Showing posts with label Maybster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maybster. Show all posts

5/26/2015

Harrington Bogeys US Open

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Padraig Harrington will miss the US Open for the second successive year after a bogey on the 36th hole saw him fall out of a play-off in qualifying at Walton Heath.

A run of four birdies from the 13th to the 16th in the afternoon on the Old Course had put the three-time major winner five under and in position to enter a six-man play-off for the final four spots available.

But he recorded a bogey five to miss out as South Africans Garth Mulroy, Thomas Aiken, Tjaart van der Walt and Australian Marcus Fraser qualified from the extra holes with Welshman Oliver Farr missing out.

"It was disappointing to bogey the last," Harrington said. "I nearly walked off after four holes this morning so I was surprised to have a chance at all.

"It was nice to get a run going on the back nine. It's one too many, so it is disappointing, especially after making a few birdies and getting inside the mark."

Two-time European Tour winner Alexander Levy will make his US Open debut at Chambers Bay next month after finishing top of the leaderboard at 11 under following a 66 on the Old Course and a 67 in the afternoon.

"I'm really happy. I played really good golf for the two 18 holes," he said. "I was positive and had a good attitude.

"It's nice to play the US Open. I was a little upset to slip out of the top 60 before Wentworth so it's great to now get in.

"It will be my first time in the US Open. I missed the Masters, so it will be great to play in another major."

Englishmen John Parry and Jason Palmer also qualified with the latter likely to get attention in the United States due to his unusual one-handed chipping style.

"The chipping is incredibly unique but it has saved my career, because there is no way I'd be competing as a professional if I didn't find the one-handed method," he said.

"At the end of last year I went from 50th on the Challenge Tour to having a win, a second place, and being on The European Tour and now this. I'm having an incredible time. I love the game of golf and at the moment it is being good to me.

"I doubt there have been many one handed chippers at the US Open before. The rough might be a bit too deep to play one-handed, so I'll have to assess it when I get there, but it is a problem I'm looking forward to have."

India's Shiv Kapur, Swede Alex Noren, Denmark's Lucas Bjerregaard and German Marcel Siem were the other qualifiers with Shane Lowry, Matteo Manassero and Nicolas Colsaerts among those to miss out.

Meanwhile, Wen-Chong Liang, Masahiro Kawamura, Hiroyuki Fujita, Kurt Barnes and Baek Seuk-hyun all progressed from the qualifying tournament in Japan.

Peter Lawrie and Gareth Maybin also failed in their efforts to make one of the the top eleven spots.


3/26/2015

Hoey leads Irish in Morocco

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Michael Hoey lies five shots off the lead after the first round of Trophee Hassan II in Morocco.

Kevin Phelan joins Hoey on two under.

The Belfast player, who won the tournament in 2012, carded four birdies and two bogeys to record a two under-par 70 and lie in a share of 22nd spot.

Gareth Maybin has work to do to make the cut as he is tied 78th on two over.

Peter Lawrie and Damien McGrane are struggling on four over after Thursday;s opening round.

France’s Adrian Saddier shone on only his second European Tour start of the season to take a one shot lead after the opening round of the Trophee Hassan II.

Saddier lost his full playing privileges after finishing 127th on The Race to Dubai last year and missed the cut on his only previous appearance in 2015 at the Joburg Open.

But after chipping in for eagle on Golf du Palais Royal’s first hole, the 22 year old added five birdies in a flawless seven under par 65.

That was one clear of England’s Daniel Gaunt, who had a hat-trick of birdies from the 15th before bogeying the last in a 66.

South African George Coetzee, one of a number of players in the field needing a big week to qualify for next month’s Masters Tournament, Scotland’s David Drysdale and England’s Chris Wood all lie two off the pace on five under.

“I’m very happy - I was very grateful to get an invite to play here,” said Saddier, who handed his invite back when his status snuck him into the field on Monday.

