2/26/2012

McIlroy in Final Desert Hunt


Rory McIlroy fought back from three down to beat Lee Westwood 3&1 in their semi-final clash at the Accenture Match Play Championship in Tucson.

And it means the the US Open champion can now go to world number one if he beats Hunter Mahan in the final later today.

Westwood made the early running, winning the second with a five foot birdie putt and the third after McIlroy couldn't save par from sand.

Another birdie putt at the fourth put Westwood three up but a bogey at five gave McIlroy his first gain and from that point on the Northern Irishman never looked back.

He won the next with a birdie putt from 28 feet, made the match all square with a 15 footer for birdie on the eighth and made it a third birdie in four holes at the ninth to turn turn one up.

After 10 and 11 were halved, McIlroy pressed the accelerator again and produced winning birdies at 12 and 13 to go three up.

Westwood won his first hole since the fourth with a birdie at 15 to cut the gap to two down but, after the 16th was halved, he handed McIlroy the match via a bogey at the long par four 17th.
Always in front

In the other semi-final, Mahan was always in front after winning the first via a bogey from fellow American Mark Wilson.

Mahan won the next to go two up but could never build a significant lead.

Wilson, a winner of the Humana Challenge earlier this year, three times reduced the lead to a single hole, once with a birdie at five and twice with par threes at three and 12.

But when Mahan won the 15th with a birdie three to go two up again, Wilson couldn't rally for a final time. Pars at the 16th and 17th were enough to give Mahan a 2&1 win and secure his place in the final.

2/25/2012

McIlroy Still in Match Play Mix


Rory McIlroy and Lee Westwood are still on course for a semi-final clash at the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship in Tucson.

McIlroy overcame Ryder Cup teammate Miguel Angel Jiménez 2 and 1 in the third round, while Westwood beat Tiger Woods' conqueror Nick Watney - the man who had knocked him out the last two years - by a 3 and 2 margin.

It was the first time in 12 attempts that the Englishman had made it into the last 16, but he looks in the mood to go much further.

He next plays Martin Laird, who defeated fellow Scot Paul Lawrie 3 and 1 in a game which could have big implications for the Ryder Cup qualifying race.

Victory on Sunday would put Westwood back as World Number One ahead of Luke Donald - McIlroy has the same target for the weekend - and so far he has repeated Donald's feat in winning 12 months ago, never trailing in any game and never being taken to the final hole either.

He has actually led for 48 of his 49 holes so far and said: "I feel in control of nearly every part of my game.

"I did some good work on my chipping last week and played some really nice ones. It was nice to get my own back. I didn't want to make it (losing to Watney) a habit."

He birdied the first two holes, went three up after the American missed the green at the ninth, then stretched the gap to four by almost holing his approach to the next.

Westwood was bunkered on the 12th and lost it to a par three, but he did wonderfully well to halve the 583 yard 13th in birdies after his chip hit the hole and rolled ten feet away. Halves at the next three finished things off.

Former Open Champion Lawrie had gone all 18 holes before beating Justin Rose and Ryo Ishikawa, but was in trouble from the moment he bogeyed the first and Laird birdied the long second.

Laird stretched his advantage to three "against the head" at the short 12th, holing from seven feet and seeing the 43 year old miss from five, but Lawrie's two-putt birdie on the next brought him back to two down.

It was all over, though, when Lawrie failed to get up and down from sand on the 17th.

McIlroy turned three up after some dazzling iron play. But for missing twice from under five feet and once from eight feet the 22 year old third seed would have been out of sight.

The gap twice came back to two early on the back nine, McIlroy twice fluffing chips, but he delivered the final nail in the coffin with another superb approach to the 17th.

Last year's runner-up Martin Kaymer found American Matt Kuchar too hot to handle despite two opening birdies, losing 4 and 3, while Hunter Mahan beat Steve Stricker by the same margin in a match between Ryder Cup colleagues.

Kuchar, a semi-finalist last year, was also at The Celtic Manor Resort and he is next for Mahan.

Another player from that match, Swede Peter Hanson, beat Brandt Snedeker 5 and 3 and will now face another American in Mark Wilson, a surprisingly easy winner over Dustin Johnson.

“I love match play,” said Hanson. “I think it's the best format ever. You only have to play one guy at a time. Here is so much fun and I think my attitude has been very good this week and I have been hitting this ball very well.”

McIlroy had to wait to discover his next opponent. Australian John Senden and Korean Bae Sang-moon were level with three to play.

McIlroy said: "I hit some really good irons and felt I hit a lot of quality shots, especially coming down the stretch when I needed to.

"I'm driving the ball really well and that's big positive.

"Miguel told me he hopes I go all the way and get number one."

Laird said after his win over Lawrie, who coached him as Open Champion over a decade ago: "It was surreal playing against him and a shame we were paired together.

"I really didn't play well the last two weeks, but my coach got me sorted out.

"I'm looking forward to playing Lee and if I keep playing like I am it will be a good game."

He lives in nearby Scottsdale and felt that knowledge of the desert conditions helped him, Lawrie more than once misjudging how far his ball was flying.

As he did against Masters Tournament champion Charl Schwartzel, Bae sank a short but testing putt on the final green to beat Senden and earn the right to tackle McIlroy.


2/22/2012

YE Yang Knocks out GMAC


Korea’s Y E Yang became the first player through to the second round of the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship with a 2 and 1 victory over Graeme McDowell.

The 2009 US PGA Championship took a topsy-turvy contest when he birdied the 17th from five feet.

It was a repeat of the pair’s third-round contest 12 months ago, when Yang beat the 2010 US Open Champion 3 and 2.

Yang’s win set up a second round contest with either Hunter Mahan or Zach Johnson, and Mahan was one up on his Ryder Cup teammate with three to play.

Also playing in the Ben Hogan bracket, Steve Stricker and Louis Oosthuizen were one up at the turn against Kevin Na and Aaron Baddeley respectively.

In the Sam Snead bracket, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castaño took the opening hole against Tiger Woods with a birdie, and doubled his lead with a 25 footer at the next.

Matteo Manassero was also two up, against another American in Webb Simpson as their match reached the turn, while Paul Lawrie also led by two against Justin Rose.

"I'm playing good - today is a big mountain over," said Yang, whose run to last-years quarter-finals represented his best performance in the event.

“I made six birdies today, I played decent golf but I ran into a man that played extremely well,” said McDowell.

“I felt like I had to follow him all day long, and I did most of the day, but he didn't put a foot wrong. 

“That's the beauty of this tournament. It's not the beauty - it could be the beast of this tournament, as well. You just run into the wrong guy on the wrong day, and you have got your work cut out. I had my work cut out today, and I didn't take care of business, so I’m disappointed.”



2/21/2012

Bushmill Dunes Gets Approval


Proposals to build a £100 million golf complex on Northern Ireland's north coast have been given the green light.

More than 10 years after the first planning application was lodged, the developers have overcome National Trust resistance to begin work on the site close to the famous Giant's Causeway in County Antrim.

The new Bushmills Dunes Golf Resort & Spa will include a championship links, a five-star 120-bedroom hotel and 75 villas. The project is expected to create at least 360 jobs.

It is hoped the course and accommodation ready by the summer of 2014.

Announcing the decision earlier today, Northern Ireland Environment minister Alex Attwood said: "I have carefully considered both sides of the argument, but given the boost to tourism and the economy that the proposal will bring, I have decided to grant planning permission."

The investment is headed by a New York-based Northern Ireland management expert and scientist Dr Alistair Hanna, 67, originally from Holywood, Co Down - the home town of US Open golf champion Rory McIlroy.

British Open champion Darren Clarke lives a few miles from the proposed course, close to neighbouring Royal Portrush golf club where the Irish Open will take place this summer.

Graeme McDowell, a friend of both players and winner of the US Open in 2010, also comes from Portrush.

The first planning application was submitted in 2001 and then renewed six years later.

There was considerable opposition by the National Trust, owners of nearby Giant's Causeway, a Unesco world heritage site where a new visitors' centre is due to open this summer after another lengthy planning process.

A National Trust spokesperson said: "As a conservation charity the trust's over-riding focus is the protection of the environment and landscape within the distinctive setting of Northern Ireland's only World Heritage Site.

"We believe this farmland and dune system is the wrong place for such a massive development.

"The National Trust will carefully review the details of the planning decision and consider its options."



Rankings Not McIlroy Worry


Rory McIlroy had admitted the world rankings are not in the forefront of his mind as he prepares for this week's WGC World Match Play.

The 22-year-old could become world number one for the first time this week if he wins the event in Tucson, Arizona and Luke Donald falls in the first or second round.

"The rankings are sort of a by-product of what you do," said McIlroy. "I'd rather just concentrate on trying to win tournaments and trying to improve as a player.

"If I happen to do that, then hopefully the ranking will take care of itself."

Donald is taking nothing for granted, coming up against former world number one Ernie Els in Wednesday's opening round, with his nine-month reign at the top of the rankings under threat.

Current number three Lee Westwood gets his campaign under way against Nicolas Colsaerts of Belgium, although the Englishman has a ghastly record in the event.

Westwood has never been beyond the second round in 11 attempts and admitted: "I just don't know why it is.

"Sometimes I have not played well enough or just run up against somebody who is playing hot, but it's very strange when you look at my record in the Ryder Cup and that I won the Match Play at Wentworth."

Tiger Woods and Darren Clarke could meet in the second round some 12 years after the Northern Irishman beat the American in the final when it was played in Dubai.

However, Clarke must first get past Nick Watney as he teams up with temporary caddie Phil Morbey for the first time.