|
|
October 2006 Archive
Tuesday 31st October 2006

Inchmarlo Golf Centre, Banchory head teaching professional Andrew Locke gets to grips with 10-year-old Bekki Gray (Kintore). Looking on the rest of an Aberdeenshire girls' winter coaching class (left to right):
Kirsten MacCallum (McDonald Ellon), Natalie Goodall (Turriff), Eleanor Franks (Ballater), Rachel Polson (Peterculter).
SCOTTISH GIRLS CHAMPION ROSEANNE TO JOIN UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IN NEW YEAR
Roseanne Niven, 17-year-old winner of the Scottish girls’ match-play title at Peebles this summer, is to join the University of California Berkeley early in the New Year.
Roseanne, a member of Crieff Golf Club, has been one of Scotland’s best young female golfers for a number of years. Her first national title was the Scottish Under-16 girls’ open championship in 19?? And she was one of the youngest ever winners of the Perth & Kinross women’s county title in 2004.
Apart from winning the Scottish Under-18 girls title this year, Roseanne was a member of the Scotland team who brought home the girls’ home internationals team trophy from Portstewart, Northern Ireland.
She has been awarded a full golf scholarship by the University of California Berkeley, where Vikki Laing (Musselburgh) and Anne Walker (Strathaven), winner and beaten finalist in the 1997 Scottish girls championship, both spent four years.
Vikki became one of the leading players on the American women’s college circuit and Ann was not far behind her. She won two tournaments.
Miss Walker stayed on at the California college to become the Bears’ assistant women’s golf coach.
The universities of North Carolina, Virginia and Vanderbilt were also prepared to offer Roseanne a golf scholarship and she visited the United States to see what their facilities were like before making up her mind to enrol at the University of California Berkeley.
Roseanne said last night:
“I feel very lucky to have the opportunity to further my golfing career and to be educated at a top university such as Berkeley. It is a very exciting time in my life and I cannot wait to get started in January.”
Nancy McDaniel, the head women’s coach of University of California Berkeley, said:
“We are delighted to have Roseanne Niven join our women’s golf team. She succeeds two of our most accomplished players, also from Scotland – Anne Walker and Vikki Laing.
“Scottish players seem to love California and really fit into the Cal Golf system. Roseanne brings a great deal of experience on an international level that will undoubtedly impact the team upon her arrival.”
+There are nine Scottish girls currently at college in the United States: Michele Thomson (Jacksonville State), Louise Fleming (Jacksonville State), Carly Booth (David Leadbetter Golf Academy), Sally Watson (David Leadbetter Golf Academy), Ashton Ingram (Belmont Abbey College), Kate O'Sullivan (High Point), Kelly Brotherton (Tennessee-Chattanooga), Katy McNicoll (Lynn University), Gemma Webster (Ohio State).
PRINCESS ANNE TO OPEN THE CARRICK AT LOCH LOMOND NEW COURSE
De Vere Hotels & Resorts is delighted to announce the official completion of its long-awaited 18 hole golf course, The Carrick, at De Vere Cameron House, on the banks of Loch Lomond.
The ceremony will be conducted by HRH Princess Anne on November 14, adding another outstanding golfing destination to the group’s illustrious portfolio.
The championship course has breathtaking views, straddling both Highlands and Lowlands, and is destined to take its place among Scotland’s elite.
The tranquility of The Carrick provides a refreshing alternative to Scotland’s other major golf destinations – the still waters of Loch Lomond, in contrast to the busy North Sea, the oak groves instead of wind-blown dunes. The approach to The Carrick, by water taxi from Cameron House, takes golfers past the nature reserve, which forms almost a third of the 350 acre estate in Scotland’s first national park.
The Carrick on Loch Lomond is named after its award winning archictect, Doug Carrick. However, by coincidence, the word ‘carrick’ also means ‘rocky place’ in ancient Scots – an apt description of the setting – and, if that wasn’t enough, the legendary Robert the Bruce is buried nearby, (one of his titles was The 3rd Earl of Carrick).
The official opening of The Carrick will incorporate it into the world-renowned De Vere portfolio of prestigious golf resorts, including: The De Vere Belfry, De Vere Slaley Hall, De Vere Carden Park and De Vere Mottram Hall, all of which have a pedigree in managing golf tournaments.
De Vere Cameron House, EventScotland and partners have already submitted a joint bid to stage the 2011 Solheim Cup. A major part of that bid is the four year commitment to bringing the Scottish Ladies Open back to the sporting calendar in the Home of Golf, as a specific part of Scotland`s Major Events Strategy and to cement her reputation for delivering exceptional golf events.
The event will be played at De Vere Cameron House, home to The Carrick, a brand new 7200 yard, par 71 championship golf course, on the banks of Loch Lomond. The Carrick, part of a £65 million investment, will reinforce De Vere’s impressive reputation and first-class pedigree of hosting international golf tournaments such as The Ryder Cup, which has been held at The De Vere Belfry an unprecedented four times.
ANNIKA WINS BY SIX STROKES
Annika Sorenstam led from start to finish to win the 75,000 Euros top prize in the Dubai Ladies Masters with a brilliant score of 18-under-par 270 at the Emirates Club.
It was as good as it gets from the 36-year-old world No 1 female player from Sweden. She set a course record 65 in the first round and broke 70 in every succeeding round to win by six shots in the end.
Compatriot Helen Alfredsson came through with a closing 70 to finish second on 276 and earn 50,750 Euros.
Australian Karrie Webb slipped down to third place with a 70 for 278.
The leading British players were back in a share of 10th place – Becky Brewerton and Trish Johnson on 284. They earned 8,962 Euro apiece.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
270 (-18) Annika Sorenstam (Swe) 65 68 68 69.
276 Helen Alfredsson (Swe) 70 71 68 67.
278 Karrie Webb 70 68 70 70.
280 Amy Yang 69 72 70 69, Veronica Zorzi 69 72 69 70.
Leading British players:
284 Becky Brewerton (Wal) 73 73 71 67, Trish Johnson (Eng) 72 67 71 74 (jt 10th).
US College golf
DUNCAN AND RUSSELL WELL TO THE FORE IN SOUTH CAROLINA
The “Jacksonville Jocks” are on the march again. Duncan Stewart from Grantown on Spey and Russell Knox from Inverness – both senior-year students at Jacksonville University, Florida - are up with the leaders with one round to go in the Charleston Southern Fall Invitational college tournament at Charleston, South Carolina.
In fact, Stewart, winner of six individual events on the American college circuit, is homing in on win No 7. Duncan, winner of the Chiberta Grand Prix in southwest France during his summer holidays, is sharing the lead with Matt Cook (West Carolina) on 138, six under par for the 6,928yd, par-72 course.
Both players have had rounds of 68 and 70.
Russell Knox, who played for Scotland in the European youth team championships in Spain during the summer, is sharing third place on the 141 mark with rounds of 73 and 68.
Jacksonville University, bidding for a third team win in the early weeks of the 2006-2006 college golf season, are in second place on 581, three behind leaders South Carolina. Hosts Charleston Southern (583) are third best in a field of 10 colleges.
US College Golf
MICHELE SHARING 13TH PLACE IN ALABAMA
Michele Thomson, the North of Scotland women’s champion from Ellon, is sharing 13th place after one round of the Troy Women’s Invitational college tournament over the 5,888yd, par-72 Arrowhead Country Club course at Montgomery, Alabama.
Michele, a freshman student at Jacksonville State University, Alabama had a round of 75 – six shots behind the leader, Swedish player Elinor Andersson (South Alabama).
Portia Abbott from Wiltshire, one of Michele Thomson’s team-mates, had a 79.
Jacksonville State (305) are in sixth place behind leaders South Alabama (292) in the team event.
CLAIRE CLIMBING WHEN BAD LIGHT STOPS PLAY ON KIAWAH ISLAND
Claire Starkie from Skipton, West Yorkshire, a student at Georgia State University, was climbing up the leaderboard rapidly when fading light forced an early finish to the first day’s play in the Edwin Watts Intercollegiate women’s tournament at Oak Point Golf Club on Kiawah Island, South Carolina.
Claire, who had a disappointing first round of seven-over-par 79 – still good enough to share eighth place over a tough course – had birdied six holes of her second round and was three under par with three holes to play when called in from the course.
Twice Welsh girls champion Lucy Gould (East Tennessee State) was lying 74th in a field of 99 after an opening round of 84 which included two triple bogeys, a double bogey and two birdies over the last five holes. Lucy was four over par for the second round with three holes to go when play was halted.
German-born Steffi Kirchmayr (College of Charleston) was the first-round leader by two shots with a 69.
Campbell Univeresity (295) lead the team event from East Tennessee State (301) with Georgia State (317) eighth of the 19 competing colleges.
US College Golf
DELANEY SISTERS HAVE MATCHING SCORES IN NEVADA
The Delaney sisters from Carlow – Tara and Karen – both students at Kent State University, Ohio, were sharing 53rd place on five-over-par 77 at the end of the first round in the Las Vegas Collegiate Showdown women’s college tournament at Anthem Country Club, Henderson in Nevada.
Karen had a double bogey 7 at the third but birdied the sixth, seventh and 18th.
Tara also ran up a double bogey 7 – at the eighth. She had one birdie, at the ninth.
Sarah Bradley (Oklahoma State) led the field of 83 players with a three-under-par 69 over the 6,175yd course.
Leading European players were former British girls champion Azahara Munoz (Arizona State) from Spain and Dewi Schreefel (Southern California) from the Netherlands. They are joint 11th on 72.
Arizona State and Oklahoma State share the team lead on 292. Kent State (302) are back in 12th place in a field of 17 colleges.
US College Golf
FERN DOWN THE FIELD IN FLORIDA
English player Fern Grimshaw tied for 33rd place in the DeBary Intercollegiate women's tournament at DeBary, Florida.
Fern, a student at Bethune-Cookman College, had rounds of 78 an d80 for a total of 158 - 17 shots more than the six-stroke winner, Danielle Jackson (Stetson).
Danielle scored 73 and 68 for three-under-par 141.
Minnesota (603) won the team event by one shot from Mercer. Bethune-Cookman (633) finished 10th of the 13 teams.
The course was a par-72, measuring 6,078yd. |
Monday 30th October 2006
SLGA Ltd looking for National Ladies’ Coach
within Scottish Golf
More information
US College Golf
HANNAH 17TH IN THE DERBY AT AUBURN
Hertfordshire player Hannah Burke, a freshman student at Baylor University, Texas, finished 17th in the rain-shortened The Derby women’s college tournament over the Auburn University course at Auburn, Alabama.
Hannah had two rounds of 76 for a total of 152. She had a double bogey 6 at the fifth and dropped more shots at the 15th and 18th in a birdie-less second round over the 6,310yd course.
In the first round, Hannhad had a triple bogey 8 at the 12th and a double bogey 6 at the 18th.
Playing over their home course, Marisa Milligan (Auburn) finished first on 145 and team-mate Nicole Hage joint second on 146.
Auburn (594) also won the team event by 12 strokes from Alabama.
The scheduled 54-hole event was reduced to two rounds when rain and flooding washed out the first round.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
INDIVIDUALS
145 Marisa Milligan (Auburn) 74 71.
146 Nicole Hage (Auburn) 76 70, Lauren Hunt (North Carolina 75 71.
Other score:
152 Hannah Burke (Baylor) 76 76 (17th).
TEAMS
594 Auburn.
606 Alabama.
608 Tennessee.
619 (12th of 17) Baylor.
US College Golf
ALAN HELPS XAVIER TO FINISH RUNNERS-UP AT WILMINGTON
Alan Glynn from Middlesex, a freshman student at Xavier University helped his college to finish runners-up to Tulsa in the team event of the Men’s Landfall Tradition tournament at Wilmington, North Carolina.
Alan had ever-improving scores of 81, 75 and 73, birdieing the 10th, 12th and 13th but bogeying the third, 11th, 15th and 16th in his final. He finished 23rd with a total of 229 – 14 shots behind the joint winners, both Tulsa University players, Mitch Cohlmia and Nicolas Geyger. Tulsa also provided the third individual finisher in Brett Meyers.
LEADING FINAL TOTALS
INDIVIDUAL
215 Mitch Cohlmia (Tulsa) 71 73 71, Nicolas Geyger (Tulsa) 74 71 70.
218 Brett Meyers (Tulsa) 74-74-70.
Other score:
229 Alan Glynn (Xavier) 81 75 73.
TEAMS
868 Tulsa.
894 Xavier.
897 Purdue. |
Sunday 29th October 2006
US College Golf
GEMMA RUNS INTO BIG TROUBLE IN FINAL ROUND AT WILMINGTON
Gemma Webster’s hopes of at least a top-10 finish in the Women’s Landfall Tradition tournament at Country Club of Landfall evaporated over her third and final round at Wilmington, North Carolina.
