Saturday, March 27, 2010

Andrew Cooley and Tom Berry help

San Diego State to team victory


English students Andrew Cooley and Tom Berry helped San Diego State University win the team championship in the Barona Collegiate Cup tournament at Barona Creek Golf Club, Lakeside in California on Thursday and Friday.
Cooley, picture by courtesy of Tom Ward Photography, a sophomore student from Surrey finished joint 28th with scores of 76, 73 and 72 for a total of five-over-par 221 over the 7324yd course.
Berry, a freshman, also from Surrey, had scores of 76, 74 and 73 for 223 and a share of 36th place in the field of 104 players.
John Chin (UC-Irvine) was the individual title winner with scores of 65, 71 and 68 for 12-under-par 204 - some shooting! Chin won by three strokes.
San Diego State (1072) won the team event from UC-Irvine (1094) and Orewgon (1097) in a field of 16 teams.

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Entry list now open for U S Kids Golf European Championship in East Lothian

Each year, many of the best young golfers from Europe and around the world descend upon East Lothian for the prestigious U.S. Kids Golf European Championship. In this, our third year, 500 players from 40 nations are expected, with over 350 entered to date.
The Championship will be three rounds of stroke play, held June 1-3, 2010, on Scotland’s historic golf courses in East Lothian:
Gullane No. 2 and No. 3, Craigielaw Golf Club, and Longniddry Golf Club.
On June 4, the Van Horn Cup will be held on Gullane No. 1, pitting the best finishers of Europe vs. those of all other countries, the International Team. Two Europeans and two International players will be selected to represent each team based on their three day total score. Only 18-hole players will be able to participate in the Van Horn Cup. Europe maintains a 2-0 lead.
To participate in the European Championship, please fill out and submit the European Championship application (click on the word).
Registration information will be sent to accepted players within ten business days of your application. Please be reminded entries will be on a first-come, first-served basis, and space is filling quickly.
INFORMATION:

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LPGA Tour Scoreboard
KIA CLASSIC
Carlsbad, California
SECOND ROUND TOTALS
Par 142 (2x71)
1 Hee Kyung Seo -5 F -7 70 67 137
2 In-Kyung Kim -3 F -6 69 69 138
T3 Seon Hwa Lee -1 F -5 68 71 139
T3 Michelle Wie -5 F -5 72 67 139
T3 Vicky Hurst -4 F -5 71 68 139
T3 Song-Hee Kim -4 F -5 71 68 139
T7 Jee Young Lee -5 F -4 73 67 140
T7 Na On Min +2 F -4 66 74 140
T9 Pat Hurst -1 F -3 70 71 141
T9 Morgan Pressel -2 F -3 71 70 141
T9 Inbee Park +1 F -3 68 73 141
T9 Stacy Prammanasudh -3 F -3 72 69 141
T13 Azahara Munoz -2 F -2 72 70 142
T13 Christina Kim -3 F -2 73 69 142
T13 Candie Kung -4 F -2 74 68 142
T13 Na Yeon Choi +3 F -2 67 75 142
T13 Jimin Kang -1 F -2 71 71 142
T13 Tamie Durdin E F -2 70 72 142
T19 Teresa Lu -2 F -1 73 70 143
T19 Karine Icher -2 F -1 73 70 143
T19 Catriona Matthew +3 F -1 68 75 143
T19 Wendy Ward -3 F -1 74 69 143
T23 Shanshan Feng -1 F E 73 71 144
T23 Soo-Yun Kang -1 F E 73 71 144
T23 Jiyai Shin E F E 72 72 144
T23 Amy Yang -1 F E 73 71 144
T27 Jane Park +2 F +1 71 74 145
T27 Anna Nordqvist +1 F +1 72 73 145
T27 Momoko Ueda -1 F +1 74 71 145
T27 Mi Hyun Kim -2 F +1 75 70 145
T27 Lorena Ochoa +3 F +1 70 75 145
T27 Eun-Hee Ji E F +1 73 72 145
T27 Eunjung Yi +3 F +1 70 75 145
T27 Amanda Blumenherst +4 F +1 69 76 145
T27 Haeji Kang +1 F +1 72 73 145
T27 Mariajo Uribe +1 F +1 72 73 145
T37 Sarah Kemp E F +2 74 72 146
T37 Jill McGill +1 F +2 73 73 146
T37 Shi Hyun Ahn -1 F +2 75 71 146
T37 Karrie Webb +1 F +2 73 73 146
T37 Ai Miyazato E F +2 74 72 146
T37 Suzann Pettersen +4 F +2 70 76 146
T37 Laura Davies +2 F +2 72 74 146
T37 Sandra Gal E F +2 74 72 146
T37 Kyeong Bae +1 F +2 73 73 146
T37 Kristy McPherson -1 F +2 75 71 146
T37 Lindsey Wright E F +2 74 72 146
T37 Amy Hung +2 F +2 72 74 146
T37 Anna Grzebien +1 F +2 73 73 146
T37 Misun Cho +2 F +2 72 74 146
T51 Beatriz Recari +4 F +3 71 76 147
T51 Sherri Steinhauer E F +3 75 72 147
T51 Juli Inkster -1 F +3 76 71 147
T51 Maria Hjorth +2 F +3 73 74 147
T51 Helen Alfredsson +4 F +3 71 76 147
T51 Katherine Hull E F +3 75 72 147
T51 Meaghan Francella +2 F +3 73 74 147
T51 Pernilla Lindberg +3 F +3 72 75 147
T51 Julieta Granada E F +3 75 72 147
T51 Jimin Jeong +1 F +3 74 73 147
T51 Ilmi Chung +1 F +3 74 73 147
T62 Samantha Richdale +3 F +4 73 75 148
T62 Angela Park +2 F +4 74 74 148
T62 Moira Dunn +3 F +4 73 75 148
T62 Mindy Kim +3 F +4 73 75 148
T62 Bona Lee +2 F +4 74 74 148
T62 M.J. Hur +2 F +4 74 74 148
T62 Yani Tseng +1 F +4 75 73 148
T62 Cristie Kerr +5 F +4 71 77 148
T62 Maria Hernandez +3 F +4 73 75 148
T62 Karen Stupples E F +4 76 72 148
T62 Louise Stahle +4 F +4 72 76 148
MISSED THE CUT
T73 Nicole Hage +4 F +5 73 76 149
T73 Angela Stanford +2 F +5 75 74 149
T73 Michele Redman +3 F +5 74 75 149
T73 Nicole Castrale +1 F +5 76 73 149
T73 Mika Miyazato +3 F +5 74 75 149
T73 Anna Rawson +3 F +5 74 75 149
T73 Wendy Doolan +6 F +5 71 78 149
T73 Becky Morgan +2 F +5 75 74 149
T81 Tiffany Joh +2 F +6 76 74 150
T81 Allison Hanna +2 F +6 76 74 150
T81 Jin Young Pak +1 F +6 77 73 150
T81 Stacy Lewis +6 F +6 72 78 150
T81 Meg Mallon +2 F +6 76 74 150
T81 Sun Young Yoo +3 F +6 75 75 150
T81 Louise Friberg +3 F +6 75 75 150
T81 Heather Bowie Young +1 F +6 77 73 150
T81 Jennifer Rosales +3 F +6 75 75 150
T81 Mina Harigae +1 F +6 77 73 150
T91 Chella Choi +2 F +7 77 74 151
T91 Brittany Lang +4 F +7 75 76 151
T91 Meena Lee +2 F +7 77 74 151
T91 Se Ri Pak +3 F +7 76 75 151
T91 Laura Diaz +2 F +7 77 74 151
T91 Nicole Jeray +6 F +7 73 78 151
T91 Irene Cho +5 F +7 74 77 151
T91 Janice Moodie +8 F +7 71 80 151
T91 Mikaela Parmlid +5 F +7 74 77 151
T100 Tania Elosegui +3 F +8 77 75 152
T100 Gloria Park +5 F +8 75 77 152
T100 Lucy Kim +4 F +8 76 76 152
T100 Giulia Sergas +6 F +8 74 78 152
T100 Jeong Jang +3 F +8 77 75 152
T100 Hee-Won Han +5 F +8 75 77 152
T100 Leta Lindley +5 F +8 75 77 152
T100 Sophie Gustafson +5 F +8 75 77 152
T100 Brittany Lincicome +2 F +8 78 74 152
T100 Alena Sharp +5 F +8 75 77 152
T100 Russy Gulyanamitta +3 F +8 77 75 152
T100 Sarah Lee +4 F +8 76 76 152
T112 Hye Jung Choi +6 F +9 75 78 153
T112 Kris Tamulis +3 F +9 78 75 153
T112 Leah Wigger +4 F +9 77 76 153
T112 Karin Sjodin +8 F +9 73 80 153
T112 Liz Janangelo +4 F +9 77 76 153
T112 Natalie Gulbis +3 F +9 78 75 153
T112 Hee Young Park +2 F +9 79 74 153
T112 Liselotte Neumann +6 F +9 75 78 153
T112 Allison Fouch +4 F +9 77 76 153
T112 Katie Kempter +3 F +9 78 75 153
T122 Jean Reynolds +5 F +10 77 77 154
T122 Diana D'Alessio +5 F +10 77 77 154
T122 Joo Mi Kim +6 F +10 76 78 154
T125 Danielle Downey +5 F +11 78 77 155
T125 Lisa Meldrum +2 F +11 81 74 155
T125 Grace Park +8 F +11 75 80 155
T125 Lorie Kane +7 F +11 76 79 155
T125 Gwladys Nocera +7 F +11 76 79 155
T130 Reilley Rankin +9 F +12 75 81 156
T130 Marianne Skarpnord +6 F +12 78 78 156
T130 Paige Mackenzie +4 F +12 80 76 156
T130 *Victoria Park +9 F +12 75 81 156
T130 Katie Futcher +7 F +12 77 79 156
T135 Lisa Strom +12 F +13 73 84 157
T135 Michelle McGann +3 F +13 82 75 157
T135 Birdie Kim +7 F +13 78 79 157
T138 Taylor Leon +7 F +14 79 79 158
T138 Song Yi Choi +10 F +14 76 82 158
T138 Beth Bader +1 F +14 85 73 158
141 Silvia Cavalleri +5 F +15 82 77 159
142 Brandie Burton +9 F +20 83 81 164
143 Kelli Kuehne +10 F +28 90 82 172

