Wednesday, May 16th, 2012

The Scot faced constant pressure from David Carter also 23 but birdied the last two holes to

July 21, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

The Scot faced constant pressure from David Carter, also 23, but birdied the last two holes to win by two strokes to secure his immediate future. Russell did not know when his next tournament would be when he arrived on the French Riviera, but he left it with his place on the circuit guaranteed until the end of next season.
Russell, who closed with a 71 for a 12-under-par total of 272, sank putts of five and 10 feet on the final two greens after Carter had wiped out an earlier four-shot deficit.”It was up and down like a fiddler’s elbow out there, but I knew I could win from the first hole on the first day,” the former Walker Cup player said. Colin Montgomerie, chasing his first US win, was seven shots adrift after a 70.MCI CLASSIC (Hilton Head, S Carolina) Leading third-round scores (US unless stated): 198 L Roberts 66 69 63 202 M O’Meara 68 69 65 204 S Hoch 71 68 65; D Love 68 68 68; L Nelson 67 68 69. 205 T Lehman 68 70 67; T Purtzer 70 67 68; C Montgomerie (GB) 69 66 70; J Maggert 69 66 70.

206 W Austin 72 67 67; V Singh (Fiji) 70 67 67; T Watson 67 67 72. 207 D Martin 67 71 69; B Tway 67 70 70; R Mediate 68 68 71; J Sluman 67 67 73. 208 N Lancaster 71 70 67; G Day 71 70 67; B Mayfair 67 73 68; D Ogrin 69 71 68; L Janzen 69 70 69; T Tryba 71 68 69; R Cochran 71 68 69; N Price (Zim) 72 67 69; B Lohr 68 71 69; J Furyk 66 72 70; A Magee 68 68 72; B Kamm 73 63 72 Selected: 209 N Faldo (GB) 70 68 71 210 G Norman (Aus) 69 69 72 217 A Lyle (GB) 71 71 75.. They were respectively 11 and 12 shots behind Loren Roberts, who opened up a four-shot lead with a 63 for a tournament record 15-under-par 198.

He immediately walked over to a 33-year-old man and said: “Do you have a problem?” His caddie, Tony Navarro, fearing that Norman was in physical danger, pushed the offender to the ground before he was arrested by police for being drunk and disorderly.It is by no means the first time Norman has been a target: he received similar treatment here last year after finishing third at Augusta, and during the 1986 US Open at Shinnecock Hills he offered to meet another heckler behind the grandstand on the completion of his round.Faldo and Norman slipped out of contention, but they still commanded the largest galleries. That was the worst incident I’ve experienced in 20 years on tour and I hope I never see anything like it again.”He did not witness Norman’s latest brush with bad behaviour, the world No 1 being abused as he left the 18th tee. Faldo confronted the oaf and insisted that he be ejected from the grounds of the Weston Hills club.He said: “I had to do something, because it would have been wrong for Curtis to get involved. Both players were given armed escorts for yesterday’s final round with officials concerned at an escalating trend of hooliganism in golf.Faldo was forced to act last month during the Honda Classic in Fort Lauderdale where a heckler shouted at Curtis Strange, “You are a Ryder Cup choker” when the pair played together for the first time since their crucial singles in last September’s match.

Golf

Greg Norman became the latest victim of loutish behaviour when he came under verbal attack from a fan during the third round of the MCI Classic here in South Carolina on Saturday.
“Why did you choke, you cost me money,” bawled a drunken spectator, referring to the Australian’s collapse against Nick Faldo in the US Masters at Augusta eight days ago. Agassi, who pulled out of the Spanish Open, has been in Barcelona to film a television commercial.Pete Sampras, who regained the world No 1 ranking from Muster last week, won the Japan Open yesterday and announced that he is to take time off to prepare for the French Open. After a hard-fought 6-4, 7-5 victory over his fellow American Richey Reneberg, Sampras said he would take the next three weeks off.The women’s final in Tokyo was also tight, with the top seed Kimiko Date of Japan winning 7-5, 6-4 over the third-seeded American Amy Frazier.. The Austrian then took a verbal swipe at Andre Agassi in their ongoing debate about American domination of the sport.
Muster criticised US control of the circuit on Friday, saying it meant clay-court tennis was dying because tournaments played on the surface were squeezed into just eight weeks.Agassi responded on Saturday by suggesting the Austrian “would not be so paranoid if there weren’t so many people following him everywhere.”"His comments probably come from eating too many hamburgers with English meat,” said Muster after his 30th consecutive victory on clay with a 6- 3, 4-6, 6-4, 6-1 win over Rios. Tennis

Thomas Muster retained his Spanish Open title in Barcelona yesterday, outlasting the Chilean sixth-seed Marcelo Rios. Also making easy work of the cut on a breezy, bumpy Mediterranean were John Merricks and Ian Walker in the men’s 470 class. A fourth, sixth and seventh, in addition to Saturday’s second and fifth, kept them in the top three overall.n John Kostecki and Paul Cayard, opponents during last year’s America’s Cup regatta, were tied for the lead after the first round in the Star class of the US yachting trials in Savannah, Georgia..

Comments are closed.