Entries Tagged as 'Celtic Manor'

Chris Wood leads Welsh Open - Costa del Sol Golf.

Chris Wood Leads Welsh Open.

Chris Wood Leads Welsh Open.

Chris Wood, last season’s Rookie of the Year on the European Tour, could be the next uncapped player to throw his hat into the Ryder Cup ring.

The 22-year-old from Bristol leads the Wales Open after a record-equalling opening round of 65, six under par, on the same Celtic Manor course where October’s match takes place.

Six of the current top nine in the points race do not have a cap between them, but Wood has already shown what he can do by finishing fifth in the 2008 Open as an amateur and then third at Turnberry last July.

He was also unbeaten on his Britain and Ireland debut against Continental Europe in the Vivendi Trophy that followed - and his last three finishes have been third, fifth and sixth.

After the disappointment of a closing 77 when leading the BMW PGA at Wentworth two weeks ago the 6ft 5in golfer, able to commute from home across the Severn Bridge, hit back with six birdies in a flawless display.

Yet Wood, who ended day one in front of Welshman Bradley Dredge and Australian Andrew Dodt, is not ready yet to declare the Ryder Cup his number one target.

“I would say it’s completely in the back of my mind,” he said. “It’s not been a massive goal of mine, but I know my game is capable enough of playing at that level.

“I’m just looking to win now. Obviously I’ve started to get myself in contention more often, so the more I do it the more likely it’s going to happen.

“I’ve just got to stay patient - and play good golf.”

The best of his birdies came at the 439-yard eighth, his 16th, where he struck a nine-iron out of a fairway bunker to five feet.

Last week’s Madrid Masters winner Luke Donald, at ninth in the world the highest-ranked player in the field, managed only a four over 75.

But leading local hope Rhys Davies, the player he pushed into second place in Spain, is very much in the hunt again following a 67.

Dredge finished second in this event three years ago, albeit on another of the courses at the resort, and after his round pointed out an additional advantage of playing on home soil.

“I actually prefer it when I get out and there’s more friends and family in the crowd,” he said.

“I feel like if I hit it in the rough there’ll always be someone there to kick it back out … only joking.”

Ross McGowan, currently fifth in the cup standings just behind Donald, was five under with four to play, but lost a ball on the driveable 15th and, after double-bogeying there, dropped further shots at the 16th and long 18th for a one-under 70.

On the same mark were Spanish Open champion Alvaro Quiros, thanks in a part to a hole-in-one on the 189-yard third, and cup captain Colin Montgomerie.

Those two were playing together and it was another opportunity for Montgomerie to admire the 27-year-old’s immense power, an asset he believes could be really useful against the Americans in four months’ time.

Simon Khan, back in action after his life-changing victory at Wentworth, sank a 35-foot putt for an eagle two on the 15th, but played the rest in two over for a 71.

Costa del Sol Golf Holidays - Latest News.

Monty issues Gleneagles demand.

Monty issues Gleneagles demand.

European captain Colin Montgomerie wants and expects everybody still fighting for a Ryder Cup place to be in Scotland rather than America in the last week of qualifying.

Two years ago Ian Poulter caused a furore when he stayed in the States when he still could have got into the side on points by playing at Gleneagles in the Johnnie Walker Championship.

Nick Faldo stuck to his guns by picking Poulter, but whether Montgomerie - one of those who spoke out about the Englishman’s absence - hands anyone a wildcard in the same scenario now remains to be seen.

“I want to see them showing support for European golf and the European Tour and I will be very, very surprised if they are not there,” said the Scot on the eve of the Wales Open, over the same Celtic Manor course where October’s match takes place.

“That would make a whole lot of sense to a whole lot of people. I am convinced that I will have around eight candidates for three spots.

“You can count on those eight playing at Gleneagles. They will be there.”

It is not just any event in the States the same week, however.

It is the first of the four FedEx Cup play-off series events - a series that offers a 10million reward - and among those likely to have qualified are Poulter, Rory McIlroy, Luke Donald, Padraig Harrington, Paul Casey, Henrik Stenson, Sergio Garcia and Brian Davis.

Poulter and McIlroy have just about done enough to make it into the side on points already - as has Lee Westwood, who is not a US Tour member - and so will avoid Montgomerie’s wrath by being there, but the others need a strong summer to avoid the cup race coming down to the last few weeks or week.

Garcia, an ever-present in the side since he became the youngest-ever cup player at the age of 19 in 1999, told Press Association Sport last week: “The Ryder Cup is important, but you can’t change your whole schedule for it.”

