Showing posts with label McDowell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McDowell. Show all posts

10/14/2014

McDowell Defends at London Club

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Graeme McDowell goes into the Volvo World Match Play looking to defend his second title of 2014, although he will have to do so at a different venue to where he won last year’s tournament.

The Thracian Cliffs Golf and Beach Resort in Bulgaria hosted the Volvo World Match Play when the Northern Irishman was victorious in May 2013.

Now the famous competition, enjoying its 50th anniversary, has returned to its spiritual home of south-east England with The London Golf Club in Kent staging the event.

In July McDowell, who won three points out of three as Europe retained The Ryder Cup last month, defended the Alstom Open de France crown.

While that was at Le Golf National both years, he will face quite different conditions to Bulgaria this week as he goes in search of back-to-back Volvo World Match Play successes.

“I’m happy to be back in London where this tournament belongs,” said McDowell, who has not competed since The Ryder Cup.

“I’m excited about my defence. It’s nice to not have to switch gears from my couple weeks off from my match play frame of mind.

“I was able to keep the match play sort of switch flicked the last couple weeks, and look forward to coming into this week and continuing hopefully where I left off at Gleneagles and win a couple matches and get myself into the nitty gritty over the weekend.”

McDowell will open his defence on Wednesday against in-form Frenchman Alexander Levy, the winner of last week’s weather-affected Portugal Masters.

The 35 year old McDowell plays mainly in the United States, but still sits 14th in The Race to Dubai while occupying 18th in The Official World Golf Rankings.

“I guess I haven't played a lot of golf since the FedEx really. I kind of hung my hat on my preparation for The Ryder Cup and ended up giving Wales a miss,” he continued.

“Thankfully it worked out. I felt fresh and ready for The Ryder Cup and performed reasonably well.

“I’m coming here feeling appreciated and actually excited to play golf this week, which is cool. 

“I'll play both events in China and then obviously The Race to Dubai. So the goals are to try and get as far as I can this week and try and put some money on the board, and then go to China, obviously trying to chase my way into the top - I say the top five (in the) Race to Dubai.”

McDowell is the top seed in the Gustaf Larson Group, whilst the leading lights in the Arnold Palmer, Mark McCormack and Assar Gabrielsson groups are his Ryder Cup team-mates Henrik Stenson, Jamie Donaldson and Victor Dubuisson respectively. 

But for Thomas Bjørn withdrawing due to a neck injury, McDowell would have been one of five recent Ryder Cup winners in action this week.

United States’ Patrick Reed involvement means there are six competitors from Gleneagles overall.

“We were potentially going to have seven Ryder Cup players this week. Obviously Thomas has pulled out so we have six, with a little bit of a glimmer of an exciting invitation with Patrick Reed being here. I think it has the right dynamic of a strong field,” McDowell added.

“Yes, we are missing a few headliners like the Rorys and the Westwoods and whatever, the top, top real echelon of the game. But it's a very solid field, let's be honest and like you say, put a show on, hopefully the sun shines and we get a good crowd and quality lineup Saturday and Sunday to showcase.

“When you look at the trophy and the names on it, this tournament deserves a great spot in the calendar. It deserves a quality venue like this one this week. It's a phenomenal purse. Volvo have done a phenomenal job for this tournament and like you say, leaving a title sponsor, we don't want to be losing this event.

“This event needs to be reinstated to its former glory and we'll do everything we can to support that.”


8/09/2014

GMAC Plans Moving Day

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Graeme McDowell is confident he will make a fourth consecutive Ryder Cup appearance one way or the other at Gleneagles next month.

A run of three top-10-finishes after a successful title defence at the French Open lifted McDowell into the automatic qualifying places at the start of the US PGA Championship.

But with less than three points separating McDowell, Jamie Donaldson and Luke Donald in eighth, ninth and 10th in the standings respectively, the former US Open champion could still need to rely on a wild card from European captain Paul McGinley.

“I want to be in the automatic spots if I possibly can,” said McDowell, who has just one qualifying event left on his schedule, the first FedEx Cup event in a fortnight’s time.

“I will be going out there tomorrow all guns blazing and trying to shoot a low number to finish the week. Ryder Cup is very, very important to me.

