with Bryan Angus

Thanks for joining me today. I look forward to your comments . They are always welcome here on FairwaysPlus. Bryan Angus bryanangus4@gmail.com



Friday, December 23, 2022

A look back at the 2022 Majors..

 Majors in 2022

Scheffler wins maiden Major at Augusta

A tradition unlike any other, the first Major of the season saw the 86th edition of the Masters Tournament held at Augusta National from April 7-10. Attendance returned to full capacity for the first time since Tiger Woods’ triumph in 2019 and the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Scottie Scheffler arrived at Augusta National on the back of a scintillating run of form that had seen him claim three PGA TOUR titles and rise to World Number One in the Official World Golf Rankings in barely two months. Victory at the WGC-Dell Technologies Match Play at the tail end of March saw the American rise to the summit of men’s golf and he underlined his pre-tournament status as the dominant force in the men’s game with a polished performance to claim his maiden Major victory in Georgia.

Scheffler did not make a bogey until the 18th hole of his three-under-par 69 in the first round which left him two shots back of pace setter Sungjae Im of South Korea. As the wind picked up on day two, the US Ryder Cup star seized control of the tournament with a 67 to open up a five-shot advantage at the halfway stage and in the process tie the tournament record for the largest 36-hole lead.

Despite a difficult back nine in the third round in which Scheffler carded four bogeys in the last seven holes, the World Number one still held a three-shot lead heading into the final day’s play. Players Champion Cameron Smith, Scheffler’s nearest challenger, reduced the overnight gap to one shot over the opening two holes but the American bounced back with a stunning chip-in birdie which turned the momentum back in his favour. Scheffler won with a one-under 71 that included a double bogey on the 18th green as he finished three shots ahead of Rory McIlroy who, having begun the day ten shots adrift, carded a remarkable closing 64 to finish in solo second.

Afterwards Scheffler revealed he “cried like a baby” on the morning of his triumph due to doubts he was ready to win one of golf’s four Majors. He added: "Probably the first time the thought of winning popped into my mind was Friday in the afternoon after we got done.

“I never really make it this far. I always dream of being here and competing. I can’t put into words what it means that I’ll be able to come back here for a lifetime, hopefully, and I can’t speak highly enough of this place."

Scottie Scheffler

Thomas denies Zalatoris to win PGA Championship again

A month later saw the second Major of the season – the PGA Championship – held at Southern Hills, with Green Jacket holder and World Number One Scheffler viewed as a co-favourite alongside reigning U.S. Open Champion Jon Rahm.

However, it was two-time champion McIlroy who carried over his resurgence from Augusta to Tulsa as he shot a five-under 65 – his lowest round in his PGA Championship career – to take a one-shot lead after the first round. After carding his best Major round with a 66 on day one, Will Zalatoris went one better a day later to get to nine under and the lead the way from Chile’s Mito Pereira at the midway point. Overnight leader McIlroy was five shots adrift of the lead after a 71.

Pereira, in his PGA Championship debut, then recovered from four bogeys in five holes around the turn to post a 69 and claim a three-shot lead heading into the final round. Matt Fitzpatrick and Zalatoris were his nearest challengers and, like Pereira, were targeting their first Major wins.

Yet it was neither of those three players who celebrated success as Justin Thomas staged a remarkable fightback before beating compatriot Zalatoris in a play-off to win his second Major, five years after winning his first at the same event.

Beginning the day seven shots adrift, Thomas shot a three-under 67 to the set the clubhouse target at five under. Pereira appeared set to win the Wanamaker Trophy until he double bogeyed the 18th after hitting his tee shot into a creek to finish at four under. Zalatoris, playing in the group ahead, made a gutsy par putt for a one-over 71 to match Thomas’ total and force a three-hole play-off.

Both Thomas and Zalatoris birdied the par-five 13th – the opening hole of the shootout. Thomas then made a two-putt birdie at the 302-yard par-four 17th in what proved the decisive moment as he sealed victory with a par at the 18th.

“I was asked early in the week what lead is safe and I said, ‘No lead,’” said Thomas, who equalled John Mahaffey's record of coming from seven behind to win the 1978 PGA Championship, also in a play-off, at Oakmont. “I can’t believe I found myself in a playoff.

Justin Thomas-1398720871

Fitzpatrick fulfils his dream to win first Major with tense Brookline finish

Another dramatic finish played out at the third Major of the season when the 122nd U.S. Open was held at The Country Club in Brookline.

Fitzpatrick, who had fallen out of contention on the final day at the US PGA, arrived in Massachusetts with fond memories after winning the US Amateur title at Brookline in 2013. The Englishman began his campaign with a two-under 68 that left him two adrift of first-round leader Adam Hadwin of Canada.

Collin Morikawa was the big mover on day two as the American star carded a 66 to earn a share of the halfway lead at five under, with McIlroy and defending champion Rahm a shot further back.