Joint fifth at the start of the day, second-year Ohio State University student Gemma from Glasgow dropped down to a final placing of joint 14th on 230 after an 80 which ruined the good work of earlier rounds of 74 and 76 over the par-72 course.
Miss Webster bogeyed the first four holes, found a bit of form with birdies at the fifth and seventh and then fell away again with a bogey at the 10th and then a catastrophic finish of a triple-bogey 7 at the 14th and a double-bogey 6 at the 17th for an inward half of 42.
Catterick girl Jodi Ewart, a freshman at New Mexico University, pulled herself up to a joint 12th finish with a final round of 73 for 223. She had five double bogeys over her two opening rounds of 77 but birdied the 10th, 13th and 18th in her last effort.
Sara Brown (Michigan State) won by four shots with a one-under-par total of 215 (74-69-72).
Virginia and Michigan State tied on 902 for the team title with New Mexico (904) third. Ohio State (920) finished sixth of the 12 colleges taking part.
LEADING INDIVIDUAL TOTALS
215 Sara Brown (Michigan State) 74 69 72.
219 Mandy Goins (Wake Forest) 77 72 70.
222 Mikaela Backstedt (New Mexico) 77 73 72, Brianna Broderick (Migigan) 72 76 74.
223 Dana Je (Ohio State) 72 79 72.
225 Jennie Arseneault (Virginia) 72 81 72, Giselle Claux (New Mexico) 75 75 75.
Other scores:
227 Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) 77 77 73 (jt 12th).
230 Gemma Webster (Ohio State) 74 76 80 (jt 14th).
LEADING TEAM TOTALS
902 Virginia, Michigan State.
904 New Mexico.
915 Wake Forest.
917 Michigan.
920 Ohio State.
Volvo Masters Amateur World Final
La Quinta Golf Course, Marbella, Spain
Well done Vicki Stevenson from Stirling Golf Club (pictured right) on finishing tied 6th overall in the World Final. With difficult conditions on both scoring days she had 63 points. The winner was scratch player Allen McGhee of Canada who scored 70 points. Vicki was second lady finishing one point behind Jirwan Chaiyanboon of Thailand who received 11 shots compared to Vicki’s two.
Seventy competitors representing 21 countries participated in the world final. They were well looked after by Volvo and were guests at the final day of the Volvo Masters at Valderamma.
Those interested in seeing how Vicki won the UK final can watch it on TV at the following times.
Sport Nation Sky Sports Extra 3rd November 1.00 a.m/8.00 a.m. or 3 p.m.
[Thanks to Tricia Chillas for this report]
US College Golf
GEMMA JOINT FIFTH IN LANDFALL TRADITION TOURNAMENT IN USA
Glasgow girl Gemma Webster, a second-year student at Ohio State University, is still on course for one of her best finishes on the American women's college circuit.
She is in joint fifth place going into Sunday's final round of the Women’s Landfall Tradition college golf tournament at Country Club of Landfall, Wilmington in North Carolina.
Gemma, capped for Scotland in last year’s home internationals and a member of Hilton Park Golf Club, has had rounds of 74 and 76 for 150.
She had no birdies in her second round and is seven shots behind the leader Sara Brown (Michigan State) (74-69 for 143) but only three behind the second placed Leah Wigger (Virginia).
Ohio State (615) is sharing fourth place behind Virginia (596) in a team event being contested by 12 colleges.
First-round leader Jennie Arsenault (Virginia) plummeted to a share of 11th place after following up a 72 with an 81 for 153.
Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) from Catterick was in joint 17th place on 154 after a pair of 77s.
INDIVIDUAL LEADERS
143 Sara Brown (Michigan State) 74 69.
147 Lea Wigger (Virginia) 75 72.
148 Brianna Broderick (Michigan) 72 76.
149 Mandy Goins (Wake Forest) 77 72.
150 Gemma Webster (Ohio State) 74 76, Giselle Claux (New Mexico) 75 75, Mikaela Backstedt (New Mexico) 77 73.
151 Dan Je (Ohio State) 72 79.
Other scores:
153 Jennie Arsenault (Virginia) 72 81.
154 Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) 77 77.
TEAM LEADERS
596 Virginia.
607 Michigan State.
611 New Mexico.
615 Michigan, Ohio State.
622 Wake Forest.
US College Golf
A COUPLE OF HITCHES FOR HANNAH BUT SHE’S STILL A RUNNER IN THE DERBY
Hertfordshire player Hannah Burke, a freshman student at Baylor University, Texas, was challenging for the first-round lead in the rain-abbreviated The Derby women’s college tournament over the Auburn University course (6,310yd, par-72) in Alabama until gad a couple of disasters on the inward half.
Hannah finished on four-over-par 76 and has a share of 12th place going into the final round of what was scheduled to be a 54-hole event. Heavy rain and flooding washed out the first round.
Hannah birdied the sixth, seventh and 16th but she had a triple bogey 8 at the long 12th and a double-bogey 76 at the 18th as well as single shots droped at the ninth and 10th in halves of 35 and 41.
Margaret Shirley (Auburn), playing over her home course, leads by two shots with a par round of 72.
Baylor (306) are in fourth place in the team event behind North Carolina (301), Auburn (303) and Louisiana State (305).
US College Golf
ALAN GLYNN DOWN THE FIELD IN MEN’S LANDFALL TRADITION
English player Alan Glynn (Xavier University) is in joint 27th place after round of 81 and 75 in the Men’s Landfall Tradition tournament at Country Club of Landfall, Wilmington in North Carolina.
It’s a tough course of 7,084yd with a par of 72 and a par total of 144 by Mitch Cohlmia (Tulsa) (71-73) has been good enough to lead. Another Tulsa player, Nicolas Geyger (74-71) is in second place so, not surprisingly, Tulsa (588) have a commanding lead in the team event from Purdue (601) and Xavier (605). Twelve colleges are competing. |
Saturday 28th October 2006
ANNIKA SORENSTAM LEADS BY SEVEN SHOTS
Annika Sorenstam increased her lead to seven shots with a third-round 68 in the Dubai Ladies Masters at the Emirates Club today.
Karrie Webb is her nearest challenger after a 70 for 208 - one ahead of Helen Alfredsson.
LEADING THIRD-ROUND TOTALS
201 (-15) Annika Sorenstam (Swe) 65 68 68.
208 (-8) Karrie Webb (Aust) 70 68 70.
209 (-7) Helen Alfredsson (Swe) 70 71 68.

Perth & Kinross Ladies County Golf Association held their annual general meeting at Craigie Hill Golf Club in Perth on Thursday. The prizewinners are:
Back row from left to right Coronation Trophy - Gwen Lambie (Dunkeld & Birnam), Gibb Trophy - Carole Turner (Alyth), Crawford Salver - Sandy Young (Auchterarder), Nell Scott Quaich - Liz Fertacz (Dunkeld & Birnam), Order of Merit - Jane Yellowlees (Murrayshall).
Front row from left to right Brown Memorial Salver & Champion of Champions - Alexandra Bushby (Strathmore), Captain Janet Griffiths (Comrie) with the Inter Counties Team Champions Trophy and County Champion - Jillian Milne (Craigie Hill).
US College Golf
GEMMA JOINT FIFTH IN LANDFALL TRADITION TOURNAMENT IN USA
Glasgow girl Gemma Webster, a second-year student at Ohio State University – “The Buckeyes,” was lying joint fifth at the end of the first round of the Women’s Landfall Tradition golf tournament at Country Club of Landfall, Wilmington in North Carolina (Friday, USA time).
Gemma, a Hilton Park Golf Club member, has a two-over-par score of 74 with birdies at the fifth and sixth in two halves of 37.
Catterick girl Jodi Ewart, a freshman student at New Mexico University, was sharing 17th place on 77 after a round of 77 that include birdies at the eighth, 12th and 18th but also double bogeys at the third, ninth and 11th in halvesof 39 and 38.
Three players - Jennie Arseneault (Virginia) Brianna Broderick (Michigan) and Dana Je (Ohio State) lead - with par-matching 72s over the 6,072yd course.
Michigan (300) lead the team event from Virginia (301) with Ohio State and Michigan State (305) sharing third place place ahead of New Mexico (309) fifth of the 12 colleges participating.
SCOTS ALL MISS THE CUT AT DUBAI LADIES MASTERS
Clare Queen, Lynn Kenny, Liz McKinnon and Kathryn Imrie all missed the cut on the second day of the Dubai Ladies Masters at the Emirates Club.
The “magic” figure was 148. Clare, Lynn and Liz missed out on 149 while Kathryn was well outside the mark with 154.
Clare birdied the14th and 16th on her way to a 74 but a double bogey at the third was to prove costly.
Lynn also had an early double bogey, at the fourth, and birdies at the 10th and 18th could not wipe that out as she returned a 73. This failure confirmed Miss Kenny’s fears that she will have to go back to the Tour School in Spain next month.
Liz was moving along nicely until bogeying the 12th, 13th and 17th for a 77.
Kathryn had a pair of 77s.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the scoreboard, Annika Sorenstam continued to show her outstanding class with a 68 for 11-under-par 133 and a five-stroke lead from Australia Karrie Webb who also had a 68.
LEADERBOARD
133 Annika Sorenstam (Swe) 65 68.
138 Karrie Webb (Aus) 70 68.
139 Tania Elosegui (Spa) 69 70, sophie Sandolo (Ita) 68 71, Trish Johnson (Eng) 72 69.
MISSED CUT ON 148
149 Clare Queen (Sco) 75 74, Lynn Kenny (Sco) 76 73, Liz McKinnon (NZ) 74 75.
154 Kathryn Imrie (Sco) 77). |
Friday 27th October 2006
CATHY PANTON-LEWIS NAMED IN REST OF WORLD “GOLDEN OLDIES” TEAM
Cathy Panton-Lewis, winner of 14 events on the forerunner of the Ladies European Tour between 1979 and 1988, is the only British player named in the Rest of the World team to play the United States in a women’s professional golf match organised by the LPGA's Legends Tour.
The inaugural 12-a-side contest for the Handa Cup – donated by Japanese businessman and philantrophist Dr Haruhisa Handa, will be played over the Slammer & Squire Course at World Golf Village, St Augustine in Florida on December 16 and 17.
The first day’s play will feature nine holes of foursomes, nine holes of better-ball and nine holes of a “Texas Scramble” format. The second and final day will consist of 12 singles ties.
Born at Bridge of Allan, daughter of John Panton, MBE, one of Scotland’s most successful professional golfers of yesteryear, Cathy now lives at Sunningdale. She had her 51st birthday last June.
In her amateur days, Cathy won the 1976 British women’s open amateur championship at Silloth on Solway, the same year she was named Scottish Sportswoman of the Year.
Turning pro in 1978, she was a founder member of the British women’s professional golf tour in 1979 and won its first Order of Merit.
Unlike her contemporaries on the British women’s pro golf scene, Cathy has played periodically on the Legends Tour which was founded in 2001 and is the LPGA’s official tour for over-45s. She has won $38,959 in fleeting visits to the States.
The teams for the Handa Cup match are:
UNITED STATES – Amy Alcott, Pat Bradley, Joanne Carner, Jane Geddes, Sandra Hainie, Chris Johnson, Rosie Jones, Marilyn Lavander, Nancy Lopez, Martha Nause, Cindy Rarick, Patty Sheehan. Captain – Kathy Whiteworth.
REST OF THE WORLD – Dawn Coe-Jones (Canada), Alicia Dibos (Peru), Maria Alice Gonzalez (Brazil), Sally Little (South Africa), Mieko Nomura (Japan), Michiko Okada (Japan), Anne-Marie Palli (France), Cathy Panton-Lewis (Scotland), Barb Bunkowsky Sherbank (Canada), Jan Stephenson (Australia), Angie Tsai (Taiwan), Nayoko Yoshikawa (Japan). Captain – Hisako Higuchi (Japan).
US College Golf
MACAULAY’S THIRD TOP-5 FINISH OF COLLEGE SEASON
West of Scotland Open champion Callum Macaulay from Tulliallan, a student at Mississippi University, notched up his third top-five finish of the 2006-2007 American college golf season in the Mason Rudolph Intercollegiate tournament at Vanderbilt Legends Club, Nashville, Tennessee (this week).
In cold and windy conditions – just like back home – Macaulay had rounds of 72, 71 and 73 for a level par aggregate of 216 over the long and testing 7,190yd course.
He finished joint fifth behind Kyle Peterman (Memphis) and Silas Sutton (Mercer) who tied for victory on 213. Petereman scored 77-66-70; Sutton 71-71-71.
Two players were joint third on 215 and Macaulay shared fifth place with three players.
Macaulay’s effort helped Mississippi (876) to win the team event by eight shots from joint runners-up North Florida and Vanderbilt in a field of 14 colleges.
Macaulay and the Mississippi University golf team will not be back in action until mid-February when they travel to a college tournament in Florida.
