Showing posts with label Scottish Open. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scottish Open. Show all posts

7/10/2015

Lowry and McDowell in Chase

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Shane Lowry was one of five players to set the early clubhouse target in the second round of the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open on Friday, with defending champion Justin Rose and Graeme McDowell as in the group. All three strokes of leader Daniel Brooks.

Lowry followed up on Thursday’s 66 replicating his impressive first round to leave him at eight under par overall. He is joined by Rose, Johan Carlsson, Grégory Havret and McDowell.

Lowry was quick out of the blocks with two birdies from his opening five holes, before three further birdies on the back nine were marred by a bogey on the 15th.

Carlsson was in the first group out at 6:30am and carded four birdies and one bogey to add a 67 to his opening 65 in damp conditions to finish eight under par.

However, Rose had also improved to eight under with nine holes to play thanks to a front nine of 31, the former US Open champion looking to become the first player to successfully defend the Scottish Open following his win at Royal Aberdeen 12 months ago.

Rose bogeyed the opening hole but two-putted the par-five second for birdie and then carded four more in the space of five holes from the fourth.

Playing partner Phil Mickelson, who won the 2013 Open a mile down the road at Muirfield, could only manage one birdie on the front nine to lie two under, one shot inside the projected cut after 77 players broke par on Thursday.

The best scoring of the day so far was coming from Chile’s Felipe Aguilar, who began the day in 140th place after struggling to an opening 73, but jumped up the leaderboard in style with birdies at the first and second before firing a hole-in-one on the third, holing from 170 yards with an eight iron.

The 40-year-old has a habit of brilliant bursts of scoring, winning his second European Tour title in Singapore last year with a final round of 62 at Laguna National, holing his second shot to the 18th to complete the back nine in just 28 shots.

And after carding what would prove to be his only par on the front nine today on the fourth, Aguilar followed it with three birdies and two bogeys for an eventful front nine of 30.

Aguilar could not repeat such fireworks on the back nine but did birdie the 14th to move to six under for the day and three under overall.

Rose found trouble off the tee on the 10th but produced a superb pitch from 55 yards to within inches of the hole to save par and remain tied for the lead, along with fellow English man Brooks, who had eagled the second.

In contrast, Mickelson bogeyed the 11th and 12th after finding sand off the tee on both occasions and, at level par, was facing an uphill battle to make the halfway cut.

Lowry had no such worries, the links specialist going to the turn in 33 and picking up another shot on the 11th to get within a shot of the lead on seven under.

Mickelson produced the ideal response with birdies on the 14th, 15th and 16th, the latter coming thanks a typically deft chip from the side of the green.

That took the five-time major winner to three under par and safely inside the cut line, while playing partner Rose remained eight under and appeared shaken by hitting an elderly spectator on the head with a wayward drive on the 16th.

MIchael Hoey fired a second round 65 to share 24th place ahead of the weekend.

Padraig Harrington was 34th after second round 68.

Damien McGrane and Paul McGinley missed the cut

7/09/2015

McDowell Finds Route 66

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Graeme McDowell enjoyed a welcome return to form on the opening day of the Scottish Open on Thursday.

McDowell’s sole top-10 finish on the European Tour this season came back in February and he missed the cut when bidding for a third successive French Open title last week, a second round of 78 being his worst score in 32 rounds at Le Golf National.

The 35-year-old admitted he needed to “clear his mind” of thoughts about technique and looked to have succeeded with an opening 66 at Gullane, which was marred only by bogeys at the last two holes.

“It’s always disappointing to finish with a couple of bogeys but I played some good stuff today,” said McDowell, who carded four birdies in succession in a front nine of 30 and also birdied the 16th before three-putting the 17th and 18th.

“I drove the ball well and the putter was quite spicy the first 11 or 12 holes before cooling down, but I would have taken 66 before going out and I will take it now.”

McDowell revealed he and coach Pete Cowen had found the solution to his poor form by looking at videos of his swing from 2010, the year he won the US Open at Pebble Beach and holed the winning putt in the Ryder Cup at Celtic Manor.

“I’m trying to get back to basics and we have narrowed my stance and used my body to swing the club how I used to,” McDowell added.

“And it was nice to get back on a course that gives you a few opportunities in benign conditions. I just need a few low numbers to get my belief and confidence back and today will go a long way towards that.”

McDowell was by no means the only player to take advantage of the 7,133-yard par-70 composite course, with American pair Rickie Fowler and Matt Kuchar also finishing four under.

