KirkwoodGolf: 23 May 2011

Monday, May 23, 2011

SUZANN PETTERSEN ENDS LEAN SPELL BY WINNING MATCH-PLAY

FROM THE GOLF.COM WEBSITE
GLADSTONE, New Jersey (AP) — A split second after her 15-foot birdie putt curled left and disappeared into the hole on No. 18, Suzann Pettersen thrust both hands skyward in celebration and seemed to exhale in relief.
The victory drought was over for the Norwegian player (pictured right).
Pettersen ended 20 months of frustration and near misses by beating Cristie Kerr by one hole in the final of the Sybase Match Play Championship on Sunday.
"It's 20 months, but it doesn't feel like 20 months," said Pettersen, who was doused with champagne by Swedish player Anna Nordqvist after winning. "It feel like a lot longer. But like I said yesterday, I had some great tournaments except winning, and I can finally put a dot over the i, and it's just the tip of the iceberg. It doesn't get much better than that."
Pettersen is familiar with the frustration of not winning. She finished second six times last year alone and 12 times since 2007, when she won five times, including her only major, the LPGA Championship.
"It boils down to winning tournaments, so if you judge your season by winning, last year was a disappointment," said Pettersen, who had 14 top-10 finishes in 21 events in 2010. "But at the same time, I tried to take positives from that. It was a lot better than '09. (However), winning is what it's about."
Pettersen wasn't handed this one, either. She beat Natalie Gulbis, Amy Hung, Stacy Lewis, No. 1 ranked Yani Tseng, No. 5 Na Yeon Choi and the No. 4 Kerr in winning for the seventh time on the LPGA Tour.
Pettersen had to work all the way to the end.
Leading 1-up and with Kerr facing a 10-foot birdie attempt on the par-5 18th, Pettersen curled in the left to-right 15-footer for birdie to seal the victory on the cold, damp overcast day that probably made the 30-year-old Norwegian star fell as if she was back home.
"It's a situation you want to be when you love the pressure," Pettersen said. "There's nothing better than winning a match play event."
Pettersen, who beat the top-seeded Choi 4 and 2 in the semifinals Sunday morning, never trailed in the match in winning for the first time since the Canadian Women's Open in September 2009.
Kerr, who won the final two holes in beating Angela Stanford 1-up in the semis, had her putter to blame for failing to win for the 15th time on tour. The American missed four putts of less than 10 feet - all for hole victories.
"Putting on the back nine killed me," Kerr said.
However, she also made a 3-foot par save on No. 16 to keep the match alive and a 10-footer for birdie on the next hole to cut Pettersen's lead to 1-up.
Pettersen ended the run and the match with her dramatic putt at the magical 18th hole. She played it four times and birdied it every time to win matches. She dispatched Gulbis in the first round, Lewis in the round of 16, Tseng in the quarter-finals and Kerr in the championship.
Pettersen earned $375,000, and Kerr made $225,000.
Pettersen birdied the second and fourth holes to go 2-up, but Kerr tied the match with birdies at the fifth and eighth holes. Pettersen made a 15-foot birdie putt at No. 9 to take a 1-up lead.
The back nine of the championship match was both heartbreaking and ugly at times.
Kerr lipped out on a 10-footer for birdie at No. 10 and then the players halved the 11th and 12th holes with bogeys. Pettersen missed a 5-foot par-saver at the 11th to win the hole and Kerr did the same at the next hole from 4 feet.
Kerr had another chance to tie the match at No. 14 but her 10-foot birdie putt burned the cup.
"The putts that I missed I hit bad putts," said Kerr, who admitted she was physically drained after playing six matches in four days, including four this weekend. "They weren't like mis-hits. They were shoves. They were pushed."
Pettersen went 2-up at the par-4 15th. Kerr was right with her second shot, chipped 10 feet past the hole and then missed the par save. Pettersen then extended the lead making a 5-footer for par.
Kerr rallied but Pettersen would not be denied.
Choi, who never made it to 18 against Pettersen, shot 4 under to open a 5-up lead over Stanford in the consolation match en route to a 4-and-3 win that earned her $150,000. Stanford, who had to be disappointed after throwing away a great chance to be beat Kerr at No. 18 in the semifinal settled for $112,500.
Stanford, who finished second to Sun Young Yoo last year, is going to have nightmares about her third shot at the par-5, 515-yard 18th hole.