SORENSTAM LEADS BY TWO IN DUBAI LADIES MASTERS
New Zealander Liz McKinnon had the lowest score of the Scotland-based players in the first round of the Dubai Ladies Masters at the Emirates Golf Club today.
Liz is in joint 59tyh place after birdieing the 13th and 17th on her way to a 74.
Clare Queen had a 75 with birdies at the fourth, 15th and 18th but a double bogey at the 10th. She is in joint 72nd position.
Lynn Kenny, who needs a top-10 finish, to avoid going back to the Tour School next month, birsied the seventh and 17th and finished with an eagle 3 for a 76. Lynn is sharing 80th place.
Kathryn Imrie had one birdie, at the second, in her 77 which puts her in joint 90th place.
Annika Sorenstam had only 28 putts – at least two of them in the “monster” category – on her way to leading the field by two shots with a seven-under-par 65.
LEADING SCORES|
65 Annika Sorenstam (Swe).
67 Namika Omata (Jap).
68 Kiran Matharu (Eng), Bettina Hauert (Ger), Sophie Sandolo (Ita), Kristy Taylor (Eng).
Other scores:
70 Karrie Webb (Aus) (jt 13th).
72 Rebecca Hudson (jt 31st).
73 Becky Brewerton (Wal) (jt 41st).
74 Liz McKinnon (NZ) (jt 59th).
75 Clare Queen (jt 72nd).
76 Lynn Kenny (jt 80th).
77 Kathryn Imrie (jt 90th). |
Thursday 26th October 2006
US College Golf
RHYS AND JODI ARE TOP BRITISH-IRISH PLAYERS IN US COLLEGE RANKINGS
Edinburgh-born Welshman Rhys Davies (East Tennessee State University) and Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) from Catterick are the leading British and Irish players in this week’s GolfWeek/Sagarin college rankings.
Davies is eighth in the men’s rankings while freshman Ewart is 17th in the women’s table.
MEN
1 Dustin Johnson (Coastal Carolina).
2 Billy Horschel (Florida).
3 Zack Miller (Stanford).
4 Charlie Beljan (New Mexico).
5 Niklas Lemke (Arizona State) (Sweden).
6 Manuel Villegas (Florida).
7 Pablo Martin (Oklahoma State) (Spain).
8 Rhys Davies (East Tennessee State) (Wales).
9 Lucas Lee (UCLA).
10 Jamie Lovemark (USC).
GB&I players:
78 Ben Taylor (Georgia State) (England).
84 Duncan Stewart (Jacksonville) (Scotland).
106 Gareth Shaw (East Tennessee State) (Ireland).
119 Seamus Power (East Tennessee State) (Ireland).
174 Daniel Willett (Jacksonville State) (England).
178 Russell Knox (Jacksonville) (Scotland).
181 Lewis Kirton (Louisville) (Scotland).
222 Adam Hodkinson (East Tennessee State) (England).
226 Niall Kearney (East Tennessee State) (Ireland).
243 Callum Macaulay (Mississippi).
261 Aaron O’Callaghan (SE Louisiana).
272 Wallace Booth (Augusta State) (Scotland).
284 Tom Sherreard (Georgia State) (England).
297 Alan Glynn (Xavier) (England).
305 Farren Keenan (Texas) (England).
611 Alex Hogben (UMKC) (England).
625 Cian McNamara (East Tennessee State) (Ireland).
781 Peter McLachlan (UMKC) (Scotland).
796 Jordan Findlay (East Tennesee State).
1101 Jamie Kennedy (Jacksonville) (Scotland).
1627 Stephen Clark (UMKC) (Scotland).
WOMEN
1 Caroline Westrup (Florida State) (Sweden).
2 Misun Cho (Pepperdine).
3 Taylor Leon (Georgia).
5 Jennie Lee (Duke).
6 Anna Nordqvist (Arizona State) (Sweden).
7 Leah Wigger (Virginia).
8 Amanda Blumenherst (Duke).
9 Jennifer Osborn (Arizona State).
10 Sandra Gal (Florida) (Germany).
GB&I players:
17 Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) (England).
40 Tara Delaney (Kent State) (Ireland).
162 Danielle McVeigh (Texas A&M)
183 Hannah Burke (Baylor) (England).
276 Karen Delaney (Kent State) (Ireland).
303 Michele Thomson (Jacksonville State) (Scotland).
327 Gemma Webster (Ohio State) (Scotland).
353 Dawn Marie Conaty (Memphis) (Ireland).
358 Sinead O’Sullivan (East Tennessee State) (Ireland).
390 Lucy Gould (East Tennessee State) (Wales).
536 Fern Grimshaw (Bethune-Cookman) (England).
622 Kate O’Sullivan (High Point) (Scotland).
625 AnnMarie Dalton (High Point) (Ireland).
627 Claire Starkie (Georgia State) (England)
807 Vicki Power (Northern Arizona) (Ireland).
935 Portia Abbott (Jacksonville State) (England)
1244 Jenna Kinnear (High Point) (Ireland).
Representatives from the winning clubs in the 2006 Greenlees Trophy Leagues
Beatrice Orr (Kilmacolm: winners of Division 2).
Joanna Scott (Cathkin Braes, runners-up Division 1).
Donna Jackson with the Greenlees Trophy (Cochrane Castle, winners of Division 1 for three of the past four years).
Gina McDowall (Erskine, winners of Division 3).
Greenlees Trophy
COCHRANE CASTLE WIN GREENLEES TROPHY FOR THIRD TIME IN FOUR YEARS
Cochrane Castle Golf Club’s women members have won the West of Scotland match-play league championship for the Greenlees Trophy for the third time in the past four years. They retained the title with a total of 45pt at the top of Division 1.
Cathkin Braes were runners-up with 40pt.
The Division 2 title was won by Kilmacolm with 36.5pt – half-a-point ahead of runners-up Hilton Park.
Erskine were winners of Division three by a large margin with 57pt. Runners-up Haggs Castle totalled 45.5pt.
Willeen McCallum is the organiser of the Greenlees Trophy Leagues which were described by leading Cochrane Castle player, Donna Jackson, as “exceedingly competitive but also very friendly” at today’s (WED) lunch and presentation of trophies at Old Ranfurly Golf Club.
The full final placings in the 2006 Greenlees Trophy Leagues:
Division 1
1 Cochrane Castle 45.
2 Cathkin Braes 40.
3 Ranfurly Castle 38.
4 Prestwick St Nicholas 38.
5 Lanark 37.
6 Cardross 36.
7 Kilmarnock Barassie 33.
8 Troon 29.5
9 Douglas Park 27.5
Relegated:
Troon & Douglas Park.
Division 2
1 Kilmacolm 36.5.
2 Hilton Park 36.
3 West Kilbride 36.
4 Bothwell Castle 29.5
5 Whitecraigs 29.5.
6 Old Ranfurly 29.5.
7 East Renfrewshire 29.
8 Eastwood 26.
9 Milngavie (withdrawn).
Promoted to Division 1:
Kilmacolm & Hilton Park.
Relegated:
Eastwood & Milngavie.
Division 3
1 Erskine 57.5.
2 Haggs Castle 44.5.
3 Cowglen 44.
4 Turnberry 44.
5 Lenzie. 36.5.
6 Largs 35.
7 Williamwood 35.5.
8 Greenock 32.
9 Cawder 39.
Promoted to Division 2:
Erskine & Haggs Castle.
|
Wednesday 25th October 2006

Some of the many prizewinners at the Midlothian AGM last night
[Photo courtesy and copyright © Janet Wake]
US College News
ASHTON FINDING HER FEET IN STATES
Fort William teenager Ashton Ingram is beginning to find her feet in golfing terms at Belmont Abbey College in America. Ashton, 18, a freshman student at the North Carolina college, finished joint 24th in the Flagler Fall Slam women’s college tournament at World Golf Village, St Augie in Florida (on Tuesday, USA time).
It was Ashton’s highest finish since she went to America in August and this was the first time she had the lowest total of the five Belmont Abbey College team players in the tournament.
Miss Ingram had scores of 76 and 85 for 161 over the 5,987yd, par-72 course.
Victoria Jackson (West Florida) won with rounds of 71 and 77 for four-over-par 148.
West Florida (613) won the team event by one stroke from Nova Southeastern. Belmont Abbey (662) finished seventh of the 17 colleges participating.
US College News
LEWIS KIRTON JUST MISSES OUT ON TOP 20 IN CALIFORNIA
Great Britain & Ireland boy international Lewis Kirton, a freshman student at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, finished 22nd equal in The Club Glove Intercollegiate golf tournament at Somis in California (on Tuesday, USA time).
Newmachar Golf Club member Lewis, third in his last competition a couple of weeks ago, had rounds of 72, 78 and 81 for a 15-over-par total of 231 over the 6,985yd, par-72 course at Saticoy Country Club.
Kirton finished 13 strokes behind the tournament winner, Charlie Beljan (New Mexico) who had rounds of 71, 76 and 71 for two-over 218 and a one-stroke victory from Jason Kokrak (Xavier) and Ricky Romano (Houston).
Alan Glynn (Xavier), from Middlesex, was joint 34th with 77, 79 and 80 for 236.
Lamar University (893) won the team event from New Mexico and Pepperdine, both 904, with Houston (906) fourth, Louisville (911) fifth and Xavier (921) sixth in the field of 12 colleges.
US College Golf
ROOKIE HOGBEN WINS OKLAHOMA COLLEGE TOURNAMENT
Alex Hogben, a 6ft 3in freshman student from Manchester, is the toast of the University of Missouri Kansas City golf team after scoring his first win in only his fourth tournament on the American college circuit.
Alex, (Photo Courtesy and Copyright © Tom Ward), shot rounds of 71, 71 and 69 for a five-under-par score of 211 – the third lowest score in UMKC golf programme history – in the ORU Shootout college tournament over the Broken Arrow course at Indian Springs Country Club in Oklahoma.
Hogben won by three shots from John Sutko (Creighton University) who had scores of 72, 71 and 71.
Alex had achieved two top-10 finishes in his first three tournaments and had been named as one of the top 25 freshmen golfers on the circuit.
UMKC (875) finished only one stroke behind the winners of the team event, Oklahoma City, in a field of 12 colleges.
Scots Peter McLachlan – last year’s Scottish youths champion – and Stephen Clark, both from Glasgow, are also on golf scholarships at the University of Missouri Kansas City but did not figure in the team of five for this tournament.
As winter approaches in the state of Missouri, this is the last tournament the UMKC team will play until late February.
|
Tuesday 24th October 2006
STIRLING STUDENTS SWEEP THE BOARDS AT ST ANDREWS BAY
Stirling swept the boards of the leading awards at the first of the British Universities Sports Association Regional Qualifiers (Scotland), played over the Devlin and Torrance courses at Fairmont St Andrews Bay.
Stirling students Paul Betty (pictured right) and Claire-Marie Carlton (pictured below left) won the individual titles and Stirling won both the men’s and women’s team events.
Betty had rounds of 74 and 69 for a one-under-par total of 143 to win by a single shot from two Highland & Islands University students, Greg McBain (144) from Aberdeen and David Morrison (146) from Banff. Scott Borrowman (Stirling) shared third place on 146.
Miss Carlton had 10 shots to spare in the women’s event after rounds of 80 and 75 for 155. Runner-up was Alford’s Laura Murray (Robert Gordon’s) who won the Scottish schoolgirls title at this venue two years ago.
Emma Fairnie (Edinburgh) from the Borders was third on 167.
The next three Scottish qualifying events are at Lossiemouth (March 26-28), Macdonald Cardrona (Apri 21-22) and Carrick on Loch Lomond (May 1-2).
Players who gain the most points will qualify to compete against qualifiers from English and Wales venues for the BUSA individual stroke-play championship next summer.
The Scottish Golf Union is supporting the regional qualifying events and in return a small number of entries will be allocated to the SGU for Scottish non-student youth players.
Collated results:
BRITISH UNIVERSITIES SPORTS ASSOCIATION REGIONAL QUALIFIER (Scotland)
Devlin & Torrance Courses, Fairmont St Andrews Bay.