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US Duramed Futures Tour Scoreboard
$150,000 RIVIERA NAYARIT CHALLENGE
El Tigre Golf & Country Club, Nuevo Vallarta, Nayarit, Mexico
FIRST ROUND
Par 73 (37-36). 6,433yd
T1 Nannette Hill (Pelham, N.Y.) 37-32 - 69
T1 Chelsea Curtis (New Seabury, Mass.) 35-34 - 69
T1 Jennie Lee (Henderson, Nev.) 36-33 - 69
T1 Mallory Blackwelder (Versailles, Ky.) 36-33 - 69
T5 Gerina Mendoza (Roswell, N.M.) 36-34 - 70
T5 Virada Nirapathpongporn (Bangkok, Thailand) 36-34 - 70
T5 Dori Carter (Valdosta, Ga.) 35-35 - 70
T5 Juli Erekson (Chicopee, Mass.) 36-34 - 70
T5 Danielle Mills (Pointe-Claire, Quebec) 38-32 - 70
T5 Kathleen Ekey (Sharon Township, Ohio) 36-34 - 70
T5 Cindy LaCrosse (Tampa, Fla.) 35-35 - 70
T5 Jenny Gleason (Clearwater, Fla.) 35-35 - 70
T13 Michaela Cavener (Ponca City, Okla.) 36-35 - 71
T13 Leanne Bowditch (Queensland, Australia) 36-35 - 71
T13 Briana Vega (Andover, Mass.) 35-36 - 71
T13 Carolina Llano (Medellin, Colombia) 35-36 - 71
T13 Melissa Eaton (Port Shepstone, South Africa) 36-35 - 71
T13 Hannah Jun (San Diego, Calif.) 36-35 - 71
T13 Miriam Nagl (Berlin, Germany) 36-35 - 71
T13 Lehua Wise (Kauai, Hawaii) 36-35 - 71
T21 Jenny Lee (Simi Valley, Calif.) 39-33 - 72
T21 Adrienne White (Red Deer, Alberta) 35-37 - 72
T21 Ashley Prange (Noblesville, Ind.) 37-35 - 72
T21 Jennifer Bermingham (Long Beach, Calif.) 38-34 - 72
T21 Jessica Carafiello (Coral Springs, Fla.) 37-35 - 72
T21 Christine Song (Fullerton, Calif.) 35-37 - 72
T21 Esther Choe (Scottsdale, Ariz.) 34-38 - 72
T21 Tiffany Tavee (Tempe, Ariz.) 37-35 - 72
T21 Kristina Langton (Ada, Mich.) 35-37 - 72
T30 Sara Brown (Tucson, Ariz.) 37-36 - 73
T30 Marina Choi (Los Angeles, Calif.) 38-35 - 73
T30 Janice Olivencia (Caguas, Puerto Rico) 35-38 - 73
T30 Hannah Yun (Bradenton, Fla.) 38-35 - 73
T30 Garrett Phillips (St. Simons Island, Ga.) 37-36 - 73
T30 Kristie Smith (Perth, Australia) 37-36 - 73
T30 Jane Rah (Torrance, Calif.) 38-35 - 73
T30 Libby Smith (Essex Junction, Vt.) 40-33 - 73
T30 Ryann O'Toole (San Clemente, Calif.) 33-40 - 73
T30 Lori Atsedes (Ithaca, N.Y.) 39-34 - 73
T30 Tanya Dergal (Durango, Mexico) 36-37 - 73
T30 Tracy Stanford (Midland, Texas) 37-36 - 73
T30 Jasi Acharya (Columbus, Mont.) 36-37 - 73
T43 Pamela Ontiveros (Gomez Palacio, Mexico) 39-35 - 74
T43 Sophia Sheridan (Guadalajara, Mexico) 38-36 - 74
T43 Alexandra Braga (Los Angeles, Calif.) 37-37 - 74
T43 Alison Walshe (Westford, Mass.) 39-35 - 74
T43 Kelly Froelich (Raizeux, France) 38-36 - 74
T43 Lisa Ferrero (Lodi, Calif.) 39-35 - 74
T43 Perry Swenson Livonius (Charlotte, N.C.) 36-38 - 74
T43 Paola Moreno (Cali, Colombia) 37-37 - 74
T43 Jessica Shepley (Oakville, Ontario) 35-39 - 74
T43 Bree Arthur (Brisbane, Australia) 38-36 - 74
T43 Mo Martin (Altadena, Calif.) 37-37 - 74
T43 Maggie Simons (Raleigh, N.C.) 37-37 - 74
T43 Danah Ford Bordner (Indianapolis, Ind.) 37-37 - 74
T43 Laura Bavaird (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 38-36 - 74
T57 Sydney Cox (Edmond, Okla.) 38-37 - 75
T57 Sara Ovadia (Santa Barbara, Calif.) 39-36 - 75
T57 Daniela Iacobelli (Viera, Fla.) 39-36 - 75
T57 Amanda Costner (Claremore, Okla.) 39-36 - 75
T57 Kirby Dreher (Fort St. John, Canada) 37-38 - 75
T57 Malinda Johnson (Eau Claire, Wis.) 38-37 - 75
T57 Kristen Simpson (Norfolk, Va.) 38-37 - 75
T57 Rachel Bailey (Faulconbridge, Australia) 41-34 - 75
T57 Haley Gildea (East Greenwich, R.I.) 37-38 - 75
T57 Caroline Westrup (Ahus, Sweden) 36-39 - 75
T57 Carly Ludwig (Brownsburg, Ind.) 35-40 - 75
T57 Stephanie Connelly (Pasadena, Md.) 38-37 - 75
T57 Sophie Jang (Seoul, South Korea) 36-39 - 75
T57 Marlowe Boukis (Lutherville, Md.) 40-35 - 75
T57 Sam White (Potomac, Md.) 38-37 - 75
T72 Carrie Riordan (Spring Valley, Ill.) 37-39 - 76
T72 Y. J. Jin (Seoul, South Korea) 38-38 - 76
T72 Meghan Little (Sturgis, S.D.) 37-39 - 76
T72 Kim Welch (Sacramento, Calif.) 39-37 - 76
T72 Selanee Henderson (Apple Valley, Calif.) 39-37 - 76
T72 Marijosse Navarro (a) (Atizpan, Mexico) 41-35 - 76
T72 Kendall Dye (Edmond, Okla.) 38-38 - 76
T72 Sofie Andersson (Angelholm, Sweden) 41-35 - 76
T72 Ana Alicia Malagon (a) (Tampico, Mexico) 41-35 - 76
T72 Elisa Serramia (Barcelona, Spain) 39-37 - 76
T72 Victoria Alimonda (Sao Paulo, Brazil) 39-37 - 76
T72 Lauren Hunt (Little River, S.C.) 42-34 - 76
T84 Kelly Lagedrost (Brooksville, Fla.) 39-38 - 77
T84 Laura Crawford (Lancaster, S.C.) 39-38 - 77
T84 Ana Carrillo (Guadalajara, Mexico) 38-39 - 77
T84 Dewi Claire Schreefel (Diepenveen, Netherland 41-36 - 77
T84 Veronica Felibert (Caracas, Venezuela) 39-38 - 77
T84 Carling Coffing (Middletown, Ohio) 42-35 - 77
T84 Amanda Mathis (Picayune, Miss.) 38-39 - 77
T84 Lili Alvarez (Durango, Mexico) 40-37 - 77
T84 Jennifer Ackerson (Dallas, Texas) 40-37 - 77
T93 Debbie Munoz (Boca Raton, Fla.) 39-39 - 78
T93 Christina Jones (Jensen Beach, Fla.) 41-37 - 78
T93 Shasta Averyhardt (Flint, Mich.) 40-38 - 78
T93 Dawn Shockley (Estes Park, Colo.) 42-36 - 78
T93 Kendra Hanson (Forest City, Iowa) 39-39 - 78
T93 Kylene Pulley (Kokomo, Ind.) 38-40 - 78
T93 Brittany Johnston (Akron, Ohio) 39-39 - 78
T93 Katie Miller (Jeannette, Pa.) 39-39 - 78
T93 Angela Oh (Maple Shade, N.J.) 40-38 - 78
T93 Erica Moston (Belmont, Calif.) 41-37 - 78
T93 Christi Cano (San Antonio, Texas) 41-37 - 78
T93 Susan Choi (Natick, Mass.) 39-39 - 78
T105 Devan Andersen (Guadalajara, Mexico) 38-41 - 79
T105 Madeleine Holmblad (Stockholm, Sweden) 40-39 - 79
T105 Janell Howland (Boise, Idaho) 42-37 - 79
T105 Marcela Leon (Monterrey, Mexico) 40-39 - 79
T105 Ale Martin del Campo (Guadalajara, Mexico) 40-39 - 79
T105 Camila Mori (Santiago, Chile) 40-39 - 79
T105 Victoria Elizabeth (Orlando, Fla.) 42-37 - 79
T105 Ayaka Kaneko (Honolulu, Hawaii) 42-37 - 79
T105 Stacey Bieber (Winnipeg, Manitoba) 39-40 - 79
T105 Hwanhee Lee (Las Vegas, Nev.) 41-38 - 79
T105 Katie Brenny (Apex, N.C.) 38-41 - 79
T105 Praew Phol-Uayporn (Bangkok, Thailand) 39-40 - 79
T117 Lindsey Bergeon (Sarasota, Fla.) 40-40 - 80
T117 Noon Huajai (Bangkok, Thailand) 40-40 - 80
T117 Tara Goedeken (Dodge City, Kan.) 44-36 - 80
T117 Susannah Aboff (Huntington, N.Y.) 41-39 - 80
T117 Jenny Suh (Fairfax, Va.) 38-42 - 80
T117 Lucy Nunn (Lawton, Okla.) 41-39 - 80
T117 Rebecca Kim (Tigard, Ore.) 41-39 - 80
T117 Chelsea Schriewer (St. Louis, Mo.) 40-40 - 80
T117 Lene Krog (Lier, Norway) 39-41 - 80
T126 Angela Buzminski (Oshawa, Ontario) 41-40 - 81
T126 Ashli Bunch (Morristown, Tenn.) 42-39 - 81
T126 Rachel Connor (Manchester, England) 43-38 - 81
T126 Caroline Larsson (Stockholm, Sweden) 42-39 - 81
T126 Taryn Durham (Glasgow, Ky.) 37-44 - 81
T126 Lauren Doughtie (Suffolk, Va.) 42-39 - 81
T132 Gloriana Soto (a) (San Jose, Costa Rica) 40-42 - 82
T132 Ulrika Ljungman-Smith (Daytona Beach, Fla.) 45-37 - 82
T132 Kelly Rainbolt (Sweetwater, Texas) 44-38 - 82
T132 Seema Sadekar (Toronto, Ontario) 43-39 - 82
T136 Whitney Wade (Glasgow, Ky.) 43-40 - 83
T136 Alana Johnson (Litchfield Park, Ariz.) 45-38 - 83
T138 Lisa LaFollette (Mililani, Hawaii) 42-42 - 84
T138 Nicole Smith (Riverside, Calif.) 43-41 - 84
T138 Elena Robles (Redondo Beach, Calif.) 43-41 - 84
141 Sarah Olsen (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 46-39 - 85
142 Gemma Webster (Glasgow, Scotland) 41-44 - 85

--- Missed 18 Hole Cut ---
Rebecca Samuelsson (Gothenburg, Sweden) 47-41 - 88
Esther Uribe (a) (Huixquilucqan, Mexico) 42-47 - 89

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Friday, March 26, 2010

Mothers and Daughters' Tournament on April 17

The late Angela Uzielli and her mother Peggy Carrick who won the Mothers & Daughters' tournament a record 21 times from 1965 - and she also won it once with her own daughter (images above and below by courtesy of Royal Mid Surrey Golf Club).
The late great Pam Barton and her mother, winners of the Mothers & Daughters foursomes tournament in 1935. British and United States champion, Pam was killed in a plane crash during the war.

Alexandra and Ann Peters
-
bid for three wins in a row

FROM JO THESIGER
Sixteen-year-old, Alexandra Peters, partnering her mother, Ann, from Notts County, will line up alongside many golfing greats, hoping to continue their winning run in the Mothers and Daughters, at Royal Mid Surrey golf club on April 17.
Alex, an English International and current holder of the Daily Telegraph Abu Dhabi junior championship , who now plays off +2, and her mother, Ann, a five-handicapper, strode comfortably to their second successive victory last year (pictured with the trophies).
They won by seven shots from the 1994 and 1995 winners, Pat Huntley and Sarah Webb from Frilford Heath, with an aggregate score of seven-over-par, in the 27-hole scratch foursomes event.
The Peters tee-off as the favourites for the title again this year but it will be no easy task as the holders must overcome a highly competitive field including eight past winning partnerships, who will be doing their utmost to stand in their way.
Former Curtis Cup captain Liz Boatman with her daughter Alex Howe, five times winner of the event and the last pair to win three successive titles, from 2005 to 2007, are still strong contenders and will be determined to put their names back on the honours board again.
Wendy Laud, former England International who learnt to play as a junior at Royal Mid Surrey, partnering her newly married daughter Katie Fewster, a two handicap and Surrey player, could also scupper the chances of the Nottinghamshire pair. The Lauds won the event in 2004 but on that occasion shared the trophy with Hertfordshire’s, Elsie Provan and Sarah Saggers, who are competing again this year.
The highly experienced former Curtis Cup players, Lady Angela Bonallack and Jill Thornhill pair up with their daughters, both seeking a third title. Lady Bonallack and her daughter, Glenna Beasley had to wait 21 years to recapture the title in 2000, having won together for the first time in 1979.
With such a strong field and so many possible contenders, the 2010 Mothers and Daughters promises to be an appetisingly exciting contest. However, whoever raises the coveted Judy Trophy at the end of the day, they are unlikely match the extraordinary feit of Angela Uzielli, who dominated the event from 1965, winning an incredible 21 times with her mother Peggy Carrick and once with her daughter Caroline in 1996 before her untimely death in 1999.

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Catriona Matthew joint third in California

LPGA Tour Scoreboard
KIA CLASSIC
La Costa Resort & Spa, Carlsbad, California
FIRST ROUND
Par 72. 6625yd
1 Na On Min 66
2 Na Yeon Choi 67
T3 Inbee Park 68
T3 Seon Hwa Lee 68
T3 Catriona Matthew 68
T6 Amanda Blumenherst 69
T6 In-Kyung Kim 69
T8 Hee Kyung Seo 70
T8 Tamie Durdin 70
T8 Lorena Ochoa 70
T8 Eunjung Yi 70
T8 Pat Hurst 70
T8 Suzann Pettersen 70
T14 Jimin Kang 71
T14 Wendy Doolan 71
T14 Janice Moodie 71
T14 Morgan Pressel 71
T14 Song-Hee Kim 71
T14 Helen Alfredsson 71
T14 Cristie Kerr 71
T14 Vicky Hurst 71
T14 Beatriz Recari 71
T14 Jane Park 71
T24 Pernilla Lindberg 72
T24 Haeji Kang 72
T24 Amy Hung 72
T24 Mariajo Uribe 72
T24 Stacy Prammanasudh 72
T24 Louise Stahle 72
T24 Misun Cho 72
T24 Laura Davies 72
T24 Jiyai Shin 72
T24 Michelle Wie 72
T24 Anna Nordqvist 72
T24 Stacy Lewis 72
T24 Azahara Munoz 72
T37 Meaghan Francella 73
T37 Maria Hernandez 73
T37 Anna Grzebien 73
T37 Nicole Jeray 73
T37 Amy Yang 73
T37 Kyeong Bae 73
T37 Eun-Hee Ji 73
T37 Jee Young Lee 73
T37 Christina Kim 73
T37 Maria Hjorth 73
T37 Karrie Webb 73
T37 Samantha Richdale 73
T37 Teresa Lu 73
T37 Moira Dunn 73
T37 Lisa Strom 73
T37 Nicole Hage 73
T37 Mindy Kim 73
T37 Jill McGill 73
T37 Shanshan Feng 73
T37 Karin Sjodin 73
T37 Soo-Yun Kang 73
T37 Karine Icher 73
T59 Mika Miyazato 74
T59 Anna Rawson 74
T59 Irene Cho 74
T59 Ilmi Chung 74
T59 Jimin Jeong 74
T59 Mikaela Parmlid 74
T59 Sandra Gal 74
T59 Candie Kung 74
T59 Lindsey Wright 74
T59 Michele Redman 74
T59 M.J. Hur 74
T59 Ai Miyazato 74
T59 Wendy Ward 74
T59 Momoko Ueda 74
T59 Angela Park 74
T59 Sarah Kemp 74
T59 Bona Lee 74
T59 Giulia Sergas 74
T77 Alena Sharp 75
T77 Julieta Granada 75
T77 Becky Morgan 75
T77 Jennifer Rosales 75
T77 Leta Lindley 75
T77 Liselotte Neumann 75
T77 Sun Young Yoo 75
T77 Mi Hyun Kim 75
T77 Sophie Gustafson 75
T77 Yani Tseng 75
T77 Kristy McPherson 75
T77 Louise Friberg 75
T77 Katherine Hull 75
T77 Angela Stanford 75
T77 Sherri Steinhauer 75
T77 Brittany Lang 75
T77 Hee-Won Han 75
T77 Grace Park 75
T77 Hye Jung Choi 75
T77 Reilley Rankin 75
T77 Gloria Park 75
T77 Shi Hyun Ahn 75
T77 *Victoria Park 75
T100 Nicole Castrale 76
T100 Gwladys Nocera 76
T100 Karen Stupples 76
T100 Joo Mi Kim 76
T100 Sarah Lee 76
T100 Song Yi Choi 76
T100 Lorie Kane 76
T100 Juli Inkster 76
T100 Meg Mallon 76
T100 Se Ri Pak 76
T100 Tiffany Joh 76
T100 Allison Hanna 76
T100 Lucy Kim 76
T113 Russy Gulyanamitta 77
T113 Allison Fouch 77
T113 Heather Bowie Young 77
T113 Mina Harigae 77
T113 Katie Futcher 77
T113 Meena Lee 77
T113 Jeong Jang 77
T113 Laura Diaz 77
T113 Jean Reynolds 77
T113 Tania Elosegui 77
T113 Diana D'Alessio 77
T113 Leah Wigger 77
T113 Chella Choi 77
T113 Liz Janangelo 77
T113 Jin Young Pak 77
T128 Katie Kempter 78
T128 Natalie Gulbis 78
T128 Brittany Lincicome 78
T128 Kris Tamulis 78
T128 Marianne Skarpnord 78
T128 Danielle Downey 78
T128 Birdie Kim 78
T135 Taylor Leon 79
T135 Hee Young Park 79
137 Paige Mackenzie 80
138 Lisa Meldrum 81
T139 Michelle McGann 82
T139 Silvia Cavalleri 82
141 Brandie Burton 83
142 Beth Bader 85
143 Kelli Kuehne 90