Kerr square the match with a short birdie at No. 17 but her third at the final hole sucked off the front of the elevated green.
Stanford hit her third shot over the green and the mistake was compounded when it landed in a downhill line with mud under the ball. The No. 18 seed, searched for a way to land the ball on the green and considered all angles before going at the pin. However, the ball came out hot and rolled down the front of the raised green, landing almost where Kerr's third shot had stopped.
Kerr had hit her fourth to 3 feet, so Stanford went at the pin and the ball banged off it. Kerr then made her par putt from 5 feet to win the match.

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NORTHERN COUNTIES LGA OPEN MEETING AT GAIRLOCH

PRIZEWINNERS
Scratch
L. Fraser (Fortrose) 77.
Silver
V. Wright (Forres) (15), S.Hooker (Muir of Ord) (15) 70.
Bronze
J. Powell (Gairloch) (28) 69, C. Mackay (Muir of Ord) (24), J. Darroch (Fortrose) (21) 74.

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PERTH AND KINROSS NAME TEAM FOR NORTH

FROM THE P AND K WEBSITE
County captain Lenore Kyle has announced her team for the 2011 North Divisional county team championship which will be held at Inchmarlo, Banchory  from June 25 - 27.
Lenore and her fellow selectors, vice-captain Pat Colqhoun and match secretary Carol Muir are delighted to introduce three new members to the team, two of whom are juniors. It really is encouraging to see our young players coming through to the senior team.


The P and K team is:

Steph Crolla (Muckhart)
Jill Milne (Craigiehill)
Eve Muirhead (Pitlochry)
Emily Ogilvy (Auchterarder)
Fiona Ramsay (Crieff)
Nicola Robertson (Dunblane)
Laura Walker (Muckhart)
Eilidh Watson (Muckhart)


Reserves:
Gwen Lambie (Dunkeld and Birnam)
Jane Yellowlees (Murrayshall)

LET US KNOW YOUR COUNTY TEAM
+ Please E-mail the information to Colin@scottishgolfview when your county teams are chosen for the forthcoming North, South, East and West divisional championships.

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LORRAINE HOWD LEADS MIDLANDS NORTH QUALIFIERS

NEWS RELEASE ISSUED BY THE ENGLISH WOMEN'S GOLF ASSOCIATION
Nottinghamshire golfer Lorraine Howd scored a superb net score of seven-under 66 at Greetham Valley Golf Club to lead the Midlands North qualifiers for the 2011 Volvo EWGA Grand Medal Final.
Lorraine, who was playing off 13, dropped just six shots for her best-ever round and was three shots ahead of her closest challenger.
The top 10 players at the regional final qualified for the Grand Medal Final at Droitwich Golf Club, Worcestershire, on June 25, where they will join qualifiers from EWGA’s other five regions to compete for the title of England’s champion medal player.
They are:
Lorraine Howd (Ruddington Grange), Kathryn Johnson (Waltham Windmill), Helen Stainforth (Leicestershire), Janice Cook (Gainsborough), Julie Cowling (Meole Brace), Kay Hircock (Burghley Park), Veronica Whitehill (Crow Nest Park), Clare Robertson (Thorpe Wood), Gretta Blackburn (Chevin), Gemma Jewkes (Oxley Park).
The regional final was contested by the leading medal players from EWGA’s Midlands North region, who had each returned the best four scores in the Volvo EWGA Medals at their club during 2010. They represented clubs in the counties of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Rutland, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire, Shropshire and Staffordshire.