“This place is just unbelievable. I played very solid today - I had a chip in for eagle on the first then another chip in on six, so it was a great start and I kept it going.

“I just have a little category on The European Tour so I will be focused on The Challenge Tour this year. 

“I played last week in Madeira and although the tournament was cancelled I was playing well in the strong wind so I’m in good shape for this week.

“It’s almost my best round; I shot 64 in Qatar last year, which was eight under, so this is one of my best rounds. 

“If I could get a win it would change my schedule as at the moment I’m playing on the Challenge Tour - I just need to focus on each shot now and see what happens.”

Coetzee and Marcel Siem kept their hopes of qualifying for the Masters Tournament very much alive.

Both men have the daunting task of knowing only a victory in Morocco would be enough to book a trip to Augusta National for the first Major Championship of the year.South Africa's Coetzee carded a 67, one shot ahead of Siem.

Siem led from start to finish here in 2013 and looked to have done enough to climb into the Official World Golf Ranking's top 50 and secure his Masters debut.

However, after the results of the Houston Open were taken into consideration a few hours later, the 34 year old discovered he was ranked 51st and had missed out by just 0.03 points.

"It's a big week for me and four under is a good start," Siem said.

"I'm really excited about playing the Masters, I've never played it. I finished it off two years ago and still did not get in. It was a little horrible.

"I'm going to keep doing what I did today, try hard not to make any stupid mistakes. I have got the experience and I know the golf course. I will make enough birdies I reckon....just (need to) avoid the mistakes."

Siem and Coetzee were not the only members of the field with Georgia on their minds, with Alexander Levy, Andy Sullivan, Tommy Fleetwood and Ross Fisher all having chances to move into the top 50 before Monday's deadline.

World number 54 Levy needs to finish in a two-way tie for second or better, while Sullivan has to match his runners-up finish from last year or claim his third European Tour title of the season to move up from 61st.

Fleetwood and Fisher both need to win, but the latter got off to a terrible start with two double bogeys in his first three holes and carded a 77 which was matched by defending champion Alejandro Cañizares.

Fleetwood completed a two under 70, Levy went round in level par and Sullivan was two over for the day.



3/22/2015

Maybin and Phelan Battle Madeira

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The Madeira Islands Open -Portugal BPI was reduced to 36 holes for the second year in succession.

The tournament had been cut to three rounds after winds gusting up to 47mph meant no play was possible on Thursday, while further strong winds on Friday caused a delay of almost two hours before rain ended play early.

Half of the field had yet to complete their rounds when play was abandoned for the day at 6pm and more rain which flooded the course caused further disruption on Saturday.

With yet more bad weather forecast for Sunday the decision was taken to make it a 36-hole event, with the top 65 and ties due to play the final round in a shotgun start at 8am.

Denmark’s JB Hansen held the clubhouse lead on four under par, one shot ahead of a group of eight players including England’s Andrew Marshall and Scotland’s Peter Whiteford.

Kevin Phelan and Gareth Maybin are both two shots off the lead on two under, while Peter Lawrie is a shot further back. 

Simon Thornton is one over.

Ruaidhri McGee missed the cut on three over.

1/09/2015

Maybin Makes Glendower Cut

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Peter Lawrie carded a second round 76 at the South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Ehurhuleni ending the first two days golf on the wrong side of the cut.

Gareth Maybin fared better at Glendower Golf Club after rounds of 71 and 73 left the Ballyclare man level par - and three strokes inside the projected cut-line. Now guaranteed a weekend pay cheque in his first outing of the new season

Andy Sullivan remained on course for a maiden European Tour title at the halfway stage of The South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Ekurhuleni, but a local Major Champion is among his nearest challengers.

Sullivan added a 70 to his opening 66 at Glendower Golf Club to reach eight under par, one shot ahead of former Masters Tournament winner Charl Schwartzel.

However, four-time Major winner Ernie Els surprisingly dropped off the pace with second round 77.

