Showing posts with label Sunshine_Tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sunshine_Tour. Show all posts

3/14/2015

Captain Clarke Fires Tshwane 67

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Darren Clarke had both good and back luck in equal measure, during his second round at Pretoria Country Club of the Tshwane Open.

The 46 year old Ulsterman has not had a top ten on The European Tour since lifting the Claret Jug at the 2011 Open Championship, some 190 weeks ago, and he started the second day at Pretoria Country Club eight shots behind the lead of Morten Ørum Madsen, looking to right that wrong in his fifth start of the 2015 campaign.

Back-to-back birdie threes at the opening two holes were a fine way to gain ground on those atop the leaderboard, before Clarke followed that up with six straight pars. Cue the ninth hole, where his approach to the par five narrowly missed the green, but what happened next needs to be seen to be believed.

Having played two holes without the use of his putter - after he also chipped in on the tenth - Clarke was five under par through ten holes and had jumped 65 places on the leaderboard into the top 15. However, his short game domination did not last, and while facing a tricky lie to the left of the green on the 13th hole, Clarke hit what the commentators rather generously described as "a snap slice".

As a result, the 46 year old walked off the hole with a double bogey six and an apology to his playing partner Andy Sullivan, who got a closer view of Clarke's chip than he expected as it whizzed past the head of the two-time 2015 European Tour winner.

Regardless of their near miss, however, the pair seemed to thoroughly enjoy each other's company all day, sharing a laugh on more than a couple of occasions. 

As for Clarke's round, it did not take the 14-time European Tour winner too long to get over his miscue, and having stuck a long iron approach to within a few feet of the hole at the testing par four 12th hole, he did the same again on the 14th to set up a tap in birdie two.

Following a short weather delay, Clarke and his playing partners Sullivan and Trevor Fisher Jnr returned to the course to finish the final four holes. Sadly for Clarke, the break seemingly interrupted the momentum he had built beforehand, eventually seeing him double bogey the final hole and card a three under par round, to sit two under par after 36 holes and in a tie for 34th.

The 67 was Clarke's lowest round in more than six months, however, and did show signs of the work he has been putting in on the range, as well as on the practice green, recently. Whether or not this ends up being the week that Clarke posts his 121st European Tour top ten remains to be seen, but he will no doubt continue to entertain the crowds here in Pretoria, and will be sure to do so with that trademark smile on his face.



3/02/2015

Phelan on Fast Track in Joburg

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Kevin Phelan went within two strokes of his first victory as a professional and, one third of a world ranking point away from winning a coveted ticket to July's Open Championship at St Andrews.

At least the rising Waterford star clinched his place in this week's Africa Open in East London with the sparkling final-round 66 on Royal Johannesburg's East Course, ensuring his best finish in 18 months as a pro in a five-way tie for second on 15-under at the Joburg Open, two behind Andy Sullivan.

The top three not already exempt for The Open qualified for St Andrews but in the event of a tie, the positions go to the highest world-ranked players. In this instance, English duo David Howell (WR 158) and Anthony Wall (WR 312), the latter was .2729 of a point ahead of Phelan (WR 511) in last Monday's rankings.

Still, the €80,600 cheque Phelan banked yesterday, when added to the €11,250 he won in December's Alfred Dunhill Championship, eased the 24-year-old inside the top-50 in the Race to Dubai.

He's played just three events since losing his European Tour card last year, a share of third at October's Hong Kong Open being his best result since turning pro after the 2013 Walker Cup. Phelan finished 129th on the 2014 Order of Merit then missed out on his card in 65th at Q-School.

So the opportunity to play again this week is a massive boost for the rock-solid Irishman, giving him a chance to build on momentum gained.

"I was just plodding along the first three days and played some nice golf and didn't hole many putts," Phelan said. "But I got the putts to drop on the front nine today and am delighted with how I played."

A closing 66 landed Englisman Sullivan (28) his second win this year in Johannesburg after his maiden success in January's South African Open. South Africans Wallie Coetsee and Jaco Van Zyl also tied second.




2/11/2015

Sunshine for Clarke at Dimension Data

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Darren Clarke has put his name down for the upcoming Dimension Data Pro-Am, where the Ulsterman will compete against the Sunshine Tour’s best.

