Contrasting emotions for Ryder Cup captain Montgomerie

Scotland (Reuters) – Colin Montgomerie may be in a trough of despair about his own game but he is thrilled at the form of his Ryder Cup players in this week’s 150th anniversary British Open.

“Things couldn’t be going much better when you look at that leaderboard with (Paul) Casey, (Lee) Westwood, (Martin) Kaymer and (Henrik) Stenson on it,” Europe’s captain told reporters after a closing 73 gave him a four-over total of 292.

“They are all up there doing me proud. I don’t want to have to waste (wildcard) picks on world stars like Casey for instance and he can seal his place today.

“Casey and Stenson aren’t currently in the team so they’ve got to battle hard. Kaymer can seal his spot today and Westwood’s number one (on the points list).”

Looking ahead to the biennial clash with United States in Wales in October, Montgomerie said he had an embarrassment of riches with Justin Rose, Ian Poulter, Luke Donald, Rory McIlroy, Padraig Harrington, Graeme McDowell and Edoardo Molinari also in the top-20 of the world rankings.

“I can pick two teams that can beat each other on any given day,” said the eight-times European order of merit winner.

“That’s the strength and depth of European golf especially this year. In any form of business, and this is one, if standards rise the competition has to follow suit, which is great for me.”

Not so great for Montgomerie is his own form on the fairways and greens.

The 47-year-old Scot has not won for three years and this season he has missed five cuts in 12 starts on the European Tour.

“It’s just not happening on the golf course right now,” said Montgomerie. “I’m not firing on all cylinders at all.

“I need to be firing on all eight if I’m to contend and I’m not doing that unfortunately.”

(Editing by Miles Evans)

From nowhere to almost there for Karlsson

Wentworth (Britain), May 23 (IANS) Robert Karlsson signed his second round card of one-under 70 and then figured that at three-over 145, he was going to miss the cut. The Swede based in Nice, Monaco, disappointed at finishing with a double bogey seven on the 18th that messed his round, took an afternoon flight from London to Nice.

He was almost home in front of his door, when he got a call that he was likely to make the cut right on the line at three-over. Realising that he was in with a chance to play the weekend, without even as much as saying ‘Hi’ to his wife in the house, he asked the same taxi driver to take him back to the airport.

With no direct flight to London, he took a flight to Paris and then after two hours of sleep, he hired a private jet to leave at 6 a.m. He reached just in time for the 8.55 a.m. tee off.

The 2008 European Number One birdied five of the first seven holes to turn in 30 and then picked further shots at the 12th, 14th and 16th for a stunning 62 at the tough West Course. That took him to tied second and just two strokes behind the leader Chris Wood.

From being nowhere, Karlsson now has the chance to pick up the winner’s cheque of 750,000 euros that could make him the first player to win a European Tour event after coming from the cut line.

Asked where he ranked the round, Karlsson just smiled and replied: ‘Probably the most unexpected.’

Rory McIlroy did just that in US recently while winning the Quail Hollow Open on the PGA Tour.

Bogey-spree sees Chowrasia drop to tied 39th at Wentworth

Wentworth (Britain), May 23 (IANS) Shiv Shankar Prasad Chowrasia, the lone Indian to make the cut at the BMW PGA Championship on the European Tour, slid down the leaderboard with four bogeys on the back nine to drop from overnight tied 12th to tied 39th at the end of the third round of the championship.

Chowrasia, who opened with an excellent 67 on the first day had a 73 on the second and slipped to 76 on the third day. He is now three-over 216.

The leader is Chris Wood, the 22-year-old from Bristol, who had a shot to win The Open Championship last July. Wood takes a two-stroke lead into the final day of his first BMW PGA Championship.

Wood was two shots clear of Robert Karlsson, who after being three-over after two rounds, felt he would miss the cut and flew to Nice in Monaco. But he flew back when he learnt he had made the cut on the line and then went on to shoot a stunning nine-under 62.

He had five birdies on the front nine and four on the back nine and went up to tied second with first round leader, Danny Willett (70).

