8/29/2014

Lagergren Sets Galgorm Record

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Joakim Lagergren got the second edition of the Northern Ireland Open Challenge in association with Maui Jim Sunglasses off to an explosive start, soaring to a course-record nine under par 62 to take a two-shot lead after Day One.

The 22 year old, who has already played two full seasons on The European Tour in his short professional career, threatened the magic number of 59 when he negotiated his opening 15 holes in eight under par with a par five to play on the par 71 lay-out. 

He did birdie the ninth, his last hole having teed off at the tenth, and while he could not create history as the second player to shoot sub-60 on the Challenge Tour, his bogey-free opening round was enough to set a new record low round at the wonderfully-presented Galgorm Castle.

On a day when 4,429 people filed through the gates at what has become the best-attended event in Challenge Tour history, the crowds were treated to a mixed bag weather-wise, the course bathing in sunshine for the vast majority of the day but a heavy shower causing a 47-minute delay in play mid-way through the afternoon.

Lagergren was lucky enough to avoid that inconvenience and he was delighted to get off to such a strong start in perfect conditions, playing alongside local crowd favourite, promising amateur Dermot McElroy.

“You can’t start any better than this,” said the Stockholm player, whose stepfather Ola Eliasson is a former European Tour player. “I’ve been playing really well the last couple of weeks but the putting hasn’t really been going good and I holed a few putts today which gave me momentum.

“I wasn’t even thinking about the birdies I was making, I was just playing today. I wasn’t even sure how many under par I was but when you get on a roll like that you just don’t want to stop. You just don’t think about the scoring, you just keep hitting those good shots.

“I holed a few 15 to 20-foot putts today so that’s a real bonus. Hopefully it will be a good week. It really feels like a proper European Tour tournament, we had a small crowd with us all day today because I played with Dermot and it was really good fun.

“The crowds definitely boost me, it’s really nice that they come out to watch the local guys and I was lucky to have played with him.

“I didn’t really think about the 59. I actually missed a short birdie putt on my second last hole, the eighth, from around five feet. It wouldn’t have mattered anyway.

“Usually you get that buzz and adrenalin of a 59 when you’re six or seven under but I didn’t think about it at all today. Anything can happen over the next three days. I was hitting good shots today, and every course is easy when you do that, but if you’re not hitting good shots out there the course is not easy.

“It would be really good to have more crowds tomorrow. The crowds could get really big here this week. I played two years on The European Tour and especially when I played in Sweden, the crowds were fantastic, so hopefully I will have a similar atmosphere over the weekend.”

Anthony Snobeck of France was two shots back on seven under par after signing for a 64 which included two eagles, one of which came at the driveable par four second to get his round going early on.

“I drove to about seven feet at the second and made the putt,” said the two-time Challenge Tour winner. “Then I hit a lovely two-iron into the tenth to about the same distance so they were just two really great shots and the rest was all good too so it was a nice day for me.

“I had a lot of chances for birdie elsewhere too. The course was really good for scoring because there was rain overnight so hopefully it will stay that way for the rest of the week. 

“It’s a very good tournament, close to a European Tour event. It’s really well organised and the greens are fast, the fairways are perfect. I think it’s one of the best tournaments on the Challenge Tour schedule.”

Meanwhile, the strongest local challenge came from Jonathan Caldwell of Northern Ireland, who had a stellar amateur career which culminated in his partnering Rory McIlroy at the 2007 Walker Cup.

While he has thus far struggled to emulate that success in the professional ranks, an impressive six under par 65 moved the 30 year old to within three shots of the lead in a share of third place alongside another former Walker Cup player, England's Steven Brown.



8/28/2014

Smyth's Woburn Feeling

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Des Smyth is hoping to feed off the good vibes he has at Woburn Golf Club as he looks to kick-start his 2014 European Senior Tour season at the Travis Perkins Masters. 

The Irishman, who will be one of Paul McGinley’s Vice-Captains at next month’s Ryder Cup, is a two-time winner of the tournament, and he will be aiming to continue his sequence of triumphing in Ryder Cup years, after claiming the title in 2010 and 2012. 

It has been a slow start to the current campaign for Smyth, whose only top ten finish came a fortnight ago at the SSE Scottish Senior Open. 

But he believes a return to the picturesque Duke’s Course at Woburn could be just the catalyst he needs to get his game back on track. 

“I’ve had two wins here and it is a place I’ve always liked coming to,” said the 61 year old. “I played poorly last year, but my form had gone off by that stage. I’m searching for a bit of form again this year. I’ve had no performances worth talking about so far. I’ve had one top ten in Scotland when I had a chance to do better but messed up at the end, so I’m hoping I can get going this week and get some good vibes from this place.

“I’ve been working on a few things recently. I’m always experimenting when things aren’t working and I need tournaments to find my form. The back nine last week (at the English Senior Open) I was trying something which felt really good. Now, I’ve no idea if it is going to work this week, but I have a clear picture of what I’m going to try and hopefully this is a good week for me. 