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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Matthew praises SLGA for ending
-
'taboo' of turning pro
-
FROM THE SCOTSMAN WEBSITE
By Martin Dempster
Catriona Matthew, the Ricoh Women's British Open champion, has praised the modern-day attitude of the Scottish Ladies Golfing Association and says it is creating a better environment for players bidding to follow her on to the world stage.
The North Berwick golfer believes turning professional was once a "taboo" subject with the ruling body for the women's game in Scotland and is delighted to see a definite change among officials about the role the SLGA plays in the development of talent.
"I definitely think the SLGA appreciate that people will turn professional in the end," she said. "When I was going through the ranks it was a bit of a taboo subject. However, they are beginning to see that successful professionals can help the amateur game as well. I think it (the SLGA set-up] is all getting a bit more professional."
Matthew, who has never lost sight of her amateur roots, agreed to become a vice-president of the SLGA earlier this year and recently joined one of its squads on a coaching trip to Spain.
"It was a good exercise for everyone, I think," she said. "We were there for four days and I was able to give them tips on course management, how I practise, that sort of stuff. I was showing them what it might be like as a professional.
"Hopefully we can get more Scottish ladies coming up through the professional ranks as there's not been many since myself, Janice (Moodie] and Mhairi (McKay]. It would be nice to see some more come through."
Matthew, who will defend her British title at Royal Birkdale in the summer, teed off the new season in Singapore last month and is now in America for two events – the Kia Classic at Carlsbad starting today and next week's Kraft Nabisco Championship at Rancho Mirage."
I've not done anything differently (as a result of winning a major]," she said.
"I had a bit of a break over Christmas and into January due to the weather but I've been out practising a lot recently. I'm playing well so I am really looking forward to the start of the season and getting going.
"I've played well in the Nabisco in the past. I love the golf course and, with me hitting the ball well at the moment, I'm really looking forward to getting out to that one. The US Open at Oakmont is a big goal for me this season and, with the British title to defend, I've certainly got a lot of things to look forward to."
On this side of the Atlantic, Matthew is also relishing the chance to join forces with Krystle Caithness, one of the rising stars on the Ladies European Tour, in the Scottish team for the European Nations Cup at La Sella, Alicante, towards the end of next month.
Matthew is the top Scot in the world rankings and Caithness has earned her place off the European money-list.
"I have played in a similar event in South Africa before and I'm looking forward to that," she said.
One event Matthew cannot say for certain she will be teeing up in this season is the Ladies' Scottish Open presented by EventScotland, even though it is being held at Archerfield Links, where she is a member.
"It will depend on my schedule," she said. "I will need to wait and see how I play at the start of the year, so things are up in the air a bit at the moment. It is good it is back, though, and the pro-am format will provide something different – every Tour has a tournament like that these days.
"Whether she plays in the Scottish Open or not, Matthew, who earned a whole host of deserved accolades following her major triumph at Royal Lytham last summer, including an MBE, insists she is unlikely to ever up sticks and move her family to America, even though that is where she plays the majority of her golf in a season.
"I usually take four or five weeks off (over the winter] and don't touch a club," she revealed. "That's kept me refreshed and keen for the game. A lot of the players live in Florida but I've always felt that if I did that I would fee; guilty if I wasn't out practising if the weather was good. At least when it's awful you don't feel so bad about it."
Not surprisingly perhaps, Matthew will once again have husband Graeme on the bag this season, the pair having worked well together thus far in her career.
"Yes, I'll have the same caddie – he can't escape," she said with a smile.

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Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Sussex student Peter wins Bobcat
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Invitational in Georgia

Englishman Peter Tarver Jones from Worthing, Sussex and a junior (third year) student at Belmont Abbey College, Charlotte in North Carolina, won the Bobcat Invitational college tournament at Lake Oconee Golf Club, Cuscowilla, Eatonon, Georgia earlier this week.
Jones, pictured holding the winner's trophy, had rounds of 71, 68 and 75 for a total of 214 over the par-70, 6730yd course.
He headed a field of 89 players by three shots from Victor Billskoog (Barry University) (72-73-72) with another Belmont Abbey student, Joe Campbell, a senior from Cheltenham, joint third on 218 (74-70-74).
Liam Ashby, a sophomore from Dublin and a student at Carson-Newman University, Tennessee, shared 19th place on 223 with scores of 75, 75 and 73.
Adam Hedges from Bromley, a freshman student at Belmont Abbey, tied for 39th place on 226 with scores of 82, 71 and 73.
Glasgow's Stephen Keane, a senior student at Belmont Abbey, finished joint 50th with scores of 81, 71 and 77 for 229.
Gavin Hay (Carson-Newman University), from Glasgow, tied for 75th place on 236 with scores of 79, 80 and 77.
Lynn University, Florida won the team title with a total of 881, just one shot ahead of Belmont Abbey. Carson-Newman finished last of 17.

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David McGregor third in California

Helensburgh's David McGregor, son of former world-class swimmer Bobby McGregor and a sophomore student at Post University, Connecticut, finished third in a field of 59 players at the SoCal Intercollegiate Chmpionship at Mission Viejo Country Club, California.
David, pictured right, had rounds of 74, 78 and 72 for a total of 224 over the par-71, 7143yd course. He finished four shots behind the winner, Collin Mayer (St Edwards University) (71-73-76), and two behind runner-up Ryan Indonina (CSS- Dominguez Hills) (71-74-77).
McGregor had three other Post University students behind him. Lee Wanklyn, a senior student from Berkshire, scored 79, 81 81 for 241 and a share of 24th place alongside Thomas Rees, a freshman from Wales (81-81-79), and Gavin Wilson, a sophomore from Ladybank, came 45th on 253 with scores of 90, 84 and 79.
Post University finished seventh of 11 in the team event with a total of 954. Sonoma State, the winners, totalled 919.



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Nicola Melville could
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step into limelight on
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Xltec Pro Tour

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Aberdeen-born Nicola Melville's golfing career has never received much publicity - but all that could change once the lady pro section of the new Xltec Pro Tour tees off at Hilton Park Golf Club on April 28-29.
Nicola, who has just turned 24, is looking forward to the chance to play competitively more often than she has done in the past. So the Xltec Pro Tour has come along at just the right time. So who is Nicola Melville?
(Thanks to her mother Fiona for elaborating on her daughter's CV for Kirkwoodgolf.co.uk!)
Born in Aberdeen but brought up in Bridge of Allan, she took up golf when she was 14 and was twice ladies champion at Bridge of Allan and once at Stirling (aged 17/18) while playing for Stirling & Clackmannan and East of Scotland Girls.
Nicola decided to join the PGA's Foundation Degree programme and initially started as an assistant professional at Blairgowrie Golf Club and then transferred to the Old Course Hotel, St Andrews four years ago.
The demands of working full time at a resort hotel meant very little time for playing and she has now left the Old Course Hotel in recent weeks to focus on improving her game. She is staying in the St Andrews area, working part time and hoping to supplement her income with some coaching and refereeing (having taken the Advanced Rules of Golf and Refereeing course).
She is going to be coaching at the Scottish Golf Show this weekend.
Her website is www.nicolamelvillegolf.co.uk and she is representing herself and is delighted at having the opportunity of playing on the new Scottish tour as well as some WPGA events and hopefully a few PGA Scottish Region events.
Nicola Melville. Remember where you read the name.

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Where have all the competitive lady pros gone?

... hopefully they will turn out in force

to play at Hilton Park (April 28-29)

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
The tee-off in the female section of the new Xltec Pro Tour has been delayed until the Hilton Park GC 36-hole competition on April 28-29.
The minimum required number of five entries for a ladies' event to be played was never going to be reached for this week's inaugural men's two-rounder at Whitekirk Golf Club, teeing off on Thursday.
"Too early in the season," seemed to sum up the general response from the potential lady competitors at Whitekirk.
But it should be a different story at Hilton Park. In fact, if the foundation stone to a second-tier lady pro tour in Scotland is ever going to be laid, it had better happen at Hilton Park.
If it does not happen at that venue, then it will never happen and people like me and the seven donors of £200 for top-up prizemoney cannot be blamed if we walk away and leave the lady pros to their own devices in future.
But let's be optimistic.
I have good reason to believe that the Xltec Pro Tour ladies' field at Hilton Park at the end of April will include the following:
1 Nicola Melville.
2 Tracey Boyes.
3 Kimberley Crooks.
4 Katy McNicoll.
5 Lynn Kenny.
6 Kylie Walker.
7 Clare Queen.
8 Heather MacRae.
I have my fingers crossed that Ladies European Tour players Vikki Laing, Carly Booth and Pamela Feggans will join the tour, hopefully in time to play at the April 28-29 venue.
That would boost the potential field to 11 players with the possibility that Gillian Stewart, Cathy Panton-Lewis, Karyn Burns and Lesley Mackay, not to mention some WPGA or other pros from England, might join the merry throng!
If we could get a field of 15 lady pros at Hilton Park that would add up to a prize fund of £1,030, which would include £280 from the bonus pot of £1,400 supplied by the following donors of £200 a time.
1 Stewart Spence (The Marcliffe at Pitfodels Hotel)
2 Dave McNicoll (Carnoustie Golf Shop).
3 David J Laing (Civil engineers).
4 Allan Ingram Industrial Cleaning Services.
5 Castle Group Scotland.
6 Name withheld at donor's request.
7 Name withheld at donor's request.
The men's side of the Xltec Tour is being run on the basis of 30 per cent of any field receiving prizemoney. For example, they have 45 competitors at Whitekirk this week, which means that the winner down to the 13th placed finisher will receive prizemoney.
If that is applied to the lady pro event at Hilton Park, then a field of 15 would mean £1,030 divided up into a 1-2-3-4-5 prizelist. Admittedly, in Ladies European Tour terms, it is not a lot of money. But this is not the Ladies European Tour. This is a fledgling lady pro circuit trying to get off the ground as best it can in the belief that each succeeding event will create a bit more publicity in the Press and on websites, and that the interest among lady pros, hopefully from Scotland but the tour is open to any nationality, to come and compete will grow each month. Is that too much to hope?
One critic sent me an E-mail, saying that what I was doing in seeking £200 donors was tantamount to "begging." So be it. If I have to beg to raise money to boost the prizefunds for this lady pro tour section to get off the ground, then I will. If there are any other donors out there, you can E-mail me at Colin@scottishgolfview.com

THE REMAINING XLTEC PRO TOUR VENUES:

April 28-29: Hilton Park.
May 25-26: Dalmahoy.
July 28-29: Westerwood.
September 28-29: Spey Valley, Aviemore.
October 6-7: Dundonald Links.