“I’m not uncomfortable. I’m optimisitic about the way I’m playing, I’m optimisitc about my chances of finishing in the automatic spots and I’d be farily optimistic of the chances of a pick. I am not really too worried about it.

“My form the last couple of months has certainly shown the captain that I’m playing well. I will take a week off then get ready for the play-offs, keep some energy in the tank.

“I think I am pretty much guaranteed (to qualify for) the first three play-offs, but we are having our baby the second week so I will spend that week at home and experience that next chapter in my life.”

McDowell, who secured the winning point at Celtic Manor in 2010, was in the first group out in the third round at Valhalla and finished play before tournament officials were ready to record his score and that of playing partner Brendon Todd.

In McDowell’s case it was a level-par 71 which featured four birdies but a quadruple-bogey eight on the 13th, where he hit two approach shots into water surrounding the green.

“I played beautifully this morning, it’s so disappointing to make an elementary quadruple bogey, a card-wrecker, tournament-wrecker, weekend-wrecker, all of the above really,” McDowell added. “I think there might have been mud on the first ball but my second attempt was a bad shot.

“This was not really a course I was going to be able to compete on. I’m 71st in driving distance this week out of the 74 players who made the cut. The damage was done Thursday, I didn’t really feel myself. My lower back was in bad shape on Friday and this morning was the only day I felt ready for it.

“It’s a slog out there when you are only moving it 280 (yards) off the tee. You say ‘only’ 280 but it really is in this day and age when Jason Day is flying it 320, Rory is flying it 330. I am four shots behind these guys before I tee it up each day so I have to play very well elsewhere which I just haven’t done.

“I’m literally wearing the grooves off my 5-wood, 3-hybrid and my four and five irons.”


11/03/2013

No Turkey for Happy GMAC

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"Proud of the way I played this week," said McDowell, who finished solo third, four shots behind Johnson. 

"A little bit of work needed on the flatstick. I can put better than I putted this week for sure."

Still, it was McDowell's first top-10 on the PGA TOUR since his win in April at the RBC Heritage. He had only three bogeys all week at Sheshan, but was left in awe of Johnson, who played with McDowell in the final group Sunday.

"He trenches one 350 down the middle and has the hands to hit that 70 yard shot to the front pin and make the putt," McDowell said. "He's just a quality, talented, very athletic classy player.

"Yeah, he makes mistakes, but when you've got a game as good as him, you can get away with a few mistakes. He drove it phenomenal. He's just got a great wedge game to go with just an outrageously good driving game."

McDowell wasn't hitting it 350 yards and straight like Johnson was all week, but his iron game was just as good. He was second to Johnson this week in greens hit despite giving up all those yards off the tee.

"Generally just very proud of myself the way I played this week tee to green, especially," McDowell said. "On the greens, room for improvement. But I didn't make a bogey all weekend."

McDowell is second to Henrik Stenson in the Race to Dubai standings with two weeks remaining, but the Northern Irishman is skipping next week's Turkish Airlines Open.

"As long as Henrik doesn't do anything too unsensible next week in Turkey, I'll have a good shot going into Dubai," McDowell said.


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10/15/2013

Horizon Good for GMAC

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Graeme McDowell's career continues to flourish under the direction of the Dublin sports agency as new accounts for Boyport Services Ltd shows the firm enjoyed its most successful year to date in 2012. with profits of £2.643m (€3.1m).

The figures show accumulated profits increased from £3.539m to £6.182m in the 12 months to the end of December last. The cash balance at G-Mac's firm has more than doubled to £3.79m.

McDowell's career is steered by Conor Ridge's Horizon Sports Management agency.

The world No.11 will now head to Asia wher he is due to play at the BMW Masters presented by SRE and the WGC HSBC Champions, both in Shanghai. This will lead up to the World Cup in Melbourne where he will represent Ireland.

McDowell, who professed his love for Victoria's Sandbelt courses last year after playing the Australian Masters at Kingston Heath, will likely team with Shane Lowry for the $8 million purse at Royal Melbourne from November 21st - 24th.