FINAL TOTALS
MEN
143 Paul Betty (Stirling) 74 69.
144 Greg McBain (UHI Millennium Inst) 70 74.
146 David Morrison (UHI Millennium Inst) 73 73, Scott Borrowman (Stirling) 72 74.
148 Gordon Yates (Strling) 82 66.
149 Gavin Dear (Stirling) 75 74.
150 Cameron Gray (St Andrews) 73 77.
151 Mark Dickson (Edinburgh) 80 71, Kevin Garwood (Bournemouth) 74 77.
152 Grant Little (St Andrews) 79 73, Bobby Rushford (Stirling) 77 75, Bradley Brooke (Stirling) 77 75.
153 David Booth (Stirling) 69 74, Jonny Watt (Strlng) 76 77, Steven Hume (Abertay Dundee) 71 82.
154 James Warwick (UHI Millennium Inst) 83 71, Ross Dixon (St Andrews) 77 77, Fergus Niven (Edinburgh) 74 80.
155 Jason Edgeworth (St Andrews) 80 75, Ricardo Rebbechi (St Andrewss) 77 78, Brian Soutar (Heriot Watt) 75 80.
156 Karl Shephard (Stirling) 79 77, Charlie Swann (Bournemouth) 79 77, Euan Polson (Stirling) 75 81.
157 Malcolm Murray (UHI Millennium Inst) 82 75.
158 Mark Wilkie (Edinburgh) 81 77, Nick Feinbergh (St Andrews) 81 77, Colin Colraine (Strathlyde) 79 79, Gordon Stevenson (St Andrews) 78 80, Evan Bryceland (Stirling) 78 80.
159 Chris O’Hagan (Bournemouth) 82 77, Andrew Brown (Strathclyde) 81 78, Craig Cowie (Robert Gordon’s) 80 79, Henric Namander (Abertay Dundee) 76 83.
160 Jamie Gardiner (Robert Gordon’s 81 79, Mike Evans (Bournemouth) 79 81, Jack Musgrove (Edinburgh) 768 82.
162 Henry Killington (Bournemouth) 81 81, David McInroy (Strathclyde) 79 83.
165 Fraser Inglis (Glasgow) 78 86,.
166 David Currie (Glasgow) 88 78, Niall Finlay (Glasgow) 85 81, Richard Aspin (Strathclyde) 85 81, Gary Reid (Heriot Watt) 81 85.
167 Scott Green (Robert Gordon’s) 83 84.
168 Bruce Mackay (Heriot Watt) 89 79, Ali Leggate (Strathclyde) 84 84.
172 Graeme McInroy (Strathclyde) 85 87.
WOMEN
155 Claire-Marie Carlton (Stirling) 80 75.
165 Laura Murray (Robert Gordon’s) 85 80.
167 Emma Fairnie (Edinburgh) 86 81.
168 Emma Tipping (Stirling) 85 83.
173 Faye Haffey (Edinburgh) 93 80.
174 Morag Macpherson (St Andrews) 87 87.
179 Lesley Rolland (Napier) 94 85.
180 Joanna Krupa (Edinburgh) 92 88, Dawn Dewar (Stirling) 92 88.
182 Rachel Schwartz (Glasgow) 86 95.
183 Kerri Harper (Abertay Dundee) 94 89.
186 Coleen Winstanley (St Andrews) 95 91.
195 Jennifer Linklater (St Andrews) 97 98
TEAM EVENTS
MEN
430 Stirling 1 (Betty, Borrowman, Yates, Dear).
443 UHI Millennium Inst (McBain, Morrison, Warwick, Murray).
456 Stirling 2 (Rushford, Booth, Watt, Polson).
Other totals:
459 St Andrews 1. 460 Edinburgh. 465 Bournemouth, St Andrews 2. 466 Stirling 3. 486 Robert Gordon’s. 488 Strathclyde. 489 Heriot Watt. 497 Glasgow.
WOMEN
323 Stirlingt (Carlton, Tipping, Dewar).
339 Edinburgh (Fairnie, Haffey, Krupa).
360 St Andrews (Macpherson, Winstanley, Linklater).
EX LADIES TOUR CHIEF RANDELL GETS TOP POST IN PGAS OF EUROPE
Former Ladies European Tour supreme Ian Randell has been appointed chief exectutive of the PGAs of Europe. He will start his new role at its
headquarters at The Belfry in mid-January.
Randell, 33, is meantime chief executive of the British Universities Sports Association where he has to fulfil his contract before moving.
The PGAs of Europe has not had a man at the helm since the retirement of Lawrie Thornton as general secretary in August 2005.
In announcing the appointment Sandy Jones, the PGAs of Europe chairman, said that the new man would take up the role of ‘driving the Association forward’ in certain crucial areas devised by a series of strategy committee meetings during the interim period.
“Ian originally worked for the PGA here at the Belfry before he went off to further his career elsewhere, so we had given him a good groundwork,” said Sandy.
“Among those we considered for the post Ian ticked all of the boxes. Such areas as ‘commercial’ and ‘communications’ are vitally important to us if we are to make the PGAs of Europe a successful business, one that generates the income necessary to provide member countries with the services and the support they need.
“During the 12 months that, effectively, I have been personally undertaking the chief executive role one thing that has come across loud and clear is the gulf between the more mature PGAs and the comparative newcomers. We’re light years apart.
“Those from the old Eastern bloc, for example, need a great deal of help and I would like to believe that with the strategies we are now putting in place, we can provide that help. The PGAs of Europe brand has an important role to play, and ought to be able to develop a really strong voice within the political structure of the European Community,” he added.
In five successful years at the Ladies European Tour, Ian Randell did much to advance the organisation, including increasing the tournament schedule from 13 tournaments to in excess of 20. Before that he was a Senior Tournament Director with the PGA, having earlier worked in the Midland Region. He has a Management Sciences degree from the University of Warwick.
“I’m absolutely delighted to get this second opportunity to work at the forefront of professional golf,” said Ian. “I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my time with BUSA, since February, but when Sandy described the plans for the future of the PGAs of Europe, the prospect of driving the growth of the Association was one that I felt was too good to miss. I look forward to working with the Board of Directors to advance the game across Europe.”
|
Monday 23rd October 2006
US College Golf
LATVIAN GIRL MAKES US COLLEGE GOLF HISTORY
Laura Jansone, an 18-year-old freshman student at East Tennessee State University, pulled off a double whammy for herself and her college in the Lady Pirate Invitational tournament over the Bradford Creek course at Greenville, North Carolina.
Laura, women’s champion of Latvia in 2004 and again this year, became the first ever player from her country to win an event on the American college circuit and also the first-ever female player from the East Tennessee State University programme to win individual honours.
Miss Jansone was actually joint first with Sara Hunt (Birmingham Southern) on level par 216 but a win’s a win!
Over the 6,232yd, par-72 course Laura had scores of 71, 74 and 71. Sara’s rounds were 70, 75 and 71. They finished two shots ahead of Ashley Davis (Old Dominion).
Irish girl AnnMarie Dalton (High Point) from Carlow finished in joint 32nd place on 227, one shot and four places ahead of former Welsh girls champion (2002 and 2003) Lucy Gould, a student at East Tennessee State from Bargoed
Another Irish player, East Tennessee State freshman Sinead O’Sullivan from Galway came 51st equal on 231, one shot ahead of High Point’s Kate O’Sullivan from Paisley. Kate was played joint 57th
Another High Point team player, Jenna Kinnear from Belfast, finished joint 97th in a field of 105 on 249.
Birmingham Southern (880) won the team event by five shots from Maryland. East Tennessee State (889) shared fourth place with Central Florida. High Point (938) finished 14th in a strong field of 20 teams.
LEADING INDIVIDUALS
216 Laura Jansone (East Tennessee State) 71 74 71, Sara Hunt (Birmingham Southern) 70 75 71.
218 Ashley Davis (Old Dominion) 75 75 68.
Other scores:
227 AnnMarie Dalton(Hgh Point) 76 75 76 (jt 32nd).
228 Lucy Gould (East Tennessee State) 78 73 77 (jt 36th).
231 Sinead O’Sullivan (East Tennessee State) 80 79 72 (jt 51st).
232 Kate O’Sullivan (High Point) 79 77 76 (jt 57th)..
249 Jenna Kinnear (High Point) 84 82 83 (jt 97th).
LEADING TEAMS
880 Birmingham Southern.
885 Maryland.
887 Augusta State.
889 East Tennessee State, Central Florida.
Also:
938 High Point (14th of 20).
STEPHANIE SCORES FIRST WIN ON JUNIOR TOUR IN FLORIDA
Irish girls champion Stephanie Meadow from Antrim, Northern Ireland has followed up her victory in the Nick Faldo Series Girls’ Final at Celtic Manor by chalking up her first win on the International Junior Golf Tour in Florida.
Now a student at the International Junior Golf Academy, Stephanie was runner-up up her debut on the IJGT in September.
This time, competing in the latest event at Bent Tree Country Club, Sarasota, Stephanie made no mistake.
Trailing by a couple of shots after a first-round 73, Stephanie’s second-round score of 74 for a final total of 147 was good enough to give her a three-stroke win in the Girls’ 19 and Under division.
Emphasising the international quality of the field, the four girls who tied for second place behind Miss Meadow came from the United States, Japan, Thailand and Peru.
Unlike most of British Isles at the weekend, Stephanie played the event under sunny skies with temperatures up in the 80s.

I know they won a couple of weeks ago, but I just thought you'ld like to see this photo of the victorious Scottish Senior Mens' team and their wives and partners. The Scottish Team won the Mens Senior Home Internationals at Dunbar. I'm told the girls all caddied (in some horrible weather) and were a great help...they really enhanced the team spirit!
Well done everyone!
[Photo courtesy SGU]
US College Golf
TRIPLE BOGEY AT 17TH COSTS JODI EWART TOP-10 CALIFORNIA FINISH
Yorkshire’s Jodi Ewart tumbled out of the top 10 with a triple bogey 6 at the short 17th in her final round at the Stanford Fall Intercollegiate women’s tournament at Stanford, California on a sunny Sunday when the temperatures were up in the high 70s-low 80s.
Jodi, a freshman student at New Mexico University and already No 4 in the Golfstat Cup rankings, entered the third round in joint fifth place after scores of 69 and 70 but she crashed to a 77 (36-41) for a three-over-par total of 216 over the 5,985yd, par-71 course over which Tiger Woods and Mhairi McKay used to play when they were Stanford University students a decade or so ago.
Miss Ewart, from Catterick, bogeyed the third, ninth, 10th, and 12th before her disaster at the 17th. After finding birdies easy to come by through the first two rounds – she had four in the first and five in the second - Jodi could muster only one on Sunday, at the fifth.
She finished the tournament, which had many of the leading female college players in the field, in joint 13th place.
Stacy Lewis (Arkansas) birdied the 16th, 17th and 18th to finish with a 69 and a six-under-par total of 207. That was matched only by Alison Walshe (Arizona), who birdied the 16th and parred the last two, also for a 69. The pair shared first place.
Spaniard Adriana Zwanck (Arizona) tied for third place with home-course player Lauren Todd (Stanford) on 208, one behind the leading pair.
Vanderbilt (855) won the team title by five shots from Arizona with Georgia (862) third and Stanford (863) fourth.
New Mexico (884) came joint eighth in a field of 15 colleges.
LEADING INDIVIDUALS
207 Stacy Lewis (Arksansas) 71 67 69, Alison Walshe (Arizona) 67 71 69.
208 Lauren Todd (Stanford) 70 68 70, Adriana Zwanck (Arizona) 68 71 69.
Other score:
216 Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) 69 70 77.
LEADING TEAM TOTALS
855 Vanderbilt.
860 Arizona.
862 Georgia.
863 Stanford.
Other score:
884 New Mexico (jt 8th of 15).
|
Sunday 22nd October 2006
US College Golf
JODI IN CONTENTION AGAIN IN CALIFORNIA SUNSHINE
Yorkshire girl Jodi Ewart is in joint fifth place with one round to play in the Stanford Fall Intercollegiate women’s tournament at Stanford, California.
Jodi, from Catterick, a freshman at New Mexico University, has made such a good start to her career on the American women’s college circuit that she was No 3 in the GolfStat Cup rankings going into this event which features many of the top players and colleges.
Jodi has had rounds of 69 and 70 over the par-71, 5,985yd Stanford course in California conditions which really do seem thousands of miles away from Scotland’s rain – temperatures in the upper 70s to low 80s!
Miss Ewart, in her second round, had a double bogey 7 at the long seventh and dropped another stroke at the 11th but cancelled those slips out with birdies at the second, 12th, 15th and 17th. She had five birdies in her opening round of two-under-par 69.
Jodi is three shots behind pacemaker Whitney Wade (Georgia) who has put together scores of 67 and 69 for six-under-par 136.
Stanford, putting their local knowledge to good use, are leading the team event on 564 – a five shot lead from Arizona. New Mexico are in joint fifth place. A total of 15 colleges are represented.
Stanford is the university which Tiger Woods – and, before him, Mhairi Mackay attended.
INDIVIDUAL LEADERBOARD
136 Whitney Wade (Georgia) 67 69.
138 Lauren Todd (Stanford) 70 68, Stacy Lewis (Arkansas) 71 67, Alison Walshe (Arizona) 67 71, Stacy Lewis (Arkansas) 71 67.