Donald, meanwhile, commented: “That will be a tough call, whether I can afford to miss a play-off event. I’ll have to take it as it comes.”

Colin Montgomerie focusing on winning a tournament.

Montgomerie - wants overdue victory.

Montgomerie - wants overdue victory.

Colin Montgomerie has set himself the target of winning a tournament before captaining Europe at this year’s Ryder Cup.

Montgomerie has not won an individual event since July 2007 and has slumped to 287th in the world rankings, but the 46-year-old Scot is determined to get back to winning ways.

“I haven’t really performed this last year,” admitted Montgomerie.

“I went out to Houston to see my coach from when I was at university there, Paul Marchand, on the way over here and worked out a number of issues within the swing and the way that I was thinking around the golf course.

“And I’ve practised well here so I look forward to not just competing here, but to contending here and then move forward from then on.

“I have a goal that I would love to win before the Ryder Cup starts. I’d like to stand in front of my team at the opening ceremony as a tournament winner myself this year.

“It has been difficult time-wise to fit everything in, to try and concentrate on playing at a certain level at the same time as all of the administration and all of the time consumed in organising and in being the host Ryder Cup captain.

“There’s an awful lot more to do being the host than there is being the away captain so it has been very busy, but it’s been exciting at the same time.”

Montgomerie can at least be confident in the likely strength of his side at Celtic Manor from October 1-3 as Europe attempt to regain the trophy lost at Valhalla in 2008.

Europe have five players currently in the world’s top 10 - Lee Westwood, Ian Poulter, Paul Casey, Martin Kaymer and Padraig Harrington - with Rory McIlroy, Henrik Stenson, Sergio Garcia and Luke Donald inside the top 20.

“Although we don’t have the top three in the world, we have the rest,” added Montgomerie, who will add three wild cards to the nine automatic qualifiers for his team.

“It’s the first time that a captain of the Ryder Cup team can say that. I think it’s (down to) that they are all competing against each other.

“I think competition improves standards, in all businesses, and I think they compete against each other. Paul Casey wants to beat Ian Poulter, Ian Poulter wants to beat Harrington and Harrington wants to beat Garcia and Kaymer and everyone around there.”

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Hunter Mahan win’s Waste Management Phoenix Open.

Hunter Mahan - victorious in Phoenix.

Hunter Mahan - victorious in Phoenix.

Hunter Mahan produced a flawless round for the second consecutive day to win the Waste Management Phoenix Open by a single stroke from rising talent Rickie Fowler.

Mahan made his move on the back nine with a pair of birdies and an eagle on the par-five 13th and after Fowler missed a birdie putt on the last the 27-year-old’s second career PGA Tour title was assured.

Mahan was the only player in the field not to card a bogey over the final 36 holes as he finished 16-under-par following a six-under 65 on Sunday.

Fowler, playing just his sixth PGA Tour event, was just inches away from forcing a play-off when he rolled a 20-foot putt past the hole on the 18th green.

The 21-year-old will, though, likely reflect on a missed opportunity on the par-five 15th when, after driving to within range of the green, he opted only to lay-up and then managed just a par.

South Korea’s Yang Yong-eun was third after he carded a 65 to finished 13 under.

Overnight leader Brandt Snedeker endured a terrible final round as he returned a seven-over-par 78, including double bogeys at each of the final two holes, to finish in a tie for 43rd.

Spaniard Alvaro Quiros was the best placed of the European raiders as the Ryder Cup hopeful recovered from double bogeys at the opening two holes to card a 70 and finish six shots behind the leaders.

Ian Poulter, who won at last week’s WGC-Accenture Match Play, was a stroke further back after also posting a final-round 70.

For Mahan it was his first PGA Tour victory since winning the Travelers Championship in a play-off in 2007 and admitted his consistency over the weekend had been the key to his success.

“I played great. Tee-to-green it was flawless,” he said in an interview on Sky Sports 2.

“I put the ball where I needed to put the ball. I gave myself a lot of easy looks, I really didn’t struggled too much with par putts.

“It’s been an ugly west coast for me. I haven’t played as well as I would have hoped so to get a win feels awesome.”

Mahan is also gunning to earn his place on the USA’s Ryder Cup team at Celtic Manor in October after having been a captain’s pick two years ago.

“This a Ryder Cup year so this is a year you really want to play well,” he admitted.

“I definately want to make the team on my own.”

