KirkwoodGolf: 24 Aug 2010

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Coroner rules Erica Blasberg committed suicide

FROM THE GOLFWEEK WEBSITE
LAS VEGAS – The Clark County coroner’s office ruled Tuesday that 25-year-old professional golfer Erica Blasberg’s death was a suicide.

Blasberg died May 9 at her home in Henderson, about 15 miles southeast of the Las Vegas Strip. She was found with a plastic bag secured over her head.
Henderson police said that while no foul play is suspected they have issued a misdemeanor arrest warrant for Dr. Thomas Hess on obstruction charges. Police said Hess, who discovered Blasberg’s body, removed items from the scene, including a suicide note.
The contents of the note haven’t been disclosed.
The coroner’s office said Blasberg died of suicide due to asphyxia, coupled with the presence of toxic levels of prescription medication in her system, including prescription headache, cough, pain and anti-anxiety medications.
The drugs in Blasberg’s system included butalbital, temazepam, alprazolam, codeine, hydrocodone, and tramadol, according to the coroner, but Nevada law doesn’t permit the release of details on the amounts of medication.
“While asphyxia was the primary cause of death, the presence of prescription drugs in Ms. Blasberg’s system was a significant factor,” Coroner Michael Murphy said.
Henderson police spokesman Keith Paul said authorities would contact Hess’ lawyer and likely allow the doctor to turn himself in because the charge is a nonviolent misdemeanor. But the spokesman refused to say if additional charges were possible.
Police have said a 911 call from Hess summoning police came from the house, and that Blasberg was alone when officers arrived. Blasberg’s agent said her bags were packed for a tournament in Mobile, Alabama, when she was found.
The death investigation was complicated, police said, because Hess admitted altering the scene – including the removal of the note indicating Blasberg took her own life – and he stopped co-operating with detectives. Hess hid the note and prescription medications in his vehicle.
Blasberg grew up in Southern California, and was in her sixth season on the LPGA Tour.
She was a former junior golf stand-out, an All-American in 2003 and 2004. She was the 2003 NCAA Freshman of the Year and 2003 Pac-10 Player of the Year while at the University of Arizona.
She turned professional in June 2004, after playing for United States in the 2004 Curtis Cup match at Formby, Lancashire, and won once on the Duramed FUTURES Tour before qualifying for the LPGA Tour in 2005.
Her best year on Tour was 2008, when she earned a career-best tie for eighth at the SBS Open in Hawaii and more than $113,000 in winnings, the LPGA said.
Blasberg played in one event this season, tying for 44th in the April 29-May 2 Tres Marias Championship in Morelia, Mexico.
Her friends have said she had everything to live for. Why she decided to end her life will remain a mystery until the contents of her suicide note are revealed.







Erica played for United States in the 2004 Curtis Cup match at Formby where the Americans won 10-8.

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The Pride of Skelmorlie Golf Club. Back row: Janet Harkness and Alex Sargent. Front row: Gillian Pollock, Kath Mackellar, Aileen Donaldson and Jenny McGee.


Skelmorlie, the other Scottish

ladies' team in last eight

E-MAIL FROM JENNY McGEE, SKELMORLIE GOLF CLUB

Hello, Colin.
Saw the article you posted from Murrayfield Golf Club about their success in
the Mail on Sunday Golf Classic. We thought you might put in a small piece about ourselves as we are equally ecstatic at reaching Round 9.
We are also "on top of the world" after winning a most thrilling match against
Deer Park ladies on Saturday. This is our first time in the Mail on Sunday
National Golf Classic competition and to reach the quarter final stage is quite
amazing!
Our match against Deer Park turned out to be yet another nail-biter.
With the first four games tied at 2-2 it was once again down to our captain Kath Mackellar to keep her cool at dormy two down. This she did in fine style, sinking two crucial long putts to force play on to the 19th hole.
This was the third such scenario she had been involved in, having been in a similar situation against Dumbarton in Round 3 and Bearsden in Round 5. Once more she played the 1st hole in textbook fashion and having reached the green in two she putted out to seal yet another victory and send us on our way to Manchester next month.
We (Skelmorlie) are only a small club, which many folk (even in our own county of Ayrshire) have never heard of, but in recent years we have gained many more lower handicap ladies and therefore felt we were capable of entering a good team. We are a mix of youth and experience, our youngest player being 21 year-old Alex Sargent, who has been playing since a junior of 11 and now plays off 12.
The rest of our team of six consists of two PE teachers (one retired and one head of department in a local high school), a retired meteorologist, a retired geography teacher and a young mum of two boys(both promising golfers) who is an office manager.
We would like to congratulate Murrayfield ladies on their successful run and
look forward to meeting them in Manchester.