Clarke won the 2001 Di-Data Pro-Am when it was still played at Sun City. Now, 13 years later, the R4,5-million tournament plays out across Fancourt’s three courses, namely The Links, Montagu and Outeniqua. There is a cut after 54 holes and then the final round is played at Montagu.

The Northern Irishman has long been a fan of South Africa and he’ll look to reignite his career at Fancourt in a week’s time. He’s claimed 14 European Tour victories and two World Golf Championship titles, but most impressive was his victory at Royal St. George’s in 2011.

“Winning again a priority for this year,” the 46-year-old said. “It’s been nearly four years since I lifted the Claret Jug and I just want to get back in the winner’s circle again.”

Clarke has been eyeing the chance to captain Europe at the Ryder Cup, but there is a strong sentiment among the players that their leader should be a current player on tour. He’ll want a victory in order to secure that leader’s spot at the Ryder Cup, which he has competed at five times.

The place for him to get back on track is South Africa, which he has frequented since 1991. At the 2001 Di-Data Pro-Am Clarke shot 71 during the final round at Gary Player Country Club and edged out a flying Tjaart van der Walt, who raced around in 66 to finish second.

For Clarke it’s about getting back to his best with a victory, but the locals will not go down without a fight. Either way the 2011 Open Champion is happy to be back.

“South Africa has always been a favourite stop and the country is very special. The crowds are amazing and very supportive,” he said.

1/09/2015

Maybin Makes Glendower Cut

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Peter Lawrie carded a second round 76 at the South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Ehurhuleni ending the first two days golf on the wrong side of the cut.

Gareth Maybin fared better at Glendower Golf Club after rounds of 71 and 73 left the Ballyclare man level par - and three strokes inside the projected cut-line. Now guaranteed a weekend pay cheque in his first outing of the new season

Andy Sullivan remained on course for a maiden European Tour title at the halfway stage of The South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Ekurhuleni, but a local Major Champion is among his nearest challengers.

Sullivan added a 70 to his opening 66 at Glendower Golf Club to reach eight under par, one shot ahead of former Masters Tournament winner Charl Schwartzel.

However, four-time Major winner Ernie Els surprisingly dropped off the pace with second round 77.

Tournament host Els, who has won the event five times, was just one shot behind Sullivan after an opening 67 but dropped down the leaderboard with a round which featured back-to-back triple bogeys around the turn.

Schwartzel, who has yet to win his national Open, finished birdie, eagle, birdie to record a 69 while Sullivan - who won a trip into space for a hole-in-one during the KLM Open last year - carded four birdies and two bogeys in pursuit of his first European Tour title.

The 27 year old former Walker Cup star, who recorded four top-five results on his way to finishing 33rd on The Race to Dubai last season, said: "I thought it was going to be a really good knock on the front nine, but a few little errant drives meant the rough got its payback on me today.

"But anything in red figures (under par) is good so I am really happy with the position I am in. I thought I did well on eight to make birdie after a couple of smelly holes in the middle."

As for his prospects of a first win, Sullivan added: "When I get in these positions I find myself enjoying it more. It's where you want to be, you practise to be in these situations and I am playing with the guys I always wanted to as a kid. It's fantastic.

"It's new territory to be up there after two rounds but hopefully I can take what I usually do in rounds three and four and blow the field away."

Schwartzel was considering pulling out of the event after fracturing a toe by walking into a piece of furniture, but he recovered from bogeys on his first two holes and insisted he was relishing the tough challenge posed by Glendower's thick rough and narrow fairways.

"Any national Open should be the most difficult tournament and this week really is a good challenge," the 2011 Masters champion said. 

"The only reason I have not pulled out is that I can actually hit the ball without pain. For some reason I can turn onto the foot but the walking is a challenge.

"I was struggling for a whole bunch of last year but started working with my dad again to recreate the feelings I had and get the old basics back. It's starting to get more comfortable and I'm at least hitting shots that I'm seeing.

"I got off to a really iffy start this morning, missed a few short putts and the conditions got difficult, but I just figured if I could somehow get to level par and try again tomorrow, and I was pretty much on track until a nice finish at the end."

Els had made a good start to his second round with a birdie on the second, but he bogeyed the next two holes. After a birdie on the sixth, the 45 year old dropped another shot on the eighth and then found water with his second shot to the ninth to run up a triple-bogey seven and reach the turn in 40.