Collated final-round scores & totals (USA unless stated, par 71):

268 Hunter Mahan 68 70 65 65

269 Rickie Fowler 65 67 69 68

270 Y.E. Yang (Kor) 66 70 69 65

271 Mathew Goggin (Aus) 66 67 70 68, Chris Couch 67 66 70 68, Charles Howell III 69 66 68 68

272 Vaughn Taylor 68 68 68 68

273 Bryce Molder 68 67 70 68, Robert Allenby (Aus) 69 65 69 70, Matthew Every 63 70 68 72, Joe Ogilvie 71 66 66 70, Scott Piercy 68 67 65 73, Camilo Villegas (Col) 62 69 71 71

274 Tom Lehman 66 67 71 70, Mark Wilson 65 66 72 71, Alvaro Quiros (Spa) 67 66 71 70, Fred Couples 67 70 68 69, Ryan Palmer 69 68 69 68, Andres Romero (Arg) 69 67 69 69, Rich Beem 70 65 70 69, Ryuji Imada (Jpn) 65 71 68 70, D.J. Trahan 70 68 69 67, Ryan Moore 66 66 74 68

275 Nick Watney 74 63 69 69, Michael Letzig 69 70 67 69, Pat Perez 65 68 71 71, Jeff Overton 67 68 70 70, Zach Johnson 66 68 71 70, Greg Chalmers (Aus) 68 66 73 68, Lee Janzen 69 67 67 72, Phil Mickelson 68 68 72 67, Anthony Kim 67 65 76 67, Chad Campbell 68 68 69 70, Ian Poulter (Eng) 72 63 70 70, Jimmy Walker 67 70 67 71

276 Ben Crane 68 70 71 67, J.P. Hayes 69 68 70 69, Bubba Watson 69 70 68 69, Tom Gillis 70 68 67 71, James Driscoll 69 69 69 69, Skip Kendall 67 70 67 72, Kevin Streelman 69 67 71 69

277 Ted Purdy 68 69 71 69, Matt Kuchar 68 70 68 71, Jeff Maggert 69 67 71 70, J.B. Holmes 69 68 71 69, Chad Collins 67 69 70 71, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 70 67 68 72, Mark Calcavecchia 68 68 67 74, Brandt Snedeker 66 67 66 78

278 Ricky Barnes 68 71 71 68, Nathan Green (Aus) 70 68 69 71

279 Kevin Na 70 69 72 68, Kenny Perry 68 70 72 69, John Rollins 69 66 72 72, Sean O’Hair 70 69 71 69, John Merrick 70 67 67 75, Scott Verplank 70 68 70 71, Parker McLachlin 67 70 70 72

280 Chris DiMarco 69 69 69 73, Johnson Wagner 72 67 71 70

281 J J Henry 73 66 72 70, Scott McCarron 68 71 69 73, Justin Rose (Eng) 65 70 71 75, Billy Mayfair 72 67 73 69, Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 66 70 71 74, Carl Pettersson (Swe) 66 70 71 74

282 Brian Gay 70 66 74 72, Briny Baird 68 69 73 72

284 Brian Stuard 72 64 76 72, Kevin Stadler 66 73 77 68, Paul Goydos 70 67 75 72, Heath Slocum 69 70 71 74

286 Aaron Baddeley (Aus) 71 67 74 74, Michael Sim (Aus) 69 70 75 72, Joe Durant 66 71 73 76, Ben Fox 67 72 74 73

287 Braxton Marquez 74 65 70 78

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Monty will wait to name Ryder Cup vice-captains.

Europe skipper Colin Montgomerie.

Europe skipper Colin Montgomerie.

Europe skipper Colin Montgomerie will wait until much later in the year to name his Ryder Cup vice-captains.

“There will be nothing announced … until at least after the British Open (in July)… because I want to give everybody an opportunity to qualify for the team,” Montgomerie said after carding a one-under 71 in the Dubai Classic first round.

Corey Pavin, skipper of the US holders, appointed Tom Lehman, Paul Goydos, Jeff Sluman and Davis Love III as his deputies on Wednesday.

The Ryder Cup will be held at Celtic Manor in Wales in October.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Corey Pavin names USA Ryder Cup vise captains.

US Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin.

US Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin.

US Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin has appointed Tom Lehman, Davis Love III, Jeff Sluman and Paul Goydos as his assistants for the match against Europe in the Autumn.

Lehman, the 2006 skipper at the K Club and 1996 Open champion, played on three Ryder Cup teams with an overall win-loss-half record of 5-3-2.

Love, winner of the 1997 US PGA Championship, has appeared in the biennial match on six occasions, compiling a 9-12-5 record.

Sluman, the 1988 PGA champion, and PGA Tour journeyman Goydos have never competed in a Ryder Cup but they are both veterans on the US circuit who are highly respected by their peers.

