1/30/2013

Padraig Praises Captain Paul


Padraig Harrington believes a case of short man syndrome will allow Paul McGinley to pull out all the stops at the 2014 Ryder Cup.

McGinley will captain the European team as they aim to retain the title in Gleaneagles against an American side which will be led byTom Watson.

Harrington, who is preparing to play in the Waste Management Open in Phoenix this week, says that his fellow Irishman will be well prepared for the battle.

"He's a little fella and he likes to fight," Harrington said of McGinley.

"He really has that little bit from his (Gaelic) football days. He's got it inside him and will lead the team well in that respect, as well as being organised."

Harrington missed last year's Ryder Cup after a slump that took him down to 96th in the world, but he now sits just outside the top 50 and knows the importance of continuing his climb if he wants a spot at Gleneagles.

But the 41-year-old says that playing alongside McGinley, with whom he won the World Cup and played alongside in three Ryder Cups, is not an extra incentive.

He added: "I don't think it motivates me more - I'm fully motivated.

"I've known him for a long time and it's going to be fantastic having him as captain, but it would be fantastic to be in the Ryder Cup no matter who was captaining the team.

"Professional golf is one of the most selfish games that you can play. It's an individual sport and it's all about managing ourselves, but Paul McGinley loves teams.

"He's probably sacrificed the last three years of his playing career and the next 18 months for the Ryder Cup. It's been all about the team for him."


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1/29/2013

Clarke Out of Desert Classic

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Darren Clarke champion was entered for the final event of the European Tour’s desert swing . Omega dubai Desrt Calssic.but his name was notably absent from the entry list over the weekend. 

A spokesman for International Sports Management said: “Darren was involved in a minor traffic accident last week and is suffering from a bit of stiffness. That’s all we know.” 

The 2011 Open Champion is a great lover of cars and motorbikes.

At the 2008 Australian Open at Royal Sydney he was lucky to limp away with nothing more than a bruised leg when he went head first into a bunker in a runaway golf cart. He was being driven off the course with Australia’s Robert Allenby after torrential rain stopped play but the driver sent to retrieve the players from the furthest point on the course failed to notice the yawning bunker in the middle of the sixth fairway. 

Iin May 2007 the Ryder Cup star suffered severe bruising when he flipped his 250cc off-road buggy in a field at his Surrey home. 

A few years earlier, Clarke took delivery of a high-speed trike for Christmas and immediately crashed it into the wall of his garage.

Paul McGinley, Gareth Maybin, Peter Lawrie, Shane Lowry, Damien McGrane and Michel Hoey all play this week at the Emirates Golf Club.

Clarke however says he will play as scheduled in India next week.

Andrew Chandler says Clarke suffered a stiff neck and "just needed to rest this week" after a car in which he was a passenger was in an accident. 

Clarke will be one of 24 players taking part in next week's inaugural Pearl Golf Premier League. The event, inspired by cricket's Indian Premier League, features eight franchises that have bought the players at an auction. The teams take part in a 14-hole competition rather than the traditional 18 at the Aamby Valley golf course from February 7-10th.

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1/24/2013

Hoey's Hot Putter in Doha

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Michael Hoey signed for a three under round of 69 on Thursday at the Commercial Bank Qatar Masters, ending the second round in the clubhouse just four shots off the lead, for a share of sixteenth place at the end of the morning session. 

A total of five birdies for the round - with two shots dropped at the second and eighth - prompting the tweet;

"Putter was great today, 25 putts, very happy! But not so good from the tee so of to the range...." 

Damien McGrane, Peter Lawrie and Gareth Maybin have yet to complete the second round at the Doha Golf Club, with the Dubliner one shot off the current projected cut of level par.

Another Dubliner, Paul McGinley, earns a weekend off after the 2014 Ryder Cup captain carded a second round 75 to finish four over par for the two days.

Butr it was Alexandre Kaleka who grabbed the outright lead at the Commercial Bank Qatar Masters, where Justin Rose remained the man to beat after a superb response to his one shot penalty in Doha.