139 Jodi Ewart (New Mexico) 69 70, Adriana Zwanki (Arizona) 68 71.
LEADING TEAMS
564 Stanford.
569 Arizona.
570 Georgia.
580 Vanderbilt.
585 New Mexico, Duke. |
Saturday 21st October 2006
Espirito Santo
SOUTH AFRICA TAKE THE TITLE AFTER TIE BREAK DEADLOCK
by COLIN FARQUHARSON
South Africa withstood a surge by defending champions Sweden to win the 2006 Women’s World Amateur Golf Team Championships on a tiebreak, becoming the first victorious host nation since 1980, at Steelenbosch.
Playing at De Zalze, Ashleigh Simon and Kelli Shean each shot 2-over par 74s for their final day total of 148. Teammate Stacy Bregman was one further back on 75. Sweden, making up a four-stroke deficit, tied the host nation at 10-under-par for a 72-hole total of 566. With the initial tie-break (final round non-counting score) being equal on 75, the non-counting score from the third round was called into play and South Africa’s Simon shot 73 to Andersson’s 77, making the host nation the victors.
It was desperately close at the top of the table with Colombia only a shot behind the top two on 567. Then came France, just one shot further back in fourth place on 568.
Germany and Japan were squeeze up behind them in joint fifth place on 569.
England (578) were the top British & Irish team in joint 11th place.
Scotland were 19th on 591 – two shots better than Wales who were tied for 20th place.
Ireland will be disappointed to have finished no higher than joint 23rd on 594.
Sweden’s Caroline Westrup, currently at college in the United States, came with a late run to deprive 16-year-old Japanese schoolgirl Rikako Morita of the individual honour.
Rikako had led through the first three rounds but a final effort of 75 left the door open for someone to catch – and it was Miss Westrup who signed off with a 69 for an eight-under-par total of 280.
That was two shots ahead of the second-placed Japanese girl.
England’s Kerry Smith (jt 16th on 288) and Sophie Walker (jt 19th on 290) were the leading GB&I players individually.
Heather MacRae finished with a 71, thanks to late birdies at the 16th and 18th for a seven-over-par total of 295 and a share of 36th place with Curtis Cup Welsh player Breanne Loucks.
Jenna Wilson ran up a quadruple bogey 7 at the short ninth in an outward half of 42. Her only birdie in two days’ play came at the 18th for a 78. She had an outstanding 69 in the second round but disappointed in the other three rounds as she finished on 12-over-par 300 and a share of 52nd place.
Krystle Caithness was back among the double bogeys in a final round of 76. She had a 6 at the second and a 6 at the 15th but she finished with birdies at the 17th and 18th for a total of 305 and a share of 73rd place.
FINAL TEAM TOTALS
566 South Africa 139 138 141 148, Sweden 139 145 138 144.
567 Colombia 147 141 143 136.
568 France 146 136 142 144.
569 Germany 141 139 143 146, Japan 137 144 145 143.
570 New Zealand 146 144 139 141.
572 Spain 145 146 138 143.
574 United States 144 146 138 146.
576 Chinese Taipei 139 146 143 147.
578 Korea 145 141 149 143, England 145 139 145 149, Netherlands 149 140 142 147.
581 Australia.
583 Canada.
584 Italy.
585 Russian Federation.
590 Mexico.
591 Scotland 153 141 150 147 (19th).
593 Wales 150 148 153 142, Czech Republic, Belgium (jt 20th).
594 Austria, Ireland 152 149 146 147 (jt 23rd).
602 Brazil.
603 Finland.
605 Argentina.
608 Norway.
610 Venezuela, Phillipines.
623 Bermuda.
624 Iceland.
625 Switzerland.
636 Puerto Rico.
638 Guatemala.
643 Egypt.
647 Trinidad & Tobago.
670 Slovakia.
694 Zambia.
705 Colombia.
760 Gabon.
FINAL INDIVIDUAL TOTALS
280 C Westrup (Swe) 72 73 66 69.
282 R Morita (Jap) 65 72 70 75.]283 A Munoz (Spa) 74 72 69 69, Pei-lin Yu (Chinese Taipei) 66 73 71 73.
Also:
285 M Bourdy (Fra) 74 68 69 784 (jt 7th).
286 K Schallenberg (Ger) 73 68 72 73 (jt 12th).
287 C Masson (Ger) 77 71 71 73, A Nordqvist (Swe) 68 72 72 75 (jt 14th).
288 A Rossi (Ita) 71 73 70 74, K Smith (Eng) 73 69, 72 74 (jt 16th).
290 S Walker (Eng) 72 70 73 75 (jt 19th).
293 B Mozo (Spa) 71 74 74 74 (jt 29th).
295 B Loucks (Wal) 77 75 75 68, H MacRae (Sco) 76 72 76 71 (jt 36th).
299 M Gillen (Ire) 75 75 74 75, C Coughlan (Ire) 81 74 72 72 (jt 48th).
300 J Wilson (Sco) 77 69 76 78 (jt 52nd).
302 M Reid (Eng) 75 74 76 77 (jt 63rd).
303 T Davies (Wal) 78 73 78 74, S Hassan (Wal) 73 78 78 74 (jt 66th).
305 K Caithness (Sco) 77 78 74 76 (jt 73rd).
322 T Mangan (Ire) 77 79 83 83 (jt 101st).
NEW ALGARVE OPEN AMATEUR EVENT ON DECEMBER 8 & 9
The Algarve Golf Guide publication, in association with Golf for Greys, is launching a major new annual event, the Algarve Amateur Open Championship and Pro-am.
The inaugural tournament will be held at Pestana’s new course near Silves on Friday December 8 and at Valda Pinta, near Carvoeiro, the following day.
The Algarve Amateur Open Championship is for players aged 18 or over who have a national federation or golf union membership card or an official handicap certificate from their club.
Both ladies and men are welcome to enter, and ladies play from the forward tees.
The field will be limited to 100 entries. If there are more than 100 entries, the lower handicappers will get priority.
The entry fee of 110 Euros guarantees two rounds of golf and lunch on the second day.
November 30 is the closing date for entries.
Entry forms and more details are available from the championship director (E-mail: aaoc.proam@yahoo.com; telephone 00351 918 449 966; fax 00351 282 381 063).
Tell them that you read about it on www.kirkwoodgolf.co.uk
Maeve Morrison (Powfoot) now a Teaching Pro in the States
Ten or so years ago, Maeve Morrison (pictured right) was one of the leading Dumfries-shire county players. She had been Powfoot women’s club champion six times and twice county champion.
Fast forward to 2006 and Maeve has become Mrs Jim Cromwell. Not only that, she is now the professional at Braelinn Golf Club in Peachtree City, just a few miles south of Atlanta, Georgia, and is “Director of Instruction” for three courses in all.
So how did all that come about?
Let Maeve tell you her story
US College Golf
HANNAH MAKES A START
Baylor University freshman student Hannah Burke from Hertfordshire finished joint 23rd in the Prices Give ‘Em Five Invitational women’s college tournament over the New Mexico State University course (6,319yd, par 72) course at Las Cruces.
Hannah had a roller-coaster tournament with rounds of 80, 72 and 76 for a total of 228.
New Mexico State made the most of their local knowledge to win the individual title through Lehua Wise (72-72-70 for two-under-par 214) and the team event with a total of 890 – six shots ahead of Baylor in a 17-team contest.
US College Golf
FRESHMAN CHARLENE CLAIMS THIRD PLACE IN NORTH CAROLINA
Charlene Reid from Antrim, Northern Ireland, a freshman student at Pfeiffer University, North Carolina, finished third in a field of 60 for the Patsy Rendleman Invitational women’s college tournament at Country Club of Salisbury, North Carolina.
Charlene had rounds of 78 and 74 for an aggregate of 152 – 10 shots behind the runaway winner, Franziska Blum (Newberry) who scored 70 and 72.
But Miss Reid was only one shot behind the runner-up, team-mate Brittany Beltran (76-75).
A second Pfeiffer player from Ulster, sophomore Nikki Taggart of Belfast, shared 20th place on 165 with scores of 81 and 84.
Scotland’s Ashton Ingram from Fort William, a first-year student at Belmont Abbey College, North Carolina, finished joint 32nd on 170 with scores of 87 and 83.
Catawba College (627) won the team event by a single shot from Pfeiffer (628) with Newberry (631) third. Belmont Abbey (667) shared fifth place in the field of 10 colleges.
The tournament was played over a par-72 course measuring 5,949yd.
US College Golf
ANNMARIE FINISHES 14TH AFTER LEADING IN VIRGINIA
Meanwhile, in the Spider Invitational women’s college tournament at Virginia Crossing Golf Club, Glen Allen in Virginia, AnnMarie Dalton from Carlow, Ireland, was the first-round leader with a 74 over the par-72, 6,038yd course.
But the junior student at High Point University faded to a second-day 89 as bad weather hit the venue. AnnMarie, with a total of 163, was placed 14th behind the winner, Belen Diaz Cisneros (Campbell University) who shot 77 and 74 for 151 and a three-shot victory from Kristin Simpson (Virginia) (76-78).
Two other High Point team players, both seniors, finished down the field. Kate O’Sullivan from Paisley scored 80 and 93 for 173 and a share of 36th place while Jenna Kinnear from Belfast had rounds of 85 and 91 for 176 and joint 45th place.
Campbell University (623) won the team event by six shots from Virginia.
High Point (872) finished joint sixth in a field of 11 colleges.
US College Golf
VICKI STRUGGLES IN CALIFORNIA
In the Aztec Fall Classic at Salt Creek Golf Club, Chula Vista in California, Irish junior international Vicki Power had one of her less successful forays on the American women’s college circuit.
Vicki, a student at Northern Arizona University, scored 76 and 85 for 161 to finish 71st in a quality field of 112 players over a 6,259yd course with a par of 72.
Two Denver University players, Emily Hoeper and Stephanie Sherlock tied for first place on three-under-par 141. Emily scored 66 and 75 while Stephanie had 69 and 72.
Denver (582) won the team event by seven shots from Brigham Young. Northern Arizona (634) came 16th of 19 colleges. |
Friday 20th October 2006
Espirito Santo - Womens World Amateur Team Championship
Third round report
FROM COLIN FARQUHARSON
Scotland go into the fourth and final round of the women’s world amateur team golf championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy in joint 19th place in a field of 42 nations at Stellenbosch, South Africa.
The Scots scored six-over-par 150 on the third day with a 74 from Krystle Caithness (St Regulus) and a pair of 76s from Jenna Wilson (Strathaven) and Heather MacRae (Dunblane New).
Krystle birdied two short holes, the seventh and 15th, on the Stellenbosch course but bogeyed the sixth, eighth, 10th and 13th.
Jenna and Heather could not muster a single birdie between them.
Jenna is the best-placed Scot in the individual rankings, sharing 41st place on six-over-par 222. Heather is joint 47th on 224 while Krystle is 74th equal of 229.
Stacy Bergman, who played well in the British women’s open amateur championship at Royal County Down in June, fired a three-under-par 69 to give South Africa a four-stroke lead after 54 holes.
Sweden leapfrogged Japan, France, England and Germany into second place with a seven-birdie 66 from Caroline Westrup while teammate Anna Nordqvist, the former British girls’ open champion, shot 72.
Rikako Morita, the 16-year-old Japanese schoolgirl, continues to set the pace. She had a 70 for nine-under-par 207 – three shots ahead of Pei-lin Yu from Chinese Taipei who had a 71.
England’s Kerry Smith is the highest placed British and Irish player in joint ninth place on 214 after a 72.
This is the first time that Scotland, England, Ireland and Wales have been able to send their own teams of three to the women’s world amateur team championship since the early days of the Espirito Santo Trophy in the 1960s. The Ladies Golf Union, traditionally, selected three players to represent Great Britain & Ireland.
THIRD ROUND TOTALS
418 South Africa.
422 Sweden.
423 Germany.
424 France.
426 Japan.
428 United States.
429 England, Spain, New Zealand, Chinese Taipei.
431 Colombia,Netherlands.
434 Italy.
435 Korea, Austria.
436 Australia.
441 Canada, Russian Federation
444 Scotland, Czech Republic.
445 Mexico, Chile.
447 Ireland.
448 Belgium.
450 Finland.
451 Wales.
452 Brazil, Venezuela.
455 Philippines.
456 Argentina.
458 Bermuda
460 Norway
463 Iceland
472 Switzerland
476 Guatemala
478 Puerto Rico
485 Egypt
496 Trinidad & Tobago
496 Slovakia
518 Zambia
527 Croatia
576 Gabon.
Leading individual third-round totals
Par 72
207 R Morita (Jap) 65 72 70.
210 Pei-lin Yu (Chi Tai) 66 73 71.
211 M Bourdy (Fra) 74 69 68, K Shean (SAF) 70 689 72, A Simon (SAf) 69 69 73, C Westrup (~Swe) 72 73 66.
212 A Nordqvist (Swe) 68 72 72.
213 K Schallenberg (Ger) 73 68 72.
214 A Blumenhirst (US) 71 71 72, C Masson (Ger) 72 71 71, A Munoz (Spa) 74 72 68, A Rossi (Ita) 71 73 70, K Smith (Eng) 72 69 72.