Tournament host Els, who has won the event five times, was just one shot behind Sullivan after an opening 67 but dropped down the leaderboard with a round which featured back-to-back triple bogeys around the turn.

Schwartzel, who has yet to win his national Open, finished birdie, eagle, birdie to record a 69 while Sullivan - who won a trip into space for a hole-in-one during the KLM Open last year - carded four birdies and two bogeys in pursuit of his first European Tour title.

The 27 year old former Walker Cup star, who recorded four top-five results on his way to finishing 33rd on The Race to Dubai last season, said: "I thought it was going to be a really good knock on the front nine, but a few little errant drives meant the rough got its payback on me today.

"But anything in red figures (under par) is good so I am really happy with the position I am in. I thought I did well on eight to make birdie after a couple of smelly holes in the middle."

As for his prospects of a first win, Sullivan added: "When I get in these positions I find myself enjoying it more. It's where you want to be, you practise to be in these situations and I am playing with the guys I always wanted to as a kid. It's fantastic.

"It's new territory to be up there after two rounds but hopefully I can take what I usually do in rounds three and four and blow the field away."

Schwartzel was considering pulling out of the event after fracturing a toe by walking into a piece of furniture, but he recovered from bogeys on his first two holes and insisted he was relishing the tough challenge posed by Glendower's thick rough and narrow fairways.

"Any national Open should be the most difficult tournament and this week really is a good challenge," the 2011 Masters champion said. 

"The only reason I have not pulled out is that I can actually hit the ball without pain. For some reason I can turn onto the foot but the walking is a challenge.

"I was struggling for a whole bunch of last year but started working with my dad again to recreate the feelings I had and get the old basics back. It's starting to get more comfortable and I'm at least hitting shots that I'm seeing.

"I got off to a really iffy start this morning, missed a few short putts and the conditions got difficult, but I just figured if I could somehow get to level par and try again tomorrow, and I was pretty much on track until a nice finish at the end."

Els had made a good start to his second round with a birdie on the second, but he bogeyed the next two holes. After a birdie on the sixth, the 45 year old dropped another shot on the eighth and then found water with his second shot to the ninth to run up a triple-bogey seven and reach the turn in 40.

It went from bad to worse for Els when he also took seven on the tenth, where he failed to escape a fairway bunker at the first attempt and then three-putted from long range. That left him two over par and battling to avoid a first ever missed cut in the event, but birdies at the 13th and 14th ensured he would be around for the weekend.

Compatriots Colin Nel and JJ Senekal fared considerably better with rounds of 70 and 67 respectively to share third place with Denmark's Lasse Jensen on six under.
 


11/21/2014

Catalunya Sinks Irish Tour Hopes

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PGA Catalunya Resort has long since proved a barren wasteland for Irish golfers seeking claim to playing rights on the European Tour. This year proved no different as both Tour and Stadium courses show little favour. Even to those trying to reclaim cards following a decade of uninterrupted play. Never mind those arriving in hope for the first time to the hallowed venue. 

Resulting in a high Irish casualty rate for Irish hopes by time the cards were signed on Thursday evening. In fairness the signs were ominous by Wednesday when the last remaining four ended the a few places off the minimum 25 and ties needed. With absolutely no room for manoeuvre, missed putts or bad drives. And so it proved.

Perhaps Kevin Phelan the biggest surprise given the end of season form in his Rookie year on the European Tour. Which made him last Saturday morning close to a racing certainty to pass the European Tour Final Qualifying with flying colours. But the score board records something different and did not run with the fairy-tale ending. A final four over par round of 74 in sharp contrast to a year ago when Phelan squeezed a spot in the last few holes. 

On Thursday a 428 aggregate left him five shots off the minimum required and twenty strokes off the top of a quality leader board. The new season now all about invites, limited exemptions and hard work from his management company - ISM Golf – to ensure the future remains bright for the Waterford born golfer.

