Showing posts with label Mikael Lundberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mikael Lundberg. Show all posts

8/22/2014

McGee in Czech Chase

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Ruaidhri McGee proved best of the Irish as he registered an opening two-under-par 70 to trail leader Jamie Donaldson by four shots at the Czech Masters.

The Rosapenna man opened with a bogey and carded a double bogey at the 14th at the Albatross Golf Resort. There were five birdies in between – at holes two, three, eight, nine and 12 – and McGee came home in 70 for a share of 22nd after the first round.

The Donegal golfer’s best finish on tour thus far is the tied 25th he recorded at the Lyoness Open in Austria in June. He was tied for 103rd in the Irish Open two weeks later and shared 98th in the Madeira Island Open in May.

Simon Thornton is alongside him on two under, while Kevin Phelan, Gareth Maybinand Peter Lawrie are level par, one ahead of Damien McGrane and four ahead of David Higgins. Automatic places Donaldson moved a step closer to making the European Ryder Cup team with a sparkling 66. The Welshman currently holds the eighth of nine automatic places for the team in Gleneagles due to his position on the world points list but a combined winning haul of just under €30,000 in Prague and in Italy next week would see him qualify via the European list.

And a six-under par round gave the 38-year-old a one-shot lead in a tournament which carries a €166,660 first prize. Donaldson may not have to secure the necessary money this week and next but qualification from the European list would be a relief with Graeme McDowell, Luke Donald, Ian Poulter and Stephen Gallacher also battling it out for the final place in the world standings.

McDowell, Donald and Poulter are all playing in the Barclays in New Jersey this week but Gallacher is also present in eastern Europe and fired a two-under par 70 playing alongside Donaldson.

Both men opened with a birdie but Donaldson dropped a shot on the third before further birdies at the fourth, eighth and ninth saw him reach the turn in 33.

Another shot was dropped on 11 but birdies at 12, 14, 17 and 18 saw him come home in the same score and secure a one-shot lead over Sweden’s Mikael Lundberg.

Gallacher had nine pars from two to 10 before a dropped shot on 11 had him level for the day. But two further birdies followed on 12 and 17 moved the Scot into red figures. There was a 10-way tie for third place which included Paul Waring, Kenneth Ferrie, Danny Willett, Lee Slattery, Soren Kjeldsen and Wales’ Bradley Dredge.

11/14/2013

Kevin David and Ruaidhri McGee

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Kevin Phelan remains the only Irish player - from the three remaining at PGA Catalunya - with a glimmer of hope ahead of the last day of European Tour Final Qualifying of sneaking one of the final 25 places. 

Phelan, who starred in the 2013 Walker Cup as well as the US Open Championship in June, where he briefly flirted with the top of the leaderboard before making the cut. A two under par fourth round proved insufficient to make that one stroke move from seven under and enter the mix. 

The Waterford golfer carded five birdies on Thursday but with three bogeys damaging any promise of a low score signing for 70 after his days work on the Stadium Course.

David Higgins finds himself in familiar territory in Girona playing the final round as a formality having finished two strokes over par and a share of 66th. A level par score for the week marks the distance with the pace of the event with sixty three players under par, and the top ten all -11.

Fortunately Higgins faces the loss of automatic playing privileges for a year but still holds access to 17 events in the 2014 season, from which he can no doubt yield some better dividend.

Ruadhri McGee saw his hopes fade in an earlier round and a score of 75 on the fifth day reflected the pressure of surrendering to Tour School at this level. All of which will prove a learning experience with much time on his side to make a comeback.

McGee suffered a final nine holes of the fifty seven variety on three consecutive holes - carding a birdie on the third, a double on the fourth and then a bogey on the fifth – to sign for for a 75 on +1 overall. 

In a share of 70th place the Rosapenna attached golfer trails the bottom of the leaderboard  having been up in the top then after round three.

Del Moral though increased his commanding four shot lead thanks to a seven under par fifth round of 67 and moved to 21 under par.

Another high powered round which included no less than eight birdies, thereby virtually securing his return to The European Tour and a fourth promotion via the Qualifying School in the last six years.

With the top 25 and ties at the conclusion of the final round earning European Tour status, the dreams of many were still hanging in the balance in Girona, north-east Spain.

The cut-off point for promotion sits at eight under par currently, with six former European Tour winners including James Morrison, Mikael Lundberg and Alastair Forsyth all inside the mark while former Ryder Cup player Oliver Wilson is just one shot outside the crucial number heading into the final round.

Once more, though, it was Del Moral who stole the show as he followed up a stunning fourth round 63 by again claiming the best round of the day over a Stadium Course which he has played three times this week, gaining 17 shots to par along the way.