Other scores:
215 S Walker (Eng) 72 70 73 (jt 14th).
222 J Wilson (Sco) 77 69 76 (jt 41st).
224 M Gillen (Ire) 75 75 74, H MacRae (Sco) 76 72 76 (jt 47th).
225 M Reid (Eng) 75 74 76 (jt 56th).
227 C Coughlan (Ire) 81 74 72, B Loucks (Wal) 77 75 75 9jt 66th).
229 K Caithness (Sco) 77 78 74, T Davies (Wal) 78 73 78, S Hassan (Wal) 73 78 78 (jt 74th).
239 T Mangan (Ire) 77 79 83 (100th).
ALYTH TO HONOUR SCOTTISH CHAMPION KEVIN McALPINE
Alyth Golf Club is to hold an evening reception to mark the achievement of one of its members, Kevin McAlpine, in winning the Allied Surveyors Scottish amateur championship at Nairn Golf Club during the summer.
It will take place in the Alyth clubhouse on Thursday, October 26.
Guests will include representatives of the Scottish Golf Union and Perth & Kinross County Golf Union, last year’s Scottish amateur champion Glenn Campbell (Blairgowrie) and former Walker Cup player Ian Hutcheon (Monifieth) who skippered the Scotland team to victory in the recent senior men’s home internationals.
Ian will say a few words before presenting Kevin with a framed painting of Nairn Golf Club.
Kevin joined Alyth Golf Club as a junior member and later spent four years at Colorado State University on a golf scholarship.
Kevin played in the Scotland team who retained the men’s home internationals title at Pyle & Kenfig Golf Club, South Wales in September.
Apart from winning the national title, he won the Alyth club championship this year and also the Perth & Kinross county stroke-play title by five strokes over his home course with rounds of 65 and 64 for an 11-under-par total.
McAlpine returned to the town of Nairn to win the North of Scotland open amateur stroke-play title for the David Blair Trophy over four rounds.
His father, Hamish, was Dundee United’s goalkeeper for many years.
Name a new course at the Home of Golf
(Aerial photos of the new course are available by contacting Mike Woodcock on 0044 1334 466610 or at mwoodcock@standrews.org.uk)
Golf fans around the world will have a chance to carve their name in history next month when St Andrews Links Trust runs a competition through its website to find a name for its seventh course which is under construction.
It will be the first time in 600 years of history at the Home of Golf that golf fans and the public will have the chance to suggest the name of a new course.
Visitors to www.standrews.org.uk will be invited to send in suggestions from November 1 to December 1. The best names will be submitted to the Course No 7 Working Party to select the winning name. The identity of the new course will be announced in January.
Competition winners will be invited to play one of the first rounds on the new course when it opens in 2008 and will be invited to the official opening ceremony along with VIP’s from the world of golf.
Course No 7 is under construction on a clifftop site to the south east of St Andrews centred on Kinkell Point and Brownhills Farm. The 220 acre site features spectacular views over the town of St Andrews and out to the North Sea.
Alan McGregor, general manager of St Andrews Links Trust, said, “The anticipation for what will be one of the finest courses not only in Scotland but in world golf has been building steadily and the mystery over its name seems to have captured the minds of golf fans everywhere.
“It is not very often that a new course opens at the Home of Golf and we have been acutely aware of the interest that Course No 7 has been attracting. We know that many golfers feel an emotional attachment to the birthplace of the game and we really wanted them to have the opportunity to become a part of the process of naming this new course.
“We have already received dozens of enquiries regarding the name from all corners of the globe and this competition promises to be fascinating. I would urge anyone who would like to be part of golf history to send in their suggestion.”
The internet competition follows the success last year of an auction on the Links Trust website for the tee plaques from the Old Course which attracted bids from around the world. The sale of the tee plaques raised £15,000 for St Andrews Links Junior Golf Association.
Full details for the competition and weekly information bulletins regarding the history and nature of the land at Course No 7 will be provided at www.standrews.org.uk. To send in your entry please email namecomp@standrews.org.uk from November 1. The deadline for entries will be 12noon on December1.
ELGA Press Release
Derbyshire pair win ELGA's new PING Fourball Betterball tournament
Matlock's Shirley Kay and Jenny Knight stormed home to become the first winners of ELGA's new competition for club golfers, the PING Ladies' Fourball Betterball Tournament of England.
The Derbyshire pair claimed their crown with a net score of seven-under par 65 in the grand final, which was played over the Thonock Park course at PING's Gainsborough Golf Club in Lincolnshire.
They won by the narrowest of margins, beating Staffordshire's Sue Spencer and Patricia Davies on countback - thanks to a remarkable performance on the back nine.
Shirley, who plays off 22, and Jenny, a 13-handicapper, came home in a net score of six-under 30, courtesy of a net eagle and four net birdies.
"I didn't realise we were doing so well until our playing partners told me our score as we left the last green. I was quite staggered," said Shirley. "We knitted together very well."
As their victory sank in Jenny added: "I could do a back flip, I am so chuffed. It's just out of this world. We scraped through our club round and through the regional final and I had no idea we could possibly do this."
Both women are PING fans and Jenny, who holed out for a net birdie on the 18th green, said: "No-one has enough money to take my PING putter away from me!"
Meanwhile Sue Spencer, a Staffordshire county player, and Patricia Davies were left counting the cost of the 13th, where they both had a shot but could manage only a net bogey five. "That's dismal in this format," said Patricia.
It was the only dropped shot of the day for the Whittington Heath pair, who were four-under on the front nine and three-under on the homeward half, helped by a net eagle two on the 15th, where Patricia holed a 45-footer. Sue, a former county champion, plays off four while Patricia is a 15-handicapper.
Third place went to Jane Fletcher and Janet Day of New North Manchester who scored net 66. Jane, who plays off six, had the additional handicap of a bad back but was determined to compete in the final and said: "Janet did all the work on the back nine when I flagged."
The pair made a quick start to the final when Janet, who plays off 13, had a gross birdie on the first hole and Jane chipped in on the par five 6th for a gross eagle three. They finished with matching halves of net 33.
The betterball medal format of the tournament proved a great hit with competitors. "It's brilliant," said Shirley Kay. "It's lovely for ladies because we don't get many opportunities to play fourball betterball."
Patricia Davies added: "I think it's a great format because it allows you to be a bit more aggressive."
The tournament attracted an initial entry of thousands of pairs from 800 clubs across England. Over 330 clubs were represented at the four regional finals and 48 pairs qualified for the grand final.
John Clark, the managing director of PING Europe, said: "We are thrilled. This tournament has exceeded all our expectations in terms of the numbers of clubs and the numbers of golfers who took part. It has been a fantastic event."
Clare Tyler, ELGA's marketing, press and PR officer, added: "We have worked with PING to create a competition for everyone to take part in. This is something we are able to offer to all our members across the handicap range."
The winners hold the PING Fourball Betterball Trophies for a year. They also each received a memento and a choice of clothing from PING Collection's exclusive ladies' range, or PING ladies' golf clubs to the retail value of 500 (less the value of any prize won in an earlier round). The runners-up and the third-placed players each received prizes to the value of £100. All the finalists received a pair of ECCO shoes and a PING Collection shirt.
During the grand final competitors also had the opportunity to tour the PING factory and visit the PING fitting centre to try out clubs.
They could also take part in a putting competition to win a PING G5i putter, and a nearest the pin challenge, where their shots were plotted by PING's state of the art "TrackMan" radar system. The winner of the challenge received a PING G5 driver.
Information about the 2007 tournament will be sent to clubs in January.
US College Golf
BANCHORY LAD JUST MAKES TOP 10 AT EAGLE RIDGE
Banchory exile Adam Lindsay finished 10th equal in the NAIA Region 7 college golf tournament at Eagle Ridge Golf Club, Galena in Illinois.
Adam, a second-year student at Iowa Wesleyan College, had rounds of 78 and 77 for a total of 155 over the 6,875yd, par-72 course.
The leading Iowa Wesleyan player was freshman James Lennox from Yorkshire who came fourth with 77 and 75 for 152. It was his second top-10 finish.
Ben Hanson (St Ambrose) won with a one-under-par total of 143 (74-69).
St Ambrose, who provided the top three finishers, won the team event with 598 ahead of Grand View (617) and Iowa Wesleyan (621) in a field of 11 teams.
US College Golf
ST ANDREWS LAD JOINT 12TH SCORE BEFORE RAINS HIT ROCKY RIVER
Daniel Sommerville from St Andrews and Neil McBride of Glasgow – both students at Clayton State University, Atlanta – finished tied 12th and 35th respectively in the rain-abbreviated Queen City Shoot-out college tournament at Rocky River Golf Club, Concord in North Carolina.
The scheduled 36-hole event had to be reduced to only 18 holes due to torrential rain which flooded the course on the second day.
Former Madras College pupil Daniel had a three-over-par 75 over the 6,970yd course and Neil had a 79.
The individual winner was Jakin Fox (Lenoir-Rhyne College) with a three-under-par 69.
Clayton State (324) finished 10th of 13 in the team event won by Belmont Abbey College (298). |
Thursday 19th October 2006
US College Golf
CALLUM (75) DOWN THE FIELD IN RAIN-HIT EVENT
West of Scotland Open champion Callum Macaulay from Tulliallan, a student at the University of Mississippi, finished joint 45th with a three-over-par round of 75 in the rain-shortened Squire Creek Inter-Collegiate tournament at Ruston, Louisana.
Torrential rain forced the organisers to reduce the 54-hole tournament to a one-round affair which was won by Johnny Caldwell (South Alabama) with a five-under-par 67.
Mississippi (287) finish fourth in the team event won by Sam Houston State (281) with Southeastern Louisiana and UT-Chattanooga joint second on 286 in a field of 18 teams.
PENNY, GODSMAN AND DUNCAN WIN BOYS' OPEN MATCH-PLAY FINALS AT FORRES
By ROBIN WILSON
Portlethen's Ryan Penny (pictured right), Kyle Godsman (Hopeman) and Scott Duncan (Newtonmore) were the respective age and handicap winners when the inaugural North District boys’ open match-play championship ended at Forres Golf Club today.
Penny (15), recent beaten finalist in the Aberdeen & District junior champions’ Spence Trophy match-play tournament, birdied the 18th against Jack Thow (Crieff) in the semi-final to book his place in Under-18 years’ section final in which Ryan beat local hope James Foley by 2 and 1.
Hopeman's Kyle Godsman, now aged 15, beat Alistair Begg (Muir of Ord) in the in the Under-15 years’ final. Begg was a 19th hole semi-final winner over Peter Ramsay (Elgin) in the morning but three-handicapper Godsman was the stronger player in the final.
Kyle was four up after nine holes and six ahead after 11 before winning by 5 and 4.
Scott Duncan (Newtonmore), only 13 years of age, won the 17th hole to go one ahead of local Aiden McLean before securing a half on the final green to win the handicap section.
The tournament, backed by the North District, was the brainchild of Forres Golf Club professional Sandy Aird who wanted to provide an opportunity for youngsters to gain more match-play experience. It is expected to become an open event, drawing entries from farther afield as more boys - and their parents - learn about the tournament.
Results:
UNDER-18 YEARS
SCRATCH
Semi-finals - R Penny (Portlethen) bt J Thow (Crieff) 1 hole, J Foley (Forres) bt A Baillie (Elgin) 4 and 3.
Final - Penny bt Foley 2 and 1.
UNDER-15 YEARS
SCRATCH
Semi-finals - A Begg (Muir of Ord) bt P Ramsay (Elgin) at 19th, K Godsman (Hopeman) bt J Treasurer (Castle Heather) 4 and 3.
Final - Godsman bt Begg 5 and 4.
HANDICAP
Semi finals - J Milne (Elgin) (12) bt N Skene (Garmouth & Kingston) 1 hole, S Duncan (Newtonmore) (19) bt A McLean (Forres) (19) at 19th.
Final - Duncan bt Milne 1 hole.
JENNA (69) GETS SCOTS MOVING UP WORLD WOMEN'S AMATEUR GOLF TABLE
FROM COLIN FARQUHARSON
Scotland improved nine places to joint 18th in the field of 42 on the back of a super 69 by Jenna Wilson, pictured right, from Strathaven in the second round of the women’s world amateur team golf championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy in South Africa today (THURSDAY).
Playing over the 6,080yd, par-72 Zalze Golf Club course, Jenna was able to improve by eight shots on the 77 she had in the first round over the marginally longer Stellenbosch club course.
Curtis Cup reserve Heather MacRae from Dunblane New was Scotland’s other second-round counter with a par 72, also at Zalze, four shots better than she managed at Stellenbosch.
Scottish Under-21 title-holder Krystle Caithness (St Regulus), also a Curtis Cup reserve, had Scotland’s non-counting score – a 78 - under the best two from three daily format.