+If any lady pro requires details about how to join the tour, what it costs, all they have to do is E-mail Colin@scottishgolfview.com

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TOP TEN FINISH FOR SCOT LINZI IN US

Ayrshire girl Linzi Allan, a freshman student at Newman University, Wichita, Kansas, finished joint seventh in a field of 61 players at the Midwestern State Invitational college tournbament at Wichita Falls Country Club, Texas earlier this week.
Linzi, pictured, had two rounds of 80 for a total of 160 over the par-72, 6077yd course. She finished six shots behind the winner by three strokes, Erica Bensch (Central Oklahoma Univesity) (76-78).
Linzi's team-mates, Megan Birdsey from Bedfordshire and Alyssa Balding from Northumberland, finished joint 16th and joint 36th respectively.
Megan scored 81 and 84 for 165, Alyssa 85 and 86 for 171.
Newman University finished fourth of 10 in the team event behind winners West Texas A&M.
Anna Carling joint seventh in Panther Intercollegiate
Welsh student Anna Carling, a freshman at Arkansas State University, also tied for seventh place in her competitive outing this past week. The Vale of Glamorgan Golf Club member had rounds of 76, 75 and 77 for a total of 228 over a par-72, 6047yd course at Eagles Landing Country Club, Stockbridge in Georgia.
The John Kirk/Panther Intercollegiate had an entry of 72 players and was won with three strokes to spare by Cathrine Madsen (Georgia State) with scores of 76, 70 and 75 for five-over-par 221.
Ellie Robinson, a freshman student from Middlesbrough at Georgia State, shared 20th place with a total of 233, made up of 74, 79 and 80.
Andrea Downer, a senior student from Surrey at Murray State University, Kentucky, tied for 27th place on 238 with scores of 80, 82 and 76.
Former Welsh champion Kirsty O'Connor (Ball State) finished joint 57th on 250 with scores of 84, 82 and 84.
On the same mark was Florida International University freshman Nikki Dunn from Harrogate, Yorkshire with scores of 83, 85 and 82.
Georgia State (905) won the team title. Ball State (996) were sixth and Murray State (953) tied for 10th place. Arkansas State (973) finished last of 13.
Another high finish by Sinead O'Sullivan
Last week Ireland's Sinead O'Sullivan finished joint third in a college event in Arizona. This week the girl from Galway, a senior year student at East Tennessee State University, based at Jefferson City, moved on to Pinehurst, North Carolina and finished joint fourth in a field of 93 players at the Pinehurst Challenge women's college tournament.
Sinead had scores of 72, 72 and 74 for a two-over-par total of 218 over the Pinehurst No 6 course (there are eight of them!) which has a ladies par of 72 and measures 5992yd.
She finished six shots behind the winner, Florida State's Lacey Agney (72-70-70) who had two shots to spare over runner-up Christine Shimel (Maryland) (71-68-75).
Channel Islander Olivia Higgins (Charleston Southern) had a unfortunate and costly last round of 79. After two scores of 71, Olivia was lying second behind Christine Shimel but she eventually finished joint seventh on 222.
Florida State (863) won the team title from Maryland (896) with Campbell (897) third and East Tennesee State (903) fourth. Charleston State came joint 15th of the 18 competing teams.
Laura Cutler shares fourth place in North Carolina
Laura Cutler, a junior student from Essex at Jacksonville State University, Alabama, shared fourth place behind runaway winner Carmen Perez-Narbon (North Carolina-Wilmington) in the Lady Seahawk Classic women's college tournament at River Landing Country Club, Wallace in North Carolina.
Laura had scores of 73, 78 and 76 for 227 over the par-72, 6012yd course.
Perez-Narbon was in a class of her own with rounds of 69, 73 and 73 for one-under-par 215. She won by nine strokes in a field of 52 players. So Laura Cutler finished only three shots behind the runner-up.
North Carolina-Wilmington (915) won the team title ahead of Pennsylvania (928) with Jacksonville State (931) third in a field of nine squads.

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Scott Crichton, coming up to the end of four years at Western New Mexico University.

Crichton wins New Mexico college event by five strokes

Scott Crichton from Delgaty Bay, Fife, playing in his second US college golf tournament of the week, won the Mustang Intercollegiate tournament at the University of New Mexico course, Albuquerque on Tuesday.
Coming up to the end of his four-year course at Western New Mexico University, based at Silver City, Crichton finished second in a warm-up event over the same course on Sunday.
Monday and Tuesday's three-round tournament was hit by bad weather and the second round was reduced from 18 holes to nine.
Aberdour Golf Club member Crichton headed a field of 54 players with scores of 66 , 38 and 72 for a four-under-par total of 176 over the par. The opening round of six-under-par 66 - over a long course of 7,384yd was the lowest competititve score of his young career.
He won the Mustange Intercollegiate title by five shots from Ryan Gay (New Mexico University).
Steven Maxwell, from Glasgow and a junior student at Western New Mexico University, tied for 30th place on 197 with scores of 80, 40 and 77.
Western New Mexico won the team title by 24 shots in a field of nine teams.
Runner-up in last year's Scottish youths championship, Crichton aims to make his mark on the Scottish amateur circuit once he graduates in June and flies home for good.
He is meantime ranked No 716 in the R&A World Amateur Rankings.
Stuart Ballingall helps Missouri win team title
Also playing in back-to-back tournaments in quick succession, Anglo-Scot Stuart Ballingall from Norwich, a freshman student at the University of Missouri, finished joint eighth in the C&F Bank Intercollegiate tournament at Kingsmills Resort, Williamsburg in Virginia this week.
Stuart finished third in Delaware at the end of last week.
In his second outing, Stuart had rounds of 71 and 73 for a two-over-par total of 144 - five shots behind team-mate Jace Long with scores of 69 and 70 for 139. Long had two shots to spare at the head of a huge field of 120 players.
William Harrold from St Albans, like Ballingall a freshman student at Missouri, shared 35th place on 150 with scores of 73 and 77.
Ballingall's effort help Missouri win the team event by seven shots from William & Mary College in a field of 22 teams.

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Stirling's James White defends

Students' title at Lossiemouth

Stirling student James White, Scottish boys' match-play champion in 2006 and a member of the Scottish Golf Union Elite Squad, defends the Scottish universties men's championship over the Moray Golf Club's Old and New courses at Lossiemouth links next week.
White, pictured by Cal Carson Golf Agency, is a member of Lundin Golf Club where his handicap of +3 makes him the backmarker in the Lossie field which tees off over the New course on Sunday and Monday with the leading 45 and ties qualifying for the third and fourth rounds over the Moray Old Course on the Tuesday.
His leading rivals for the students' title could be Gordon Stevenson (St Andrews) and John Duff (Aberdeen), who both play off +2, and Stirling team-mates Bobby Rushford (+1) and David Booth (+1), the Scottish youths champion in 2008. Sam Binning (Glasgow), another +1 player, is also in the title reckoning.
Stirling, with strength in depth, will be favourites to win the team match-play event later in the week.
MEN'S TEE TIMES AT LOSSIEMOUTH
SUNDAY-MONDAY, New Course.
(Player's handicaps in brackets after name of university).
10.30 and 11.30: David Currie (Dundee) (scr), Chris Baron (Edinburgh) (scr).
10.37 and 11.22: Dave Calder (Edinburgh) (1), Stephen Pointon (St Andrews) (scr)
10.45 and 11.15: Will Wrisdale (St Andrews) (scr), Roddy Forgie (Edinburgh) (1), Angus Lang (Glasgow) (scr).
10.52 and 11.07: Josh Clarke (Abertay Dundee) (1), Michael Main (Dundee) (1), Alex Main(Edinburgh) (1).

11.00 and 11.00: Cole Sedgwick (St Andrews) (1), Andy Wright (Glasgow) (1), Neil Gordon (Aberdeen) (2).
11.08 and 10.52: Stuart Cramb (Dundee) (2), Blair Mackay (Aberdeen) (2), Craig McLaughlin (Strathclyde) (1).
11.15 and 10.45: Scott Henderson (Edinburgh) (3), Scott Clark (Glasgow) (2), Daniel Sommerville (Dundee) (2).
11.22 and 10.37: Freddie Edmunds (St Andrews) (2), Craig Telfer (Edinburgh) (3), Douglas Pender (Glasgow) (2).
11.30 and 10.30: Zac Clark (Strathclyde) (3), Douglas Cramb (Dundee) (4), James White(Edinburgh) (3).
11.37 and 10.22: Steven Hogg (Dundee) (4), Charles Deparis (Abertay Dundee) (4), Richard Grierson (Strathclyde) (3).
11.45 and 10.15: Greg Harper (Abertay Dundee) (4), Grant Payne (Dundee) (4), Jonny Calder (Edinburgh) (4).

12.00 and 10.00: Kieran Urquhart (Dundee) (4), Jon Skomedal (Heriot Watt) (4), Will Russell (Stirling) (+1).
12.15 and 9.45: Kit Holmes (Stirling) (+1), Calum Marshall (Heriot Watt) (4), Alex Shedden(UHI) (4).
12.22 and 9.37: Mark Murphy (Glasgow) (4), Gavin Fourbister (Strathclyde) (3), Darren Timms (Stirling) (+1).
12.30 and 9.30: Ryan Stirling (UHI) (4), Michael Howard (Stirling) (+1), Euan Paterson (Heriot Watt) (1).
12.37 and 9.22: Ally Macdonald (Strathclyde) (3), Adam Foley (Heriot Watt) (3), Graeme Robertson (Stirling) (+1).
12.45 and 9.15: Jon Corke (St Andrews) (+1), Andrew Wallace (Stirling) (+1), Ally Leith(Glasgow) (5).
12.52 and 9.07: Alan Ferguson (UHI) (3), Matt Wheeler (St Andrews) (1), Jordan Leask(Strathclyde) (3).

13.00 and 9.00: Mike Dailly (Stirling) (+1), Mark Scanlan (Strathclyde) (3), Elliot Brown (St Andrews) (4).
13.30 and 14.00: Duncan Melville (St Andrews) (2), Colin Baird (Stirling) (+1), Cameron Hay(Aberdeen) (scr).
13.37 and 13.52: Sean Thompson (Stirling) (+1), Malo Scullion (Aberdeen) (5), Sean Fotheringham (St Andrews) (2).
13.45 and 13.45: Malcolm Pennycott (Heriot Watt) (scr), Steven Scott (Abertay Dundee) (1), Patrick Spraggs (Stirling) (+1).
13.52 and 13.37: Ryan Penny (UHI) (3), Bobby Rushford (Stirling) (+1), Ben Sloan (Heriot Watt) (1).

14.00 and 13.30: David Booth (Stirling) (+1), Mikey Hunt (UHI) (scr), Paul Robinson (Strathclyde) (2).
14.07 and 13.22: Steven Smith (Heriot Watt) (1), Euan Brown (Strathclyde) (+1), Colin Thomson (Stirling) (+1).
14.15 and 13.15: Alex Culverwell (Stirling) (+1), Graeme Macdougall (Strathclyde) (scr), Mike Gray (St Andrews) (scr).
14.22 and 13.07: Gordon Stevenson (St Andrews) (+2), Fraser Moore (Stirling) (+1), Sam Binning (Glasgow) (+1).
14.30 and 13.00: John Duff (Aberdeen) (+2), Cammy Gray (St Andrews) (scr), James White (Stirling) (+3).
14.37 and 12.52: Ben Herriot (Heriot Watt) (4), Douglas Maxwell (Aberdeen) (1), Ally Wells (UHI) (6).
14.45 and 12.45: Nick McAndrew (Aberdeen) (scr), Gavin Owens (UHI) (6), Rory Whitson (Heriot Watt) (4).

15.00 and 12.30: Paul Munro (UHI) (6), Jamie Thompson (Heriot Watt) (4), Corin Fitch-Stewart (Aberdeen) (3).
15.08 and 12.22: Iain Lockhart (Abertay Dundee) (5), John Wybar (Aberdeen) (scr), Torben Quoos (UHI) (6).
15.15 and 12.15: Keith Shanks (Aberdeen) (+3), Mark Smith (UHI) (6), Bertie Allison(Glasgow) (5).
15.23 and 12.07: Richard Pentecost (Edinburgh) (5), Phil Davidson (Glasgow) (5), Callum Taylor (UHI) (6).
15.30 and 12.00: Tom Murdoch (Abertay Dundee) (7), Andrew Houston (UHI) (6), Ross Milligan (Glasgow) (5).
+Leading 45 and ties qualify for Tuesday play over Old Course (from 8am & 1.30pm).



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Tuesday, March 23, 2010


Kelsey MacDonald in action for Scotland at last September's women's home internationals at Irvine Golf Club. Image by Cal Carson Golf Agency. Click on it to enlarge.

Kelsey misses Scottish universities' championship
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at Lossie for Paris trip to play in French U-21s

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
Kelsey MacDonald (Nairn Dunbar & Stirling University), Scottish Under-21 champion for the past two years, is not in the field for next week’s Scottish universities women’s championship over the Moray Golf Club Old and New Courses at Lossiemouth.
She has accepted an invitation from the Scottish Ladies Golfing Association to fly to Paris on Monday and take part in the French Under-21 girls open amateur championship at St Cloud from April 1 to 5.
Kelsey is a member of the GB&I Curtis Cup preliminary squad and a good performance in what is always a top-class field for the "French," will impress the Ladies Golf Union selectors more than doing well in the Scottish universities championship.
In Kelsey’s absence, the player with the lowest handicap in the Lossiemouth field for the women’s university title is Scotland international team-mate Jane Turner (Craigielaw & Robert Gordon University, Aberdeen) who plays off +2.
But a third member of the Scotland team will be playing at Lossiemouth – Scottish champion Megan Briggs, who is a student at Strathclyde University. Megan has a rating of +1.
Another strong contender would be Gemma Bradbury, a one-handicapper who was a member of the title-winning Wales team at the women’s home internationals at Irvine Golf Club last September. Teenager Gemma, a member at Cottrell Park Golf Club, Cardiff, is now a a student at St Andrews University.
Last year’s Scottish universities women’s champion was Laura Murray (Alford and Robert Gordon University). She has since left university.
Draw for the first two rounds over the Moray Old Course on Sunday, March 28 and the New Course on Monday, March 29 is (players’ handicaps in brackets):
1.0 and 3.22: Felicity Lloyd-Jones (St Andrews) (9), Nicola Robinson (Edinburgh) (10), Eleanor Pike (St Andrews (10).
1.07 and 3.15: Eilidh Mackay (Stirling) (7), Alison McGarity (Strathclyde) (5), Ashley Smith (St Andrews) (6).
1.15 and 3.07: Jennifer Linklater (St Andrews) (6), Gillian Arnott (Strathclyde) (5), Isla Craigie (Edinburgh) (5).
1.22 and 3.0: Jordana Graham (Stirling) (4), Dorothea Bouck-Standen (Strathclyde) (4), Mikela Nordblad (St Andrews) (5).
1.30 and 2.52: Megan Jones (St Andrews) (3), Rachel Cassidy (Stirling) (2), Emma Fairnie (Edinburgh) (1).
1.37 and 2.45: Megan Briggs (Strathclyde) (+1), Rebecca Wilson (Stirling) (2), Ailsa Theunis (St Andrews) (3).
1.45 and 2.37: Jane Turner (Robert Gordon Univ) (+2), Gemma Bradbury (St Andrews) (1), Susan Jackson (Edinburgh) (1).
+Leading eight plus ties qualify to play on Tuesday afternoon.