The 28 year old has his girlfriend Karin Dedering on the bag this week and he believes that she has played a huge part in his success as he looks forward to a full season on The 2014 Race to Dubai.

“I have struggled a lot this year and so I decided that no one knows me better than my girlfriend and she’s a great golfer too, a scratch handicap, so she knows what she is doing,” said the Qualifying School specialist.

“She is very supportive and it has been very emotional for both of us, first of all playing for just a Challenge Tour category at Second Stage and then here for a European Tour card, so hopefully we can have an unforgettable finish tomorrow.

“She is a great putter and every time I have a doubt I ask her. She knows my game and my distances very well and she is doing great as a caddie. She gives me that emotional support too and if I have a bogey she might come and say, ‘you’re cute’, so it cheers me up. It’s really nice to have her out there.”

The Stadium Course itself is proving something of a second love for the romantic Valencia native and he is hoping for another stress-free day as he looks to become the first Spanish winner of Final Stage since 2006, when Carlos Rodiles topped the qualifiers.

“I’m not stressed at all on that course,” he said. “I'm playing every shot really calm and positive and I'm not making many mistakes out there.

“I feel like if I have any putts between five and ten metres I have a chance so I don’t need to go for pins and when you don’t have to go for pins it’s a lot easier. I have got a lot of trust in my putter and hopefully it will be the same tomorrow.”

Four shots back in second place is Chile’s Fabrizio Zanotti, who signed for a four under par 68 to move to 17 under par and also virtually guarantee a return to The European Tour, having finished 140th in The 2013 Race to Dubai.

“I’m in a good position but tomorrow I need to do more of what I have been doing these last few days,” said the 30 year old. “I need to hit it shot-by-shot and stay patient. It is going to be a long day again so you just have to do your best.

“It is a little tiring. We have already played five rounds and we’ve still got one to go, but I think the Q-School is a fair tournament. It is a very good way of deciding who is going to play on The European Tour.”

While 32 players currently sit inside the cut mark for a European Tour card on eight under par or better, there are likely to be twists and turns aplenty in what is always one of golf’s most dramatic finales.

The promising 21 year old Belgian and protégé of Nicolas Colsaerts, Thomas Pieters, is on course for a rookie season on The European Tour after a four under par 68 moved him to tied tenth on eleven under.
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7/23/2013

Higgins and Company in Russia

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David Higgins to action days after the Open Championship, an event he failed to qualify for the after he discovered he was carrying fifteen clubs in  his bag at the qualifier in North Berwick at the start of July.

Higgins is joined by Michael Hoey, Alan Dunbar, Damien McGrane, and Gareth Shaw in an event that sees  the European Tour this week return to Russia for the first time in five years with the M2M Russian Open at the stunning Tseleevo Golf and Polo Club.

After three successful years hosting the Challenge Tour, this Jack Nicklaus designed course hosts European Tour competition for the first time with all three previous winners in the field looking to rekindle that winning feeling.

Spain’s Carlos Del Moral (2010), England’s Sam Little (2011) and Frenchman Alex Kaleka (2012) have also tasted success here and looking for repeat performances, as is the current course record holder, Tommy Fleetwood, who shot a six under par 66 in the 2010 M2M Russian Challenge Cup.

Michael Campbell, the 2005 US Open Champion, is joined by a host of European Tour champions including India’s most successful golfer, Jeev Milkha Singh, former Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year and Portugal Masters Champion Tom Lewis and six-time Tour winner Simon Dyson.

It is also an opportunity for some of the lesser lights to shine and secure their place among the game’s elite for next season, much as Peter Uihlien did in Madeira and Simon Thornton in St Omer, and for Russia’s golfers to showcase their emerging talent.

The three Russian professionals in the field are former tennis grand slam champion Yevgeny Kafelnikov, Andrey Pavlov and Konstantin Lifanov and they are joined by five Russian amateurs.

Russia has provided the launchpad for a number of players over the years, including Jamie Donaldson, winner of the 2012 Irish Open and this year’s Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Champions, whose first professional victory came in the Challenge Tour in Russia in 2002.

The last time the M2M Russian Open was played on The European Tour, Sweden’s Mikael Lundberg claimed the title in 2008. This was three years after he won the event for the first time in 2005 and he will hoping to become the first player to win the title three times. Indeed, Lundberg was the last player to win the same European Tour event for their first two Tour titles.

Tseleevo Golf and Polo Club, a classic Jack Nicklaus Design, has been carved out of mature forestland which adds character to the shape of all the holes combined with natural looking water features which compliment this majestic course. It has received rave reviews from those players who have faced the challenge over the last three years as one of the finest courses on the schedule.


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