England's World Number Four went from four under par to three under after his ball moved a fraction as he prepared to tap in for par on the 17th green on Wednesday. 
But he hit straight back with a closing birdie and two more came in his first five holes this morning to leave him only a two strokes off the lead.

Portugal's Ricardo Santos led overnight and while he waited for his lunchtime resumption, Challenge Tour graduate Kaleka birdied the 433 yard second to join him on seven under, before edging ahead with another gain at the fourth.

Former PGA Championship winner Simon Khan reached seven under when he picked up shots on the tenth and 16th, but then came a double-bogey seven on the long 18th.

Northern Irishman Michael Hoey was only two back after three birdies in four holes from the 14th.

Sergio Garcia and Ernie Els, three under and level par respectively, were later starters like Santos.

Rose's next dropped stroke, unlike his unfortunate incident on the opening day, was all of his own making.

His second to the long first after he had turned in 34 was fired miles right into the desert scrub and it took him three more shots to make the green.

A five foot putt did at least limit the damage to a bogey six and on five under he was still only two behind the joint leaders - Kaleka, Santos, South Africans Garth Mulroy and George Coetzee, Australian Marcus Fraser and Rose's playing partner Martin Kaymer.

Coetzee was producing the most action-packed round. He resumed with a double-bogey seven, but then had six birdies in seven holes around the turn.

Fraser was the one to break clear at the top. After nine straight pars on the back nine he grabbed five birdies in seven holes to reach nine under.

That put him two clear, but former World Number One Kaymer - hero of last September's Ryder Cup - sank a ten foot putt on the fifth to narrow the gap to one and Chilean Felipe Aguilar had a hat-trick of birdies from the 12th to be eight under as well.

Rose remained five under with four to go and compatriot Paul Casey was alongside him after birdies on the third and fourth.


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1/20/2013

Donaldson Adds to Irish Title

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Jamie Donaldson collected his second European Tour title in dramatic fashion at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship.

The Welshman went two clear with five birdies in his first 17 holes, but three-putted the par five last and bogeyed.

That left overnight leader Justin Rose and Dane Thorbjørn Olesen in the final group needing a birdie at the 18th to force a play-off, but Olesen’s 15 foot effort slid by before World Number Five Rose lipped out from 12 feet.

“It’s pretty surreal really, I’ve played really good all week although I’ve got away with murder up the last,” said Donaldson.

“I thought one of them would hole if not both, but when both putts slipped by it was my week.

“I’m very happy to be stood here holding the trophy.”

Donaldson’s victory at the Irish Open last year was his first in 255 European Tour events, but it has taken him only 13 starts to double his trophy haul.

“It’s like buses isn’t it?” he joked.

Donaldson recently sent Robert Rock a picture of his Masters Tournament invitation to wind him up, and has now succeeded him as champion at Abu Dhabi Golf Club.

Against a field that had earlier in the week included world top two Rory McIlroy and Tiger Woods - both missed the halfway cut - he could hardly believe what had just happened.

"I played the pro-am on Wednesday and thought the course was too difficult and I had no chance," Donaldson said. "I thought if I could get a decent finish I would be chuffed.

"To be holding this trophy is just mad."

Rose, whose last trip to the Middle East in November saw him denied by McIlroy in Dubai, shared second place with Olesen.

The biggest sympathy vote, though, went to Rose's fellow Englishman David Howell.

Now 258th in the Official World Golf Ranking - he was 569th less than three years ago - the former World Number Nine charged into the lead with five birdies in the first ten holes.

But the former Ryder Cup star bogeyed the short 12th, then on the next splashed out of sand to four feet and, incredibly, four-putted from there for a triple bogey seven.

Howell had to be content with a tie for sixth place when a first victory for seven years would have taken him comfortably back into the game's top 100.

Donaldson, who earned his place at Augusta National by climbing into the top 50 by the end of last year, will be around 30th when the new ranking is published on Monday.

The six was Donaldson's only dropped shot of the day. He had resumed two behind Rose, but birdied the first, ninth and 11th and then, following Howell's horror show, sank putts of 18 and 15 feet on the 14th and 15th to go two ahead.