The standard was extremely high and two players who returned scores of net par failed to qualify for the Grand Final. The shot of the day was played by Gretta Blackburn who had a hole-in-one on the 130-yard 14th. It was her first ace in over 30 years of playing golf and she said: “I was playing very average but that shot kickstarted my round.”
She qualified for the Grand Final on the cut mark.
Meanwhile, Lorraine Howd was celebrating her career-best score. “After nine holes I knew I had dropped only two shots and I had to tell myself ‘don’t let the wheels come off.’ I managed to hold it together!
“It’s the first big competition I’ve ever won and the thought of going through to the Grand Final is very exciting. At the moment I don’t think it’s really sunk in, but I’m looking forward to it.”


Qualifying net scores
Par 73 SS 74 CSS 74
66 Lorraine Howd (Ruddington Grange) (13)
69 Kathryn Johnson (Waltham Windmill) (12)
70 Helen Stainforth (Leicestershire) (19), Janice Cook (Gainsborough) (14)
71 Julie Cowling (Meole Brace) (26), Kay Hircock (Burghley Park) (21)
72 Veronica Whitehill (Crow Nest Park) (21), Clare Robertson (Thorpe Wood) (23)
73 Gretta Blackburn (Chevin) (15), Gemma Jewkes (Oxley Park) (9)

Lyndsey Hewison
Press and PR Officer
EWGA



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BYRNE WILL END U.S. COLLEGE YEARS AT NCAA CHAMPIONSHP

James Byrne did not play well in the South Central-Colorado Region Conference Championship at Erie, Colorado - but he will end his four years at Arizona State University by competing in the end-of-the-season college circuit climax: the NCAA Division 1 championship, starting on Tuesday, May 31 at Karsten Creek, Stillwater in Oklahoma.
The Banchory player, pictured, had rounds of 70, 75 and 77 for a total of six-over-par 222 over a very long course - 7,758yd with a par of 72.
James finished joint 56th but, more important, Arizona State tied for fourth place with Georgia and that qualified them for the NCAA championshipS alongwith regional champions Oklahoma State, Colorado State and Northwestern.
Kevin Tway won the individual honours with scores of 72, 65 and 67 for a 10-under-par total of 206, great shooting on such a "mammoth" course. One of Byrne's team-mates and closed friend Scott Pinckney, who has come over to play in the East of Scotland Open among other Scottish events, finished runnerup on 2076 with scores of 69, 70 and 68.
The Arizona State team had Pinckney to thank for pulling them through to the NCAA championship.
Kevin Phelan from Waterford and North Florida University must be wondering if his dash across to Royal Aberdeen to play in a three-day Walker Cup squad practice match at Balgownie was worth it.
Back in the States, Phelan finished last of 75 in the regional field at Erie with rounds of 80, 80 and 73 for 233. He must be dead beat!

END OF US COLLEGE SEASON FOR PAUL FERRIER

Former Scottish boys champion Paul Ferrier from Baberton, a student at Charlotte University, won't be going to the NCAA championships. Charlotte failed to make the top four teams in the Central-Indiana Regional championship at Wolf Run GC, Zionsville, Indiana.
Paul's rounds over a par-71, 7025yd course were 74, 74 and 72 for 220, which saw him finished 30th in a field of 75.
England's Garrick Porteous and Darren Renwick, team-mates at the University of Tennesee, finished tied fourth and joint 49th - and Tennesse grabbed the last of the four team qualifying places for the NCAA championships.
Michigan, Illinois, Alabama and Tennessee are the four teams heading for Karsten Creek.
Porteous scored 71, 68 and 70 for 209 to finish joint fourth behind joint winners on 205, Luke Guthrie (Illinois (69-71-65) and Lion Kim (Michigan) (71-69-65).
Renwick's rouns were 74, 79 and 74 for 227.

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