Thorbjorn Olesen had set the clubhouse target on seven under after a flawless 63, with England’s Matthew Nixon, Spain’s Adrian Otaegui and American Ryder Cup player Jimmy Walker on five under.

In a week dominated by Rory McIlroy missing his British Open defence due to an ankle injury suffered playing football, Olesen could sympathise with the world number one after injuring himself getting off a camel in Dubai last year.

“When I had to get down I pulled a muscle in my groin and it took a few weeks before I could walk properly again,” Olesen admitted with a smile.

The 25-year-old also discovered a tendon problem in his left hand over the winter but battled on for four events – missing the cut in the last three – before undergoing surgery at the start of February.

“It’s been a tough time but I keep working on the right things and hopefully it will come,” said Olesen, who lost a play-off for the Mauritius Open in May in his first event back after three months on the sidelines. “I showed today I can still shoot low rounds.

“I hit almost every green – only missing the 18th – and hit a lot of fairways and greens today, which was the key.”

Two birdies in the final five holes helped Pádraig Harrington card a two-under 68

Damien McGrane was in the clubhouse after a round of 69

Michael Hoey signed for a level-par 72.

Paul McGinley got off to a disastrous start, finding himself on four over after two holes following a triple bogey on the opening hole and a bogey on the second to end Thursday on a six-over 76.


7/15/2014

Padraig Plans to Loosen Up

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Padraig Harrington admits he needs to loosen up as he looks to rediscover his winning touch at Hoylake this week.

Harrington has not tasted victory in a top-level international tournament since the golden 13-month period in 2007-08 when he won back-to-back Opens and the USPGA Championship.

The 42-year-old has shown some encouraging signs of late by finishing in a tie for 14th at his home Irish Open last month and shooting a final-round 67 at the Scottish Open on Sunday.

Now he hopes to build on that and get back into a winning frame of mind for the 143rd Open Championship at Royal Liverpool.

Harrington said: "It could be a little bit better - I am right in that mode of (when) things aren't happening for me and I'm trying too hard.

"I'd love to tell you that it's easy not to try too hard, but I am just a little bit too intense.

"Good results make it easier to be a bit more blase and when things aren't going so well there's far too much grinding, there's not enough freedom and ease in the round for sure.

"That's where I am at, I need to get my head around it.

"Getting to Hoylake, the temptation will be to try hard, I need to find the right attitude.

"It's very hard to be relaxed when things aren't going for you, but I am too defensive, just not letting it go.

"The temptation will be to try hard, I need to find the right attitude." 
Padriag Harrington

"I don't mean I have a bad attitude, but I need to be a bit less intense about it. Obviously I always have been that way, but I am just over-trying a little bit."

Based on memory, Harrington expects the test coming up on the Wirral to be a tough one.

Harrington missed the cut by six shots the last time the Open was played on the Merseyside links in dry, hard conditions in 2006, and watched in awe as Tiger Woods won by two strokes.

Harrington said: "I just remember I was so scared putting the club on the ground, it was slipping.

"You lose your footing, there was only dust on the fairways. The fairways were quicker than the greens.

"It was in phenomenal condition but even for an experienced links player like myself, I found it scary. I hadn't seen anything like that for a long long time.

"I was there a couple of weeks ago and it was very green but it will be a good test no matter what."

Woods will command plenty of attention this week as he returns to major action for the first time since back surgery in March. The 14-time major winner missed both the US Masters and the US Open during a three-month lay-off.

Harrington believes the venue for his comeback is apt, as the scene of his greatest triumph.

"Nobody could have played the golf Tiger played that week," he said. "That was the best golf Tiger Woods has ever played."


7/10/2014

Rory Strikes Record 64 in Aberdeen

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Rory McIlroy fired a course record 64 in the opening round of the Aberdeen Asset Management  to lead the  Scottish Open on Thursday,

Michael Hoey finished two strokes off the lead after a round of 66. 

Sweden's Kristoffer Broberg had established a new mark of 65 at Royal Aberdeen after going out in the first group at 6:30am, but that lasted a matter of two hours as McIlroy also made light of the windy conditions.

The former World Number One carded eight birdies and one just bogey, even driving the green on the downwind par four 13th - a distance of 436 yards.

"Everything was pretty much on," a delighted McIlroy said. "I controlled my ball flight really well which is the key to me playing well in these conditions and on these courses.

"I've been working the last ten days on keeping the ball down, hitting easy shots and taking spin off it and I went out there today and really trusted what I practiced."