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Jamie Frail, Active Schools Co-ordinator for the Irvine Royal cluster and Jo Rand, Active Schools Co-ordinator for additional support needs schools, with pupils and staff from Annick Primary and Stanecastle Schools playing firstclubgolf and helping plant trees on the schools’ course Image by Rob Eyton-Jones. Click on it to enlarge.

Junior golf drive on course in Irvine area

The drive to give every Primary 5 child in Scotland the opportunity to play golf is proving successful in the Irvine area. After Easter all five primary schools in the Irvine Royal Academy cluster will introduce their children to the game through the national junior programme, clubgolf.
This will be the first time that all five have been involved. Around 50 children will receive taster sessions through the programme’s introductory game, firstclubgolf, which employs modified equipment, is taught by school staff and supported by Active Schools Co-ordinators.
“Last year two schools were involved but this spring every single school will be doing extra curricular firstclubgolf, either at lunchtime or after school,” said Jamie Frail, Active Schools Co-ordinator for the Irvine Royal cluster.
“Each of the five schools is expected to have 10 children in their P5 age group participating in their extracurricular golf programme - so there is potential for 50 children to be regularly playing golf this year.”
A lasting legacy to Scotland’s successful bid to host the 2014 Ryder Cup, clubgolf is a partnership between the Scottish Golf Union, the Scottish Ladies' Golfing Association, the Professional Golfers' Association, the Golf Foundation and sportscotland.
Active Schools is an integral part of clubgolf’s schools programme, in helping train teachers and supporting the programmes in schools as well as recruiting more volunteers to deliver.
The Irvine Royal Academy cluster children have the advantage of being able to use a six-hole golf course on their doorstep between Annick Primary and Stanecastle School.
“The golf course was completed last year and as far as I know Annick is one of only two schools in Scotland which has its own course,” said Jamie.
Last week children from the school and neighbouring Stanecaslte (an Additional Support Needs school) were busy helping plant trees and daffodils on the course.
“Having a golf course on the school grounds is a big help and as a resource it’s perfect for developing golf. Because it’s on Annick’s doorstep the school use it for teaching golf to all of their year groups with credit going to the head teacher who has been a major driving force.
“The five schools will do their own firstclubgolf coaching then one night a week Annick is open for children from the cluster and surrounding community to come and use it. All we need is for volunteers to open the course and supervise the sessions.
"So far we have senior pupils from Irvine Royal Academy, those who have an interest in golf, lined up for this role. I will be organising further training so that more volunteers from the community will be able to deliver firstclubgolf and enjoy the course.”
In 2009 over 753 North Ayrshire Primary 5 children (just over half of the year roll) were introduced to golf through firstclubgolf. This year the target is to roll out the game to 75% of the children in the area.
“Children really enjoy the game,” said Jamie. “Golf is a good leveller and a game that every child, both boys and girls, can play. They like the freedom of being able to get outside and hit a ball, and getting outdoors has massive health benefits. Active Schools introduces golf in the schools and develops the volunteers who will then deliver the game.
“The next step is to encourage the ones that are interested in developing their golf so we can get them into a clubgolf programme at a local club.”
Rob Eyton-Jones
clubgolf Media Manager
http://www.clubgolfscotland.com/

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Gemma Hardie joint 12th at Carmel, California

Gemma Hardie from Scunthorpe, a sophomore student at Central Arkansas University, tied for 12th place in a field of 52 players at the Monterey Invitational women's college tournament at Del Monte Golf Club, Carmel, California.
Over a par-72, 6072yd course, Gemma had rounds of 80, 81 and 78 for a total of 239.
She finished 22 shots behind the winner by six strokes, Amy Anderson (North Dakota State) with scores of 73, 69 and 75 for one-over-par 217.
Lamar (930) won the team event ahead of Drake 9932) and Central Arkansas (937) in a field of nine teams.
Xavier University, Cincinnati's two English students, Kieran Lovelock from Surrey and Alan Glynn from Middlesex tied for 23rd and 35th positions respectively in a field of 102 players at the Desert Shootout college tournament at Palm Valley Golf Club, Goodyear in Arizona.
Over a par-72, 7015yd course, Kieran had scores of 71, 71 and 74 for 216.
Alan had rounds of 73, 72 and 73 for 218.
Winner by three shots was Dustin Garza (Wichita State) with rounds of 68, 65 and 69 for 14-under-par 202.
Xavier finished seventh of 17 in the team event in which Kansas and Wichita State were joint winners, both with totals of 855.

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Danielle McVeigh looks for winning start

FROM THE IRISHTIMES.COM WEBSITE
Local player and Ireland international Danielle McVeigh will be among the favourites for Sunday's Royal County Down Women’s Scratch Salver as the 36-hole event over the championship links at Newcastle (Northern Ireland) tees off the domestic season.
McVeigh is the reigning Ladies British open amateur stroke-play champion - she won it over the Royal Aberdeen links last season - and will look to get her 2010 season under way with a win at the RCD event, which is also the first ILGU ranking event event of the year.
“The Royal County Down Ladies Scratch Salver is one of the most prestigious events on the fixture list and I look forward to competing against some of the best players in Ireland around my home course,” said McVeigh.
“Niamh Kitching won last year’s event with a great score of four under and I’m sure the competition will be just as strong this year. Hopefully I can put local knowledge to good use and challenge for honours and add my name to the illustrious list of former winners.”
The Bridgestone-sponsored event is in its 15th year and is open to the top 50 entrants with a handicap limit of 12. Courtesy practice is available from 4pm on Saturday, or by arrangement through Royal County Down GC.
Entry fee is £25, which includes lunch. Entry forms are available by logging on the Irish Ladies Golf Union website: www.ilgu.ie

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Michelle Wie does a deal with McDonald's

Michelle Wie has signed an endorsement deal with McDonald's, arguably the world's leading fast-food providers. An advertising campaign featuring Miss Wie will be launched next month in five languages.
Terms of the deal have not been disclosed but we are talking, as they say, mega-bucks.
Wie is one of the most popular players in women's golf, especially after the 20-year-old from Hawaii won her first LPGA Tour event last year in Mexico and was a big hit on her Solheim Cup debut. She spends part of her time as a student at Stanford University, California.
The commercial is to be available in two dialects of Chinese, English, Korean and Taglish. Wie also will take part in McDonald's promotions that focus on education.

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Monday, March 22, 2010

Ireland name girls for Paris and Scottish Under-16 stroke-play

FROM THE IRISH LADIES GOLF UNION WEBSITE
The following selections have been made to represent Ireland at upcoming International events:

French Under-21 Championship at St Cloud Golf Club, Paris (April 1 to 5)
Sarah Cunningham (Ennis)
Leona Maguire (Slieve Russell)
Lisa Maguire (Slieve Russell)
Aedin Murphy (Carlow)

Scottish Under-16 Stroke Play Championships at Strathmore Golf Centre, Blairgowrie (April 8-9).
Jessica Carty (Hollywood)
Ariana Coyle-Diaz (Elm Park)
Laura Fekkes (Larne)
Collette McNicholl (Royal Portrush)
Emma Murphy (Wexford)
Jean O'Driscoll (Muskerry)

Managers: Ber Murphy (Castletroy) & Marie Collins (Headfort)

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Loretto v Gullane Juniors share honours

Loretto Golf Academy and Gullane Juniors fought out at 3-3 draw at Craigielaw on Sunday.
Switch over to www.scottishgolfview.com for a report and all the results.

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Scots 2-3 for Western New Mexico University

SCOTT CRICHTON RUNNER-UP AT

ALBUQUERQUE, MAXWELL THIRD

Aberdour Golf Club member Scott Crichton from Dalgety Bay, Fife, a senior year student at Western New Mexico University, finished second in the stroke-play section of the WNMU v Colorado School of Mines golf match at Albuquerque on Sunday.
Crichton, pictured right, runner-up in last year's Scottish youths championship, had a round of level par 72 over a long course of 7,384yd.
He finished a shot behind team-mate Joon Lee and a shot in front of Glasgow's Steven Maxwell in a Western New Mexico University 1-2-3 in a field of 14 players.
Western New Mexico (291) scored a resounding win over Colorado School of Mines (330) in the match.

TOM RENNIE MAKES TOP TEN AT WINSTON SALEM

Aberdeen.s Tom Rennie, a Deeside member and sophomore student at Brevard College, North Carolina, finished eighth in a field of 31 players at the WSSU Spring Challenge college golf tournament at Winston Lake Golf Club, Winston Salem, North Carolina over the weekend.
Rennie had rounds of 82 and 76 for a total of 158 - 15 shots behind the three-stroke winner, Curtis Brotherton (High Point University).
High Point (610) won the team event ahead of Brevard College (620) in a field of five squads.

HANNAH COLES JT 50th AT WILLIAMSBURG

Hannah Coles from Birmingham, a junior year student at Radford University, Virginia finished joint 50th in a field of 112 at the C&F Bank Collegiate women's tournament at Ford's Colony Country Club, Williamsburg, Virginia at the weekend.
Over a par-72, 6043yd course, Maxstoke Park Golf Club member Hannah had rounds of 82 and 84 for a total of 166, the same total as Emma Gilmore (Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia), from Moylough, Ballinaside, Ireland. Emma, a junior year student, had a pair of 83s.
Another Irish player in the field, Laura Holmes (Old Dominion), finished joint 56th on 167 with scores of 82 and 85.
Individual winner with a pair of 73s for 146 was Kameron Carter (Longwood).
William & Mary College (612) won the team title ahead of Akron (619) with Old Dominion (638) eighth and Radford (647) ninth in a field of 20 teams.

PORTEOUS JUST OUTSIDE TOP TEN AT STATESBORO

Garrick Porteous from Bamburgh Castle, a sophomore student at Tennessee University, finished tied 12th of 81 in the Schenkel Invitational men's college tournament at Forest Heights Country Club, Statesboro in Georgia.
Garrick had rounds of 78, 72 and 66 (matching the lowest score of the tournament) for a level par total of 216 over the 6947yd course.
Team-mate Darren Renwick, a sophomore student from Woking, Surrey, finished joint 64th on 226 with scores of 74, 76 and 76.
Tom Brown (Ole Miss), a freshman from Hertfordshire, finished 79th with scores of 79, 78 and 78 for a total of 235.
In a highly competitive tournament with a lot of players covered by a span of very few shots, three players shared first place on five-under-par 211: Hunter Hamrick (Alabama) (73-68-70), Jonathan Randolf (Ole Miss) 70 69 72, and Jordan Gibb (North Florida) (70-70-71).
Auburn (862) won the team title by a single stroke from North Florida. Tennessee and Ole Miss tied for fifth place on 871 in a field of 15 teams.

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Ayrshire Girls v South of Scotland Girls

Ayrshire Girls in yellow with their South of Scotland opponents

In this first friendly match of the season for both teams, three foursomes matches were played on what turned out to be a pleasant dry day at Brunston Castle Golf Course.
Ayrshire just managed to edge ahead with a 2-1 win.

Results  (South of Scotland names first) :-
Katie McCracken & Rachel Walker beat Gillian Arnott & Mhairi McKay 5/4
Emma Greenlees and Mirren Fraser  lost to Connie Jaffrey & Katie McGarva 5/3
Rachel Lorimer and Lucy Bell  lost to Emma Hale & Grace Mackie 6/5

Dean Robertson coaching Linlithgow children at the Kingsfield Festival (Image by kby Rob Eyton-Jones)

Kingsfield Kids have fun with Dean Robertson

Linlithgow’s Kingsfield Driving Range welcomed 73 local primary school children for its first ever festival which could encourage youngsters to develop a life-long interest in the game.
Last year 1,400 West Lothian P5 children (70% of the total year roll) experienced the game at school through clubgolf’s introductory game.
clubgolf is Scotland’s legacy programme for Scotland’s successful bid to host the 2014 Ryder Cup and a partnership between the Scottish Golf Union, the Scottish Ladies' Golfing Association, the Professional Golfers' Association, the Golf Foundation and sportscotland.
“The inspiration for the festival came from the fact the primary schools in Linlithgow have a number of sports festivals each year which tend to be rugby, hockey and football,” said Kingsfield Manager, David Mitchell.
“We have a real family atmosphere at Kingsfield and are working hard to get more kids involved in the game. We approached the local Active Schools Co-ordinator and offered the centre for the day and set up some games and brought in a personality”.
The personality was Dean Robertson, the 1999 Italian Open winner and 2006 Scottish PGA champion who now runs the highly successful Scottish Junior Golf Tour.
“My philosophy is about creating games for learning and understanding which is what we rolled out here today,” he said.
“I’m huge on positive coaching. In order to learn you have to create an environment which is synonymous with having fun. That was evident today where the kids were really buzzed and they enjoyed it.
“clubgolf introduces the kids at beginner level with simple games that were on show today. One of the teachers hit the nail on the head today when she said the improvement in the kids as they go around is incredible.”
With clubgolf’s introductory game set to introduce over 41,000 to the game this spring Kingsfield’s involvement comes at the perfect time.
“The festival was fantastically well organised and the children loved the day,” said Active Schools Co-ordinator Lauren McLean, who supports school staff to deliver the introductory game and creates links between schools and local clubs.
“We have taught clubgolf in school for a number of years and we are very fortunate in having golf clubs in Linlithgow offering clubgolf coaching that the schools can feed into.
“Kingsfield complements these clubs by offering different services such as holiday programmes and another advantage is that it has a covered driving range.”
“These children get clubgolf coaching in school during the day and they now get the opportunity to go to Kingsfield and get the chance to carry on playing golf.”
Rob Eyton-Jones
clubgolf Media Manager
Official clubgolf website: http://www.clubgolfscotland.com/

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GEMMA PLACED FOURTH IN RAIN-HIT FLORIDA

US-based Aberdeen teenager Gemma Dryburgh was placed fourth in the IMGA/DLGA girls' golf championship after the weekend bad weather which hit Florida stopped the tournament for good after only six holes of the second round on Sunday at IMG Academies Golf & Country Club, Bradenton.
Gemma had a score of 74 in the first round, three shots behind leader Ginger Howard.