Karlsson could become the first man ever to win a European Tour event having made the cut with nothing to spare.

That is something Rory McIlroy did in the US earlier this month.

After 54 holes, Wood is on the eight-under-par mark of 205, with Karlsson up from 63rd to joint second with another 22-year-old Englishman making his debut in the event, first round leader Danny Willett.

Luke Donald’s 72 dropped him from halfway pacesetter to fourth, while defending champion Paul Casey and Padraig Harrington are part of a five-way tie for fifth, but now five shots adrift.

Golf – World rankings

World rankings on Monday (U.S. unless stated, last week’s positions in brackets):

1. (1) Tiger Woods 10.60 average points

2. (2) Phil Mickelson 9.62

3. (3) Lee Westwood (Britain) 7.76

4. (4) Steve Stricker 7.76

5. (5) Jim Furyk 7.00

6. (6) Ian Poulter (Britain) 5.92

7. (7) Ernie Els (South Africa) 5.81

8. (8) Paul Casey (Britain) 5.66

9. (9) Rory McIlroy (Britain) 5.32

10. (10) Anthony Kim 5.12

11. (11) Martin Kaymer (Germany) 4.91

12. (12) Robert Allenby (Australia) 4.71

13. (18) Luke Donald (Britain) 4.67

14. (13) Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 4.48

15. (14) Camilo Villegas (Colombia) 4.35

16. (15) Retief Goosen (South Africa) 4.16

17. (16) Geoff Ogilvy (Australia) 4.09

18. (17) Hunter Mahan 3.98

19. (20) Lucas Glover 3.86

20. (19) Yang Yong-eun (South Korea) 3.84

(Editing by Neil Maidment; to query or comment on this story

email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

McIlroy lives up to hype with breakthrough win

Rory McIlroy shot a course record 10-under-par 62 on Sunday to win the Quail Hollow championship by four strokes and enhance his reputation as one of the brightest emerging talents in professional golf.

The Briton blew away a top-quality field which included Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson to become the youngest player since Woods to win on the PGA Tour, finishing at 15-under after a masterclass of shotmaking on a notoriously difficult course.

“Ever since I was 10 or 11, I wanted to be a professional golfer and you know it’s been a crazy ride to this point,” McIlroy told reporters after sealing victory two days before his 21st birthday.

“I’m going to have a bit of a party on Tuesday night.”

Mickelson, chasing back-to-back titles after winning the U.S. Masters last month, closed with a 68 to finish outright second at 11-under while Angel Cabrera of Argentina also carded a 68 to finish third, a further shot back.

Zimbabwean Brendon de Jonge was fourth and Bo Van Pelt fifth as overnight leader Billy Mayfair fell out of contention after shooting 76, but no-one could keep pace with McIlroy.

“I thought a 68 would be good enough,” Mickelson said. “But I’ve got to congratulate Rory, you just never expect something like 62.

“He’s an incredible player, just an amazing talent.”

WOODS WOES

Woods limped out of the tournament on Friday after failing to make the cut for only the sixth time as a professional, raising questions about how long he can continue to dominate the game after the sordid revelations about his extramarital affairs.

Mickelson is rapidly closing in on the number one ranking and on the same day McIlroy won his maiden title in the U.S., 18-year-old Ryo Ishikawa shot a 58, the lowest single round score on any of the major golf tours, to win in Japan.

“He’s the guy that we followed and the guy that we turned on our TV and the guy that we went out to practice so hard,” McIlroy said.

“All the younger guys have flourished at such an early age because Tiger set the benchmark so high.”

McIlroy has been earmarked for greatness since his early teens and won his first European PGA title in Dubai last year but his final day at Quail Hollow was undoubtedly his finest performance to date.

He almost missed the cut himself, scraping in by a single stroke Friday after making an eagle at his third last hole, but fired a 66 on Saturday to give himself an outside chance of winning.

He started the final round four shots off the lead in a tie for seventh but stormed to the top of the leaderboard with eight birdies and an eagle.

He completed the last six holes in just 18 shots, making an eagle at the par-five 15th when he drilled a five iron from 206 yards to within four feet then draining a 43-foot putt on the last to break the previous course record by two shots.

