TOUR after he withdrew after one round at Riviera and missed the cut at The Honda Classic. 

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8/29/2013

Captain McGinley Watches Over Field

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European Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley has said he will not be afraid to blood inexperienced youngsters in his team for next year's contest.

The Irishman, a five-times Ryder Cup winner as player and vice-captain, will have three wildcard picks for his 12-man team, with several Ryder Cup rookies among Europe's form players.

Italy's Matteo Manassero, Sweden's Jonas Blixt and Denmark's Thorbjorn Olesen are all ranked in the world's top 50 and will be pushing for inclusion while Scotland's Martin Laird and England's Chris Wood have tour wins in 2013.

"The quality of golf on The European Tour now is phenomenal and there's a lot of young players who are ready to step up to Ryder Cup standard," McGinley said on the European Tour website.

"I'm not afraid of having rookies on the team, and if those guys step up to the plate and play really well, I'll be delighted to welcome them to the team.

"Generally, all I'm concerned about at the end of the day is having the 12 strongest players to represent Europe at this time next year.

"We had a situation a couple years ago where Alvaro Quiros won the Dubai World Championship and ended up not making the Team. So even though you may have a big win, it doesn't necessarily mean you're going to make the Ryder Cup Team.

"Ultimately I'm looking for the guys who have played the best over the 12-month period and I have absolutely no hesitation about having rookies on the team or picking a rookie. Generally what I want is players who are playing the best."

McGinley will compete this week at the Wales Open, keeping an eye on the early contenders for a place in his team for the biennial clash against the United States which is taking place in Scotland next year.

The Irishman, who has been a popular figure on previous teams, said he would be ruthless in order to help Europe win at Gleneagles for the eighth time in the last 10 Ryder Cups.

"I understand that along the journey that all captains take, some tough decisions have to be made," McGinley added.

"Some have been made already and some will be made going forward. I'm prepared for that and I'm prepared for the fact that not everybody is going to agree with my decisions.

"I've been very fortunate, I've been involved in five of the last six Ryder Cups, and we won all five that I was involved in (three as a player, two as vice-captain). I've seen the template, I've seen what works and I just want to make that template better and roll it out again," he said.

"I'll meet any challenges I have head on and I understand that not everybody is going to be in agreement with the decisions that I make."


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8/10/2013

McIlory Rors Back into PGA Mix

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For a second day running, defending champion Rory McIlroy put together a flying finish to surge inside the top ten as the third day progressed at the US PGA Championship.

McIlroy, who yesterday birdied four of his last seven holes after a stuttering start had earlier threatened his place in the weekend action at Oak Hill Country Club, was level par on Saturday through 12 holes before three birdies in his last six holes – including two in succession to finish – helped the Northern Irishman sign for a superb 67.

The third round of a golf tournament is commonly known as ‘Moving Day’ and McIlroy’s heroics, completed amidst bright but breezy conditions in Rochester, certainly helped him do just that as the 24 year old jumped back inside the top ten and back within a few shots of the lead as much of the field struggled on Saturday.

It was indeed a remarkable turnaround, having been four over par for the tournament midway through his second round before a resilient fight back saw him close level par on Friday, and the two-time Major Champion showed some more of the same iron grit to get right back in contention.

A birdie at the sixth hole was tempered by his only dropped shot of the day at the tenth, before a second gain of the day at the long 13th preceded a truly extraordinary close.

Ranked by far the hardest two holes on the golf course, the World Number Three belied the statistics to sink a 50-foot birdie putt at the 17th before chipping in from off the green for a precious three at the last.

“It was good to feel the sort of rush again,” said McIlroy, who triumphed in record-breaking circumstances at Kiawah Island 12 months ago. “Making a birdie on 17 is like an eagle and then to follow it up with another on the last is even better.

“I had 24 putts for 71 on Friday and I had 25 putts for 69 on Saturday so clearly my short game has been really, really good and it was just a matter of trying to get a long game in shape.

“I wouldn't say that that was my best ball striking round out there by any means, but I got it up and down when I needed to and that was the most important thing.”

With many of the field over par for the day, McIlroy knows he still might have a real chance of becoming the first from Britain to defend the same Major title since Nick Faldo in 1989-90.

“The way the conditions are with the swirling wind, it's tricky out there so I felt like I still had a chance,” he continued. “I felt good enough about my game that I could go out there and post a good one today and at least give myself a chance going into tomorrow.”

Scotland’s Marc Warren was another to take advantage of the high scoring on Saturday, firing five birdies en route to a two under par 68, a superb performance that saw the 32 year old US PGA debutant jump inside the top 20 on one under par for the tournament.

Warren has wife Laura with him this week and their four month old son, Archie, who has now been overseas to Ireland, France and the US since he was born.

“After the first day here on Monday I felt practice went really well but then I was a bit frustrated after the first round score I shot,” said Warren, who narrowly missed out on the flagship BMW PGA Championship in May, losing out in a play-off to Italy’s Matteo Manassero at Wentworth.

“I just felt I was trying a little too hard to be perfect with my swing but managed to settle down after that and yesterday’s round was one of the best tee-to-green all week so it was a good 67 and then to back that up today with a 68 is very pleasing.

“The wind makes the conditions a little tougher because when we played in the rain yesterday there was no breeze to speak of and that made clubbing a bit easier. Heading into tomorrow I will just work on the same things. I won't hit that many balls this afternoon and will just chill out and get ready for tomorrow."


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