It went from bad to worse for Els when he also took seven on the tenth, where he failed to escape a fairway bunker at the first attempt and then three-putted from long range. That left him two over par and battling to avoid a first ever missed cut in the event, but birdies at the 13th and 14th ensured he would be around for the weekend.

Compatriots Colin Nel and JJ Senekal fared considerably better with rounds of 70 and 67 respectively to share third place with Denmark's Lasse Jensen on six under.
 


3/02/2014

Irish Open Champ wins Tshwane

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Michael Hoey signed for a final round 68 on Sunday at Centurion to finish with a share of second place at the Tshwane Open in South Africa. An early eagle on the par five fourth helped Joey moved to within touching distance, along with a birdie from 30 feet at the 11th.

However a double bogey at the twelfth then undid that strong rally.

In the end Ross Fisher won the Tshwane Open at Centurion by three shots after a two-under-par final round 70.

Fisher started the day with a five-shot lead and although that was whittled away to just one after 11 holes. But he held his nerve to win by three from Hoey and South African Danie Van Tonder.

Fisher, whose last European Tour victory came at the 2010 Irish Open, sealed the win with an eagle three on 15 after Hoey had got to within a shot just after the turn.

It gave him a four-shot cushion at Copperleaf, the longest European circuit layout.

The 33-year-old Fisher had not won on the European Tour since the 2010 Irish Open in Killarney and, after tumbling out of the world's top 50 during his title drought, has now thrust himself into contention for the Ryder Cup at Gleneagles later this year.

Hoey moved to within touching distance with a birdie from 30 feet at the 11th, but a double bogey at the next stalled his progress.

Fisher's work was not done, however, as Van Tonder and Del Moral then made their moves and set up a potentially nervous finale, after the Englishman had dominated for the entire weekend at the 7,964-yard, Ernie Els-designed course.
Whittled down

As he stepped up to the 15th tee, Fisher's lead had been whittled down to two strokes by both Van Tonder and Del Moral.

Fisher had picked up just a single stroke for the round up until that point, but saved his best for when it counted as he reached the 15th green in two before holing a 30-foot eagle putt.

Careful pars at 16 and 17 ensured Fisher was able to walk up the 18th with victory assured and, while he finished with a bogey, a long-overdue win was secured for a player who has been as high as 17th in the world.

Victory leaves Fisher sitting 16th in the Ryder Cup standings and is set to lift him up to 52nd in the world rankings.

"I'm thrilled to get over the line," Fisher said. "It was a testing day with the weather conditions and playing with Mike he put up a great challenge for me.

"I set a target of trying to go out there and shoot in the 60s and almost managed to do it. I had a little mishap on the last but I'm just glad to be standing here talking to you as champion."

Fisher admitted his eagle on the 15th had helped to settle any potential nerves.

"It's been pretty good to me this week (the 15th hole)," he added. "There have been a couple of eagles, but that was a big putt there.
Coast in

"I know I was only a couple ahead. To hit a nice shot there and have a good look at three and to see it drop - I think I went four shots clear with only three to play I knew I could coast in.

"There was a little wobble on a few of those holes and I managed to make a couple of good par-saves of 16 and 17.

"It would have been nice to shoot 69 but unfortunately I missed one on the last. I'm not going to complain."

His long putt on 15 typified a good week with the shortest stick and, after struggling on the greens in the past - Fisher welcomed the change.

"That's been an Achilles for many, many years," he said. "For some reason this week I saw the lines in the greens and felt really comfortable on the greens all week.

I'd love to know how much footage I holed this week because it was quite a lot."

Kevin Phelan, the European Tour Rookie, finished T6 and collects a cheque for€44,750 for his efforts this week with a final round of 70.



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2/26/2014

Five Irish Contest Tshwane Open

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Shane Lowry, Damien McGrane, Gareth Maybin, Peter Lawrie and Kevin Phelan are in action this week in South Africa and join Jaco Van Zyl, who hopes to continue the excellent record of South African players on home soil at the Tshwane Open.

Home players have won nine of the last 11 European Tour events in South Africa, but Van Zyl is still awaiting his breakthrough after runner-up finishes at the Africa Open and Trophée Hassan II. 

