Showing posts with label South African Open. Show all posts
Showing posts with label South African Open. Show all posts

11/22/2013

Irish Start 2014 in South Africa

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Simon Thornton led the Irish contingent at the South African Open with a two under par 72 first round at Glendower Golf Club in Ekurhuleni with Gareth Maybin signing for a level par.

Peter Lawrie finished two strokes further adrift with Paul McGinley and Michael Hoey 75 for the day.

Damien McGrane dropped eight shots in all to end his first round of 2014 just five over par.

Justin Brink signed for a 79.

Matthew Nixon eagled his penultimate hole to open up a one-shot lead after day one with Marco Crespi, who has only had his European Tour card six days, looked as if he would get his time on the big stage off to the perfect start and topped the leaderboard after the opening round. Until Nixon’s late heroics displaced him and South African Jbe Kruger at the the summit.

Nixon started on the back nine and opened his round with three birdies en route to reaching the turn in 31 but dropped a shot on his 11th hole.

Two further birdies put him within one shot of the lead and his eagle on the 477-yard par-five eighth saw him leapfrog Crespi and Kruger and claim the overnight advantage.

Crespi finished third at the Qualifying School at PGA Golf Catalunya last week to secure his place on Tour for the 2014 season and on Thursday fired an opening 65.

Also starting on the back nine, Crespi fired four consecutive birdies from the 12th to the 15th to turn in 32 and picked up a further three shots on the back nine to sit seven under.

Kruger, meanwhile, also eagled the eighth and then birdied five of his last seven holes but there were a host of fellow home favourites in the chasing pack.

Two-time US Open winner Retief Goosen was leading the group on six under after seven birdies, including one on the last, and a single bogey saw him fire a 66 alongside Christiaan Basson

Former US Masters champion Charl Schwartzel was expected to be in contention as he attempts to win his home tournament for the first time but younger brother Atti was a surprise name on the leaderboard.

The 25-year-old is a regular on the Sunshine Tour and is looking to make an impact on the bigger stage after firing a 67 to sit at five under alongside his brother who has high hopes for a good week.

“It means a lot, I’d love to win the South African Open,” Schwartzel said after his round.

“I did my preparation and figured out the way I want to play the golf course and it worked today.

“I’ve always had really good results in the South African Open, come close a few times.

“I reckon it’s one of those where you have to keep at it and keep playing and it will come eventually.”

Denmark’s Morten Orum Madsen and Italian Andrea Pavan were also on five under, one shot clear of Simon Dyson.

The Englishman was playing his first tournament since disqualification from the BMW Masters after signing for an incorrect score and shot a four-under 68.

Dyson put aside concerns over an impending disciplinary hearing after being charged with a serious rules breach, for which the most severe punishment could be a ban, despite insisting his actions were an accidental mistake after television viewers spotted him touching the line of a putt.

However, his round was erratic with his opening nine holes including five birdies and two bogeys and, although he started the back nine with another dropped shot, he recovered with two more birdies to sit in a group with seven other players.


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11/20/2013

Glendower Sunshine for McGinley

European Tour
Paul McGinley knows what he likes when it comes to golf courses, and the South African Open championship tees off on Thursday on one of them.

“I think the course is one of the best I’ve ever played,” he said after playing in his pro-am round ahead of the tournament at Glendower Golf Club. “I’m blown away by how good it is. I think it’s fabulous. It’s a throw back to traditional golf courses, right in the centre of one of the major capital cities in the world.”

So impressed was he that he suggested that if the course were in the United States, the US Golf Association would find it good enough to host a tournament which traditionally played on the most fussily set up of all courses: “It’s very visual, really well bunkered and extremely well set up. We don’t get to play on many traditional courses anymore and I was delighted.

“I could see this as a real potential venue for a US Open if it was in America. It’s so reminiscent of the great courses in the United States, it would fit in very well,” McGinley said.

Sean Quinn, the design principal of Golf Data, who redesigned the greens in 2004, will be getting a congratulatory phone call from the Irishman after McGinley made a point of seeking out his telephone number.

“Whoever did the green redesigns did a wonderful job. They are very cleverly designed and they’re a nice speed too. It doesn’t look like there’s much slope, but there is and there are some very clever pin-placements too,” he said.

Glendower is hosting the SA Open for the fourth time, having been the venue for the world’s second oldest national open in 1989, 1992 and 1997, and boasts immaculate kikuyu fairways and a magnificent array of handsome trees.

There are 64 bunkers and water features on 11 of the 18 holes.

The rough has been allowed to grow to 100mm and greenkeeper Mike Burnard has narrowed the fairways to just 18 metres.

Burnard said he was delighted to get such positive feedback ahead of the tournament’s start on Thursday. “I’m thrilled. You never know how an old classic like this is going to compete against the top courses in the world, but I guess it’s like an old Mercedes-Benz, they just keep impressing,” Burnard said.

“There’s a big onus to hit the ball straight off the tees. It’s not the longest course, but there’s lots of water and there are right places to put the ball. You are going to have to set it up off the tee,” was McGinley’s assessment of how hopefuls are going to have to cope with the challenges posed by Glendower.

Gareth Maybin, Michael Hoey, Damien McGrane, Peter Lawrie and Simon Thornton join McGine this week and get their new season underway in South Africa.

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11/01/2013

South Africa Next for McGinley

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Paul McGinley travels to South Africa to compete in the 103rd South African Open Championship at Glendower Golf Club from November 21-24, hoping to find some of the same magic that sparked defending champion Henrik Stenson’s spectacular return to form.

South African golf fans will get the chance to see the popular Irishman in action when he lines up alongside the Swedish world number four in the first counting event on The 2014 European Tour International Schedule.

McGinley has enjoyed an illustrious career on The European Tour, including four victories and three victorious Ryder Cup performances. He will always be remembered for holing the winning putt at The Belfry in 2002, and he is now determined to add his name to the star-studded list of former champions of the world second oldest national Open, a championship co-sanctioned between the Sunshine Tour and The European Tour.

“There is certainly an impressive list of names already on the trophy and I would love nothing more than to add mine on there as well,” said McGinley.

McGinley first came out to South Africa in 1997 and returned for the South African Open in 1999, 2001 and 2004. The 46 year old Dubliner says he is relishing the opportunity to return to South Africa.

“I love playing in South Africa because the crowds are always supportive and cheerful – they just want to come out and watch great golf and support everyone. The weather is always great, too.

“It’s going to be huge year for me in 2014, but first I just want to see 2013 out among friends and fans and who knows, maybe a little South African magic will rub off on me too.”

McGinley is joined by Stenson, former SA Open champions James Kingston and Hennie Otto, Sunshine Tour winners Darren Fichardt, Jaco van Zyl and Dawie van der Walt, as well as world class players such as Ross Fisher, Edoardo Molinari and Scott Jamieson at the 103rd South African Open Championship.



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