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Late entries being accepted
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for launch of new tour at
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Whitekirk on Thursday

Late entries are being accepted from male and female professionals for the inaugural event on the Xltec Pro Golf Tour.
The first event, over 36 holes at Whitekirk Golf Club, near North Berwick, tees off on Thursday.
Contacts:
Alan Tait - 07734 207119
Nigel Scott-Smith - 07939 015556
Chris Turner (110sport) - 07889 355856
Women professionals - of any nationality, and they do not need to be members of the Ladies European Tour or the WPGA -have to pay a one-off fee of £40 to become a member of the Xltec Pro Tour. A minimum of five female entries is required.
Competition entry fee for females per event is £50, all of which will go directly into the prize fund, plus a £10 administration fee.
DON'T DELAY - ENTER TODAY!
Discounted accommodation rates for competitors are available at the Marine Hotel, North Berwick

FIRST ROUND TEE TIMES
7.50am: Kenneth Glen (Royal Musselburgh), Eric Walker (Burntisland).
8.00am: Stuart Kerr (Strathaven), Norman Huguet (Musselburgh), Jonnie Cliff (Murrayfield).
8.10am: John Gallagher (Swanston Golf), Michael Rae (Alyth), Graeme Brown (Montrose Links).
8.20am: Alastair Thomson (Douglas Park), Alan Lockhart (Ladybank), Mark Kerr (Dalmahoy).
8.30am: Craig Everett (Caldwell), Stewart Savage (Dalmuir), Craig Matheson (Falkirk Tryst).
8.40am: Graham Rankin (Drumpellier), Shaun McAllister (Craigielaw), Danny Wardrop (Didsbury).
8.50am: Chris Russell (RAW Golf Course Design), Craig Ronald (Carluke), Jason McCreadie(Buchanan Castle).
9.00am: Steven Hume (Murrayshall), Stephen Clark (Carrick on Loch Lomond), Graeme Stewart (Gleddoch).
9.10am: Chris Kelly (Cawder), Stephen Gray (Hayston), Greig Hutcheon (Banchory).
9.20am: Reserved for late entries.
9.30am: Steven Duncan (Carnoustie), Craig Gordon (unatt), Steven Brown (Carnoustie Golf Links).
9.40am: Lee Harper (Archerfield Links), Wallace Booth (Comrie), David Roger (Windyhill).
9.50am: Sean O'Donnell (Balbirnie Park), Tom Buchanan (Duddingston), Owen Leslie (Edinburgh Leisure).
10.00am: Scott Henderson (Kings Links Golf Centre), Graeme Lornie (Paul Lawrie Foundation), Paul Cormack (Inchmarlo Golf Centre).
10.10am: Ben Irving (Kirkcudbright), Neil Cooper (unatt), Malcolm Isaacs (Nairn Dunbar).
10.20am: Scott Henry (unatt), Paul Wardell (Whitekirk), Scott Catlin (Greenburn).
10.30am: Iain Hanna (Strathclyde Park), James McGhee (Turnhouse), Chris Currie (Caldwell).
10.40am: Craig Lee (Aspire Golf Centre), Ross Cameron (McDonald Ellon), Euan Cameron(Hamilton).
10.50am & later: Late entries.

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Sunday, March 21, 2010

SCROLL DOWN TO READ THE REPORT AFTER THE SCORES


US Duramed Futures Tour Scoreboard
$100,000 FLORIDA'S NATURAL CHARITY CLASSIC
Lake Region Yacht and Country Club, Winter Haven, Florida
FINAL TOTALS
Par 216 (3x72) 6,176yd (Final round cancelled)
1 Angela Oh (Maple Shade, N.J.) 72-65 - 137 $14,000 (won play-off)
2 Jane Rah (Torrance, Calif.) 70-67 - 137 $10,000 (lost play-off)
3 Cindy LaCrosse (Tampa, Fla.) 69-69 - 138 $7,125
T4 Gerina Mendoza (Roswell, N.M.) 72-67 - 139 $4,558
Garrett Phillips (St. Simons Island, Ga.) 70-69 - 139 $4,558
6 Jenny Gleason (Clearwater, Fla.) 69-71 - 140 $3,109
T7 Dewi Claire Schreefel (Diepenveen, Netherland75-66 - 141 $2,434
Esther Choe (Scottsdale, Ariz.) 73-68 - 141 $2,434
9 Yoora Kim (Seoul, South Korea) 73-69 - 142 $1,959
T10 Stephanie Connelly (Pasadena, Md.) 73-70 - 143 $1,400
Kristie Smith (Perth, Australia) 72-71 - 143 $1,400
Jennie Lee (Henderson, Nev.) 73-70 - 143 $1,400
Elisa Serramia (Barcelona, Spain) 72-71 - 143 $1,400
Kelly Froelich (Raizeux, France) 71-72 - 143 $1,400
Carolina Llano (Medellin, Colombia) 71-72 - 143 $1,400
T16 Kathleen Ekey (Sharon Township, Ohio) 76-68 - 144 $908
Dori Carter (Valdosta, Ga.) 71-73 - 144 $908
Ryann O'Toole (San Clemente, Calif.) 71-73 - 144 $908
Amanda Mathis (Picayune, Miss.) 71-73 - 144 $908
Nicole Jeray (Berwyn, Ill.) 70-74 - 144 $908
Victoria Elizabeth (Orlando, Fla.) 70-74 - 144 $908
Jessica Shepley (Oakville, Ontario) 69-75 - 144 $908
T23 Julie Wells-Shenfield (Wilsonville, Ore.) 73-72 - 145 $771
Tiffany Joh (San Diego, Calif.) 74-71 - 145 $771
Kylene Pulley (Kokomo, Ind.) 72-73 - 145 $771
Min Seo Kwak (Seoul, South Korea) 74-71 - 145 $771
Paola Moreno (Cali, Colombia) 71-74 - 145 $771
Isabelle Beisiegel (St. Hilaire, Quebec) 75-70 - 145 $771
Ashli Bunch (Morristown, Tenn.) 75-70 - 145 $771
T30 Lisa Ferrero (Lodi, Calif.) 75-71 - 146 $700
Caroline Larsson (Stockholm, Sweden) 73-73 - 146 $700
Carling Coffing (Middletown, Ohio) 73-73 - 146 $700
Ashley Prange (Noblesville, Ind.) 72-74 - 146 $700
Susan Nam (Edmonton, Alberta) 72-74 - 146 $700
Taryn Durham (Glasgow, Ky.) 74-72 - 146 $700
Sara Brown (Tucson, Ariz.) 71-75 - 146 $700
Whitney Myers (York, Pa.) 74-72 - 146 $700
Marlowe Boukis (Lutherville, Md.) 71-75 - 146 $700
T39 Jennifer Song (a) (Ann Arbor, Mich.) 76-71 - 147
Amanda Costner (Claremore, Okla.) 76-71 - 147 $645
Marcela Leon (Monterrey, Mexico) 76-71 - 147 $645
Christine Song (Fullerton, Calif.) 72-75 - 147 $645
Samantha Richdale (Kelowna, British Columbia)73-74 - 147 $645
Virada Nirapathpongporn (Bangkok, Thailand) 72-75 - 147 $645
Seema Sadekar (Toronto, Ontario) 74-73 - 147 $645
Kelly Lagedrost (Brooksville, Fla.) 74-73 - 147 $645
Mo Martin (Altadena, Calif.) 74-73 - 147 $645
Hannah Yun (Bradenton, Fla.) 69-78 - 147 $645
Maria Hernandez (Pamplona, Spain) 75-72 - 147 $645
T50 Adrienne White (Red Deer, Alberta) 77-71 - 148 $592
Madison Opfer (a) (Plant City, Fla.) 78-70 - 148
Tara Goedeken (Dodge City, Kan.) 76-72 - 148 $592
Kendall Dye (Edmond, Okla.) 79-69 - 148 $592
Leanne Bowditch (Queensland, Australia) 75-73 - 148 $592
Nannette Hill (Pelham, N.Y.) 72-76 - 148 $592
Sophia Sheridan (Guadalajara, Mexico) 72-76 - 148 $592
Kitty Hwang (Guayaquil, Ecuador) 72-76 - 148 $592
Katie Miller (Jeannette, Pa.) 74-74 - 148 $592
Sue Ginter (Appleton, Wis.) 72-76 - 148 $592
Kristen Simpson (Norfolk, Va.) 74-74 - 148 $592
Jenny Shin (Torrance, Calif.) 74-74 - 148 $592
Christi Cano (San Antonio, Texas) 75-73 - 148 $592
Aimee Cho (Orlando, Fla.) 75-73 - 148 $592
T64 Nicole Smith (Riverside, Calif.) 73-76 - 149 $560
Laura Bavaird (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 74-75 - 149 $560
Lindsey Bergeon (Sarasota, Fla.) 74-75 - 149 $560
Erica Moston (Belmont, Calif.) 75-74 - 149 $560
T68 Kay Hoey (Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.) 78-72 - 150 $536
Sarah Olsen (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 78-72 - 150 $536
Rachel Connor (Manchester, England) 77-73 - 150 $536
Libby Smith (Essex Junction, Vt.) 79-71 - 150 $536
Sofie Andersson (Angelholm, Sweden) 76-74 - 150 $536
Heather Burgner (Lakeland, Fla.) 75-75 - 150 $536
Jackie Barenborg (Vero Beach, Fla.) 73-77 - 150 $536
Brandi Jackson (Greenville, S.C.) 72-78 - 150 $536
Michaela Cavener (Ponca City, Okla.) 73-77 - 150 $536
Marina Choi (Los Angeles, Calif.) 74-76 - 150 $536
Tiffany Tavee (Tempe, Ariz.) 75-75 - 150 $536
Melissa Eaton (Port Shepstone, South Africa) 75-75 - 150 $536
Emma Calderone (Toronto, Ontario) 75-75 - 150 $536

Angela Oh Wins Rain-Shortened Event After One-Hole Play-off

With rain blowing sideways, fairways flooding and palm trees showing their wind-dancing resilience in Florida storm conditions, players hunkered inside the clubhouse at Lake Region Yacht and Country Club, wondering how Sunday’s final round of the $100,000 Florida’s Natural Charity Classic would play out.
In a word, it was a wash. Sunday’s final round was suspended at 1:23 p.m., and at 4 p.m., the final round was cancelled.
After 36 holes on Saturday, two players, Angela Oh and rookie Jane Rah, were tied for the lead at 7-under 137. Once the lashing rains left the area on Sunday afternoon, leaving a waterlogged and largely unplayable course behind, Duramed Futures Tour officials shortened the event to a 36-hole tournament with a sudden-death play-off between the two players who were tied.
The play-off hole was to have been No. 18, but this hole, bordered by Lake Hamilton, was unplayable because of standing water. So Oh and Rah were moved to the 154yd par-3 17th hole to play for the win.
Rah won the coin toss and played first, hitting her 6-iron to 25 feet below the hole. She two-putted for par.
Oh stood on the tee, trying to decide between a “hard 6-iron or a choked-down 5-iron” when wind began blowing in her face. She opted for the 5-iron and her shot landed one foot past the cup and rolled to four feet. She drained the putt for birdie to win her first professional tournament.
“It ended as quickly as it started,” said Oh, 21, of Maple Shade, N.J., winning the Florida’s Natural Charity Classic in the one-hole playoff. “But it also felt like the longest hole ever.”
And it was one long afternoon once the rain began hammering the course. At the time of the suspension, three players -- Rah, Gerina Mendoza of Roswell, N.M., and Garrett Phillips of St. Simons Island, Ga. -- were tied for the final-round lead at eight under, with Cindy LaCrosse of Tampa, Fla., one shot back at seven under. On the other hand, Oh was struggling four shots off the lead with a double-bogey, one birdie and one bogey.
“I was on the 11th green about to putt when they suspended play,” said Oh, who played for two years at the University of Tennessee. “I was three over at that point.”
“I had a 10-foot birdie chance on the 11th green when they called it,” said Rah, 19, of Torrance, Calif. “It was one of those days when I was in between clubs all day, but I was kind of hanging around, with one birdie and pars everywhere else.”
Rah’s chance to close out her first professional win ended when the round was washed out.
Tournament officials were pressed not only with a aturated golf course, but also with a daylight constraint and 59 players still on the course.
When play was called, Oh was fading and Mendoza and Phillips, also chasing their first Tour title, were in hot pursuit of Rah, with LaCrosse right on their heels.
“We had eight holes left, but that’s golf,” said LaCrosse, a second-year pro out of the University of Louisville who is an LPGA Tour member this year. “You can’t be too disappointed about it. There’s just too much water out there.”
“It is what it is,” added Phillips, also a second-year pro out of the University of Georgia. “If we didn’t have to travel to Mexico tomorrow, maybe we could have played on Monday.”
Mendoza had just eagled the 11th hole to jump into a share of the lead and was on the 12th green when play was suspended, but as the rains pounded against the clubhouse windows for more than two hours, Mendoza slept soundly on a couch in a players’ area, waking up to be told that her work for the day was done.
Neither Oh nor Rah, who last played together in junior golf five years ago, had ever competed in a play-off to win.
“I had a putt-off once, but that was in junior golf when I was like 10 or 11 years old,” said Rah, making her pro debut on the Futures Tour this week following her departure from Oklahoma State University after one semester.
But Oh, who carded a second-round score of 7-under 65 to put herself into position on Saturday, was in the right place at the right time today, making her birdie when she needed it to pocket the winner’s $14,000 check and walk away with a new Bulova watch and Med/3 skin care products.
“It feels awesome,” said Oh, who was a 2009 LPGA Tour member. “I haven’t played on a course in three months because it’s been cold in New Jersey, so just being able to hit shots on grass and get that feeling back has been great.
“But if I can do it once, hopefully more will come,” added Oh. “I’m looking forward to Mexico next week.”
Weather: Cloudy, turning into heavy rain with lightning and high winds and temperatures in the mid-70s