Rory McIlroy's contract to play the Australian Open in Sydney the following week precludes him from playing outside New South Wales this year, so he was unavailable.

The decision effectively confirms McDowell will play for Ireland and not Great Britain at the 2016 Rio Olympics when golf makes its first appearance at the Games since 1904. 

Emerging golf power Thailand has also confirmed its top pair will be in Melbourne with the popular Thongchai Jaidee joined by Kiradech Aphibarnrat.

Italian prodigy Matteo Manassero has already confirmed his return to Melbourne to play alongside Francesco Molinari

Jason Day and Adam Scott will lead Australia's charge in the tournament's first time back at Royal Melbourne since 1972.

Bill Haas the 2011 FedEx Cup champion, will partner world No.8 Matt Kuchar as the prime rival to Australia’s dream pairing of Adam Scott and Jason Day.

Haas, ranked 29, was a key member in  the recent last week’s Presidents Cup victory for the Americans, as he was at Royal Melbourne two years ago where he found the hard, bouncy style to his liking.

Another player with history on the Sandbelt, Denmark’s Thomas Bjorn 46) will pair with the in-form Thorbjorn Olesen as another threat.

Other key rivals on paper include Sweden’s Jonas Blixt and Peter Hanson.

England’s top tier will not travel, but David Lynn and Chris Wood will still make a formidable combination, while Presidents Cup pair Branden Grace and Richard Sterne will fly the South African flag.

Scotland’s Martin Laird and Stephen Gallacher will fancy their chances.

The 60-man field will compete for $7 million, the richest individual prize in Australia golf history.

Nicolas Colsaerts, Fijian Vijay Singh and Zimbabwe’s Presidents Cup revelation Brendan de Jonge have also all confirmed.

Other featured world top 100 players who will have lesser-ranked team-mates include Dutchman Joost Luiten, Spanish favourite Miguel Angel Jimenez, Welshman Jamie Donaldson and German Marcel Siem.

Japan’s Ryo Ishikawa and Korean pair K.J.Choi and Sang-Moon Bae, while are also entered.

The teams event, first played in 1953 as the Canada Cup, carries an additional $1million in prize money.

The field represents 34 countries, 74 US PGA Tour victories, 31 European Tour champions, 11 players who have played in the Presidents Cup and seven players with Ryder Cup experience.


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8/12/2013

McDowell Delights in PGA Finish


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Graeme McDowell was delighted to post a final round of 66 in the US PGA Championship to give him some momentum heading into the final stretch of the season.

The Majors may be over for 2013, but McDowell has some important tournaments approaching, with the US PGA Tour reaching its climax in the next two months, followed by the Final Series on The European Tour, where he will hope to win The Race to Dubai.

Currently second in money list behind Swede Henrik Stenson, having won the Volvo World Match Play Championship and the Alstom Open de France, McDowell was happy to finish on a high note at Oak Hill Country Club.

“It's been a frustrating few months, but that was a little glimmer of light, something to take away,” said the Northern Irishman, who won the 2010 US Open. “It was nice to get some momentum out there. To make eight birdies was very pleasing.

“The putter has been cold for the last few months. It’s been a disappointing few months even with the French Open win in there.  There has been some very average ball striking and very average technique. I feel like I kind of got it back on track a little this week.

“It's very difficult to have your game exacted for these Major weeks. It's hard to peak, it's hard to be ready. I missed the cut at the Masters and I win the week after. I missed the cut at the US Open and won a couple of weeks after at the French Open. 

“It's a hard game. It's hard to get it right on the day.  The Major Championships are the toughest tests in golf, as we know.  They stress you, they frustrate you.  That's why great players win Majors, because they are hard to win.”

McDowell will also marry his girlfriend Kristin Snape in the autumn, and added: “It’s a big thing in a man’s life and I’m very much looking forward to it. The first time I’ll tee it up as a married man will be in the BMW Masters in Shanghai.”

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8/05/2013

GMAC July Player of the Month

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Graeme McDowell has been named The Race to Dubai European Tour Golfer of the Month for July after becoming the second multiple winner on The 2013 European Tour International Schedule with his triumph in the Alstom Open de France.