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MARTINE POW (left) and RACHAEL WATTON (right) in Scotland team for Cardiff (Images by Cal Carson Golf Agency)

FIRST CAP FOR RACHAEL WATTON (18) AND

RECALL FOR MARTINE POW AT 45

By COLIN FARQUHARSON
A first cap for 18-year-old Rachael Watton (Mortonhall) and an international recall at the age of 45 for Selkirk's Martine Pow.
These are the talking points of the Scottish Ladies Golfing Association's announcement of the team to take part in the Women's Home Internationals at Whitchurch Golf Club, Cardiff from September 8 to 10.
The Scots should go to Wales on a high, having gained bronze medals behind Sweden and Spain  at the European team championships at La Manga in July (England finished sixth, Wales ninth and Ireland 14th).
Twelve months ago, Scotland snatched defeat from the jaws of victory over the last hour of play in the internationals at Irvine Golf Club. Having beaten Ireland and England, even a draw in their final match against title-holders Wales would have been enough for skipper Lesley Nicholson's team to win the Miller Trophy for the first time since the double-whammy of 1990 (Hunstanton) and 1991 (Aberdovey).
But, frrom a strong position, Scotland contrived to lose more singles than they won and finished up losing 6-3 to Wales who retained the title. Scotland were disappointed and disappointing runners-up.
The inclusion of Watton and Pow in place of Carly Booth and Kylie Walker, both now tour pros, are the only changes in a squad again captained by Lesley Nicholson who has a Lothians colleague as team manager, Hilary Wardell, winner of the title as Hilary Monaghan at Portpatrick in 1995.
Rachael Watton, arguably one of Scotland's most improved young players compared with last season, gave champion-to-be Kelsey MacDonald one of her toughest ties of this year's Scottish women's amateur championship at Craigielaw.
Two up with six to play in their quarter-final encounter, Rachael took two shots in a bunker to lose the 18th and the match by one hole. She played No 1 for Scotland in the singles of the recent girls' home internationals at Bangor GC, Northern Ireland.
Pow, who is a Scotland selector, won the Scottish title at Dunbar in 2006 - the year she was last capped - and later the now defunct British women's mid-amateur championship. Leading qualifier at Craigielaw in May, Martine lost by 3 and 1 in the quarter-finals to Clare-Marie Carlton (Fereneze) who is named as first reserve.
Modest Martine would have been the last to push herself forward for a cap recall but, on Craigielaw form, are there eight better players of any age than Pow in Scotland? Certainly not.
Sally Watson, back at Stanford University, would not have been available for selection. More's the pity.

Team, with ages, is:
Megan Briggs (Kilmacolm) 21.
Louise Kenney (Pitreavie) 27.
Kelsey MacDonald (Nairn Dunbar) 19.
Laura Murray (Alford) 22.
Martine Pow (Selkirk) 45.
Pamela Pretswell (Bothwell Castle) 21.
Jane Turner (Craigielaw) 20.
Rachael Watton (Mortonhall) 18.
Reserves:
1 Clare-Marie Carlton (Fereneze) 24.
2 Gillian Monteith (Portpatrick Dunskey).

Quotes from Scotland captain Lesley Nicholson:

I am delighted with the team that has been picked and am very much looking forward the captaining the team again this year.
In addition to the girls who played in the Europeans we have Rachael Watton who has had a very successful year and produced some great results.
Martine Pow will bring a wealth of experience to the team and has also produced some very fine performances.
Obviously we came very close last year to taking the trophy. We will be looking to build on our performance at the European Championships and hopefully go one step better this year at the Home Internationals.
My team manager Hilary Monaghan does not play a great deal of golf at the moment as she now has two children to keep her busy, although she still manages to keep a handicap of scratch and got cut last time she played with me this year ... so she is still very handy!
Hilary played amateur golf with me for years and has a wealth of knowledge and experience to bring to the team.