“I have hand-picked my four assistants because of their intelligence, experience and their ability to express their own opinions to me without hesitation,” Pavin said.

“Each of my assistants have unique perspectives to bring to the table which I believe will bring a great balance of leadership to Team USA.

“Tom and Davis have been long-time friends of mine,” added Pavin, who was an assistant to Lehman at the 2006 Ryder Cup.

“Tom and I joined for his first Ryder Cup match and Davis and I were on the US team in 1993 that brought home the Cup from The Belfry — the last time the USA won on foreign soil.

“Jeff is a Major champion, a seasoned veteran who has been a success on both the regular and the Champions Tour. Paul is well-liked, a fine player and a good judge of talent and well respected over the 18 years he has been on Tour.

“I will lean on them for advice, and I am delighted that they have accepted to be a part of our team this year.”

The 2010 Ryder Cup will take place at Celtic Manor resort in Wales from October 1-3 when the US will defend the trophy they won by 16.5 points to 11.5 at Valhalla Golf Club in 2008.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Costa del Sol Golf Holidays - Monty excited about Celtic Manor.

Monty excited about Celtic Manor.

Monty excited about Celtic Manor.

Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie is excited by the prospect of leading Europe’s strongest ever line-up at Celtic Manor later this year.

With four-time winner and European number one Lee Westwood heading the list of established names and Rory McIlroy topping an exciting group of potential rookies, Montgomerie is delighted with the way his team is developing ahead of October’s highly anticipated showdown.

Europeans currently occupy seven places inside the world’s top 11, while untested German world number six Martin Kaymer and 2006 winner Robert Karlsson have already won this season.

“It is and will be the strongest collection of players ever assembled. We have never had so many high-ranked players in the world,” said Montgomerie.

“And they are improving. Martin Kaymer is getting better, Robert Karlsson is coming back, Paul Casey is coming back, Padraig Harrington is still improving, Westwood is still improving.

“They are all getting better, which is so exciting and the ones coming through are also working hard and becoming great.

“No captain has had so much potential as myself.

“Last year was more admin behind the scenes, now we are looking at the players in the team and how it is going to formulate, it is fantastic to see it taking shape.”

Paul Casey showed glimpses he had recovered from his long-standing rib problem in Qatar last week, while Kaymer reassured Montgomerie he was fully fit following last year’s go-kart crash - a point be underlined with last month’s win in Abu Dhabi.

World number nine McIlroy and Kaymer are virtual certainties for debuts this year, while Ross Fisher, Alvaro Quiros - who has matured in the eyes of Montgomerie - Ross McGowan and World Cup-winning Italian brothers Francesco and Edoardo Molinari are also making strong cases for inclusion.

“They will be rookies, but they have already played in the WGC events and the majors. To call them rookies is almost unfair,” added five-time Ryder Cup winner Montgomerie.

“In my day we hadn’t even played in America before we went over to play in the Ryder Cup. I hadn’t played an American major when I was playing in my first Ryder Cup in 1991; my first American major was 1992.

“There is a necessity to get the dynamic and blend between youth and experience right, but not as much a necessity as it used to be.”

Montgomerie will have three captain’s picks at his disposal to complete the 12-man line-up, one more than was available to predecessor Nick Faldo ahead of the defeat at Valhalla in 2008.

“I don’t want to waste my picks on players that should have made it,” said Montgomerie.

“I want to pick players who I think will benefit the team, other than having to pick players who haven’t played to their potential during the year.”

Montgomerie was speaking after Emirates were confirmed as the official airline of the 2010 Ryder Cup and an official partner for the 2012 trip to Medinah Country Club in Illinois.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Costa del Sol Golf - Ryder Cup feeling the pinch.

The Ryder Cup.

The Ryder Cup.

The economic crisis has been a brutal lesson for sports event organisers, according to Europe’s Ryder Cup chief, who said this year’s showpiece in Wales would likely fail to reach sales targets for corporate hospitality.

The Ryder Cup, which pits the best golfers from the United States against their European counterparts every two years, has been a big draw for blue-chip companies and their lavish hospitality budgets but the financial climate means prising money away from businesses, fans and sponsors has got a lot harder.

“I don’t think anything is recession-proof,” Richard Hills, Europe’s Ryder Cup director, told Reuters in an interview late Wednesday, while stressing that the event itself was firmly on track.

“I think the last two years have been a vicious learning curve of how things can change. Things do change: timings of when people will commit, whether it be to sponsorship, whether it be to hospitality or to buying a ticket, that pattern has changed.

“That’s something that all sports are learning to live with. We talk to our colleagues in tennis, in cricket, in soccer and that thread has been common throughout, when people are going to make that commitment.