McIlroy revealed he had also driven the 13th in Wednesday's pro-am, although it probably still came as a shock to the group ahead of Ian Poulter, Miguel Angel Jiménez and Jimmy Walker, who were still on the green.

"I'm driving the ball really well and I feel if I can get driver in my hand and have an advantage on the field I should do it," he added.

"Going out this morning in these conditions I thought anything in the 60s would be a good score so to shoot something better than that is pleasing."

The scoring overall was excellent given the wind was gusting up to 20mph, with Luke Donald and Scot Marc Warren shooting rounds of 67.

Defending champion Phil Mickelson also looked set to finish four under par, only to three-putt the 18th for his only bogey of the day.

Broberg won four times on the Challenge Tour in 2012, three of the victories coming in the space of four weeks.

"I played really, really well," he said. "I hit very good shots and a lot of close ones, so this helps a bit. And I kept away from those bunkers and stayed patient.

"I woke up at 4am and saw the wind out there. There was a little less wind to start, but it got more windy after eight holes so it's the same for everybody."

Kevin Phelan and Darren Clarke signed for rounds of 69.

Garethr Maybin and Padraig Harrington carded 71's with Simon Thornton finished Thirsday on 73.

Paul McGinleyended on 74 strokes.

Peter Lawrie was +8 after nine bogeys.





7/07/2014

McIlroy Joins Lefty Aberdeen Effect


Rory McIlroy believes Phil Mickelson’s back-to-back victories on links courses last July has encouraged many of the game’s leading players to enter this week’s Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open.

Twelve months ago, Mickelson followed his win at Royal Aberdeen by claiming a three-shot triumph in The Open Championship at Muirfield.

This week’s field on Scotland’s north-east coast is possibly the strongest in tournament history which may be testimony to what Mickelson achieved in 2013.

McIlroy, the world No 8, agrees that his decision to play in Scotland this week is largely because of what the 44-year-old left-handed American pulled off last year.

He told Sky Sports News: “I think it has influenced a lot of people and it definitely influenced me.

“I played with Phil the first two rounds at Muirfield last year and you could see his links game was very sharp.

“And Phil’s double has put it into many guys heads to do the same and for the Scottish Open to go back to a proper links is probably why the strength of this week’s field is great.”

As for this week’s lucrative event, the 25-year-old from Northern Ireland added: “I haven’t played the Scottish Open for a few years.

“Have heard some great things about the golf course and it’s good that the Scottish Open has gone back to a true links course.

“Not just because it is good for The Open Championship the following week (at Royal Liverpool). I think the likes of the Irish Open and Scottish Open should be on links courses because that’s what this part of the world is known for.”

Regarding his own current form, McIlroy says his game is in a fairly decent state.

“Just limiting the mistakes would be good. The win at Wentworth was probably the only week for some time that I didn’t have a bad stretch of holes," he said.

“If I can keep the bad runs of holes off my card, that’s all I need to do because the good golf is there. I’m playing good quality stuff.”


3/31/2014

Scottish Open for Clarke and Westwood

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Darren Clarke and Lee Westwood have confirmed they will join one of the strongest fields in the history of the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open at Royal Aberdeen Golf Club from July 10-13.

Two of the most decorated players in European golf, Clarke and Westwood are also close friends and have formed one of most formidable Ryder Cup partnerships of recent times, winning six points out of a possible eight when paired together in golf’s greatest team event.

Clarke, in particular, will be hoping his return to the Aberdeen Asset Management Scottish Open will conjure memories of one of the greatest moments of his career, when he claimed his first Major at The 2011 Open Championship a week after playing in Scotland’s national open.

Clarke, who finished runner up to Edoardo Molinari in 2010, is hoping that he can add a 15th title to his European Tour trophy haul on Scotland’s stunning North East coastline.

“It is no secret that I love links golf,” said the Northern Irishman. “So to have a new links course on The European Tour’s International Schedule is very exciting for me, and especially at an event with which I feel I have a real affinity.

“The Scottish golf fans are some of the most knowledgeable in the world so it is always a pleasure to return to this event and I hope that I can give them something to shout about.”

Last year, American Phil Mickelson became the latest player to benefit from the experience of the Scottish links in his quest for Open glory, defeating Branden Grace in a play-off to claim his first Scottish Open title before going on to earn his fifth Major title and first Claret Jug at Muirfield a week later.

Westwood, the former World Number One and the first winner of The Race to Dubai back in 2009, returns to this event - which he won in 1998 - for the first time in three years. The Englishman also has a proven track record in Scotland, having also captured the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship at the Home of Golf in 2003.