Krystle, just 17 years old, was heading for a great score when she was two under par after 11 holes, having birdied the first, fourth and seventh and dropped only one shot, at the fifth.
Then the Fifer from Cellardyke shed eight shots over a nightmare last seven holes. Krystle bogeyed the 12th and 14th before running up a disastrous triple bogey 7 at the 15th.
Another bogey went on her card at the 17th before the final blow of a double-bogey 6 at the 18th, giving her sadly-contrasting halves of two-under-par 34 and eight-over-par 44.
Jenna Wilson conquered the De Zalze inward nine that floored team-mate Krystle. Jenna was out in one-under 35 with birdies at the first, third and fifth and bogeys at the fourth and seventh.
Then Jenna eliminated all the mistakes from her game with seven pars and birdies at the 17th and 18th for two-under 34 home and a 69.
Miss Wilson improved from joint 66th to joint 29th at the end of the second day.
Heather MacRae also turned in one-under-par 35 at De Zalze with birdies at the third and eighth and a bogey at the 17th. She almost held on to a sub-par score with a birdie at the 13th but bogeys at the 12th and 16th for an inward 37 and a par-matching 72 which put her in a share of 38th spot, an improvement of 16 places.
Host nation South Africa have taken up the running with a total of 277 – three shots clear of Germany with the toppled overnight leaders Japan in third place on 281.
England are in joint fifth place on 284; Scotland joint 18th on 294; Wales 21st on 298 and Ireland sharing 24th place on 301.
England’s Kerry Smith (Waterlooville) (73-69) and Sophie Walker (Kenwick Park) (72-70)– both of whom were overlooked for the Curtis Cup match in late July – are the leading British or Irish players in the individual standings in joint seventh place on 142 – five shots behind 16-year-old Japanese high school girl Rikako Morita (65-72).
US College Golf
JORDAN FINDLAY STILL STRUGGLING TO FIND FORM ON US COLLEGE CIRCUIT
Fraserburgh teenager Jordan Findlay just cannot get back in the groove for East Tennessee State University on the American college circuit since his summer break back home.
The former British boys champion had rounds of 85, 74 and 79 for a total of 22-over-par 238 in the Bank of Tennessee Intercollegiate tournament at The Ridges Golf & Country Club, Jonesborough in Tennessee.
Findlay was placed 73rd in a field of 77 students.
The event was won by his ETSU team-mate, another past British boys champion, Edinburgh-born Rhys Davies.
It was an eighth college win in the States for the Walker Cup player from Bridgend, South Wales.
Davies score 71, 69 and 71 for a five-under-par total of 211 which was three ahead of runner-up Philip Petit (Tennessee).
Tennessee (869) pipped East Tennessee State (870) for the team event contested by 15 colleges.
LEADING INDIVIDUALS
211 Rhys Davies (East Tennessee State) 71 69 71.
214 Philip Petit (Tennessee) 73 69 72.
Other scores by East Tennessee State University players:
220 Gareth Shaw (Lisburn, Northern Ireland) 73 74 73.
221 Seamus Power (Waterford, Ireland) 74 78 69.
222 Cian McNamara (Limerick, Ireland) 73 74 75.
225 Adam Hodkinson (England) 77 75 73.
238 Jordan Findlay (Fraserburgh) 85 74 79.

Michelle Thomson in action
MICHELE THIRD IN USA – BUT SHE’S NOT GUARANTEED PLACE IN NEXT TOURNAMENT
North of Scotland women’s champion for the past two years, Michele Thomson has finished third in her second appearance on the American women’s college golf circuit – but is still not guaranteed a place in the Jacksonville State University team for the next tournament!
Michele, 18, from Ellon, Aberdeenshire, is a freshman student at the university in Alabama. She finished 26th in her debut tournament in September but is obviously now more acclimatised to the American conditions.
Michele shot scores of 80, 74 and 71 for an aggregate of 225 over a par-72, 5,963yd course in the Chris Bannister Gamecock Classic at the Silver Lakes course in Calhoun County, Alabama.
Hiliary Zeigler (Lamar University), who set a tournament low record mark, was the runaway winner by nine shots with scores of 73, 72 and 69 for two-under-par 214. But Michele was only two shots behind runner-up Therese Nilsson, also of Lamar, who had 73, 77 and 73 for 223.
Miss Thomson was the leading freshman – first-year student – in a field of 47 players.
“I was a bit disappointed with my first-round score of 80 but delighted with my last two rounds of 74 and one-under-par 71, especially as the weather was pretty bad,” said Michele.
“The start of the third round was delayed because of thunder storms and the weather suited me a lot more than it did some of the other players.
“I’m just delighted that I’ve been able to get off to such a good start in America and hopefully I can build on this performance and do even better next time.”
Although Michele’s performance helped Jacksonville State University (933) to finish second in the team event behind Southern Alabama (919) and she was nine strokes better than the next best JSU player in the final totals, there is no guarantee that the long-hitting Scot will be a member of the college’s team for the next tournament which is the Troy University Invitational at Birmingham, South Alabama from October 29 to 31.
Michele explained: “Jacksonville State is no different from any other college golf team out here. We have seven players in our squad and only five players travel to a tournament. We have a little qualifying competition over our home course – and the players with the five best scores make up the team to travel, the sixth and seventh stay at home.
“It is the same for all the universities on the circuit. Although Katy McNicoll from Carnoustie has this week won her first event, she will still have to qualify to make the Lynn University team for the next tournament.”
LEADING INDIVIDUALS
Par 72
214 Hiliary Zeigler (Lamar) 73 72 69.
223 Therese Nilsson (Lamar) 73 77 73.
225 Michele Thomson (Jacksonville State) 80 74 71.
227 Elin Andersson (South Alabama) 75 73 79.
229 Sara Marti (South Alabama) 76 80 73.
LEADING TEAMS
919 South Alabama.
933 Jacksonville State.
937 Lamar
957 Western Kentucky.
ELAINE TO BE MADE A FOUNDER MEMBER OF ABERDEEN SPORTING HALL OF FAME
Mrs Elaine Farquharson-Black, a Great Britain and Ireland team player in the Curtis Cup matches of 1990 and 1992 and the Vagliano Trophy of 1989 and 1991, is one of four Aberdeen-born golfers who will be among the first 21 inductees to the newly-created Aberdeen Sporting Hall of Fame.
Mrs Farquharson-Black, an honorary member of Deeside Golf Club, won the Scottish Under-18 girls’ title in 1985, the Helen Holm Trophy in 1987 and the Scottish women’s amateur championship at Machrihanish in 1990 when her victims included Kathryn Imrie (quarter-final), Catriona Lambert (semi-final) and Shirley Huggan (final).
In 1989, representing GB&I, she and Helen Dobson won the women's world amateur better-ball championship at Sao Paulo, Brazil. For some reason, the tournament has never been played since, which makes Elaine and Helen undefeated world champions!
Also, in 1991, Elaine was one of the five-strong GB&I who won the Commonwealth tournament, played at Northumberland GC.
Elaine had a short spell in the professional ranks after GB&I won the Curtis Cup at Hoylake in 1992 and she is one of the few lady golfers who can claim to have played for Scotland as an amateur AND a professional. She was a member of the Scotland professional side who beat England at Hazlehead in the mid-1990s in a one-off women’s match for the Union Cup.
Now a successful Aberdeen solicitor, specialising in planning an environmental law, 38-year-old Elaine is a mother of two boys, Nicholas (7) and Michael (3) – and still has a scratch handicap although she has been only a social golfer for more than a decade.
In recent years, she captained the Scotland team in the women’s home internationals three times and also led Scotland in two European women’s team championships.
The other Aberdonian golfers to be honoured are Paul Lawrie, winner of the Open championship at Carnoustie in 1999, Harry Bannerman, who played in the 1971 Ryder Cup match at St Louis, Missouri and gained a square match with Arnold Palmer, then in his prime, and Sandy Pirie, the Hazlehead greenkeeper who became a GB&I player in the Walker Cup match of 1967
A civic ceremony will be held in the Aberdeen Town House on November 23 when all 21 inductees will be made founder members of the Aberdeen Sporting Hall of Fame.
West Vets beat East Vets 5-4
The rescheduled match between the West and East was played in glorious conditions at Troon Portland yesterday. In a very closely contested match the West team were able to regain the Elise Duncan Trophy by winning 5 - 4.
Team Players
West: Robina Gilbertson, Heather Anderson, Elspeth Hanlon, Pat Hutton, Aileen Wilson, Jennifer Mack, Anna Telfer, Rosemary Donaldson and Eleanor Taylor
East: Noreen Fenton, Ruth Brown, Anne Brownie, Susan Penman, Karen Ballantyne, Ethel Jack, Maureen Woodward, Norma Richmond and Jen Corbett.
Check out the West Vets website for results and photos from the Scottish Vets meeting at Blairgowrie, Scottish Seniors and Senior Home Internationals.
NORTH DISTRICT BOYS’ MATCH-PLAY EVENT BEATS THE RAIN AT FORRES
By ROBIN WILSON
SGU North District secretary David Black, local club professional and tournament instigator Sandy Aird and Scottish international Brian Fotheringham all pitched in to clear water from the greens and enable the first and second rounds of the inaugural North District boys’ open match-play championship to be completed on a rain-sodden Forres Golf Club course yesterday.
After leading the Under-18 years’ section qualifiers Neil Howitt (Nairn Dunbar) made a shock exit in the second round to Ryan Penny (Portlethen), who won after just 13 holes.
Host club member James Foley plays Andrew Baillie (Elgin) in the second of Thursday’s semi finals to ensure a North presence in the final.
Foley, who had to play three extra holes to survive his first-round tie, beat the highly rated Aberdeen youngster, Scott Fraser (Northern), in the second round.
Penny takes on another Aberdonian, Scott Robertson (Hazlehead), in the other Under-18 semi final.
The North has four players through to the semi-finals of the Under-15s championship. Peter Ramsay (Elgin) meets Alistair Begg (Muir of Ord) and Kyle Godsman (Hopeman) tackles Jamie Treasurer (Castle Heather) for a place in the final.
Results:
UNDER-18s
FIRST ROUND
N Howitt (Nairn Dunbar) bt A Hay (Grantown on Spey) 2 and 1.
R Penny (Portlethen) bt S Mann (Moray) 2 and 1.
J Thow (Crieff) bt D Macandrew (Hazlehead) 5 and 3.
S Robertson (Hazlehead) bt M. Brand (Tain) 5 and 4.
A Baillie (Elgin) bt S Stables (Elgin) 3 and 1.
C MacDonald (Nairn Dunbar) bt B Macleman (Moray) 1 hole.
S Fraser (Northern) bt S Griffiths (Cullen) 5 and 4.
J Foley (Forres) bt A. Dunton (McDonald Ellon) at 21st.
SECOND ROUND
Penny bt Howitt 6 and 5.
Robertson bt Thow 5 and 3.
Baillie bt MacDonald 4 and 3.
Foley bt Fraser 4 and 3.
UNDER-15s
FIRST ROUND
D Edwards (Elgin) bt D Wright (Alness) 3 and 2.
P Ramsay (Elgin) bt C Nelson (Nairn) 2 and 1.
F Clarke (Westhill) bt R Clarke (Moray) at 21st.
A Begg (Muir of Ord)) bt E Duncan (Newtonmore) 8 and 7.
L Reid (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) bt W Rennie (Northern) 1 hole.
K Godsman (Hopeman) bt M Ross (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) 1 hole.
J Treasurer (Castle Heather) bt N MacAndrew (Cullen) 5 and 4.
T Maddocks (Forres) bt C MacLean (Inverness) 7 and 5.
SECOND ROUND
Ramsay bt Edwards 3 and 2.
Begg bt F Clark 3 and 2.
Godsman bt Reid 2 and 1.
Treasurer bt Maddocks 8 and 6. |
Wednesday 18th October 2006
ESPIRITO SANTO TROPHY DAY ONE
By Pete Kowalski (International Golf Federation Press Officer)
With additional words by Colin Farquharson (colin@scottishgolfview.com)
Scotland – represented by Heather MacRae (Dunblane), Krystle Caithness (St Regulus) and Jenna Wilson (Strathaven) – are joint 27th in a field of 42 nations at the end of the first day of the women’s world amateur team championship for the Espirito Santo Trophy at Stellenbosch, South Africa.
The Scots, captained by former Curtis Cup player Alison Davidson from Stirling, totalled 153 under the best-two-from-three-scores to count daily format.
Heather had a four-over-par 76 to be in joint 54th place individually. Krystle and Jenna both had 77s to be sharing 66th place.
Scotland’s first-round total was 153, which put them 16 shots behind the leading Japan team for whom 16-year-old Rikako Morita had the best individual score of seven-under-par 65.
Japan lead by two strokes from defending champions Sweden, South Africa and Chinese Taipei, all on the 139 mark.