McDowell, who receives an engraved alms dish and a Jeroboam of Moët & Chandon champagne, claimed a four shot victory at Le Golf National – venue for The 2018 Ryder Cup – on the outskirts of Paris in Continental Europe’s oldest National Open Championship to follow his victory in the Volvo World Match Play Championship in May.

The 2010 US Open Champion, who is currently second behind Justin Rose, the 2013 US Open champion, in The 2013 Race to Dubai, became the first Northern Irishman to win the Alstom Open de France – first played in 1906 – and claimed his third success of a momentous season following another win on the US PGA Tour.

McDowell, who celebrated his 34th birthday on Tuesday, said: “It’s nice to have another reason to celebrate, in addition to my birthday, this week. It was obviously a great win at the French Open. It’s a golf course I’ve always felt I can do well on.

“It was a special win at a prestigious venue. I’m delighted it has been recognised with this award. It’s always nice when it’s recognised that you’re playing well, especially against such a high quality field with some top, top players and in Major season too.”

The Race to Dubai European Tour Golfer of the Month Panel, comprising members of the Association of Golf Writers as well as commentators from television and radio, also considered the winning performances of another Northern Irishman, Michael Hoey, in the M2M Russian Open and Sweden’s Jonas Blixt on the US PGA Tour, in addition to Sweden’s Henrik Stenson’s back-to-back performances in the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open and The 142nd Open Championship.

Stenson included brilliant rounds of 64 and 66 at Castle Stuart Golf Links to finish tied third behind Phil Mickelson, then seven days later demonstrated his brilliance again on the links by taking the runners-up berth behind Mickelson at Muirfield to move to fourth in The 2013 Race to Dubai and re-enter the Official World Golf Ranking top 20.

Derek Lawrenson, Golf Correspondent of The Daily Mail, said: “Henrik Stenson’s rise from the depths of the middle 200s in the Official World Ranking is a heart-warming example of the old adage about class being permanent.

"Nevertheless the Open de France is one of the most historic and best tournaments on The European Tour, played on a top-class course that was presented in perfect shape, and to come out on top Graeme McDowell demonstrated not only great craft and skill but all the combative qualities that make him such a wonderful competitor. He is a most worthy European Tour Golfer of the Month.”

McDowell will now be considered – along with previous winners Chris Wood (January), Darren Fichardt (February), Marcel Siem (March), Raphaël Jacquelin (April), Matteo Manassero (May) and Justin Rose (June) – for The 2013 Race to Dubai European Tour Golfer of the Year Award, and all will be seeking to follow in the footsteps of last year’s winner, Rory McIlroy.


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7/19/2013

Tiger for Muirfield Major - McDowell

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Graeme McDowell believes Tiger Woods is in the form to end his five-year major drought at the Open Championship this weekend.

The Northern Irishman played the opening two rounds at Muirfield with the world No 1, who combined superb putting with "devastating" iron play in rounds of 69 and 71 which left him well in contention on two under.

McDowell matched Woods' second-day 71 to remain comfortably inside the cut mark on four over, and he admitted his playing partner could be tough to beat come Sunday evening.

"He was very, very impressive the last two days. He will not be far away this weekend the way he's playing," said McDowell.

"He just hits the shot that you're supposed to hit at all times. Really, it's like, 'do I have to follow that?' He's so impressive. It's very difficult to focus on your own game when you're watching the best player maybe ever over the last two days.

"I lost count of how many comebacks he made for pars. He's putting them exceptionally well. He's playing the golf course very conservatively, using his iron play to devastating effect - very impressive.
Great putting

"Combine that with some great putting, he's going to be dangerous. He certainly looks like he's very close to being back. So there will be no surprise to me if he's picking up the Claret Jug on Sunday night."

McDowell birdied the second and ninth in a battling outward 34, and although he flirted with the cut line after dropping three shots in five holes after the turn, he refused to rule out his own chances of Open glory.

"But I'm not writing off the rest of the field. There's quality players there in this field, and I'm certainly not writing myself off.

"The big key for me on Saturday is to get out there and get focused on my own game, try to shoot four or five under par and - who knows - I might have a shot come Sunday afternoon."


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