Showing posts with label Seve Benson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seve Benson. Show all posts

2/02/2015

Heartbreak Ridge For McIlroy


Rory McIlroy, fresh from a weekend victory in Dubai, is suing Conor Ridge's Horizon Sports Management over the cut his firm was taking from his on and off course earnings.

On Tuesday the world number one is in Dublin to contest the case in court. 

The bitter row over £4.2million in fees has taken the pair all the way to the big business division of the Irish High Court.

The case centres on McIlroy's contract with Dublin-based Horizon and two other linked companies, the Malta-based Gurteen and Canovan Management, also based in the Irish capital.

The golf star, who took up the game as a youngster in Holywood, Co Down, and now has a home in Florida, claims the terms were inferior to those given to other top 10 players including fellow countryman and major winning friend Graeme McDowell, who was in the same stable.

In court papers when the case was launched in late 2013, it was claimed McIlroy signed up with Ridge's agency at an informal meeting on the day of Horizon's Christmas party in 2011.

The golfer, whose address at the time was given as Avenue Princess Grace in Monaco, alleged he was exploited, misled and taken advantage of when he joined the Dublin agency.

The court heard he had no legal advice or knowledge of negotiating before he signed up, and trusted them to charge the appropriate rates.

McIlroy's case will be heard before the president of the High Court, Judge Nicholas Kearns, unless the two sides attempt an 11th hour settlement.

The dispute involves McIlroy's claim that Horizon charged almost four times what top 10 golfers pay to agents.

The pre-tax rates were set at 5% of prize winnings and 20% of sponsorship and appearances money, a charge his lawyers claim is reserved for an "inexperienced or unproven golfer'', the court heard last year.

McIlroy's business interests are now overseen by Rory McIlroy Incorporated, which is headed by Donal Casey, formerly of Horizon, his father Gerry and family friend and business executive Barry Funston, who also oversees much of the golfer's charitable work under the Rory McIlroy Foundation.

Another dispute in the case is an alleged 166,000 euro (£141,000) donation to Unicef on the eve of a trip to Haiti when McIlroy was an ambassador for the charity.

There was another row over Horizon using complimentary airline seats on a flight to Abu Dhabi booked by tournament organisers in McIlroy's name.

The young golfer's career soared in the year after he signed for Ridge from Chubby Chandler's stable, earning more than £10m in 2012 before hitting a slump to earn about £2m in prizes.

He was with the company when he won the 2012 PGA Championship, rose to number one in the world and signed a five-year sponsorship deal with Nike, said to be worth in excess of £60m.

A dip in form followed and his engagement to tennis star Caroline Wozniacki ended, but the Northern Irishman has four majors to his name.

And if recent form on the course offers any insight into his demeanour in the face of a potentially ugly court case, McIlroy appeared focused when picking up his latest trophy.

Sunday's win at the Dubai Desert Classic is a repeat of his first as a professional back in 2009.

He is now favourite to complete the career grand slam of golf, aiming to have the commercial dispute over before vying for a famous green jacket at the US Masters in Augusta in April.

Unless both sides agree to last minute mediation - a plea for which already failed last December - the relations between arguably the world's most marketable sports star and a Dublin-based agent are set to play out in public over the next four to six weeks.

Ridge's Horizon is counter-suing McIlroy for at least £1.65m after breaking his contract early.



1/31/2015

RMAC on the Attack in Dubai

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Rory McIlroy’s peerless power and precision has put him in pole position at the Omega Dubai Desert Classic.

The Northern Irishman produced a superb bogey-free eight-under-par 64 to take a one-shot lead over Scotland’s Marc Warren at 14-under.

Graeme McDowell trails Rory by two strokes after firing a second round 65

McIlroy underlined his class by closing with three successive birdies but even so, he would have come off the course with the feeling he could have gone even lower on a track where he recorded his maiden professional victory in 2009.

That shows how far the 24-year-old’s expectations have risen in the six years since he lifted the title at the Emirates Golf Club, during which time he has won four majors with two of those coming in the last six months.

“It was good. I hit a couple of loose shots early on but found my rhythm and after that I played pretty well and converted most of my chances,” he told European Tour Radio.

“You can’t ask for much more: bogey-free, eight birdies. I’ve set myself up nicely for a good run at it in the next couple of days.

“I saw a stat yesterday that since the first round of The Open, I’ve played 45 rounds and a third of them were 66 or better, which just shows you the level that I am at.

“I’ve put the work in and I’ve worked hard; I continue to work hard and this is the result, which is nice.