"As South Africans we always feel a bit more pressure playing European Tour events at home, but we've always done well in these events," said Van Zyl, who has made every cut this season and finished tied for fifth in East London two weeks ago.

"We're very competitive and we like marking our territory and won't give it up that easily. It would be nice if it's my turn this week."

Dawie van der Walt admits he faces a journey into the unknown as he looks to defend his title this week.

Van der Walt won his maiden European Tour title in the inaugural Tshwane Open 12 months ago and also triumphed at the Nelson Mandela Championship in December, but does not know how he will respond to the pressure of being defending champion.

"This is the first time I am defending so I don't really know what it's like," Van der Walt told the European Tour podcast. "We will see how I deal with the pressure of defending.

"I am not putting too much pressure on myself, my goal for this week is just to have a chance going into the last day to defend the title, not be too far back.

"If I can defend it, great; if I don't I'm not going to let it affect me too much."

Van der Walt won by two shots from compatriot Darren Fichardt last year on the Ernie Els-designed Copperleaf Golf & Country Estate at Centurion, which at 7,964 yards is the longest course in European Tour history.

It is also the first European Tour course to have four par fives measuring over 600 yards, while the 685 yard par five fourth hole is the longest in European Tour history.

"Last year the course was long but this year it's ridiculous. It's almost crazy," said local favourite Fichardt, who was born in Pretoria and is attached to Centurion.

"It's going to be demanding on your long-iron play, and it's going to put pressure on your chipping and putting.

"I like this course and I've been pretty consistent this year. I play here a lot and I'm hitting it a bit longer, which helps around here."

World Number 53 George Coetzee is the highest ranked player in the field and reached the last-16 in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship in Arizona last week.

Coetzee beat World Number 13 Steve Stricker in the first round and Patrick Reed in the second at Dove Mountain, before losing 3 and 1 to eventual champion Jason Day.

The Joburg Open winner has been paired with England's Tommy Fleetwood and fellow South African van Zyl in the first two rounds.


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11/29/2013

Irish Struggle at Leopard Creek


Kevin Phelan made a strong to a new professional career securing a score the right side of the projected cut in his opening round of two-under-par 70 at the Alfred Dunhill Championship in South Africa. On Friday he is sailing closer to the edge and remains level overall after eleven playing holes and +2 for the day. 

Former Walker Cup player Phelan made birdies on the second and fifth holes of his first round, but had back-to-back bogeys on the sixth and seventh. Another bogey on the 11th put him one over for his round, but Phelan stormed home with birdies on the 13th, 16th and final hole to lie in share of 15th position in the clubhouse.

Gareth Maybin is one shot ahead on three under after he carded a 69 that included five birdies and a double-bogey at the 11th. 

Four days after winning his maiden European Tour title in the South African Open, Madsen carded a seven-under-par 65 at Leopard Creek to finish one ahead of local favourite Allan Versfeld and Portugal’s Ricardo Santos.

Madsen carded eight birdies and one bogey as he continued his remarkable start to only his second full season on Tour, having finished 81st in last season’s Race to Dubai.

Versfeld returned a flawless 66 thanks to an eagle and four birdies, while Santos did likewise and finished in style with his eagle coming on the par-five 18th.

Defending champion Charl Schwartzel was two shots further back on four under alongside England’s Richard Finch, Scotland’s David Drysdale and France’s Victor Riu.

Schwartzel was five under for his first six holes and annoyed at not capitalising on such a blistering start, declined to speak to reporters afterwards. The former Masters champion triumphed by 12 shots last year, just a week after winning the Thailand Open by 11 strokes.

“Today it seemed easy but it definitely wasn’t, it was pretty tough out there and the course was playing long with the wind,” said leader Madsen after his round.

“I played really solidly, I gave myself a lot of looks at birdie and a lot of shorter ones which was nice.

“I wasn’t expecting to shoot 65 today, I knew I was playing well but I won last week so everything that happens this week or next week is going to be icing on the cake. I am just trying to enjoy the ride.”

Damien McGrane suffered a costly finish to his round, a triple-bogey seven on the ninth, his final hole, meaning he had to settle for a level-par 72.

Peter Lawrie also carded a 72.

Michael Hoey signed for a 76 and Simon Thornton a 79.


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