Peter Lawrie in contrast is at the other end of the scale having enjoyed success on the Tour since qualifying in 2003, winning the Spanish Open in his time and playing the US Open in 2010. The Dubliner maybe at a career crossroads and the ambition dimmed somewhat given last season was also a close call. Only keeping his card in the last event of the year down under in Western Australia.

The costs needed to battle for another season and justify a return to Girona in a year’s time may be complicated also by his more limited playing season. All of which might not make financial sense. Yet a round of 71 and share of twenty eighth place was tantalisingly close to making it. 

Which might be a spur in a positive direction. 

However one bogey and two birdies is as exciting as it got in the final round for Lawrie. Never really good enough to blitz the field and enough to suggest that the 2015 season might have proved a struggle had he qualified.

The dogged consistency that so marked Lawrie’s good years, with solid driving, good pitching and a fair share of putts seems to have waned. His statistics not close to where they were for so long and delivered career earnings of €5.5m

Simon Thornton will be disappointed with his final three rounds 76-72-71 on the Stadium Course after opening with 68-69-67. At one point looking very comfortably placed to spring back his lost card at the first ask. But Thursday dictated it was not to be his fate. 

In short, the quality of the field and the level of competition, particularly in the last few rounds, means that the best has to be saved for last. Probably even more so than even in some of the main tour events where journeymen may have lost their hunger and desire. 

At Q School that is not even a remote possibility.

Eliminate Thornton’ two double bogeys and the T34 finish improves, Also reducing the pressure in the final round and two shots would have been enough to get him close to one of the last places. 

However Q School doesn’t do "If’s and buts".

Gareth Maybin looked as if he was on a roll after the 65 on Tuesday that earned him place inside the top 70. 

Unfortunately in the final round the former University of South Alabama graduate’s scoring was average. Albeit he pushed up the leader board on Thursday only to card a double bogey amidst five birdies and unravelled any lingering hope that he could grab victory from the jaws of defeat

Golf seldom offers up hose fairy tales at this level and for Maybin it proved no exception.

Anyway the past few seasons have seen Maybin trifle too far down the ranking in the Race to Dubai given his natural golfing talent. With this year the inevitable falling his way and an unwelcome return to PGA Catalunya. A venue the Ballyclare man has avoided since first gaining his card. 

For him 2015 may prove a strange twelve months on the one hand. Yet might allow him reinvigorate his game and future ambitions on another. The only downside being that the step down from weekly competition at the highest level may prove costly. 

This season despite missing half the cuts Maybin bagged €190K from 25 starts.

A return to the Challenge Tour now – the place from whence he graduated - does not offer the same lucre. Or anything close for down the field finishes. So it may too become a commercial decision and depend on the generosity of sponsors.

All in all a very disappointing week for Irish golf generally, with Michael McGeady also eliminated after four rounds. 

In short the new European Tour season – which will start in South Africa in a few weeks - Ireland will be field four less tour cards, with Rory McIlroy, Graeme McDowell, Shane Lowry, Michael Hoey and Damien McGrane bearing the torch for the nation. Until further recruits make it through a year from now.

If they do.

The worry is that that this year’s Q School flock were all vastly experienced. Contrasting with previous occasions. With McGeady the only one making it through the whole qualifying process as Lawrie, Maybin, Phelan, and Thornton were exempt to the Final Stage. A high number of hopefuls also failing in September at Stage 1 and then Stage 2 last week. 

Further testament to Michael McGeady’s achievement this year. At thirty six years old Father Time looms large and so cannot be expected carry all future Irish hopes single-handedly. Thus leading to the real question. Where is that next generation?

Phelan is the last out of the traditional Walker Cup production line – along with Gavin Moynihan. For so long that trophy has delivered as far back as Jimmy Bruen to John McHenry, Padraig Harrington, Ronan Rafferty, Jonathan Caldwell, Michael Hoey, Rory McIlroy, Niall Kearney - to mention just a few. 