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Alyson McKechin (Elderslie) and Simon Fairburn (Craigielaw). Image by courtesy of the Scottish Golf Union. Click on it to enlarge.
Simon Fairburn and Alyson McKechin win 2009
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Scottish junior champion of champions' titles

There was an East-West divide today in the destination of the 2009 Scottish Junior Champion of Champions golf titles – the tournament was rescheduled from last November 1 – with Simon Fairburn (Craigielaw) heading a Lothians 1-2-3 in the boys’ section and Alyson McKechnie from the Elderslie club near Paisley winning the girls’ title ahead of Rachel Watton (Mortonhall).
Fairburn returned a one-over-par 72 over The Duke’s Course, St Andrews to head a field of 34 boys. Beaten finalist in last year’s Lothians boys champion, the Craigielaw junior birdied the first, 12th and 17th but dropped shots at the seconhd, fifth, 14th and 15th in halves of 37 and 35.
He won by a single shot from Craigielaw clubmate Grant Forrest, last year’s Scottish Under-16 champion, and Tom Blennerhassett (Marriott Dalmahoy).
Forrest shed four shots to par over the second and third holes – a triple bogey 7 at the second and a bogey 5 at the third, his only deviations from par on the first nine holes which cost him 40 strokes.
He birdied the long 11th, the 14th and short 16th in a very good score of two-under-par 33 for the inward half which included only one bogey, at the 12th.
Blennerhassett had birdies at two long holes, the first and the sixth but dropped shots at the fifth, 10th, 14th and 15th in halves of 35 and 38.
Alyson McKechin won the girls title with a four-over-par round of 75 (39-36), one shot ahead of Rachel Watton (37-39) who, after starting at the 10th, dropped four shots over a three-hole span - the 16th, 17th and 18th. She had bogeys at the 16th and 17th and a double bogey at the 18th. She had birdies at the long sixth and the long 11th, dropping other shots at the fifth, eighth and 10th.
McKechin birdied the long first, the seventh, the long 11th and the short 16th. She had bogeys at the third, fourth, fifth, eighth, ninth, 10th, 14th and 18th.
REPORT FROM THE SCOTTISH GOLF UNION WEBSITE:
In the girls' event Alyson McKechin, in only her second 18 holes of the year, returned a four over par score of 75 to win by one from Mortonhall's Rachel Watton. Local girl Rachel Hanlon (St Regulus) finished in third place with a 77 (+6).
McKechin, coached by SLGA National Coach Kevin Craggs, expressed her delight at lifting the first National title of the year "It's just amazing having only played one other round this year while on an SLGA squad coaching trip to Spain. However I have been working hard on the range and this is a nice reward for all the practice put in".
Meanwhile Lothians Boys Match Play Champion, Simon Fairburn lifted the boys title with a one over par total of 72, a score he was obviously delighted with, if not a little surprised "It feels great to win having come into the tournament not expecting much. Living in the Borders I have had very little golf with the way the winter has been but this gives me a great boost of confidence going into the forthcoming SGU Junior Tour Events and Scottish Boys Championship".
Fairburn, coached by Colin Brooks, finished one shot ahead of his clubmate and firstpointusa.com Scottish boys' Under-16s champion, Grant Forrest. Tom Blennerhassett (Marriott Dalmahoy) also finished on 73 but Forrest's two under par better back nine score of 33 was enough to relegate his Lothians team-mate into third place.
Limited play over the winter months had been a common occurrence for a number of competitors with many courses having been closed for long periods due to snow and frost. The Duke's itself was closed for 51 days as Arctic conditions swept the country but the course today was dry and playing well for the time of year and, as always, provided the competitors with a great test of golf.
FINAL TOTALS
Par 71
BOYS
72 Simon Fairburn (Craigielaw) 37-35
73 Grant Forrest (Craigielaw) 40-33, Tom Blennerhassett (Marriot Dalmahoy) 35-38.
74 Ryan Beattie (Hawick) 39-35, Neil Beattie (St Andrews) 38-36, Alan Welsh (Torrance House) 37-37, Ewan Scott (St Andrews) 35-39, Connor O’Neil (Pollok) 34-40.
75 Cameron Farrell (Cardross) 38-37, Andrew McLachlan (Bonnyton) 37-38, Colin Baird (Bothwell) 37-38.
76 Stuart Boyle (Harburn) 39-37.
77 Ian Redford (St Andrews New) 38-39, Calum Stewart (Brora) 38-39, Liam Johnston (Dumfries & Co) 38-39.
78 Jamie Lynch (Falkirk) 41-37, Craig Ross (Kirkhil) 39-39.
79 Paul McPhee (King James VI) 40-39, Grant Bowman (Monifieth) 39-40, Jack Thorburn (Dunfermline) 38-41.
80 Jordyn Rhind (Uphall) 43-37, Fraser Thain (West Linton) 40-40.
81 Gary Chalmers (Dollar), Gordon Munro (Fraserburgh).
82 Roger Clarke (Moray), Bradley Neil (Blairgowrie), Thomas White (Milnathort).
83 Chris McKeown (Milngavie).
85 Daniel Flannery (Peebles), Greg Nicoll (Bonnybridge), Jamie Treasurer (Inverness), Craig Pirie (Millport).
87 Alexander Ferguson (Paisley).
89 Scott Baird (Tillicoultry.
GIRLS
75 Alyson McKechin (Elderslie) 39-36.
76 Rachel Watton (Mortonhall) 37-39.
77 Rachel Hanlon (St Regulus) 42-35.
79 Sammy Leslie (Westhill) 41-38.
80 Lauren Whyte (St Regulus) 40-40, Lesley Atkins (Minto) 39-41.
84 Eilidh Watson (Muckhart) 39-45.
85 Ailsa Summers (Carnoustie Ladies) 44-41.
87 Tara MacTaggart (Minto) 42-45.
88 Kate McIntosh (Broomieknowe) 46-42, Clara Young (North Berwick) 45-43, Ailsa Bain (Peebles) 43-45.
90 Alison Godwin (Glenbervie).
97 Rachel Irvine (Largs), Alexis Hutton (Falkirk Tryst).
98 Kirstin Scott (Milngavie).
104 Nicole Benson (Cawder).

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Oh, Rah Lead Futures Tour’s Season
Opener After Two Rounds in Florida

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE DURAMED FUTURES TOUR
WINTER HAVEN, Florida. – It was “moving day” on Saturday in the second round of the $100,000 Florida’s Natural Charity Classic, so Angela Oh and rookie Jane Rah took advantage of perfect weather and made their respective jumps up the leaderboard.
Oh picked the day to card her career-low round of 7-under 65 to take the lead at 137 (-7). Four groups later, she was joined by rookie Rah, who moved into a share of the lead with her second-day score of 5-under 67.
But by day’s end and heading into Sunday’s final round at Lake Region Yacht and Country Club, six players were jammed within four shots of the lead in the Duramed FUTURES Tour’s season-opening event.
“Being from New Jersey, I haven’t been on a course for three months,” said Oh, 21, a third-year pro from Maple Shade, N.J. “I’ve been all bundled up all winter, hitting balls on the range and pretty much putting on the carpet, so coming into this week, I just wanted to make the top-10 here and in the next tournament.”
Oh’s irons were red hot today. She hit 16 greens in regulation, setting up a bogey-free day that rendered 27 putts, five birdies and an eagle-3 on the par-5 18th hole. Her second shot on the last hole landed in a “bowl” indention around a sprinkler head in the 18th fairway. Oh fretted momentarily about the shot that needed to clear a water hazard in front of the 18th green. But still riding the momentum that had carried her all day, the 2009 LPGA Tour member pulled out her 50-degree A-wedge, struck her approach shot to five inches of the cup and watched it spin back into the hole for the eagle.
“My irons were awesome,” said Oh, who played collegiately for two years at the University of Tennessee. “I think this is the best I have ever played.”
Competing in her first Duramed FUTURES Tour tournament as a pro this week, Rah added another sub-par round to her scorecard and found herself slipping into match-play mode with pairings partner Garrett Phillips (69) of St. Simons Island, Ga., who was also pushing her way up the leaderboard for a share of fourth at 5-under 139 with Gerina Mendoza (67) of Roswell, N.M.
“Garrett inspired me and I almost felt like it was match-play,” said Rah, 19, of Torrance, Calif. “On a couple of holes, she unleashed it off the tee and I couldn’t really catch her, but on the greens, I rolled a couple in on top of hers. It felt pretty good.”
The rookie’s hot streak included four birdies on holes No. 9-14, and she capped off her single-bogey round with a 12-foot birdie on the 18th to charge into a share of the lead with Oh.
“My goal is to just keep knocking and if I win, I win,” said Rah, who played college golf last fall at Oklahoma State University. “I’d like to get top-10s every week, like Inbee [Park], and to consistently shoot under par.”
But Oh and Rah are trailed one shot back by second-year pro Cindy LaCrosse of Tampa, Fla., who has paired rounds of 69-69 to sit one shot off the lead at 6-under 138. LaCrosse won two Florida mini-tour tournaments last fall and has been building confidence ever since she graduated from the University of Louisville last spring, posted five top-10 finishes in 11 Duramed FUTURES Tour events in 2009, and earned 2010 LPGA Tour membership at LPGA Q-School last December.
“I’m happy with the way I played because I’m more consistent with where I am, my scores and the mental part of my game than I was last year,” said LaCrosse, 22, who hit 13 greens and 11 fairways in regulation today. “I’m still in it and I’m happy with where I am.”
Mendoza capitalized on her length off the tee on the par-72, 6,176-yard course. She birdied every par-5 hole on the course, playing the longer holes at five under today, compared to playing the par fives at one over in Friday’s first round. Mendoza carded six birdies and one bogey today, knocking her wedges close and needing only 25 putts to move from a tie for 20th into a tie for fourth.
“For me, it’s all about confidence,” said Mendoza, 24, who also has 2010 LPGA membership. “Coaches tell me there’s nothing wrong with my swing, so if it’s not my swing, obviously, it’s something in my head. I do believe in myself a lot more.”
Dewi Claire Schreefel of Diepenveen, Netherlands, also made a huge move with her second-round score of 6-under 66 to charge from a tie for 62nd into a tie for seventh at 3-under 141 alongside Esther Choe (68) of Scottsdale, Ariz., and one stroke behind Jenny Gleason (71) of Clearwater, Fla., at 4-under 140. Schreefel carded six birdies in her bogey-free round, with five birdies on hole Nos. 6-11.
“I tried to play safe and not make too many mistakes, and then I got things going,” said Schreefel, a second-year pro who won the Tour’s 2009 ING New England Golf Classic in Connecticut. “If I feel good and am hitting it well, I can get my groove going.”
Choe hit 14 greens in regulation and said she tried to hit to the middle of greens and make two-putts or better all day. That strategy worked, with Choe’s longest birdie putt being a 30-footer on No. 8.