“Coming back to a course where you have done well before always helps. This is a good driver’s course too, and that is my strength. I’m a straight driver, but on some courses you don’t get the reward for it. On this course you do. If my driving holds up, which it normally does, and if I get something going with my irons, which I think I have, then it might be a good week.”

The Travis Perkins Masters always attracts one of the biggest crowds of the Senior Tour season, and Smyth hopes that can also help inspire him to a good performance this week as he tries to regain the title, after watching Colin Montgomerie succeed him as champion 12 months ago. 

“This is our best tournament outside the Senior Open,” he said. “We get over 20,000 people here and you get all the best players. It’s great having Monty back defending his title and it is great to see Eduardo Romero playing here as well. There is a good atmosphere and it is a great tournament, so I hope it has the right effect on me.”


Hoey Targets Galgorm Castle

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Michael Hoey is targeting a top three finish at least as he returns to the Northern Ireland Open Challenge in association with Maui Jim Sunglasses following the disappointment of missing the cut at last year’s inaugural event.

The five-time European Tour winner, a former graduate of the European Challenge Tour, is the official Tournament Ambassador for the event taking place on the pristine greens of Galgorm Castle this week.

The event made a huge impression last year, attracting over 20,000 people from the golf-mad nation - which has produced such golf superstars as Rory McIlroy, Graeme McDowell and Darren Clarke - while this year over 32,000 have registered for tickets, which are free of charge for the first time.

As one of the most successful Northern Irish players in recent history, Hoey was a main attraction for the home crowds last year but he unfortunately missed the halfway cut as Dutchman Daan Huizing went on to win the tournament, courtesy of a play-off victory over former Ryder Cup player Oliver Wilson.

The 35 year old is hoping that he can make amends this time around though, and he feels like his game is in good shape as he takes on some of Europe’s most promising young players as well as many experienced European Tour professionals.

“It’s great to be back,” said Hoey. “It was a great event last year and I was just disappointed not to make the cut but hopefully I can put that right this year. I feel like my game is good at the moment, I played the course last Friday and on Monday and it’s in good shape. 

“I think there was a lot of attention on me last year and I put myself under a bit too much pressure. I think I’ll just try and relax a little more this year.

“It would be great to finish maybe top three. This event doesn’t affect my own rank on The European Tour so I may as well just relax and play well.

“Expectation in golf is never a great thing, to think you’re going to do great. It’s that type of game, you just have to relax a bit more and not expect too much, so that’s what I’ll and try do this time.

“I could do with a bit of swing work because I haven’t played too much in the last six weeks so it’s just frustrating. I've done some work with my coaches in the last few days and it feels a bit more solid now so hopefully I can hole a few putts and see what happens.

”It’s a great tournament to be associated with and the business model is very good, they’re putting a lot into it here.”

Of course, Hoey hit the headlines on his last appearance on The European Tour when he got on a flight home in the belief that he missed the cut at Made in Denmark, before receiving a call that he had made the weekend and he was forced to withdraw.

“It didn’t end up being a good decision but sometimes these things happen,” said the Templepatrick player, who has won three times on the Challenge Tour. “I couldn’t see myself making the cut at all, but it wasn’t easy getting to and from that place so once you leave it’s hard to get back.

“You just have to learn from it, I got a bit of a ribbing for it understandably! I could have won the tournament over the weekend but it was fairly unlikely to get two 62s.”

Hoey heads a star-studded field at the Ballymena venue, with Englishman Wilson returning in the hope that he can go one better than last year and win a maiden Challenge Tour title.

He is joined by another former Ryder Cup player, Phillip Price of Wales, and a host of former European Tour winners, including Welshman Rhys Davies, Maarten Lafaber of the Netherlands and Swede Johan Edfors.

Jake Roos, meanwhile, is still chasing a third Challenge Tour victory which would earn him automatic promotion to The European Tour.


8/26/2014

McGinley Plans Italian Job

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The race to make Paul McGinley’s European team for the upcoming Ryder Cup at Gleneagles will reach its denouement at this week’s 71° Open d’Italia Presented by DAMIANI.

With the nine automatic qualification places set to be determined on Sunday evening – four from the European Points List and five from the World Points List – McGinley knows that Ryder Cup D-Day is fast approaching.

“This is the last lap of qualifying for The Ryder Cup and from the World Points angle this tournament could make a contribution,” said the Irishman who is at Circolo Golf Torino this week to also compete himself after a number of weeks on the sidelines nursing a shoulder injury. All eyes will be on Stephen Gallacher, the Scot needing to finish in the top two to force his way past Graeme McDowell into the final qualifying place, but the likes of Joost Luiten and Francesco Molinari will be among those hoping to impress McGinley in this final week as he weighs up his wild card options.

It has been a lengthy process since the qualification began at the Celtic Manor Resort during the ISPS Handa Wales Open 12 months ago, with the golfing cream rising to the top over that period.

On Tuesday September 2, McGinley will finalise the 12-man squad which will take on the United States in Perthshire from September 26-28, as the 47 year old names his three Captain’s Picks in the ballroom at Wentworth Club.

“I think a lot of what happens with the nine automatic qualifiers determines where you go with your picks,” said the captain.