Behind those names it has also been the US scholarship system that has seen the development of some. Graeme McDowell the best example. Or the likes of Philip Walton in his time at Oklahoma University. With Kevin Phelan of the University of North Florida the most recent case.

Over the years the European Tour has been the necessary apprenticeship for Darren Clarke; Eamonn Darcy; Christy O’Connor Snr, and Junior; Paul McGinley and Des Smyth. With countless others over the years. In fact anyone who was anyone had to make their way on the European Tour in the first instance with the latter years improved access to the PGA Tour offing opportunities.

Shane Lowry breaking the mould when he won the Irish Open in 2008 at the County Louth club 

Now the production line seems to have halted. 

Doing so at a time when Irish players have earned such a high profile globally and winning a number of majors in the past decade: Harrington’s three majors in 2007 and 2008; McDowell’s US Open in 2010; McIlroy's first the following year with Darren Clarke becoming Open Champion months later. The feats of the Wunderkind McIlroy these days befuddling every statistic known to Irish golf and an exception to the rule.

It seems beyond the current generation Irish golf is no longer a heavy weight with the Irish Q School statistics paling against those of Sweden, Spain and other European nations. 

The loss of four players this season a clear message for those within the game to ponder.


Irish Golf Club Gazette - All rights reserved

11/20/2014

Profile - Gareth Maybin

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In 2010 Gareth Maybin secured a second place finish at the fog plagued Ballantine’s Championship at the Pinx Golf Club to secure his playing rights for the 2011 season, easing the pressure of needing that late surge in earnings to keep his card. 

In fact on the final day in Korea Maybin may have done even better except he faded down the stretch, losing out on sole possession of second place after a par putt at the last lipped out. The level par 72 score dropped him back alongside Australia's Brett Rumford - albeit a vital pay day of €191,516.50 towards the Race to Dubai

Originally from Ballyclare in Northern Ireland, Maybin had a very successful career as an amateur, representing Ireland at boys, youth and senior levels, in addition to wins in the Leinster Youths and North of Ireland. 

In 2001 Gareth accepted a four year golf scholarship at the University of South Alabama, where he set a record by winning eight times in one season, beating PGA Tour player Heath Slocum’s record of seven wins. In 2004 Gareth played on the successful European Palmer Cup team at Ballybunion Golf Club and was also a member of that year’s Walker Cup panel.

Maybin turned professional after the 2004 University season, initially playing on the Hooters Tour in the US, where he was named Rookie of the Year in 2005. 

After two wins on the Tour, in 2005 and 2006, and a victory in the 2006 Alabama Open, he returned to Europe to compete on the European Challenge Tour, for the second half of the 2007 season. After four top ten finishes in only ten events, including a third place finish in the First Plus Wales Challenge, Gareth finished the season in 49th position on the Order of Merit and secured full Challenge Tour playing rights for 2008. Gareth rounded off 2007 in style, playing in the World Cup of Golf with fellow Northern Irishman Michael Hoey, at Mission Hills in China. 

Maybin had a superb 2008 season on the Challenge Tour, with nine top-10 finishes, including his first Challenge Tour victory at the Qingdao Golf Open in September. Gareth’s consistent performances saw him finish the 2008 season ranked 4th on the Challenge Tour Rankings. This secured a category 10 card on the main European Tour for the 2009 season, which gave Gareth entry to most tournaments. 

He took full advantage of this opportunity, and nearly secured the European Tour’s Rookie Of The Season award for 2009. Maybin had no fewer than seven top-10 finishes, and came close to winning on a number of occasions. None more so than at the South African Open Championship, where he missed out on a play-off. Gareth finished 53rd in the final 2009 Race to Dubai rankings, a superb debut season. 

