11/20/2013

Glendower Sunshine for McGinley

European Tour
Paul McGinley knows what he likes when it comes to golf courses, and the South African Open championship tees off on Thursday on one of them.

“I think the course is one of the best I’ve ever played,” he said after playing in his pro-am round ahead of the tournament at Glendower Golf Club. “I’m blown away by how good it is. I think it’s fabulous. It’s a throw back to traditional golf courses, right in the centre of one of the major capital cities in the world.”

So impressed was he that he suggested that if the course were in the United States, the US Golf Association would find it good enough to host a tournament which traditionally played on the most fussily set up of all courses: “It’s very visual, really well bunkered and extremely well set up. We don’t get to play on many traditional courses anymore and I was delighted.

“I could see this as a real potential venue for a US Open if it was in America. It’s so reminiscent of the great courses in the United States, it would fit in very well,” McGinley said.

Sean Quinn, the design principal of Golf Data, who redesigned the greens in 2004, will be getting a congratulatory phone call from the Irishman after McGinley made a point of seeking out his telephone number.

“Whoever did the green redesigns did a wonderful job. They are very cleverly designed and they’re a nice speed too. It doesn’t look like there’s much slope, but there is and there are some very clever pin-placements too,” he said.

Glendower is hosting the SA Open for the fourth time, having been the venue for the world’s second oldest national open in 1989, 1992 and 1997, and boasts immaculate kikuyu fairways and a magnificent array of handsome trees.

There are 64 bunkers and water features on 11 of the 18 holes.

The rough has been allowed to grow to 100mm and greenkeeper Mike Burnard has narrowed the fairways to just 18 metres.

Burnard said he was delighted to get such positive feedback ahead of the tournament’s start on Thursday. “I’m thrilled. You never know how an old classic like this is going to compete against the top courses in the world, but I guess it’s like an old Mercedes-Benz, they just keep impressing,” Burnard said.

“There’s a big onus to hit the ball straight off the tees. It’s not the longest course, but there’s lots of water and there are right places to put the ball. You are going to have to set it up off the tee,” was McGinley’s assessment of how hopefuls are going to have to cope with the challenges posed by Glendower.

Gareth Maybin, Michael Hoey, Damien McGrane, Peter Lawrie and Simon Thornton join McGine this week and get their new season underway in South Africa.

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Grant Starts Out Level

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Stephen Grant opened with a birdie on the par 5 first hole at the PGA Tour Second Stage Qualifying on the Plantation Golf and Country Club in Florida on Tuesday.

A series of dropped shots on the way to the turn - two bogeys and a double at the par four 6th - left Grant 3 at the halfway mark. But  recoveries on holes 12 and 14th brought him back level for the round at 71 - for a share of 50th place.

Nick Lindheim is the early leader after carding a 65

The second stage is an all-or-nothing affair for most of the participants. Players who advance to the third and final stage are guaranteed at least conditional status on the Web.com Tour, which is the only pathway to the PGA TOUR. Most who miss out at second stage will start 2014 without status on that circuit.

Q-school’s second stage concludes this week at four sites that will be played Tuesday-Friday. Two sites were held last week (click here for results). The second stage always features a mix of young up-and-comers and former PGA TOUR winners.

Billy Mayfair, Arjun Atwal, Eric Axley, Frank Lickliter, Peter Lonard, Chris Smith, Marc Turnesa are among the former PGA TOUR winners competing this week.

The q-school fields also are full of players just starting their pro careers.

Three 2013 first-team All-Americans are taking part in second stage this week – Daniel Berger, James Erkenbeck and Michael Kim. They’re looking to join fellow first-teamers Max Homa and Justin Thomas at q-school’s final stage; Homa and Thomas advanced last week.

Thomas was the 2012 NCAA player of the year. Kim, a junior at Cal, won that award this year; he is competing in second stage as an amateur. He earned an exemption into second stage by finishing 17th at this year’s U.S. Open. Kim, Homa and Thomas were teammates on this year's victorious U.S. Walker Cup squad.

Erkenbeck and Kim are competing at Bear Creek Golf Club in Murrieta, California, Berger, runner-up to Homa at this year’s NCAA Championship, is playing at Plantation (Fla.) Preserve. He turned pro earlier this year after his sophomore season at Cal.

Kim is not the only collegian competing at Bear Creek. University of Southern California junior Anthony Paolucci also is competing at Bear Creek; he finished 29th in the 2011 Farmers Insurance Open while still in high school. Chris Williams, who turned pro earlier this year as the world’s No. 1 amateur, also is playing at Bear Creek.

Australia’s Brady Watt, the world’s No. 8 amateur and a semifinalist at this year’s U.S. Amateur, is playing second stage in Gautier, Mississippi,  as is Tadd Fujikawa, who made the cut in the 2007 Sony Open in Hawaii as a 16-year-old.






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Royal Sydney for McIlroy

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Adam Scott will be aiming to complete his Triple Crown at Royal Sydney with World Number 6 Rory McIlroy and World Number 20 Jason Day heading the players to halt Scott’s charge and take the title from defending champion Peter Senior.

Amercan Kevin Streelman and Australians Matt Jones, Stuart Appleby and Marcus Fraser are the latest players to confirm their places at next week’s Emirates Australian Open at The Royal Sydney Golf Club.

World Number 43 Streelman won the 2013 Tampa Bay Championship on the PGA Tour among five top-10 finishes this season.

Sydney-born Jones has had a breakout year on the PGA Tour with five top-10 finishes including a tie for second at the Greenbrier Classic.

Appleby, the 2001 Australian Open champion, joins compatriot Fraser who is hunting his first Stonehaven Cup following a tie for second at The Ballatine’s Championship in Korea earlier this year.

The Emirates Australian Open will host the strongest field of Australian players this summer with John Senden, Geoff Ogilvy, Aaron Baddeley, Greg Chalmers, Robert Allenby, Nick O’Hern, Scott Gardiner, Cameron Percy, Craig Parry and Rod Pampling all joining Scott, Day, Fraser, Jones, Appleby and Senior in the final tournament of the PGA Tour of Australasia 2013 season.

Minister for Tourism and Major Events, George Souris, said: “It’s a very special year for Australian golf and it’s great to see Sydney host this world-class event. Visitors coming to the Australian Open Golf in Sydney are in for a real treat to indulge in their golfing passion.

"The NSW Government remains committed to the long term vision of showcasing the historic Australian Open and highlighting Sydney and NSW’s stunning, world-class golf courses to the world.”

Golf Australia CEO Stephen Pitt said there was tremendous depth in the field and the fans were in for a sensational week as Adam Scott aims for the triple crown.

“Wherever you are, if you can get to Royal Sydney Golf Club next week, you’re in for a fantastic four days of golf action as the Adam Scott hype reaches fever pitch,” Pitt said.

“The strength in this field is its depth and the international flavour.

"While we’ll all be cheering Adam on to the triple crown, Rory McIlroy, Jason Day and the multitude of leading Australian players will all have their own plans for the Stonehaven Cup."

Adding to the week’s excitement will be the introduction of The Open Qualifying Series – Australia with the top three players not already exempt earning their place at The Open Championship at Royal Liverpool (Hoylake) in July 2014.

“This adds further prestige to Australia’s most coveted title and gives our competitors a wonderful opportunity to earn direct qualification into golf’s oldest Major,” Pitt said.

The Championship is owned by Golf Australia and is managed by World Sport Group in conjunction with the PGA of Australia, with the assistance of TRP Sports.


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GMAC Olympic Call in Melbourne


Graeme McDowell was reminded of Royal Melbourne's subtle dangers when he  played nine holes and walked the other nine shortly after arriving from Dubai on Tuesday.

Even though the world No. 12 was reacquainting himself with the Composite course for the first time in nine years, he instantly recalled the cautious approach required by himself and rookie teammate Shane Lowry for the World Cup opening round tomorrow.

"You've really got to respect it. You really have to pay attention to what you're doing out there because the wrong shot on the wrong line and the wrong shape at any given moment can get you in all sorts of trouble,'' McDowell said.

"I feel like it will bring the cream to the top, for sure. The top players will shine and the less experienced players will have a problem with this golf course.

"Shane and I are as good and experienced as anybody this week and, hopefully, we can be playing together late on Sunday afternoon.

"It's just a great track that requires a lot of strategy, a lot of positioning of iron play coming into these fast and firm undulating greens.

"You don't hit many drivers, maybe four or five max out there. Like a links golf course, the wind can change this course within the space of an hour, change the character of holes when the wind switches direction.''

McDowell also believes his decision to play the World Cup of Golf under the Irish flag in Melbourne this week indicates he is likely to make himself available for the same nation when golf marks its return to the Olympics in 2016.

McDowell is entitled to choose between competing for Ireland or Great Britain - which includes athletes from Northern Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales - at the Rio Games.

"It is a very touchy political and religious subject, one that myself and Rory have not really enjoyed answering questions about the last few years because it is very difficult to pick a side because you are going to end up upsetting someone from either side really," McDowell, who teamed up with McIlroy at two previous World Cups, told reporters at Royal Melbourne golf club on Wednesday.

"From my point of view, when the World Cup came back on the schedule and it was coming to Royal Melbourne, I knew that I wanted to be part of this team, we have always represented Ireland when it has come to the World Cup.

"So I believe that me being here and representing Ireland will, you know, with the Olympic regulations, will mean that I am - I will have to play for Ireland when it comes to the Olympics in 2016... if good enough, if eligible, if fit enough."

"Part of me feels relieved to not have to make that decision," added McDowell, who will team up with Ireland's Shane Lowry at Royal Melbourne.

"It certainly did not enter into my reasons to wanting to be here this week. I wanted to be here and play with Shane, around Royal Melbourne, in a golf tournament which I have always loved."


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