FIRST-ROUND RECORD
Rikako Morita broke the record for lowest individual first-round score in Espirito Santo Trophy history. The second-year high school student from Kyoto had an eagle, six birdies and a bogey in her round.
Team-mate Mika Miyazato, 17, of Okinawa, added an even-par 72 for a team total of 137. Miyazato and the third Japanese player, Erina Hara, 18, played in the 2004 women’s world amateur team championship when they tied for fourth place behind Sweden.
"I hit my tee shots long and straight and I hit my irons close,” said Rikako Morita, the 2006 Japan Women’s Public Golf champion.
"We made a game plan for this championship,” said Japan’s captain Mayumi Satofuka. “We discussed course management and the team was very good at following the game plan.”
Former British girls champion Anna Nordqvist from Sweden was the most successful European player on the first day. Her four-under-par 68 at the De Zalze Golf Club course was the lowest at that venue and placed her third overall. Anna is a student at Arizona State Universtiy.
For more information and scoring visit www.internationalgolffederation.org.
You can E-mail Pete Kowalski with questions or comments at pkowalski@usga.org
TEAM SCOREBOARD
FIRST ROUND
137 Japan
139 Sweden, South Africa, Chinese Taipei.
141 Germany.
142 Canada.
143 Australia.
144 United States.
145 Korea, Spain, England.
146 New Zealand, France.
147 Colombia.
148 Italy.
149 Netherlands, Finland, Czech Republic.
150 Russian Federation, Wales, Chile, Venezuela.
151 Mexico, Austria, Belgium.
152 Ireland.
153 Scotland, Argentina.
154 Iceland, Brazil.
155 Norway, Phillipines.
157 Puerto Rico.
160 Bermuda.
162 Guatemala.
163 Switzerland.
164 Trinidad & Tobago, Egypt.
168 Slovakia.
175 Croatia.
176 Zambia.
191 Gabon.
LEADING INDIVIDUALS
Par 70
65 Rikako Morita (Jap).
66 Pei-Lin Yu (Chinese Taipei).
68 Anna Nordqvist (Sweden).
69 Emma Bennett (Australia), Sandra Gall (Germany), Ashleigh Simon (South Africa).
70 Laura Matthews (Canada), Kelly Shean (South Africa).
Other scores:
71 Belen Mozo (Spa) (jt 9th).
72 Sophie Walker (Eng) (jt 13th).
73 Sahra Hassan (Wal), Kerry Smith (Eng) (jt 20th).
75 Martina Gillen (Ire), Melissa Reid (Eng) (46th).
76 Heather MacRae (Sco) (jt 54th).
77 Krystle Caithness (Sco), Breanne Loucks (Wal), Tricia Mangan (Ire), Jenna Wilson (Sco) (jt 66th).
78 Tara Davies (Wal) (jt 79th).
81 Claire Coughlan (Ire) (jt 94th).
US College Golf
KAREN EARNS DELANEY FAMILY BRAGGING RIGHTS – UNTIL NEXT US COLLEGE EVENT
Karen Delaney, Irish girls champion in 2002 and 2003, does not usually finish ahead of her younger sister Tara in American college golf events but she earned the family bragging rights, at least until the next tournament, by doing so in the Mercedes Benz Women’s College Championship over the Cherokee Country Club course (par 71, 5,932yd) at Knoxville, Tennessee.
Both girls are students at Kent State University, Ohio.
Karen had scores of 77, 73 and 79 for a total of 229 which put her in a final position of joint 33rd in a field of 81 players.
Tara, who lost to Karen in the 2003 Irish girls final before winning that title in 2004, as well as the Irish women’s open amateur stroke-play championship in 2004 and 2005, had rounds of 75, 77 and 78 for a total of 230 and a share of 38th place.
It has to be said that this was not one of Tara Delaney’s best efforts on the American college circuit on which she has twice been a winner, including earlier this 2006-2007 season.
Jenny Suh (Alabama University) won the Mercedes Benz title by two shots from Lacey Jones (Southern Methodist) with scores of 74, 70 and 70 for a total of one-over-par 214.
Kent State, with a total of 912, finished 10th of 15 in the team event won by Tennessee at the first hole of a play-off against Georgia. They had tied on 887.
US College Golf
WALLACE DOWN THE FIELD AT SOUTH BEND, INDIANA
Former Scottish youths champion Wallace Booth from Comrie, Perthshire finished joint 40th in a field of 67 for the Fighting Irish Classic men’s college golf tournament over the Warren course at South Bend, Indiana.
Now in his fourth and final year at Augusta State University, Wallace had scores of 81, 77 and 75 for a total of 233 over the par-70, 7,011yd course.
Justin Harding (Lamar University) won the event with a three-over-par total of 213 (67-71-75). He chipped in for a birdie at the last hole to pip two players who had finished on 214.
Augusta State (908) finished sixth of 11 in the team event won with ease by Lamar with a total of 860.
US College Golf
CARNOUSTIE’S KATY CHALKS UP FIRST WIN IN UNITED STATES
Carnoustie’s 18-year-old Katy McNicoll has won her first tournament on the American women’s college golf circuit.
Only a month or two into her second year at Lynn University, Boca Raton in Florida, Katy had rounds of 74 and 75 for a total of 145 – her lowest over 36 holes in the United States – to win the Nova Southeastern Fall Invitational women’s college tournament over the challenging, par-72, 6,000yd Squire Course at PGA National Resort, Palm Beach Gardens in Florida.
During the summer break from college, Katy was runner-up to Krystle Caithness in the Scottish Under-21 girls’ stroke-play championship at Stirling and semi-finalist in the Scottish Under-18 girls championship at Peebles, beaten by the eventual winner Roseanne Niven (Crieff).
She said then that she felt that her first year in the United States had made her a better competitive golfer.
Katy finished third in the Lady Falcon Invitational at Daytona Beach in late September, her first tournament of the 2006-2007 college season.
"I'm really happy to have won my first tournament out here. The wind got up on the final day so I guess it was a bit like home for me. This is where some of the other girls struggled," said Katy from Florida today (WED).
"To be honest, I didn't start well both days. I was three over par through the first three holes on the first day and two over through three on the second. On the final day I made a couple of double bogeys but three birdies helped a bit to balance that out.
"My last birdie was at the par-5 14th and I parred in from there. Nothing exciting but it made the difference in the end for me to win by one stroke."
Lynn University won that team event and also this week’s one at West Palma Beach after a one-hole play-off against Florida Southern Univeresity who also finished with a team aggregate of 607.
“This was a fantastic day for our team,” said Lynn University women’s head golf coach Courtney Bibby. “I’m very proud of these girls.”
Katy won by one shot from three players – Heather Burgner and Lindsey Bergeon, both Florida Southern University, and Laura Fourdraine (Rollins College).
Lynn University had four players in the top 10, including Natasha Morgan from Monmouth, South Wales. Natasha finished joint seventh on 153 with scores of 76 and 77. Natasha is a senior (final year) student.
Lynn University women’s golf squad is made up of four students from the United States, and one each from Scotland, Morocco, Canada, India and Wales.
Katy McNicoll’s older brother Keir was also a student at Lynn University until he completed his golf scholarship before the summer during which he won the East of Scotland Open at Lundin Links and went on to make his debut for Scotland in the team that retained the men’s amateur home internationals title at Pyle & Kenfig, South Wales in September.
Katy’s dad Jim, a former Dunfermline footballer, runs a sports shop in Carnoustie.
“I’m never keen to be quoted re the performances of the ‘bairns.’ It’s all about them and not about the parents. But knowing how much hard work Katy has put in to her golf, we can appreciate any success she has,” said Mr McNicoll.

Winners in the Donald Ross Junior Invitational at Royal Dornoch
left to right: Christain MacLeod, Sammy Vass and John Fair.
Success for Nairn Dunbar Junior at Royal Dornoch.
Donald Ross Junior Invitational at Royal Dornoch
By ROBIN WILSON
At just fourteen, he will be fifteen next month, Nairn Dunbar's Christain MacLeod took the first step to following in the path of club mates Ryan Elder and Russell Knox when he triumphed in his first major event outside his home club by becoming the seventh winner of the Donald Ross Junior International invitation tournament at Royal Dornoch today. (Wednesday)
From his handicap of ten, which will now reduce to eight, MacLeod with 37 stableford points, won on a card countback from Icelander Arnar Freyr Jonnsson. MacLeod's inward card of 20 points in the stableford scoring format was achieved with a birdie, birdie start at the 10th and 11th holes for three points at each hole as the North juniors made a clean sweep of the main trophies.
John Fair (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) with halves of 37 and 38 for 75 won the Royal Dornoch Trophy for the best scratch score on the championship course and Tain's Sammy Vass (14) was fourth overall and the girls winner with 36 points.
In the consolation competition on the Struie course for non qualifiers Michael Campbell, handicap 1, from Buckpool won the Dornoch Firth Trophy with 37 points on a better inward half over Martin Laing (Inverness).
Results. Donald Ross Championship CSS (boys 71, girls 77)
Donald Ross Trophy -C. MacLeod (Nairn Dunbar) (10), A F. Jonnsson (Iceland) (10) 37 pts. J. Fair (Fortrose & Rosemarkie) (5) , S. Vass (Tain) (5), N. Campbell (Royal Dornoch) (20) 36 pts. R. I. Mackenzie (Tain) (5), C. Stewart (Brora) (5), C. Sutherland (Royal Dornoch) (10) 35 pts. G. Morrison (Tain) (12), G. Rose (Jedburgh) (12), E. Anderrsson (Iceland) (6), J. Williams (Castle Douglas) (14) 34pt.
Girls scores- S. Vass (Tain) (5) 36pts. E. Anderrsson (Sweden) (6) 34pts. F. Fullerton (Huntly)(16) 33pts.
Struie Consolation. Dornoch Firth Trophy - M Campbell (Buckpool) (1), M. Laing (Inverness) (10) 37pts. O. Coull (Buckpool) (6) 34pts.

Megan Briggs, Elaine Moffat and Linda Allan
(photo courtesy SLGA)
SLGA Champion of Champions
Former Scottish champion Elaine Moffat won another national title at Glasgow Gailes Golf Club when she captured the SLGA Champion of Champions’ title.
Contested in the main by winners of this year’s county championships, but also the Scottish women’s and seniors championships, the third staging of the 18-hole event had a field of 12 players.
St Regulus member Elaine, the Fife county champion, had a round of 73 to win by four shots from one of her playing partners, teenager Megan Briggs (Kilmacolm), the Renfreshire champion.
Linda Allan (Falkirk Tryst), the Stirling & Clackmannan title-holder, finished third with a 78, beating Ayrshire champion Lesley Hendry (Routenburn), who also returned a 78, on a card countback.
Full results (CSS 77 Par 75)
73 Elaine Moffat (St Regulus).
77 Megan Briggs (Kilmacolm).
78 Linda Allan (Falkirk Tryst), Lesley Hendry (Routenburn).
79 Kesley MacDonald (Nairn Dunbar).
80 Martine Pow (Selkirk), Claire Hargan (Mortonhall).
82 Addi Shamash (Kirkcudbright), Fiona De Vries (St Rule), Fiona McGregor (Thornton).
85 Kylie Walker (Buchanan Castle).
87 Ruth Brown (Lothianburn).
Withdrew – Jillian Milne (Craigie Hill). |
Tuesday 17th October 2006
Sally Watson wins the Daily Telegraph Junior Championship
Roseanne Niven in joint second place
from the Daily Telegraph website.....
FINALS RESULTS
IN the end, the margins of victory were as wide as the water that defines this superb course, but the manner of them was something special. Dale Whitnell and Sally Watson won their first Daily Telegraph Junior Championship crowns after superb final rounds at the Dubai Creek Golf and Yacht Club.
Whitnell, 18, from Essex, conjured up a marvellous 68, three under par, to see off twin challenges in the shape of Daniel Casey, who had led by a shot going into yesterday's play, and England boys' captain Sam Hutsby. As his rivals flirted with the greenside hazards, Whitnell sank an eight-footer on the last to win in some style by six. Scotland's Watson, meanwhile, extended her overnight lead from four strokes to 10, decimating what was, in theory anyway, an equally competitive field. Only 15 and already a resident of the David Leadbetter Academy in Florida, she clearly has quite a future.
The pair join a clutch of former winners who have gone on to prosper, like Justin Rose, who became a Telegraph champion just months before chipping in at Royal Birkdale during the 1998 Open. Mhairi McKay, the girls' winner in 1991, has twice represented Europe in the Solheim Cup, while Rebecca Hudson, who collected a hat-trick of junior victories, secured her maiden Ladies European Tour title in July.
Some 40,000 juniors competed throughout the summer for the right to make the 21-strong field for the 2006 final and by the third round yesterday, the boys' contest had come down to a three-man race.However, Hutsby, who, like Whitnell, had started the day
| | |