His 68 gave him a 14 under par total of 274, one better than his close friend Rock managed a year ago when he beat McIlroy by one and Woods by two.

As for that Masters invite photo being sent to Rock, Donaldson said: "It's just banter. He was ill in the week and said 'Get my trophy back'."

Holding it up he added: "Here you are Rocky!"

Rose had led from his opening 67, but managed only a closing 71. There were three back-nine birdies in that, but also bogeys at the 11th and 17th after he missed both greens.

Rose, whose runners-up finish was still good enough to take him back to fourth in the world, said: "It was definitely hard work today.

"For some reason it was hard to see the breaks on the front nine, but I pulled it together really well and felt I got into a really good competitive mode.

"When I birdied 14 I didn't realise Jamie had had a hot round. I had actually expected to be one ahead at that point and I was one behind, so every credit to Jamie.

"I didn't do a lot wrong. It's hard to beat yourself up about it.

"I felt like I brought my best stuff on the back nine rather than the front nine, so that's encouraging.

"I don't think I need to do anything different - just need to keep chipping away and keep swinging well.

"But was a long, hard week to end up finishing second."

As for his closing putt his mind went back to the Ryder Cup last September.

"It reminded me exactly of the putt at 18 against Phil (Mickelson), just outside right edge. That's exactly where I hit it and unfortunately this time the putt didn't go in for me.

"Would I swap it? No, I wouldn't!"

Nor would he deny Donaldson his triumph. He had "four years in the wilderness" after being told his injury trouble was a spinal condition called Pars Disease.

One doctor told him his career could be over, but he went for another opinion and instead of it being a nightmare the story since has been the stuff of dreams.

The 22 year old Olesen had held a share of the lead after birdies at the fourth and fifth, but a double bogey six at the next ultimately left him with too much to do.

“I was trying to go for the green but I knew the lie was bad and I tried anyway,” he said. 

“Maybe I should have just laid up, but you can always say that after. I tried to make birdies today, and I didn't make that many unfortunately.”


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1/19/2013

McGinley Choice Strikes Chord

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Paul McGinley sported a grin as wide as the 18th green at the Abu Dhabi Golf Club on Friday as he explained how he had been blown away by the reaction to his appointment as Europe's 2014 Ryder Cup captain.

The 46-year-old Irishman was almost certain to miss the halfway cut at the Abu Dhabi Championship after carding a one-over-par 73 for a five-over tally of 149.

While McGinley was disappointed by his inability to make a mark on this week's European Tour event, he took great comfort from the hordes of well-wishers keen to slap him on the back as he made his way to the clubhouse at the end of the second round.

"It's been a whirlwind for the last 48 hours," the genial Dubliner told Reuters in an interview as he wiped the sweat from his brow after another steamy day in the desert.

"It's all sunk in now. You can't help but think about the Ryder Cup because everyone's coming up to you wherever you turn - tour staff, fans, players, officials, caddies," said McGinley.

"It's all been completely overwhelming. I had no idea the reception would be so genuinely enthused for me and it's a really nice feeling to know your peers are so happy for you to have success."

McGinley, who took a sideways glance at the clubhouse clock as he was expecting a phone call from Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny, said he had received hundreds of congratulatory text messages since his appointment on Tuesday.

"I've had nearly 500 texts and I haven't yet managed to sift my way through them all," he added. "I've had so many things to do so I don't know who most of them are from."

McGinley was not only "very excited" about what the captaincy would mean for him, he was also delighted at the positive spinoffs for golf in general, especially a project he is involved with in Africa.

"This is a real boost for me at this stage of my career because it opens so many doors for me, brings so much more worldwide exposure, and I want to use all that in the right way," said McGinley.

"I'm doing a lot of work in Ghana with Tullow Oil, the Royal and Ancient (R&A) and (golf club manufacturers) Taylor Made. They've all invested a lot in the project and now I'm Ryder Cup captain I can bring a lot more to the table when I go there."

McGinley said the oil company had found the biggest oil field in Ghana and decided to reinvest in the country.

"I sold them the idea, along with their golf-fanatic chief executive Aidan Heavey, of investing in golf and sport. They decided to do that and they've invested in Sunderland Football Club and in soccer academies.