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Pamela Pretswell takes pride of place in the line-up of prizewinners last Friday at the conclusion of the British women's open amateur stroke-play championship at Tenby GC, South Wales. Image by courtesy of the Ladies Golf Union.
PAMELA A WINNER AT

WHATEVER SHE DOES
 By COLIN FARQUHARSON
New British women’s open amateur stroke-play golf champion Pamela Pretswell makes a habit in succeeding at what she does.
So when she says there's a good chance she will try to get a players' card for the 2012 Ladies European Tour, then you have to think she might well become one of the most successful Scots on the pro circuit since the halcyon days of Gillian Stewart, Muriel Thomson and Jane Connachan.  The 21-year-old Glasgow University student from Hamilton was a top-ranked tennis junior, rubbing shoulders with Andy Murray and Co at the age of 14, and she was also in the Scotland junior badminton squad.
But there was something inside independently-minded Pamela that rebelled against the racquet sports leaving her with precious little time of her own. 
So Pamela walked away from a tennis career that could have seen her develop into Scotland's female equivalent of Andy Murray. She switched to golf. Just like that.
Seven years later she is a Curtis Cup international player and now British champion. From a standing start as a golfer, that is pretty good going up the ladder. 
So what’s next for the young woman who was made an honorary member of Bothwell Castle Golf Club earlier this year?

“I graduate in May 2011 from Glasgow University and I am hoping to go to Ladies European Tour School at the end of 2011 to win my Tour Card, but I will make the decision after I graduate - and after I play in the Ricoh Women’s British Open at Carnoustie, which I am already very excited about!” said Pamela.

A place in the Women’s British Open is one of the perks of winnng the British stroke-play title.

“I am absolutely delighted to have won the British stroke-play and it is fantastic to bring the title home to Scotland - especially following our bronze medal at the European team championships in July,” she said.
“I have had a busy few months’ golf, starting with the Curtis Cup, the British championship, European team championship, European individual championships and then the Austrian women’s mateur (in which she was pipped for the title after leading throughout).

“Playing in these tournaments has given me some amazing experiences and I have certainly learned a lot this summer. I am really grateful for the opportunities the SLGA and the LGU have given me, and for the support Aberdeen Asset Management as SLGA sponsors, Glasgow University , the RandA and the Winning Students scheme have given me."
By the time she has a go at making the grade as a tour pro on the Ladies European Tour, Pretswell expects to be an even better all-round player than she is now.
Remember, she did not start playing golf seriously until seven years ago. On a 10-year learning curve, she could peaks around the age of 24 or 25, by which time she should be on the Ladies European Tour or even the LPGA circuit.  “Over the last few tournaments I have played in, I have felt that my game has become stronger and last week in South Wales , everything just came together for me. Missing out on winning the Austrian amateur by just one shot was majorly disappointing, having led from round 1, but the experience of leading a major tournament has proved invaluable and really helped me throughout the last round at Tenby.

“The Curtis Cup was also another phenomenal experience that will never be forgotten. The experience of playing alongside Danielle McVeigh in the four-ball against America 's top players was fantastic. The standard of golf that was played that week by all 16 players was incredible and I learned a lot from everyone.

“At Tenby, the key to me winning the British stroke-play was probably my ball striking. The weather was pretty horrific most of the time. The wind was just so strong it was important to strike the ball well to hold it up against the wind.

“My course management and club selection were also pretty good. With my dad caddieing, we plotted our way around the course, hitting some irons and woods off the tee when needed bwind was it was so important to keep the ball in play.
“Key hole was probably the 17th in the final round (Pamela and Amy Boulden were joint leaders with two holes to play). There was a really strong wind at this tricky par 3 and I hit my shot of the week with a four-iron to 5 feet and holed the putt for birdie (Boulden bogeyed the hole, producing a decisive two-shot swing in the Scot's favour).”
Pretswell will be back in South Wales in a couple of weeks, spearheading along with Scottish champion Kelsey MacDonald the Scotland effort in the Women’s Home Internationals at Whitchurch Golf Club, Cardiff .

Last year, the Scots had the title all but won at Irvine Golf Club until they snatched defeat from the jaws of victory and finished second to Wales .
It could be different this time round.

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Strong Scotland team for Belgian Junior Tournament

Scotland is being represented by women's amateur champion Kelsey MacDonald (Nairn Dunbar) and girls' champion Lesley Atkins (Gullane Ladies) as well as Jack McDonald (Kilmarnock Barassie), last year's Scottish boys' stroke-play champion, and Liam Johnston (Dumfries and Co), winner of the SGU Junior Tour event at Kilmarnock Barassie this season and second in the SGU Boys' Order of Merit table,  in the Total Belgian Junior International Tournament at Royal Belgique Golf Club near Brussels.
Kelsey has a very good record in this four-round stroke-play tournament begins on Wednesday. There is a cut after three rounds.

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