Zalatoris, forging a reputation for producing his best golf at the Majors, surged into a share of the lead alongside Fitzpatrick heading into the final round with a best-of-the-day 67. But with Rahm a stroke behind and Scheffler a further shot adrift, there was an exciting finale in store. Overnight leaders Morikawa and Dahmen saw their hopes of victory all but ended with rounds of 77 and 74 respectively.

In a gripping final round that saw the lead exchange hands on several occasions, Fitzpatrick produced an extraordinary bunker shot at the 18th on his way to his first Major title with a one-shot victory.

Matt Fitzpatrick-1404017735


Smith wins at St Andrews after back-nine charge as McIlroy falls just short

Smith The Open-1409667359

The final Major of the season was a historic one as The Open Championship celebrated its 150th anniversary at the Home of Golf, the Old Course at St Andrews.

There had been much discussion around how three-time winner Tiger Woods might fare on his return to Major golf after sitting out the U.S. Open in a bid to improve his chances on the Old Course.

But despite the pre-tournament anticipation, Woods double bogeyed the first and struggled thereafter as he opened with a six-over 78. Leading the way after the first round was PGA TOUR rookie Cameron Young, who carded a bogey-free 64 to stand two shots ahead of McIlroy.

Smith matched that score on day two to reach 13 under par and take a two-shot lead into the weekend, with European pair Viktor Hovland and McIlroy well positioned in a share of third place. The Ryder Cup pair then shot matching 66s in the third round in front of record crowds to open up a four-shot advantage as Smith and Young struggled to reach the heights they had set on the opening two days.

Amid fever-pitch excitement around the prospect of McIlroy ending his eight-year wait for a fifth Major title, Smith stunned the swathes of crowds that lined the St Andrews fairways to lift the Claret Jug. A bogey-free eight-under 64, which included five successive birdies from the 10th, saw the Australian finish one shot ahead of Young, who eagled the 18th to pip McIlroy into second place.

"I didn't feel like I did many things wrong, but the putter went cold on me throughout the round," said McIlroy, who earlier held a two-shot lead after nine holes.

Smith said: "I think to win an Open Championship in itself is probably going to be a golfer's highlight in their career. To do it around St Andrews, I think is just unbelievable."

edit : Amid wild media speculation after a report the he was talking behind the scenes with Greg Norman about jumping to the rebel LIV series, it wasn't until several weeks later when he had returned to Australia that he revealed that after speaking with the PGA and DP World brass as well as Rory McIlroy, he just couldn't refuse the guaranteed money and made his move official.

His fate and all the others who jumped to LIV about their future on the DP World Tour hangs in a court ruling in February 2023. They have already been banned on the PGA Tour.

As is so often the case with elite sport, the results of three of this year’s four Majors have aptly illustrated how fine the margins are between success and perceived failure.

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)


Wednesday, December 21, 2022

Glory year for Rory, wrapping up the 2022 DP World Tour Rolex series.

 The 50th anniversary year of the European Tour group was punctuated with milestone moments as the Rolex Series continued to evolve and Rory McIlroy sits atop it all.

GenesisScottishOpen-1407259214

The year started with back-to-back Rolex Series events in the Middle East - and two firsts. The Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship moved to a new venue at Yas Links, and the season opener was followed by a newcomer to the select band of marquee tournaments on the DP World Tour, as the long-established Dubai Desert Classic was elevated to Rolex Series status.

In the summer, the Genesis Scottish Open created history twice - as it became the first event to be co-sanctioned with the PGA TOUR and attracted the strongest field ever assembled at a DP World Tour event, with 14 of the top 15 players in the Official World Golf Rankings teeing it up at the Renaissance Club in East Lothian.

The BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth Club celebrated the fifth anniversary of the first-ever Rolex Series event, before the DP World Tour Championship brought the season to an exciting conclusion in Dubai.

Pieters claims maiden Rolex Series win in Abu Dhabi

The first event of 2022 saw Thomas Pieters conquer a new venue in the 17th playing of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship.

The Belgian produced a masterclass from tee to green at Yas Links over the four days to earn his sixth DP World Tour and first Rolex Series title.

Starting the final round one stroke adrift of third-round leader Scott Jamieson, Pieters moved three shots clear at one point on the front nine and, despite being briefly caught on the back nine, he held his nerve down the final stretch to claim a one-shot victory.

The victory saw Pieters return to the top 50 in the world rankings and provided the impetus for the 2016 Ryder Cup star to enjoy his best-ever finish on the season-long DP World Tour Rankings in Partnership with Rolex.

Hovland triumphs in tense Dubai finish

A week later, Viktor Hovland claimed his maiden Rolex Series title with a play-off victory as he underlined his burgeoning reputation.

The Norwegian, who only turned professional in the summer of 2019, finished birdie-eagle-birdie in regulation play on the final day to shoot a round-of-the-day 66 and set the clubhouse target at 12 under.