“We have to learn to live with that, we have to do our budgets accordingly, we have to do our cash flow accordingly. We’re certainly not recession-proof. We’d be pompous to think we were. We have to work that extra bit harder to get the results we need.”

Those comments came a few days after Premier League soccer club Manchester United revealed spending on their corporate hospitality packages was down too, and growth would remain challenging in the future.

“We sympathise with that and we understand that,” Hills said. “It is a changed world.”

He added: “We’re not sold out at the moment (for 2010 hospitality).

“We’ll work as hard as we can to sell out but I wouldn’t be surprised if we didn’t hit the exact target on the corporate spend. We’d be naive to think that in the current climate we would hit them all.”

For all the problems in bringing in corporate dollars, pounds and euros, Hills said the Ryder Cup was comfortably on track thanks to prudent budgeting and the fact that a TV rights deal is in place.

“We’re on target,” Hills said. “We’re prudent. We’ve done a small, medium and large budget, and we’ve gone through that, we’ve taken it apart and put it back together again and looked at all of those angles and briefed our board accordingly.

“I don’t like delivering surprises to my board so we’ve briefed them as to what could be expected in best, worst and middle-case scenario.”

After this year’s event from October 1-3 at Celtic Manor in Wales, Scotland will be host the next time the Europeans get to choose for the 2014 event before continental Europe takes over for an extended run.

Sweden, Netherlands, Portugal, Germany, France and the Spanish city of Madrid are bidding for the rights to stage the event in 2018 and the plan is to go to the continent again in 2022, 2026 and 2030.

The six candidates for 2018 gathered in London Wednesday for a symposium on the bidding process, where they were told the financial targets the successful hosts would be expected to meet for an event that is a vital source of income for the sport in Europe.

“We work in a four-year cycle in the Ryder Cup, with the home and away matches,” Hills said. “We don’t make as much money when we play in the States for obvious reasons — the rights for that match prevail with the PGA of America — but we’re comfortable with what we’ve got with the indications of bookings, etc.

“We’re having to work hard.”

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Corey Pavin wants Tiger in his team at Celtic Manor.

Pavin - wants Woods on his team.

Pavin - wants Woods on his team.

American Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin wants Tiger Woods on his team at Celtic Manor in October and says his view of him has not changed since news broke of the world number one’s infidelity.

“Everybody makes mistakes. I’m not going to sit here in judgment, I am the last guy in the world to do that,” said Pavin, in London today to become the first non-European recipient of the Professional Golfers’ Association annual recognition award for services to the game.

“I just hope things work out for him and Elin. It’s obviously an emotional time for him, but I think he’s going to be fine.

“Tiger’s obviously a very strong-minded individual and I don’t think he will play any differently when he comes back.

“He’s come back from injuries and setbacks (Woods’ father died in 2006) and done fine. But my main concern at the moment is for his family.”

Woods won both the Open and US PGA three years ago, but he had everyone’s sympathy then and that will certainly not be the case after all the revelations that have come out since his car crash on November 27.

Pavin was in Iraq visiting troops at the time and admits he was “very shocked, very surprised.”

But his trip to the Middle East made it easy for him to put things into perspective.

“It’s humbling and very inspirational,” he said. “We get lost in our own little world sometimes on what’s important.

“We get bothered by little things and then you talk to someone who’s had their legs blown off in war and are upbeat.

“The most amazing thing is when you see an injured soldier’s first thought is to get back with their unit.”

Like everyone else, Pavin is now waiting to see how long Woods is out.

The Americans regained the Ryder Cup without Woods at Valhalla last year following his knee surgery, but Pavin added: “To not have the best player in the world weakens the team.

“That does not mean we can’t win without him because obviously we did last time, but you always want the best player in the world.”

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

France to bid for 2018 Ryder Cup.

Ryder Cup.

Ryder Cup.

France will join Germany, Madrid, Portugal, Netherlands and Sweden as official candidates to host the 2018 Ryder Cup, Sports Minister Rama Yade announced here on Wednesday.

Since its creation in 1927 the biennial competition has only once been held outside Great Britain or Ireland in Europe - with Spain hosting the 1997 edition.

Yade described the Ryder Cup as a “legendary” event.

“Our country has incomparable advantages but we must continue to work without stopping,” she told a press conference organised by the French Golf Federation.

Yade promised to devote all her energy and determination to backing the bid.

The winning candidate is due to be announced by the Ryder Cup Committee in April 2011.

The 2010 Ryder Cup is being held at Celtic Manor in Wales.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Print
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks