8/24/2014

GMAC Banks on Final Day

Getty Images

Graeme McDowell is likely to need an impressive final round to secure his Ryder Cup place with a week to spare after a third round 71 at The Barclays.

The Northern Irishman, who holed the winning putt in the 2010 contest against America, fired a level par effort to remain four under at Ridgewood Country Club, but slipped out of the top 20.

With the qualification race for Gleneagles ending next week, McDowell currently holds the final automatic spot via the world list, but could be overtaken by Stephen Gallacher if the Scot finishes strongly in the Czech Republic on Sunday.

Jason Day and Jim Furyk are tied for the lead heading into the final day, while an inconsistent third-round performance left World Number One Rory McIlroy five strokes off the pace.

Australian Day followed up his stunning Friday score of 64 with a three under par 68 and, coupled with Furyk's blemish-free 69, the pair reached the clubhouse on nine under for the tournament.

Following his Open Championship, WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and US PGA Championship victories, McIlroy had fixed a poor opening round with a sparkling 65 on Friday but could only sign for a one under 70 on Saturday.

GMAC mixed three birdies with two bogeys yet sits among illustrious company including overnight leader and defending champion Adam Scott, Bubba Watson and McDowell in a share of 23rd place heading into the deciding round in Paramus, New Jersey.


8/23/2014

McIlroy Rors Back in Jersey

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy fought back from a rusty start with a second-round 65 to ease into contention in the first of the four PGA Tour play-off events.

The world number one surged to three under to trail Adam Scott and Cameron Tringale by five shots in New Jersey.

McIlroy, who opened with a 74 in The Barclays event in the aftermath of his US PGA win, hit six birdies to reignite his bid for a fourth straight win.

European Ryder Cup hopefuls Ian Poulter and Luke Donald both missed the cut.

The pair are outside the top-nine automatic qualifying spots and are likely to have to rely on a captain's wildcard to make the side for September's clash against the USA at Gleneagles.

Eight-time Cup veteran Lee Westwood is another in danger of missing out but rounds of 70 and 73 meant he made the weekend at one over.

Also one over was five-time major champion Phil Mickelson, the US PGA runner-up, whose 72 included a shot hit out of a hospitality dining area.

Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell, who occupies the final Ryder Cup qualifying spot, shot 68 to end four under alongside England's Justin Rose with countryman Paul Casey five under.

McIlroy, 25, took some time out to enjoy the fruits of his fourth major win earlier this month but said a range session after Thursday's opening round ironed out his swing.

"The work I did on the range really helped, got back in the rhythm and the flow of things," said McIlroy, who also won the Open in July followed by the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational. "I knew my game was there. I just needed to think more about the chances I was giving myself."

American trio Kevin Chappell, Brendon Todd and Jim Furyk were tied third on seven under at Paramus with FedEx Cup champion Henrik Stenson, Ernie Els, Scotland's Russell Knox, Bo Van Pelt, Jason Day and Kevin Na one stroke further adrift.

European Ryder Cup qualifying ends after next week's Italian Open before captain Paul McGinley names three wildcards on 2 September.

Automatic selection for the USA is settled with captain Tom Watson making his three wildcard picks on 3 September.

The Ryder Cup takes place at Gleneagles, Scotland, from 26-28 September.


8/22/2014

McGee in Czech Chase

Getty Images
Ruaidhri McGee proved best of the Irish as he registered an opening two-under-par 70 to trail leader Jamie Donaldson by four shots at the Czech Masters.

The Rosapenna man opened with a bogey and carded a double bogey at the 14th at the Albatross Golf Resort. There were five birdies in between – at holes two, three, eight, nine and 12 – and McGee came home in 70 for a share of 22nd after the first round.

The Donegal golfer’s best finish on tour thus far is the tied 25th he recorded at the Lyoness Open in Austria in June. He was tied for 103rd in the Irish Open two weeks later and shared 98th in the Madeira Island Open in May.

Simon Thornton is alongside him on two under, while Kevin Phelan, Gareth Maybinand Peter Lawrie are level par, one ahead of Damien McGrane and four ahead of David Higgins. Automatic places Donaldson moved a step closer to making the European Ryder Cup team with a sparkling 66. The Welshman currently holds the eighth of nine automatic places for the team in Gleneagles due to his position on the world points list but a combined winning haul of just under €30,000 in Prague and in Italy next week would see him qualify via the European list.

And a six-under par round gave the 38-year-old a one-shot lead in a tournament which carries a €166,660 first prize. Donaldson may not have to secure the necessary money this week and next but qualification from the European list would be a relief with Graeme McDowell, Luke Donald, Ian Poulter and Stephen Gallacher also battling it out for the final place in the world standings.

McDowell, Donald and Poulter are all playing in the Barclays in New Jersey this week but Gallacher is also present in eastern Europe and fired a two-under par 70 playing alongside Donaldson.

Both men opened with a birdie but Donaldson dropped a shot on the third before further birdies at the fourth, eighth and ninth saw him reach the turn in 33.

Another shot was dropped on 11 but birdies at 12, 14, 17 and 18 saw him come home in the same score and secure a one-shot lead over Sweden’s Mikael Lundberg.

Gallacher had nine pars from two to 10 before a dropped shot on 11 had him level for the day. But two further birdies followed on 12 and 17 moved the Scot into red figures. There was a 10-way tie for third place which included Paul Waring, Kenneth Ferrie, Danny Willett, Lee Slattery, Soren Kjeldsen and Wales’ Bradley Dredge.

8/21/2014

Rory Not Banking on Barclays

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy’s bid for a fourth tournament win in a row got off to a rather rocky start as he carded an opening round of 74 at The Barclays in New Jersey.

The world number one came into the first leg of the four-tournament FedEx Cup playoffs looking to extend his amazing run that has seen him triumph at the Open, the US PGA Championship and also the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.

However the Northern Irishman has some work to do if he is to continue his hot streak after having to sign for a three-over score on Thursday at the Ridgewood Country Club.

McIlroy went out in 40 shots, despite coming close to recording a birdie at the 10th – his first hole of the day, as he registered a double-bogey on the 12th and followed that with bogeys on the 13th and 18th. As he reached the turn, he found himself last of all players on the course at the time.

A birdie at the fifth offered hope but the 25-year-old gave that shot back on the eighth, missing a four-foot attempt for par. He did at least finish with a flourish, carding a three at the par-four ninth.

Still, McIlroy finds himself well adrift of early pacesetters Cameron Tringale, Hunter Mahan and Charles Howell II, the trio of Americans all managing rounds of 66 to sit on five under.

Home favourites Rickie Fowler and Bubba Watson are on three under, one ahead of Australian Adam Scott.



Lefty Reckons Rory's Favourite

Getty Images
Rory McIlroy will be difficult to beat heading into the FedExCup play-offs in New Jersey claims Phil Mickelson.

The PGA Tour begins its four-tournament race to the finish-line with The Barclays at Ridgewood Country Club tomorrow, and all eyes will be on world number one McIlroy as he goes for a fourth win in a row after victories at the British Open Championship, the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational and the US PGA Championship.

The Northern Irishman leads the FedEx Cup rankings and has two play-off victories to his name from 2012 but has yet to claim the big prize and the $10million cheque that comes with it.

The top 125 players in the standings have qualified for The Barclays, with the field being trimmed to 100 for the Deutsche Bank Championship, 70 for the BMW Championship and then 30 for the Tour Championship.

Mickelson has qualified for every Tour Championship since the FedEx Cup began in 2007, a feat matched only by Steve Stricker, who will not play until December due to hip and back injuries, and Hunter Mahan.

The Californian, who also has two play-off wins under his belt, is currently 45th in the rankings but that can change very quickly with a win and, following a second-placed finish behind McIlroy at Valhalla, Mickelson is brimming with confidence.

“The PGA was a big week for me because it was the first time this year my game was back. It gave me an excitement and energy heading into the FedExCup and Barclays here that my game is back and I’m ready to compete and get back into contention.

“It was so fun being up there again, and the nerves and the excitement of it all, it got me excited.”

However, he also knows that to get to the top of the leaderboard he must overcome McIlroy, whose form in the last few weeks he admits has been “incredible”.

“His level of play this last month has been exceptional,” he said “Now, from what I’ve seen over the years with Tiger (Woods), from 2000, if you want to compare it to that, well, he’s got a ways to go.

“But to win the British and the PGA and throw a World Golf Championships in the middle under anybody’s circumstances, that is just a remarkable month of golf and some of the best that I’ve seen.

“You can probably go back and compare it to some of the Tiger stuff. He’s done that over decades. And I wouldn’t be surprised if Rory did it too. You just never know. He’s that good. He can do it.”

While McIlroy may be the player in form at the minute, the man second in the standings, Jimmy Walker, is without a victory in six months after a blistering start to the season.

Walker had won the Frys. com Open, the Sony Open and the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am by February, and six further top-10s saw him hold the top spot for most of the season.

The 35-year-old finished seventh at Valhalla, his third top-10 finish in a major this year, and he is confident the next win is not far away.

I feel like I’ve played well,“ said Walker. “Yeah, obviously I would have liked to have won again, but before this year it had taken 180 times before I had one and you win three.

“But I’ve continued to play well. I’ve got a ton of top-10s. I’ve played good in the big tournaments and I’m looking to win again.

“It’s close. It’s right there. It’s just a matter of putting four weeks together but I’ve been there.”