“I am very comfortable and a lot of the parts of my game are in good shape but the conditions out there are absolutely perfect so I would expect the scoring to stay low for the weekend and I am going to have to carry on playing like this.

“It is the best place to be, one shot ahead, but you just got to go out and be aggressive and try to make as many birdies as you can.

“I’m going to need something similar over the weekend to stay in the same position, as there are so many people close to the lead, it is so bunched up, you can’t play defensively on this course.”

McIlroy’s power advantage was evident early on as he almost eagled the 351-yard second after driving the green but had to settle for one of three birdies in his first five holes.

That put him four off the lead but back-to-back birdies at the 10th and par-three 11th, where he hit a brilliant approach to three feet, got him moving again and he would have advanced quicker had a four-foot birdie attempt not lipped out at the next and not mis-read from inside 10 feet at the 13th and 14th.

But he continued to push hard and at both 16 and 17 he hit driver then wedge to eight and six feet respectively before holing an 18-footer at the 564-yard last having flown the water-guarded green with his approach.

McIlroy’s performance took the shine off Warren’s round of 65, which was possibly not as clean but included nine birdies – including five in six holes from the 13th, having started on the back nine.

The in-form Scot, runner up in Qatar last week, is now 30 under for his last five rounds and he told Sky Sports News: “It was very good from the fairways but scrappier than I would have wanted off the tees.

“(In) Abu Dhabi I drove the ball really well, I improved my iron play last week and I am giving myself lots of chances.”

England’s Seve Benson and Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell lead the chasing pack with 12 players within four shots of the lead.

Among them are Englishman Lee Westwood, who was bogey-free in carding 68, and Dane Morten Orum Madsen who had seven birdies and an eagle on the way to a best-of-the-week 63.

Darren Clarke was the only one to miss the cut after a second round 71.

Peter Lawrie made it into the money with a 69 on Friday which put just on the cut line and an invaluable weekend's golf.

Michale Hoey ended T49th after a 70

Damien McGrane carded a 71.

10/22/2013

Dunbar Plays Oman Challenge

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Alan Dunbar plays the penultimate tournament of the European Challenge Tour season in the maiden visit to Oman for the National Bank of Oman Golf Classic. 

Dunbar finished second at Stage 1 of European Tour Qualifying School at Wychwood Park last month and will head to Spain next month in search of playing rights for the European Tour next season.  In early September Alan claimed fourth place at the Open Blue Green Côtes d'Armor Bretagne

Appropriately enough, with just the top 45 players in the Rankings progressing to the season-ending Dubai Festival City Challenge Tour Grand Final hosted by Al Badia Golf Club next week, Oman will this week become the 45th country to have hosted a Challenge Tour event. 

With so much at stake it is little wonder that the tournament has attracted such a strong field, with second placed Brooks Koepka and 22nd ranked Seve Benson – both of whom are now plying their trade predominantly on The European Tour – the only players from the top 30 not teeing up at the superb Almouj Golf, The Wave.

Italian Andrea Pavan is still the man to catch at the top of the Rankings, but much of the attention in Muscat will focus on those players desperately bidding to secure their berths in next week’s finale. 

For the likes of Julien Guerrier, who climbed to 45th place on the back of his top ten finish in China last week, nerves will be frayed as the Frenchman strives to cling on to the last remaining ticket to the €330,000 showpiece in Dubai. 

Just €445 separates Guerrier from Englishman Daniel Brooks in 46th place and, with a prize fund of US$300,000 on offer to the 114-man field, there are likely to be several twists and turns throughout the week. 

One player who will arrive in Oman full of confidence is Nacho Elvira, who won last week’s Foshan Open to climb to 13th place in the Rankings. Another strong performance from the Spaniard this week would effectively seal his graduation to The European Tour alongside his close friend and former college room-mate Pavan. 

Elvira, who saw off India’s Shiva Kapur and the English duo of Tyrrell Hatton and Sam Walker in Foshan City last week, will bid to become the first player this season to secure back to back titles.

He said: “Before China my only thoughts were just to qualify for the Grand Final in Dubai, but after my win I’m obviously thinking of the top 15. There’s still a long way to go and a lot of prize money to play for, so a lot can happen but at least I’ve given myself a chance. 

“I’ve never won before so I don’t know how hard it is to play well the week after, but hopefully I can keep this feeling going for two more weeks and finish it off.” 

The 7,342-yard, par 72 championship course at Almouj Golf, The Wave, which was designed by Australian Major Champion Greg Norman, follows the natural lines of Muscat’s pristine coastline.


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