"There is also a great golfing legacy in Ghana. They have 14 courses, most of them designed in the 1920s and 1930s by the British, but they've been left to rack and ruin over the last few years," said the four-times European Tour winner.

"The rooting though is quite strong so I've already built three new academies and I'm now going to start upgrading a couple of the courses too."

McGinley said the R&A, one of the game's two governing bodies along with the United States Golf Association, was thrilled with the project.

"The R&A are very much on my side, they're contributing financially and I've got about 15 guys working in Ghana with Paul McGinley Golf Design upgrading one of the courses," he added.

"I spent almost 30 days there last year which is a lot of time. I don't know if I'll be able to spend that much time there this year," the triple former Ryder Cup player added with a hearty laugh, "but I'll certainly be spending at least half that time there.

"I need to introduce new people to the game, send coaches to the schools and get the kids out for free golf lessons.

"We are lighting the golfing fire down there and it's important for Ghana to take that on now and keep the fire lit for a number of years."


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New Clubs Not to Blame - McIlroy


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Rory McIlroy insisted he, rather than his new clubs, were to blame for his poor performance at the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship.

The two-time major champion missed the cut by some distance in his first competitive outing of the season, shooting a second successive 75 on Friday to finish on six-over-par after 36 holes.

In the wake of his multi-million dollar switch to Nike, the change in clubs have been blamed for his form this week, but McIlroy insisted that was not the case.

"All aspects of my game were off," he told Sky Sports. "I didn't drive the ball well, my iron-play wasn't anywhere near the standard it usually is for me.

"I'm struggling with my swing a little bit, I feel like I'm spinning out of a lot and hitting it out of the heel quite a lot and I just need to put in a bit of work on the range.

"It's the first week out, I wouldn't look too much into that (the change of equipment), if anything it's more the Indian than the arrow at this point."

However, McIlroy - who will now have four weeks off - did concede that he was not happy with the driver he had been using this week and would be working hard to find a solution for an area that is normally such a strength of his game.

"I've got to work on a few things, I'm really happy with the irons and my ball and wedges, the putter's good on fast greens that I practice on," he continued.

"I just need to find a driver I feel comfortable with because I didn't drive the ball at all well and I feel like that's normally a big advantage for me."

The Northern Irishman also revealed that his decision to revert to his old putter on Friday was not a significant issue and would not necessarily mean he would continue to keep it in his bag.

"It was just for these greens this week," headded. "I felt like the greens were pretty slow out there and the Nike putter I used yesterday is a little lighter so it was just a weight issue more than anything else.

"I feel like the one I used today was a little heavier and I was able to get the ball to hole, but even when I got the ball to the hole it still didn't go in... so the change was to no avail!"



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Mount Wolseley Receives Award


The Team at Mount Wolseley Resort Hotel are delighted to announce that they have been awarded the “Best Golf Resort in Leinster “for 2013 by the Golfers Guide of Ireland.

This prestigious award recognises the leadership role that Luxury Resort Hotel properties with golf courses are having on attracting tourism by giving the visitor the all inclusive holiday experience and is a very welcome and fitting Award for all the Team at Mount Wolseley.

This is also recognition of this romantic and picturesque county of Carlow that Francis F. Hayden wrote about over a century and a half ago, with its fertile vales and lawns, unfolding their several beauties to the feasted eye of the entranced visitor.

Lisa Morrissey, Director of Mount Wolseley stated that the Team are particularly honoured with this accolade as it is based on an all Ireland pole undertaken from within the golf related industry. Lisa also states, that the Resort Team are dedicated to consistent and meticulous 
presentation over all the Resort with a dedicated Team maintaining the 18 hole Championship golf course designed by Christy O’Connor, with its tree lined fairways and fair but testing challenges for the golfer.

Mount Wolseley Hotel, Spa and Country Club offer the complete experience for those wishing to take a leisure or a golfing break. We also specialise in weddings and conferences and our facilities are renowned nationally which were surely taken into account by the industry when it was making the decision to award this much sought after Prestigious Award.


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