“To cap a day off like that was probably fitting, it’s one of those moments that you’ll always remember,” he said.

Golf world rankings

REUTERS – World rankings on Monday (U.S. unless stated, last week’s positions in brackets):

1. (1) Tiger Woods 11.36 average points

2. (2) Phil Mickelson 8.90

3. (3) Steve Stricker 7.67

4. (4) Lee Westwood (Britain) 7.64

5. (5) Jim Furyk 6.96

6. (6) Ian Poulter (Britain) 6.13

7. (7) Ernie Els (South Africa) 5.98

8. (8) Paul Casey (Britain) 5.84

9. (9) Martin Kaymer (Germany) 5.19

10. (10) Anthony Kim 4.99

11. (11) Padraig Harrington (Ireland) 4.58

12. (12) Camilo Villegas (Colombia) 4.56

13. (13) Rory McIlroy (Britain) 4.46

14. (14) Geoff Ogilvy (Australia) 4.28

15. (15) Retief Goosen (South Africa) 4.21

16. (17) Henrik Stenson (Sweden) 4.09

17. (16) Robert Allenby (Australia) 4.08

18. (18) Hunter Mahan 3.96

19. (19) Luke Donald (Britain) 3.94

20 (20) Yang Yong-eun (South Korea) 3.86

(Editing by Toby Davis)

McIlroy ends Augusta debut with birdie bonanza

AUGUSTA, Georgia (Reuters) – British teenager Rory McIlroy ended his U.S. Masters debut in dynamic style by posting six birdies in 10 holes for a closing two-under 70 on Sunday.

“It was a lovely way to end the week,” the 19-year-old told reporters after finishing on two-under 286 at Augusta National. “Six-under for the last 10 holes was pretty nice.

“Overall I haven’t played as well as I would have wanted but it is a pretty respectable finish. It has been a great week.”

McIlroy, who won the Dubai Desert Classic in February and has surged to 17th in the world rankings, got caught up in the final-round excitement despite being well adrift of the leaders.

“I looked up at the leaderboard and saw Phil (Mickelson) had got to nine under after seven holes and was laughing, thinking this would be great to watch on TV,” said the young Northern Irishman.

LITTLE BETTER

McIlroy, tipped as a future world number one, said he gained a lot from his debut at the season’s first major.

“It has been a good first Masters for me but I was hoping to do a little better and hopefully I can do better in the final three majors of the year,” he said.

“I have got to know the course so much better and when I come back next year I will know it.

“I have learned not to dance in the bunker,” McIlroy said in a joking reference to the 18th hole on Friday when he kicked the sand with his foot, raising doubts whether he had illegally tested the surface.

McIlroy was cleared of infringing the rules but the triple-bogey seven he took at the hole jolted his title hopes.

“If I could have finished on Friday the way I did today I would still be out there,” he said. “It is all part of the learning curve.

“I have hopefully got a lot more Masters to play and if I get in that position again I will hopefully know what to do.”

(Editing by Tony Jimenez)

Reprieved McIlroy moves up leaderboard

AUGUSTA, Georgia (Reuters) – Teenage Briton Rory McIlroy took advantage of a late second-round reprieve to inch his way up the U.S. Masters leaderboard on Saturday.

Given extra motivation when tournament organizers cleared him of infringing the rules on Friday, the 19-year-old carded a one-under-par 71 in difficult, swirling winds in the third round.

The long-hitting McIlroy, who clinched his maiden European Tour title in February’s Dubai Desert Classic, parred the last 10 holes at Augusta National for an even-par total of 216.

“I played very solidly and only had one bogey out there in tricky conditions,” the Northern Irishman told reporters after recording two birdies and one dropped shot in the first eight holes.

“A couple of birdies and a sub-par round was nice today and will hopefully move me up a few spots.”

Less then 24 hours earlier, the mop-haired teenager survived an anxious wait before advancing right on the cut line of one-over 145.