Richard Bland joined him in the clubhouse at the same mark with a birdie-birdie finish for a 68, before Rory McIlroy found water with his approach into the 18th on his way to a closing bogey as he missed out on the play-off.

A two-putt birdie for Hovland on the first trip back up the 18th saw him celebrate a third win in five starts and rise to a career-best third in the world rankings.

Schauffele keeps on piling up the wins

The much-anticipated third Rolex Series event of the season saw a world-class field of stars from both the DP World Tour and PGA TOUR descended on Scotland.

In the 40th edition of the tournament and the first under new title partner, Genesis, American Xander Schauffele became the third first-time Rolex Series winner of the season.

After a nervy finish to his front nine, which included three bogeys in four holes, the overnight leader recovered to card a closing level-par 70 to win by one shot from countryman Kurt Kitayama and South Korea’s Joohyung Jim at the Renaissance Club.

The victory was the reigning Olympic Champion’s third in succession after he won the JP McManus Pro-Am earlier that week in Ireland, to follow his triumph at the PGA TOUR’s Travelers Championship.

Lowry lands Wentworth win after flawless performance

The BMW PGA Championship boasts a roll call of champions which includes some of the game’s leading lights, and the best once again rose to the top this year.

In front of record crowds, Shane Lowry produced a flawless seven-under 65 to end his wait for a victory at Wentworth after coming into the week with nine top-20 finishes to his name in this event.

The 2019 Open Champion birdied the last to overtake clubhouse leader Jon Rahm, who had earlier produced a stellar 62, before McIlroy agonisingly missed a birdie putt of his own at the 18th to force a play-off.

Lowry, who added a second Rolex Series win to his triumph in Abu Dhabi in 2019, did not card a single bogey across on his way to victory across 54 holes, after Friday’s play was cancelled following the death of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II.

Rahm makes history with Dubai hat-trick as McIlroy wins season-long title

The DP World Tour Championship once again provided a fitting climax to the season, with a world-class field assembled at Jumeirah Golf Estates.

With history on the line heading into the final round at the Earth Course – no player had yet to win five Rolex Series titles – Rahm demonstrated his class to hold off a strong chasing pack to win the season finale in Dubai for a record third time.

Rahm

The 2021 U.S. Open Champion never relinquished his 54-hole one-shot lead on the final day but despite three opening birdies was put under pressure on the back nine, before finishing two shots clear of Ryder Cup team-mates Tyrrell Hatton, Alex Noren and McIlroy.

McIlroy

World Number One McIlroy capped a hugely consistent campaign by winning the Harry Vardon Trophy for the fourth time, ending the year as the European Number One, World Number One and FedExCup Champion for the first time in his career.

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)


Sunday, December 18, 2022

Rozner romps through the Mauritius Open.. final results

 DP World Tour: AfrAsia Bank Open 

Antoine Rozner produced an impressive display of front-running as he fired a Sunday 67 to storm to a five-shot victory at the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open.

Antoine Rozner and Alfredo Garcia-Heredia join Sami Välimäki at the top in Mauritius

The Frenchman began the day with a two-shot advantage and carded an eagle and three birdies on the front nine to stretch his lead to five strokes at the turn.

He then safely parred the next seven holes in breezy conditions before a bogey-birdie finish saw him end the tournament on -19 and banish the memory of his play-off defeat to Rasmus Højgaard in this event three years ago.

Rozner's commanding victory in the final event of the calendar year is his third win on the DP World Tour and first since the 2021 Commercial Bank Qatar Masters.

Spaniard Alfredo Garcia-Heredia finished alone in second on -14  after posting a flawless 67 on his 41st birthday.

France's Julien Brun was two shots further back in third after his level-par 72.

Bryan Angus (edit)


Saturday, December 17, 2022

Frenchman Rozner leads by two shots AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open.. complete Saturday scoreboard

 DP World Tour : AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open Leaderboard

Antoine Rozner will take a two-shot lead into the final day of the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open after firing a third-round 68 in breezy conditions at Mont Choisy Le Golf.

Antoine Rozner

The Frenchman recovered brilliantly from back-to-back bogeys at the first and second on Saturday, carding seven birdies and a single bogey in his remaining 16 holes to get to -14.

Rozner, who narrowly lost out to Rasmus Højgaard in a play-off at this event three years ago, saved his best until last on Moving Day, producing a wonderful tee-shot at the short 17th for a birdie there before closing his round with another gain on the 18th.

Fellow Frenchman Julien Brun was alone in second on -12 after making six birdies and a solitary bogey in his third-round 67, with South African Oliver Bekker a shot further back in third.

France's Pierre Pineau and Finn Sami Välimäki were in a tie for fourth on -10.

Rozner was pleased with his day's work considering the tricky conditions. He said: "It was tough out there. It was blowing a lot more than yesterday. It wasn't easy at all.