“This is my best round in competition for a while,” said Choe, 20, the 2006 AJGA Rolex Girls’ Player of the Year and a two-time U.S. Junior Solheim Cup Team member.
Rookie Kendall Dye of Edmond, Okla., had the gutsiest round of the day, improving her opening-day score of 79 by 10 shots with today’s second-round score of 69 to jump from a tie from 122nd into a tie for 50th at 4-over 148.
“This is my first Duramed FUTURES Tour event and I had some nerves and jittery feelings yesterday,” said Dye, a 2009 graduate of the University of Oklahoma, where she was the captain of the women’s golf team. “I guess today’s score is kind of night and day with yesterday.”
Former England amateur international Rachel Connor, pictured above, daughter of Manchester Golf Club's Scottish-born professional, survived the cut on her debut on the Futures Tour.
A total of 22 players carded rounds of even-par 144 or better.
Eighty-one players made the 36-hole cut at 150 (+6).
Weather: Sunny with temperatures in the high-70s.
SCROLL DOWN FOR ALL THE SECOND-ROUND TOTALS

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Sunny day for Scottish junior champion of champions

The Scottish junior champion of champions' 18-hole tournament, washed out when it was originally due to be played on November, is under way on a sunny day at The Duke's, near St Andrews.
We expect to have the scores on display for you around about tea-time.
If you live in Fife, why not go along and give the young stars of tomorrow your support?
Tee times (from the SGU website) are:

STARTING FROM FIRST TEE
09:10
WHYTE, Lauren St Regulus Girls
HUTTON, Alexis Falkirk Tryst Girls
YOUNG, Clara North Berwick Girls
09:20
LYNCH, Jamie Falkirk Boys
BEATTIE, Neil St Andrews Boys
WHITE, Thomas Milnathort Boys
09:30
SCOTT, Ewan St Andrews Boys
BOWMAN, Grant Monifieth Boys
CHALMERS, Gary Dollar Boys
09:40
BAIN, Ailsa Peebles Girls
HANLON, Rachel St Regulus Girls
SUMMERS, Ailsa Carnoustie Ladies Girls
09:50
BAIRD, Scott Tillicoultry Boys
FERGUSON, Alexander Paisley Boys
THOMSON, Jamie Cawder Boys
10:00
THAIN, Fraser West Linton Boys
RHIND, Jordyn Uphall Boys
MUNRO, Gordon Fraserburgh Boys
10:10
O'NEIL, Connor Pollok Boys
ROSS, Craig Kirkhill Boys
ROBINSON, Colin Largs Boys
10:20
GOODWIN, Alison Glenbervie Girls
SCOTT, Kirstin Milngavie Girls
McCOOK, Hannah Abernethy Girls
10:30
PIRIE, Craig Millport Boys
WELSH, Alan Torrance House Boys
MCKEOWN, Chris Milngavie Boys
10:40
McLACHLAN, Andrew Bonnyton Boys
BOYLE, Stuart Harburn Boys
NEIL, Bradley Blairgowrie Boys

STARTING FROM TENTH TEE
09:05
REDFORD, Ian New Club St Andrews Boys
BLENNERHASSETT, Tom Marriot Dalmahoy Boys
McPHEE, Paul King James VI Boys
09:15
THORBURN, Jack Dunfermline Boys
FORREST, Grant Craigielaw Boys
NICOLL, Greg Bonnybridge Boys
09:25
WILSON, David Troon Welbeck Boys
BEATTIE, Ryan Hawick Boys
JOHNSTON, Liam Dumfries & County Boys
09:35
LESLIE, Samantha Westhill Girls
MACTAGGART, Tara Minto Girls
McINTOSH, Kate Broomieknowe Girls
09:45
BAIRD, Colin Bothwell Castle Boys
FARRELL, Cameron Cardross Boys
TRASURER, Jamie Inverness Boys
09:55
FAIRBURN, Simon Craigielaw Boys
STEWART, Calum Brora Boys
GIBSON, Scott Southerness Boys
10:05
ATKINS, Lesley Minto Girls
McKECHIN, Alyson Elderslie Girls
WATTON, Rachel Mortonhall Girls
10:15
CLARKE, Roger Moray Boys
FLANNERY, Daniel Peebles Boys
McDONALD, Jack Kilmarnock (Barassie) Boys
10:25
WATSON, Eilidh Muckhart Girls
IRVINE, Rachel Largs Girls
BENSON, Nicole Cawder Girls



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US Duramed Futures Tour Scoreboard
$100,000 FLORIDA'S NATURAL CHARITY CLASSIC
Lake Region Yacht & Country Club, Winter Haven, Florida
SECOND-ROUND TOTALS
Par 144 (2x72)
T1 Angela Oh (Maple Shade, N.J.) 72-65 - 137
T1 Jane Rah (Torrance, Calif.) 70-67 - 137
3 Cindy LaCrosse (Tampa, Fla.) 69-69 - 138
T4 Gerina Mendoza (Roswell, N.M.) 72-67 - 139
T4 Garrett Phillips (St. Simons Island, Ga.) 70-69 - 139
6 Jenny Gleason (Clearwater, Fla.) 69-71 - 140
T7 Dewi Claire Schreefel (Diepenveen, Netherland 75-66 - 141
T7 Esther Choe (Scottsdale, Ariz.) 73-68 - 141
9 Yoora Kim (Seoul, South Korea) 73-69 - 142
T10 Stephanie Connelly (Pasadena, Md.) 73-70 - 143
T10 Kristie Smith (Perth, Australia) 72-71 - 143
T10 Jennie Lee (Henderson, Nev.) 73-70 - 143
T10 Elisa Serramia (Barcelona, Spain) 72-71 - 143
T10 Kelly Froelich (Raizeux, France) 71-72 - 143
T10 Carolina Llano (Medellin, Colombia) 71-72 - 143
T16 Kathleen Ekey (Sharon Township, Ohio) 76-68 - 144
T16 Dori Carter (Valdosta, Ga.) 71-73 - 144
T16 Ryann O'Toole (San Clemente, Calif.) 71-73 - 144
T16 Amanda Mathis (Picayune, Miss.) 71-73 - 144
T16 Nicole Jeray (Berwyn, Ill.) 70-74 - 144
T16 Victoria Elizabeth (Orlando, Fla.) 70-74 - 144
T16 Jessica Shepley (Oakville, Ontario) 69-75 - 144
T23 Julie Wells-Shenfield (Wilsonville, Ore.) 73-72 - 145
T23 Tiffany Joh (San Diego, Calif.) 74-71 - 145
T23 Kylene Pulley (Kokomo, Ind.) 72-73 - 145
T23 Min Seo Kwak (Seoul, South Korea) 74-71 - 145
T23 Paola Moreno (Cali, Colombia) 71-74 - 145
T23 Isabelle Beisiegel (St. Hilaire, Quebec) 75-70 - 145
T23 Ashli Bunch (Morristown, Tenn.) 75-70 - 145
T30 Lisa Ferrero (Lodi, Calif.) 75-71 - 146
T30 Caroline Larsson (Stockholm, Sweden) 73-73 - 146
T30 Carling Coffing (Middletown, Ohio) 73-73 - 146
T30 Ashley Prange (Noblesville, Ind.) 72-74 - 146
T30 Susan Nam (Edmonton, Alberta) 72-74 - 146
T30 Taryn Durham (Glasgow, Ky.) 74-72 - 146
T30 Sara Brown (Tucson, Ariz.) 71-75 - 146
T30 Whitney Myers (York, Pa.) 74-72 - 146
T30 Marlowe Boukis (Lutherville, Md.) 71-75 - 146
T39 Jennifer Song (a) (Ann Arbor, Mich.) 76-71 - 147
T39 Amanda Costner (Claremore, Okla.) 76-71 - 147
T39 Marcela Leon (Monterrey, Mexico) 76-71 - 147
T39 Christine Song (Fullerton, Calif.) 72-75 - 147
T39 Samantha Richdale (Kelowna, British Columbia) 73-74 - 147
T39 Virada Nirapathpongporn (Bangkok, Thailand) 72-75 - 147
T39 Seema Sadekar (Toronto, Ontario) 74-73 - 147
T39 Kelly Lagedrost (Brooksville, Fla.) 74-73 - 147
T39 Mo Martin (Altadena, Calif.) 74-73 - 147
T39 Hannah Yun (Bradenton, Fla.) 69-78 - 147
T39 Maria Hernandez (Pamplona, Spain) 75-72 - 147
T 50 Adrienne White (Red Deer, Alberta) 77-71 - 148
T50 Madison Opfer (a) (Plant City, Fla.) 78-70 - 148
T50 Tara Goedeken (Dodge City, Kan.) 76-72 - 148
T50 Kendall Dye (Edmond, Okla.) 79-69 - 148
T50 Leanne Bowditch (Queensland, Australia) 75-73 - 148
T50 Nannette Hill (Pelham, N.Y.) 72-76 - 148
T50 Sophia Sheridan (Guadalajara, Mexico) 72-76 - 148
T50 Kitty Hwang (Guayaquil, Ecuador) 72-76 - 148
T50 Katie Miller (Jeannette, Pa.) 74-74 - 148
T50 Sue Ginter (Appleton, Wis.) 72-76 - 148
T50 Kristen Simpson (Norfolk, Va.) 74-74 - 148
T50 Jenny Shin (Torrance, Calif.) 74-74 - 148
T50 Christi Cano (San Antonio, Texas) 75-73 - 148
T50 Aimee Cho (Orlando, Fla.) 75-73 - 148
T64 Nicole Smith (Riverside, Calif.) 73-76 - 149
T64 Laura Bavaird (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 74-75 - 149
T64 Lindsey Bergeon (Sarasota, Fla.) 74-75 - 149
T64 Hanna Kang (Seoul, South Korea) 74-75 - 149
T64 Erica Moston (Belmont, Calif.) 75-74 - 149
T69 Kay Hoey (Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.) 78-72 - 150
T69 Sarah Olsen (Grosse Ile, Mich.) 78-72 - 150
T69 Rachel Connor (Manchester, England) 77-73 - 150
T69 Libby Smith (Essex Junction, Vt.) 79-71 - 150
T69 Sofie Andersson (Angelholm, Sweden) 76-74 - 150
T69 Heather Burgner (Lakeland, Fla.) 75-75 - 150
T69 Jackie Barenborg (Vero Beach, Fla.) 73-77 - 150
T69 Brandi Jackson (Greenville, S.C.) 72-78 - 150
T69 Michaela Cavener (Ponca City, Okla.) 73-77 - 150
T69 Marina Choi (Los Angeles, Calif.) 74-76 - 150
T69 Tiffany Tavee (Tempe, Ariz.) 75-75 - 150
T69 Melissa Eaton (Port Shepstone, South Africa) 75-75 - 150
T69 Emma Calderone (Toronto, Ontario) 75-75 - 150
MISSED THE CUT
Briana Vega (Andover, Mass.) 77-74 - 151
Christine Cho (Kent, Wash.) 77-74 - 151
Sae Hee Son (Seoul, South Korea) 78-73 - 151
Jessica Carafiello (Coral Springs, Fla.) 78-73 - 151
Perry Swenson Livonius (Charlotte, N.C.) 79-72 - 151
Hannah Jun (San Diego, Calif.) 76-75 - 151
Ashley Grier (Hagerstown, Md.) 76-75 - 151
Jasi Acharya (Columbus, Mont.) 75-76 - 151
Lori Atsedes (Ithaca, N.Y.) 74-77 - 151
Laura Crawford (Lancaster, S.C.) 71-80 - 151
Benedikte Grotvedt (Nesbru, Norway) 78-74 - 152
Shasta Averyhardt (Flint, Mich.) 78-74 - 152
Noon Huajai (Bangkok, Thailand) 77-75 - 152
Veronica Felibert (Caracas, Venezuela) 78-74 - 152
Mayule Tomimbang (Kissimmee, Fla.) 76-76 - 152
Janice Olivencia (Caguas, Puerto Rico) 76-76 - 152
Jaclyn Burch (St. Louis, Mo.) 76-76 - 152
Danah Ford Bordner (Indianapolis, Ind.) 76-76 - 152
Chelsea Curtis (New Seabury, Mass.) 75-77 - 152
Daniela Iacobelli (Viera, Fla.) 75-77 - 152
Pamela Ontiveros (Gomez Palacio, Mexico) 72-80 - 152
Ayaka Kaneko (Honolulu, Hawaii) 71-81 - 152
Bree Arthur (Brisbane, Australia) 80-73 - 153
Angela Buzminski (Oshawa, Ontario) 80-73 - 153
Madeleine Holmblad (Stockholm, Sweden) 75-78 - 153
Selanee Henderson (Apple Valley, Calif.) 75-78 - 153
Gennifer Mendez (a) (North Port, Fla.) 75-78 - 153
Y. J. Jin (Seoul, South Korea) 77-77 - 154
Jenny Suh (Fairfax, Va.) 77-77 - 154
Ashley Medders (Alma, Ga.) 77-77 - 154
Janell Howland (Boise, Idaho) 79-75 - 154
Kim Augusta (Rumford, R.I.) 76-78 - 154
Danielle Mills (Pointe-Claire, Quebec) 79-75 - 154
Carrie Riordan (Spring Valley, Ill.) 81-73 - 154
Lucy Nunn (Lawton, Okla.) 73-81 - 154
Lauren Doughtie (Suffolk, Va.) 70-84 - 154
Kendra Hanson (Forest City, Iowa) 75-79 - 154
Lehua Wise (Kauai, Hawaii) 77-78 - 155
Hwanhee Lee (Las Vegas, Nev.) 78-77 - 155
Jessi Gebhardt (Chandler, Ariz.) 79-76 - 155
Chelsea Schriewer (St. Louis, Mo.) 76-79 - 155
Whitney Wade (Glasgow, Ky.) 80-75 - 155
Haley Gildea (East Greenwich, R.I.) 77-79 - 156
Miriam Nagl (Berlin, Germany) 78-78 - 156
Malinda Johnson (Eau Claire, Wis.) 78-78 - 156
Seul Ki Park (Northbrook, Ill.) 81-75 - 156
Sophie Jang (Seoul, South Korea) 78-79 - 157
Juli Erekson (Chicopee, Mass.) 78-79 - 157
Christina Jones (Jensen Beach, Fla.) 79-78 - 157
Carmen Bandea (Atlanta, Ga.) 80-77 - 157
Lauren Hunt (Little River, S.C.) 82-75 - 157
Lene Krog (Lier, Norway) 82-75 - 157
Lili Alvarez (Durango, Mexico) 80-78 - 158
Eileen Vargas (Ibague, Colombia) 75-83 - 158
Kristina Langton (Ada, Mich.) 82-76 - 158
Stacey Bieber (Winnipeg, Manitoba) 77-83 - 160
Caroline Westrup (Ahus, Sweden) 81-81 - 162
Jennifer Ackerson (Dallas, Texas) 81-81 - 162
Kirby Dreher (Fort St. John, Canada) 82-81 - 163
DISQUALIFIED
Susannah Aboff (Huntington, N.Y.) DQ

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