“But it’s important that we have players who are on form – which I think the qualification process will provide. It’ll identify the leading nine European players throughout the world over a 12 month period and then it’s up to me and my vice captains to complete the jigsaw. Of course, as someone once said, with great power comes great responsibility and McGinley is acutely aware that some of the aspects of September 2 will be more testing than others.

“Being a Ryder Cup captain, there are good bits of the job and there’s bad bits,” he continued. “And everybody has talked about how difficult it is calling guys, particularly friends of yours, to tell them they haven’t made the team.

“That’s going to be difficult, I know it is. But I’ve been very upfront with them, they know where they stand, and I’ve tried to be very open and transparent with where I was going with the picks and it was up to the players to show me some form and some reason why they should be picked.”

Since being made captain 19 months ago, the meticulous Irishman has traversed the world, delved into form guides, statistics, the Ryder Cup history books and more, but the preparation period is almost over.

With little more than four weeks left before the first ball is struck at Gleneagles, this week – and next week’s wild card announcements – represent the culmination of hundreds of hours of hard work.

“Once the picks are made, that’s a significant milestone in terms of the captaincy,” reflected McGinley. “You then have 12 players in place which enables you to start thinking seriously about tactics, about strategy. You start communicating with the players on a lot more of an individual level than you’ve done before.

“Before it was generic but after September 2 it’s right down to the nitty-gritty of when you’re arriving, what practice rounds you’re going to play and who your potential partners could be. It’s exciting.”



McGee Returns for NI Challenge

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Ruaidhri McGee has spent the last six months roving Europe and beyond in his rookie season on the European Challenge Tour, but he returns to the Emerald Isle this week in search of a maiden title at the Northern Ireland Open Challenge in association with Maui Jim Sunglasses.

The 23 year old came through the first two stages of The European Tour’s Qualifying School last year – winning in the First Stage – before missing out on a card to The Race to Dubai at Final Stage in PGA Catalunya Resort.

But consolation came in the shape of a strong category for the 2014 Challenge Tour season and the smooth-swinging Derry man came flying out of the blocks with an opening round 66 at the first event of his maiden season, the Challenge de Catalunya.

While a disappointing second round meant he missed the cut, a tied 12th finish at the Turkish Airlines Challenge in May was followed closely by a first top ten finish at the Kärnten Golf Open presented by Mazda.

McGee, however, endured a difficult mid-summer spell but in his last two Challenge Tour starts has secured a top 30 finish at the Azerbaijan Golf Challenge Open and a top 20 at the Vacon Open, so he is feeling good as he arrives at a venue with which he is very familiar.

“I played my first Challenge Tour event last year and I made the cut,” said McGee, who has recently been rooming with former Amateur Champion Garrick Porteous of England. “It was nice to make the weekend and that helped me play a bit better towards the end of the last year.

“It’s a really nice course here, it’s well laid out and they have it in great shape every year. It’s pretty tight so it suits me in that way and the greens are very good. If you can hit it straight off the tee and putt good you’ll do well.

“I've really enjoyed it on the Challenge Tour, it’s been good so far. I played well at the start of the year and then had a bad spell in the middle and now it’s starting to get a bit better again so hopefully it keeps improving.

“I'm not sure what happened in the middle of the year, it was just one of those things, just a bad patch. It’s not fatigue, I'm just taking a bit of time to get used to the travelling week-in, week-out and all that stuff that comes with it.

“I have learned a lot about my game and how to travel and to just be a bit more patient with everything, with delays in play and all the flights and those kinds of things. I think my game is improving, you just have to be solid out here and make sure there are not many things wrong with your game. 

“I don’t think I play conservatively, but I don’t seem to make a lot of bogeys. I just need to get more birdies now and I can improve.

“The plan is to go and give it a good run this week. I've played the course over the past three years, because there was a Europro event here in the two years before last year’s Challenge Tour event, and I've always done alright. I just want to try and play well for a few months now and see what happens.

“I like the course and the fan club will be there this week! It’s a bit of a help, having people out there supporting you.”

McGee has already acquired some vital European Tour experience in his short career on the Challenge Tour, having a particularly impressive week at the Lyoness Open powered by Greenfinity in June, where he entered the final day in a share of tenth place before finishing tied 25th.

This year has already been a big learning curve, and McGee hopes he can lead the lines in inspiring young Irish players to come through the professional system

“It was nice to play at The European Tour events,” he said. “I don’t think there is much difference between the top guys on the Challenge Tour and players on The European Tour so if you play well here you should be able to do well up there. Everybody in the field here can win any given week so it’s pretty impressive. 

“There are a lot of good young Irish players now, the amateur team just won the Home Internationals recently, so there’s no shortage of guys coming through. It’s just a case of giving them the support and the invites and they’ll be fine.

“The Irish players needed something and now they’ve got this. There are quite a few Irish guys get invites from this event, and that’s very important. They need all the help they can get on the Challenge Tour. There’s a bit of a gap from the top Irish players on The European Tour to further down the tours so we need something like this to help.

"It’s important that us guys start to push through on the Challenge Tour now and hopefully another few guys will come through after us too."