"The long game was tough and the putting was even worse, I thought.

"I struggled a little bit. I had a big putt on the fourth that helped me a lot, and made a birdie after that. "So that helped me get the round going. After that it was very solid for the most part. I wish I could have maybe holed a couple more at the end but it is what it is and one more round to go.

"I feel like I missed a lot of opportunities but I still shot four under, so in those conditions it's pretty good.

"That helps me for the confidence and hopefully I can use that for tomorrow."

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)



Friday, December 16, 2022

Three way tie after 36 holes at the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open.. full leaderboard

 DP World Tour : AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open Leaderboard

Sami Välimäki was joined by Alfredo Garcia-Heredia and Antoine Rozner at the top of the leaderboard at the halfway stage of the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open.

Antoine Rozner

Välimäki and Garcia-Heredia were among the earlier starters and their mark of -10 was regularly threatened but by the end of the day only Rozner had caught up with them.

Oliver Bekker last week's winner, managed a 71 to sit one back -9, a shot ahead of Christoffer Bring, Casey Jarvis and Pierre Pineau all at -8.

Mauritius is an African territory, an island east of the mainland in the Indian Ocean. It has it all, beaches, lagoons, reefs on the coast and a mountainous interior with a National Park, waterfalls, a rainforest, wildlife like the flying fox and hiking trails. English is the national language, 28% of the population are Catholic, 47% Hindu and the Muslims make up 17%.

They are playing a resort course called Mont Choisy Le Golf, a 7000 foot par 72 and this is the last regular event of this 2022 calendar year before the Christmas break and a return to play in mid January in the middle east (UAE)

Välimäki shot a course-record 62 on Thursday and, after starting his second round at the tenth, hinted that another low round was coming with birdies at the 11th, 14th and 15th but a first dropped shot of the week arrived at the 16th and he bogeyed the second as well.

He struck back at the next with a birdie but a bogey-double bogey finish, after a birdie at the seventh, sent him to the clubhouse to sign for a level-par 72.

Garcia-Heredia began at the tenth too and he birdied three in a row from the 12th, picked up another shot at the 18th and three more at the fourth, fifth and seventh. His only bogey of the day in his 66 came at the difficult eighth.

"It was fun out there today," said Garcia-Heredia. When asked what areas of his game were strong he said: "All of them. I played really solid yesterday and really solid today. I improved my putting. I went to see a putting coach because last year wasn't very good. I'm really happy with all of that."

Rozner appeared to be heading for the top of the leaderboard on his own.

The Frenchman went into the second round eight shots off the pace and made steady progress on his front nine before bursting into life on the way home.

He fired four birdies on the way out before four in a row from the 12th took him alongside Välimäki and Garcia-Heredia.

He said: "I think it's one of the first times in my career I'm happy with every single score on every single hole. That doesn't happen a lot and I don't think I can score any better on this course. It was tricky, it was tough so I'm really pleased with the way I played."

europeantour.com

Bryan Angus (edit)

Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Canada's Keith Pelley elected as Chairman of the International Golf Federation

 Keith Pelley, the Chief Executive of the European Tour group, has been elected as the new Chairman of the International Golf Federation (IGF).

Keith Pelley

Pelley will serve as Chairman of the IGF from 2023-2027, while World Golf Hall of Fame Member Annika Sörenstam, the ten-time Major Champion and host of the Volvo Cars Scandinavian Mixed, was also re-elected as IGF President.

Prior to joining the European Tour group, Pelley was President of Rogers Media in Toronto where he was responsible for leading the overall operations of the company’s diverse portfolio. Before that, he was Executive Vice President of Strategic Planning at CTVglobemedia, President of Canada’s Olympic Broadcast Media Consortium, President and CEO of the Toronto Argonauts Football Club and President of The Sports Network in Canada.

In August 2015, Pelley became the fourth Chief Executive in the 50 year history of the European Tour group, which incorporates the DP World Tour, the European Challenge Tour, the Legends Tour and the G4D Tour, and is the Managing Partner of the Ryder Cup in Europe.

The IGF was founded in 1958 and is the recognised International Federation within the Olympic and Paralympic Movement.

Pelley said: “I am very honoured to accept this important and prestigious role and I look forward to working with Annika and Antony Scanlon, the IGF’s Executive Director, as well as the individual member Federations and Tours, to continue to develop our sport globally

While this press release is not clear I believe Pelley will continue his role as Chief Executive of the DP World Tour, as Jay Monahan continued his role with the PGA Tour during his recent tenure as Chairman of the IGF. 

Bryan Angus (edit)

europeantour.com 

Monday, December 12, 2022

Congrats to Maddie Szeryk making it to the LPGA..final scoreboard

 LPGA Tour Q School final results here.

Just wanted to keep you up to date on Maddie Szeryk who has won her LPGA Card for the 2023 season.

Maddie Szeryk

She shot 71 74 67 72 70 68 73 72 -17 over 2 weeks and placed T17.

The top 45 all got their cards, She will join Brooke Henderson and Maude Aimee Leblanc next season.

Maddie is a dual citizen with family ties in London, ON and Allen, Texas.

Bryan Angus 

Sunday, December 11, 2022

Terrific Cockerill finishes T4 at Alfred Dunhill Championship.. complete scoreboard

 DP World Tour:  Alfred Dunhill Championship Leaderboard

Aaron Cockerill has just finished his week at this Alfred Dunhill Championship with a solid final round -3 69, he had 13 pars, 4 birdies and just 1 bogey T4 -14 (70 65 70 69) moving up the DPWTR a whopping 65 spots for a projected ranking of 22 after 3 events this 2023 season. 

Aaron Cockerill

The winner by 2 shots is South African Ockie Strydom 68 70 63 69 -18, his first win on this tour.

The final event of this calendar year is next week at the AfrAsia Bank Mauritius Open before the Christmas break, The DP World Tour then returns with the first full event January 19-22 Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship worth $9,000,000, followed by the Dubai Desert Classic for the same.

Aaron hasn't officially announced his schedule but I'd think with wife Chelsea expecting, it would be a good time to fly home to Winnipeg for Christmas / New Year.

Bryan Angus 

Saturday, December 10, 2022

Cockerill amongst the leaders heading into Sunday Alfred Dunhill Championship.. full leaderboard

 DP World Tour : Alfred Dunhill Championship Leaderboard

Ockie Strydom equalled the course record set by Scott Jamieson a day earlier to join the Scot at the top of the leaderboard on day three of the Alfred Dunhill Championship.

South African Strydom stormed into contention on Moving Day, carding an eagle and eight birdies in his first 15 holes before a late bogey prevented him from setting a new course record at Leopard Creek Country Club.

He instead had to settle for a third-round -9 63 and a share of the lead alongside Jamieson heading into Sunday's fourth round at -15.

Halfway leader Jamieson struggled on the front nine on Saturday, carding three bogeys and two birdies to turn in 36.

But he bounced back with three straight birdies at the 11th, 12th and 13th to join Strydom on -15 with his 69.

The leading duo sit two shots clear of South Africans Dean Burmester and Oliver Bekker and Englishman Dale Whitnell in a three-way tie for third.

Strydom began the day seven shots off the lead but soon set about closing the gap, firing a stunning eagle at the second before making a hat-trick of birdies at the fourth, fifth and sixth. 

Further gains followed at the ninth and 11th before he rolled in from around 25 feet for another on the 13th.

The home favourite opened up a three-shot lead after sending his approach at the 14th to four feet and sinking the putt.

And he made it three birdies in a row on the 15th, having narrowly cleared the water with his second shot and two-putted for birdie.

That took him to ten under for the day, and with three holes remaining, the possibility of a 59 was not out of the question. But he was unable to save par at the short 16th, and had to settle for pars at the 17th and 18th to head into the final round on -15.

Meanwhile Canada's Aaron Cockerill had opened with 70 then that 9 birdie 65, followed up earlier today with 4 birdies and an eagle 3 at the par 5 15th, offset by 4 bogey's for another 70 and  at -11 he is alone in 9th place, just 4 shots off the lead.

He will be in the 3rd last group on Sunday at 1010am local alongside Branden Grace and Dylan Frittelli who are two of South Africa's best players, Grace has jumped ship to play on the LIV series so his future on this DP World Tour will depend on a judge''s decision in February 2023.

Bryan Angus (edit)

europeantoiur.com


Friday, December 9, 2022

Nine birdie Cockerill surges into contention Alfred Dunhill Championship.... full scoreboard

 DP World Tour  Alfred Dunhill Championship Leaderboard

Scott Jamieson fired a course-record -9 63 on Friday to hold a commanding three-shot lead at the halfway stage of the Alfred Dunhill Championship.

Scott Jamieson

Afternoon starter Jamieson produced two impressive birdie bursts during the second round at Leopard Creek Country Club, reeling off four straight gains on the front side before making a hat-trick on the back nine.

The Scot made nine birdies in all and kept his card clean to head into the weekend on -13. 

Englishmen Eddie Pepperell 65 and Nathan Kimsey 64 and French DP World Tour Qualifying School graduate David Ravetto 67 were in a three-way tie for second on -10

South Africans MJ Daffue 66 Dean Burmester 70 Oliver Bekker 66 and Dylan Mostert 65 were another shot further back -9, along with Canada's Aaron Cockerill.

Cockerill also fired 9 birdies, out in 31, back in 34 for 65, by far his best round of the year. He ran in 5 birdies in a row from the 7th -11th.  Only 2 bogey's kept him for tying the course record along with the quiet Scotsman. 

Bryan Angus (edit)

europeantour.com


Wednesday, December 7, 2022

Thursday TEE TIMES Alfred Dunhill Championship..

