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.