“I am really looking forward to returning to the Scottish Open,” said Westwood. “It is a course I have never played in competition so it is going to be a new challenge, and I have heard great things about it.

“I think it will also be the perfect place to prepare for The Open Championship and that is one of the reasons why I have made the decision to return this year.

“Of course, being a former winner of this event makes it extra special for me and hopefully I can feed off the positivity that brings and challenge for the title.”

Defending champion Mickelson, two-time Major winner Rory McIlroy and Jimmy Walker, three-time winner this year on the US PGA Tour, have all confirmed their attendance at what is one of the Tour’s most prestigious events, in which Aberdeen Asset Management and the Scottish Government are key partners.


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2/10/2014

Castle Stuart for McIlroy

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Rory McIlroy has confirmed that he will play in this season's Scottish Open for the first time in five years.

The two-time major champion hopes that competitive golf will be the perfect preparation for the following week's Open Championship at Hoylake.

Phil Mickelson defied history last year when he became the first player to win both the Scottish Open and the Open Championship in the same season.

The American edged out Branden Grace in a play-off at Castle Stuart last July before lifting the Claret Jug for the first time, and McIlroy hopes to emulate Mickelson as the Scottish Open is staged by Royal Aberdeen for the first time.

"It'll be my first time playing Royal Aberdeen," said McIlroy, who played in the Scottish Open at Loch Lomond in 2008 and 2009.

"I believe it's a great links with lots of golfing history. I'm really looking forward to the challenge it will present.

"To play some competitive golf on a links course will be great preparation for The Open Championship the following week.

"I can think of no better preparation for The Open, especially on a respected course like Royal Aberdeen. There will also be so many similarities I can bring to the following week's Open Championship."

Mickelson will defend his title at Royal Aberdeen, and McIlroy is delighted that sponsors Aberdeen Asset Management have again attracted a strong international field.

"The field is going to be very strong," he added. "Aberdeen Asset Management has done a great job in promoting the event and bringing some of the best players in the world there. And Phil will be back, of course, to defend his title.

"Phil winning the double last year made me realise that the Scottish Open is more than good preparation for The Open - he showed it was possible to win both weeks.

"The Scottish Open going back to a traditional links course was something that made a lot of sense.

"Yet you can play as much golf on links courses as you want, but until that's in a competitive environment you can never tell how ready your game will be.

"It really is so important, then, to get some competitive golf on a true, challenging links".



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10/11/2013

Two Mac's Get Irish Open Date

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The 2014 Irish Open has been given a date change which makes it easier for Rory McIlroy and fellow Major champion Graeme McDowell to tee it up in their home event next June.

The proposal to move the Irish event forward seven days on the schedule – to the week immediately after the US Open at Pinehurst – was passed at a meeting of Europe's Tournament Players Committee in Vilamoura, Portugal.

McIlroy has long stated his commitment to the Irish Open, but moving it to June 19-22 helps in his commitment to play in next year's Scottish Open a fortnight later on the classic links at Royal Aberdeen.

This switch also fulfils the desire of Munich's BMW International Open to move a week further away from the US Open. 

The run-up to next year's Open Championship at Hoylake now reads: The Irish Open, BMW International,French Open and Scottish Open.

The venue for next year's Irish showpiece, which now takes place in the same week as the British Amateur Championship at Royal Portrush, has yet to be finalised. However Carton House remains the favourite.

Ryder Cup captain Paul McGinley, a member of the 15-man Tournament Players Committee, welcomed European efforts to persuade their big-name players, the vast majority of whom are full members of America's PGA Tour, to make time for 'home tour' events. 

Ten of Europe's 12 Ryder Cup heroes at Medinah are US Tour regulars yet their support is critical, McGinley says, if the European circuit is to attract tournament sponsors and ride out the current recession

"What would the Irish Open be without Rory McIlroy?" the Dubliner asked. "It is a success every year because Rory plays and it was a success when Padraig Harrington played when he was the top Irish player." 

Still, McGinley is against putting a gun to heads. Instead, he suggested: "there'd be some kind of a negotiation which would lead to individuals committing to some other events on the European schedule.

Conceding that it was "tough" for the stars of world golf to find room in their schedule, McGinley went on: "I certainly wouldn't put pressure on the top guys to say you have to do this or come back and do that. That's not right. This is just a commitment to their home event and that's not a lot to ask. Rory's committed for the Irish Open, there's no issue about that and they all play Wentworth.


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