 DP World Tour : Alfred Dunhill Championship Tee Times

The tee times are out for Thursday's opening round at the stunning Leopard Creek GC across the Crocodile River from the spectacular Kruger National Park with it's elephants, lions, tigers,leopards and Rhinoceros's.

Those of you who follow me here and @mummmbles remember all the tension that accompanied the last 2022 event in Portugal when the top 117 to get their 2023 cards were finally decided and near the bottom it all came down to the final round for Canada's Aaron Cockerill who managed to finish 107th.

Aaron Cockerill

Now you can see why, as Aaron has full status, not waiting as an alternative or hoping for an invite. He can plan his schedule especially with his wife Chelsea expecting their first child.

He tees it up at 1220hrs local time off the 10th tee with Swede Jens Dantorp who was 3rd last week and South African Jaco Van Zyl.

Bryan Angus

Tuesday, December 6, 2022

Ernie Els returns to Leopard Creek for Alfred Dunhill Championship..

 The DP World Tour is back on the outskirts of the stunning Kruger National Park in South Africa as the Alfred Dunhill Championship returns after a two-year hiatus. Here are your five things to know.

In the 2020 season we were fortunate to have two editions of the Alfred Dunhill Championship but it was not held last year due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Now we are back and ready for one of the most eagerly anticipated weeks of the year at Leopard Creek Country Club. Anthony Wall won the first edition of the event in its current guise in 2000 - he would wait a record 16 years and 204 days for his next and final win - and the following year Adam Scott would lift the trophy, 12 years before he would go on to the win the Masters Tournament. Justin Rose claimed his first DP World Tour win in 2002 at this event which has also been won by fellow Major Champions Charl Schwartzel and Ernie Els.

Just over two years ago, South African Christiaan Bezuidenhout won his second DP World Tour title at this event and a week later he would have his third as he won his national open. Since then he has become a truly international player, with a best PGA TOUR finish of second and a Presidents Cup appearance under his belt. He has finished in the top five in his last two DP World Tour appearances - both on home soil - as he looks to get back into the top 50 on the Official World Golf Ranking and secure a fourth consecutive Masters Tournament appearance.

Ernie Els

There are few bigger names in South African golf than Ernie Els and the Big Easy will be a headline attraction this week. He won this title the first time it was staged at Leopard Creek 17 years ago for one of his 28 DP World Tour wins and four he claimed in 2005. He may concentrate on the seniors circuit nowadays but the 53-year-old has made the cut on both his his last two appearances in Melalane in 2018 and 2019 and big crowds will be willing him to make the weekend again.

Thriston Lawrence arrives at Leopard Creek off the back of a victory at last week's Investec South African Open and the home favourite has been one of the most in-form players in the world over the last year. He is now up to 64th in the Official World Golf Ranking having been 555th just 13 months ago. His wins at the Joburg Open and Omega European Masters helped him finish 14th in the Rankings, securing the Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year Award for 2022, and he currently sits atop of the Race to Dubai Rankings in Partnership with Rolex.

The rich history of this event is not the only thing that draws a stellar field and big crowds, there is also the fantastic Kruger National Park. One of South Africa's biggest game reserves, the Kruger is home to the big five - lions, leopards, rhinos, elephants and buffalo - and many of the field will be venturing out before and after their rounds to possibly get a glimpse of some of nature's giants. And some of the animals that have wings or can swim often come and see the field, too.

Canada's Aaron Cockerill is in the field, making his 3rd start of the 2023 season at this South African swing. He has MC and T59th.

Bryan Angus edit

Monday, December 5, 2022

Maddie Szeryk qualifies for the final stage of LPGA Q school..final leaderboard

 LPGA Q School results here.

At this time of year Q schools are underway for various Tours so I thought I'd mention a great week for Canadian Maddie Szeryk who played some events this year, but needed to go to Q School to get full status for 2023.


She was playing at Magnolia Grove in Mobile Alabama and after a Sunday E 72 she managed to finish T6 at -12 well inside the top 70 and ties that move on to this week's final stage in Dothan, Alabama where the top 45 and ties get full LPGA Tour status.

It was absolute heartbreak for her fellow compatriot Selena Costabile who shot 74 70 72 69 -1 to finish just a shot outside the cut at -2 !!.. As such she will begin 2023 on the Epson Tour.

Bryan Angus


Victor Hovland wins Tiger's exhibition event in Bahamas.. final scoreboard

 PGA Tour: Hero World Challenge final results here

Viktor Hovland brilliantly held his nerve to see off a spirited challenge from Scottie Scheffler and successfully defend his Hero World Challenge title on the PGA TOUR in the Bahamas.

Viktor Hovland

Hovland was in danger of squandering a two-shot lead on the final hole when he pulled his second shot from an awkward lie on the edge of a bunker into the water, but the Ryder Cup star got up and down to salvage an unlikely bogey.

Scheffler also bogeyed the 18th after his chip from a waste bunker caught the edge of the hole and ran 15 feet past, leaving Hovland to celebrate an unexpectedly dramatic two-shot win on 16 under par.

“It’s freaking nerve-wracking,” said Hovland after a closing 69.

“I was leading by five I think after the turn and didn’t play all that great on the back nine, but it was good enough. It made it a little bit exciting I guess.”

Scheffler, who needed to win to reclaim top spot in the Official World Golf Ranking from Rory McIlroy, momentarily held a share of the lead when he followed birdies on the second and fourth by chipping in for eagle on the sixth.

However, playing partner Hovland holed from 20 feet on the same hole to edge back in front and Scheffler’s hopes looked to have disappeared with a bogey on the seventh and double bogey on the par-five ninth.

Scheffler refused to throw in the towel and the Masters Tournament Champion birdied the 11th, 14th, 15th and 16th to keep the pressure on, which almost paid off on the 18th.

Hovland joins tournament host Tiger Woods - who triumphed in 2006 and 2007 - as the only players to win back-to-back titles in the limited-field event. He won $1,000,000

“That’s pretty bad-ass,” Hovland said with a smile. “I’m just happy he didn’t play the last two years. (But) to win his tournament is something very special.”

Canada's Corey Connors ended up with a -5 67,16th +2 , This off season invitational event for 20 players and sponsored by Hero, a motor cycle manufacturer in New Delhi, raises money for the Tiger Woods Foundation. It's an unofficial tournament but the PGA Tour has decided to award Fed Ex points as per a normal event. 

Connors won $104,000 for his week in the Bahamas. Last place Tommy Fleetwood got $100,000. 

Bryan Angus (edit)

Sunday, December 4, 2022

Lawrence holds on to win Investec South African Open.....Cockerill moves up.. final results

 DP World Tour: Investec South African Open Results

Thriston Lawrence held off Clément Sordet to win the Investec South African Open Championship despite a nerve-wracking finish.

Lawrence

Lawrence had a five-shot lead early on the back nine at Blair Atholl Golf & Equestrian Estate but was reeled in by his playing partner before getting over the line by one stroke at 16 under par.

At the presentation ceremony – after dropping the trophy off its base and catching it one-handed – Lawrence said: “This is what you strive for, being a kid you dream for this moment, to win such a prestigious event in front of an amazing crowd.”

Sweden’s Jens Fahrbring finished third on his own at 14 under after a closing 70.

Sordet made the perfect start, with birdie at the first while Lawrence's bogey wiped out his two-shot overnight lead. 

But the reigning Sir Henry Cotton Rookie of the Year regained the initiative as a wonderful approach to the fourth set up birdie - and a three-shot swing as the Frenchman made a double-bogey six.

Sordet birdied the 14th and when Lawrence’s par putt slid just past, the lead was down to three with a dramatic finish back on the agenda.

Lawrence found water down the left of the next and could only pitch up from a path for double bogey.

Sordet was in deep rough next to a greenside bunker but got up and down for par to take a further two out of the lead – and it was all square with two to play after Lawrence bogeyed the next.

After all that drama the Frenchman missed a short putt for a bogey at the 17th, then he found a bunker off the last tee.

Lawrence was safely in the middle of the fairway and a fine approach, combined with only a par for Sordet, meant he could even afford a three-putt from the fringe of the green for the title.

Aaron Cockerill was never in contention, however after making the cut 68 74 -2 he made the most of his weekend battling this 8,000 yard Blair Atholl GC to a 72 69 weekend good to finish T35 -5 worth 15 points and $14,230 for his week in Joburg.

Next week it's the Alfred Dunhill Championship in Malelane at the Leopard Creek GC which borders the spectacular Kruger National Park. Malelane, an old farming town 400 kilometers NE of Joburg has grown substantially with the construction of a national highway and the subsequent rise in tourism.

Bryan Angus



Polish star Meronk surges past Scott to take Australian Open...final results

 DP World Tour: ISPS Handa Australian Open Results

Adrian Meronk stormed to a second DP World Tour title as he eagled the last in a stunning five-shot victory at the ISPS HANDA Australian Open in Melbourne.

Adrian Meronk

The Pole entered the day at Victoria Golf Club a shot behind former World Number One Adam Scott but after a two-shot swing on the first he never looked back, signing for a 66 to finish at 14 under.

Scott carded a 72 in front of adoring home crowds to finish a shot ahead of another Australian in Min Woo Lee, who recorded a closing 69.

Spaniard Alejandro Cañizares signed for a 64 to finish at seven under alongside Australia's Haydn Barron, one clear of Kiwi Josh Geary.

Lee, Cañizares and Barron all booked their places at The 151st Open Championship at Royal Liverpool thanks to their finishes.

Meronk made the trip Down Under after a 2022 season that saw him become the first Polish player to win a DP World Tour event thanks to his triumph at the Horizon Irish Open and finish eighth in the Rankings.