Maybin would continue in the same vein going into 2010, narrowly missing out securing his first European Tour victory. Gareth would secure five top-10s, including finishing second at the Ballantine's Championship in Korea and also the Andalucia Valderrama Masters in Spain. He sampled his first taste of Major golf by qualifying for both the US Open and the Open Championship on his way to finishing 40th in the Race to Dubai. 

The 2011 season however saw a loss of momentum mid season with a large number of  missed cuts impacting his twenty eight season starts, including the Irish Open presented by Discover Ireland in Jillana. The loss in earnings was sufficient to cause concern through the last few events in the European Tour schedule, nit  helped when Maybin earned only €8,700 from 57th place at the Andalucia Masters.

However fortune favoured and a €13,327 cheque in Hong Kong moved him to 117th from 120th in the Race to Dubai standings. 

With the three players ahead of him - Fredrik Jacobsen, Ryan Moore and Tom Lewis - not playing the required number of tournaments to count, this bumped him to 114th on the list - one spot inside the automatic 115 players on the money list who retain their playing privileges for the new year.

In 2012 Maybin left Horizon Sports to join a new management company Sportology.

The highlight of his 2013 campaign came at the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open, where he followed up a joint eighth finish in the Alstom Open de France with a joint fifth finish behind Phil Mickelson. 

Needed to make the cut in his last event of the 2011 season, the UBS Hong Kong Open, to have any chance of keeping his card, and duly did so, coming tied 39th to scrape in in 117th place in The Race to Dubai. 

Was a less nervy finish in 2012, when he took 111th place. His highest finish in the Money List was in 2010, when he came 40th. Graduated from the Challenge Tour in 2008, the year he won his maiden title, at the Qingdao Golf Open. 

2014 loses European Tour card after finishes 123rd in the Race to Dubai.

At The European Tour Final Qualifying a 58th place finish ended Maybin's hopes of a quick recovery of playing rights.

Personal Details 
Date of Birth: 14th September 1980 
Management: Sportology
Residence: Ballyclare, Northern Ireland 
Turned Professional: 2005 
Interests: Football, Shooting, Cars and Pool 
Tour school: 2007 (14)
Career earnings €2,363,328 [November 2014]



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11/19/2014

Four Irish Face Final Thursday Test

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Peter Lawrie signed for level par in the fifth round of The European Tour Final Qualifying on the Stadium Course at PGA Catalunya to finish T29 on Wednesday.

Having started with two birdies through his first six holes but then lost one when the Dubliner carded a bogey the eighth hole and made the turn one under par. But with three bogeys and only two birdies on the front nine Lawrie ended the day signing for a 72.

More importantly it was a drop of ten places and ending the second last day just outside the top 25

Kevin Phelan carded a two over par round to finish in a share of 38th. Two dropped shots on the front nine and then a level par finish to the clubhouse resulted in a drop of 12 places and one stroke outside the mark 

Simon Thornton also finished over par with a 73.

A double bogey six on the par four 6th with birdies on holes 14 and 17 reducing the damage to just one stroke. Despite sharing 38th place Thornton remains two strokes off the minimum needed to get within the top 25 places.

Gareth Maybin signed for a two over par 74 and dropped 6 shots and carding only for birdies.

In share of 61st place the Ballyclare man needs a strong finish on Thursday to get amongst the top qualifiers. 

Renato Paratore is on course to become the youngest winner in European Tour Qualifying School history after storming two shots clear at the top of the Final Stage leaderboard with 18 holes remaining of the marathon contest at PGA Catalunya Resort.

Paratore, the youngest man in the field this week at just 17 years, fired a superb 67 across the testing Stadium Course in Girona on Wednesday to surge into pole position on 17 under par after 90 holes with Finland’s Mikko Korhonen the closest of the chasing pack after an excellent 68.

Four-time European Tour winner Ricardo Gonzalez (70) lies a further two shots adrift heading into the final day alongside overnight leader, England’s Matt Ford (72) as the chase for a place in the top 25 and The Race to Dubai riches that will bring nears its denouement for another year.