A question had been raised over whether McIlroy had illegally tested the sand before playing a second shot from a greenside bunker at the par-four 18th.

After reviewing television footage of the incident, consulting McIlroy and lengthy deliberations, the competition committee cleared the teenager and he escaped possible disqualification.

RULES VIOLATION

“I didn’t feel I had done anything wrong or anything to violate the rules so I was very certain no action would be taken,” said McIlroy, who ended up triple-bogeying the 18th for a one-over 73 in the second round.

“I played my bunker shot, didn’t get it out of the bunker. I played my next shot over the green and three-putted for a seven.

“I didn’t even think about what I did until (competition committee chairman) Fred Ridley rang me to tell me what had happened and what he had seen on tape.”

McIlroy, making his Masters debut, was summoned back to the course on Friday evening to review the footage with officials.

“I said to them I hit my shot and it was a natural instinct for me after I have hit a bunker shot to smooth out my footprints,” he added.

“I didn’t kick it. It was more of a sweep and I didn’t feel I did anything wrong. I thought it was handled very well.”

McIlroy has set his sights on a top-16 finish on Sunday to book his place in the 2010 edition.

“I want to shoot something in the 60s,” he said. “I scrambled well today. I want to get back in next year.”

(Editing by Tony Jimenez)

Kim leaves mark on Masters with record birdie binge

AUGUSTA, Georgia (Reuters) – Anthony Kim left his mark on the U.S. Masters on Friday, ripping apart Augusta National Golf Club for a tournament record 11 birdies.

Kim’s round also included two bogeys and a double-bogey at the par-four 10th to leave him on seven-under 65, a 10-shot improvement on the 75 he carded in his debut round on Thursday.

“I haven’t been making 11 birdies in two days; so to make 11 in one day is pretty special,” the 23-year-old American told reporters after he moved into contention in a tie for sixth on four-under 140. “Obviously to do it at Augusta is amazing.

“Hopefully I can build off that and if I keep the putter hot, I like my chances here.”

Playing with teenagers Rory McIlroy and Ryo Ishikawa, Kim was overshadowed by the pair during Thursday’s opening round but stepped into the spotlight on Friday when he eclipsed the 10 birdies posted by Zimbabwe’s Nick Price in the 1986 third round.

After covering the first eight holes in five under, Kim said he felt things slipping away with his bogey on nine and double-bogey on 10.

But then he recalled a story he had read early that morning about the death of promising Los Angeles Angels rookie pitcher Nick Adenhart, who was killed in a car crash on Thursday just hours after pitching six shutout innings.

“No matter what I shoot, I wanted to put this tournament round in perspective,” said Kim.

“I read a great story this morning before I teed off about that baseball player who died two nights ago, and I said, ‘look, it’s been a dream of mine to be at the Masters my whole life’.

“There’s no reason to pout about a bogey or a three-putt, enjoy being out here and enjoy all of the hard work that was put into it by myself and my parents and go out there and have some fun.

“The last line in the story was: ‘You never know what can happen, even at 22. You have to live every moment of every day like it’s your last’.

“I don’t want to go out whining about a three putt. I want to be happy and I want to enjoy everything that the hard work has gotten me.”

Tiger Woods may never again dominate golf: Ernie Els

London, Mar 3 (ANI): Ernie Els reckons that Tiger Woods might never again dominate golf as he did before his latest injury.

Woods returned last week after an eight-month lay-off at the Accenture Match Play Championship in Arizona.

Tim Clark knocked him out in the second round and Els believes his knee may continue to hamper him.

Former world No.1 Els underwent similar surgery for a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament in 2005, The Sun reported.

“My take is that Tiger will feel it. It’s only normal. I don’t care how good your rehab was, you’re going to feel it every now and again in your swing, especially in cold weather,” Els said.

“My knee was still swollen when I came back and it took another six months for it really to start feeling back to normal,” he added.

The South African has already tipped Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy, 19, to become a future world No.1.
And Spain’s Sergio Garcia could overtake Woods in the rankings within a fortnight if he wins this week’s Honda Classic in Florida and finishes third or better next week at Doral. (ANI)