He was four over after his first 16 holes in Melbourne and looked like he could be in a battle to make the cut after a 73 but followed that up with rounds of 66-63-66 to storm to the top of the leaderboard and take the trophy.

I’m super excited and to finish like that on the 18th hole is just unreal," he said. “I’m so grateful, thank you for all the support and I enjoyed this week so much.

“I felt really good again today. I kept doing what I’ve done the last two days and it worked pretty well. I’m super proud of myself, proud of my team and super happy right now."

In the women's event, South Africa's Ashleigh Buhai finished a shot ahead of South Korean Jiyai Shin, while Kipp Popert cruised to victory in the G4D Tour season opener, winning the Australian All Abilities Championship @ the ISPS HANDA Australian Open by seven shots.

There was a two-shot swing on the first as Scott dropped a shot and Meronk made a birdie and the lead was two when the 29-year-old put an approach to four feet on the next.

Scott came roaring back as he holed a 15-footer on the fourth and put an approach to two feet on the fifth but he bogeyed the seventh to once again drop out of the lead.

He failed to get up and down from the sand on the eighth and with Meronk making a two-putt birdie on the par-five ninth, the Pole led by three at the turn.

Scott hit a smart approach into the 12th to trim the lead and made a good par save at the next, with Meronk unable to do the same from the greenside bunker.

A wonderful bunker shot on the driveable 15th helped set up a birdie and while Meronk gave that shot back on the 17th, Scott went out of bounds off the tee to surrender a double-bogey.

That gave Meronk a three-shot cushion heading up the last and he completed an emphatic victory by holing a long putt from just off the 18th green to spark wild celebrations.

europeantour.com



Saturday, December 3, 2022

Lawrence leads into Sunday, Cockerill's par 72... full leaderboard

 DP World Tour : Investec South African Open Leaderboard

Thriston Lawrence continued what he's excelled at all week at his national championship the Investec South African Open, driving it well, solid irons and a red hot putter led him to a Saturday -5 67 combined with earlier 64 67 his -18 total is 2 shots clear of the field heading into Sunday's final round.

Lawrence

He'll be in the final pairing with Frenchman Clement Sordet -16 and Swede Jens Fahrbring -12 

Meanwhile at the other end of the leaderboard Canada's Aaron Cockerill posted 4 birdies, 2 bogey's and a costly double for E 72 and a -2 total T59th. He'll be playing for money and points on Sunday in his 2nd event of the 2023 season.

Bryan Angus

Eagle finish puts Scott atop the leaderboard Australian Open.. full scoreboard

 DP World Tour : ISPS Handa Australian Open Leaderboard

Home hero Adam Scott made a closing eagle for the second day in a row to take a one-shot lead into the final round of the ISPS HANDA Australian Open.

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - SEPTEMBER 25: Adam Scott of Australia and the International Team walks the seventh green during Sunday singles matches on day four of the 2022 Presidents Cup at Quail Hollow Country Club on September 25, 2022 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images)

Adrian Meronk had tied the course record and his lowest DP World Tour round with a 63 to set the target at ten under and it looked like he would be the man with the advantage after 54 holes.

But Scott made a birdie on the 15th and then eagled the last in a 67 to leapfrog the Pole as he looks for a second win in his national open after triumphing 13 years ago.

Min Woo Lee carded a 65 to sit four shots off the lead alongside fellow Australian Haydn Barrow, with Kiwi Josh Geary and Irishman Conor Purcell at six under.

In the women's event, South Korea's Jiyai Shin will take a one-shot lead over South African Ashleigh Buhai into the final round, while Kurtis Barkley signed for a sensational 69 to lead the Australian All Abilities Championship @ the ISPS HANDA Australian Open - the opening event of the 2023 G4D Tour season - by three shots at one under.

Scott was frustrated after a 71 on day one at Kingston Heath Golf Club but since moving over to Victoria he has barely put a foot wrong, making just one bogey in his last two rounds to fly up the leaderboard.

Huge crowds are sure to follow the former World Number One on the final day as he looks for a 12th DP World Tour title full of belief in an all-star group with Meronk and Lee.

"I think the crowd’s been awesome the last two days out here," he said. "It’s been a great week. It’s great to see so many people coming out to the golf and I certainly have had incredible support, just going to the first tee. I’ve felt the love, so I’m looking forward to feeling it tomorrow and hopefully I can play some really good golf and show them a win out there.

"I believe I’m going to do it but without using clichés, there’s no point thinking about my winner’s speech right now. I’ve got a long way to navigate my round, get around the course tomorrow, but I absolutely believe I’m going to do it. If you don’t believe in it, then you won’t do it.

"So, I’ve got to go out tomorrow and do much of the same stuff I did today and if I get a couple of good numbers and the putts drop, I know when to challenge and when to hold back a little."