Photo – Andrew Dodt – Golf NSW

Newcastle based Queenslander, Andrew Dodt, had all eyes on him over the closing stages of his morning round on day two of the AV Jennings NSW Open at the Twin Creeks Golf and Country Club.

Dodt had only just scrapped into the field after tournament organisers opened several spots for those impacted by the cancellation of this week’s Hong Kong Open.

The 33-year old raced to 11under par on the par 72 layout through 15 holes today and, while the final three holes are not exactly snacks, on the Graham Marsh designed layout, the expectation was brewing for him to become the first player in a PGA Tour of Australasia event to break the magical 60.

NSW’s Brad McIntosh had done so in 2005 at the Queensland PGA Championship on the Gold Coast but that was then an event on the Von Nida Tour so there was much anticipation as to whether Dodt could birdie two of his final three holes to create the milestone.

Unfortunately, he was unable to birdie any, but his course record round of 61 left him one shot ahead of the brilliant Perth rookie Min Woo Lee and two ahead of overnight leader, Josh Younger.

“That was the best round of my pro career so far,” said Dodt, who bases himself in Newcastle these days  after being raised in Gatton west of Brisbane.

“I got hot around the turn and made a few birdies, and then I started getting a bit nervy, thinking ‘I’m getting pretty low here.’

The winner of the 2019 Sarawak Championship was one of the favourites in the event after receiving a last minute invite into the ISPS HANDA PGA Tour of Australasia tournament.

Since claiming the Asian Tour victory in August, Dodt has made the cut in all six tournaments he has contested across the PGA Tour of Australasia and Asian Tour, but believes his low scores must continue to be in contention come Sunday.

“This is the first time I’ve played here. I checked the scoring from the last two years and I know you’ve got to be 20-under to win,” he said.

Shellharbour’s Travis Smyth is at 10 under par and alone in 4th position while NSW rookie, Justin Warren, who turned professional in the middle of this year after a career in collegiate golf in the US, is 5th at 9 under and five from the lead.

Brad Macintosh with the card his round of 59, 14 years earlier.

 

photo: Josh Younger Golf NSW

35-year old Victorian, Josh Younger, played in the more difficult afternoon field on day one of the AV Jennings NSW Open at the Twin Creeks Golf and Country Club west of Sydney but that did not stop him from producing a stunning opening round of 9 under par 63 to lead by one.

Younger, who has yet to win on the PGA Tour of Australasia, began his round at the 10th and birdies seven of his first eight holes to make the turn in 29 and, although the momentum slowed somewhat after making the turn, he had established the base for a round which would eventually give him the lead over the exciting Perth golfer, Minwoo Lee, and Justin Warren of Picton in NSW.

Younger’s previous best on the PGA Tour of Australasia was when runner-up to Nick Cullen at the 2014 Australian Masters but importantly for his ongoing chances this week, he finished 3rd in this event last year and although 2019 has been a struggle for him recent work with a mental coach appears to have made a difference.

“I started off on the back-nine and made six straight and then just tried to keep out of my own way from there on in,” said Younger.

“People won’t believe me but the back-nine was tough. We came through the turn and the wind got up and that front-nine played quite difficult. I had a good start and was able to stay patient and let things happen. I picked up a couple more coming in and saved a couple of pars.”

Lee is just completing his first year as a professional, a year which saw him narrowly miss his full status on the European Tour for 2020 but he will have enough to secure plenty of starts.

Lee is joined in second place by 24 year old Warren, who completed his education at the University of Arkansas in the US in the middle of this year, but he had gained access to the PGA Tour of Australasia at the Tour School late in 2018.

Dimi Papadatos, Travis Smyth and local amateur Nathan Barbieri are tied for 4th at 7 under par and two from the lead.

Despite the breezy afternoon conditions, 64 players broke par on the Graham Marsh designed layout.

Photo: Twin Creeks Golf and Country Club – Golf NSW

The Australasian summer of professional golf begins this Thursday with the staging of the AV Jennings NSW Open at the Graham Marsh designed Twin Creeks Golf and Country Club in Luddenham in Sydney’s west.

While the assembled field does not include any of Australia’s leading 15 world ranked players, it has proven to be a great launching pad for golfers in recent years, the success of Perth’s, Jason Scrivener (2017), and Queenslander, Jake McLeod, last year, seeing both golfers advance their game and standing in professional golf considerably as a result of their breakthrough Tier One wins on the PGA Tour of Australasia.

In 2017 Scrivener recorded his first win in professional golf and has gone on to record impressive seasons in Europe in each of the last two years, including in 2019 where he has earned more than €1 million on the European Tour alone and finished 32nd in the Race to Dubai Rankings.

McLeods’ win in 2018 came a week before his very impressive 3rd place at the Australian Open a week later, a finish that would lead to him securing the top spot on the 2018 PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit and allowing him access to the European Tour in 2018.

McLeod lost his status in Europe at season’s end, but he has won it back at the recent tour school in Spain further highlighting the underlying experience and importance of his win at Twin Creeks twelve months ago.

Neither player are in this week’s field but their play since their wins at Twin Creeks highlights the impact such a victory can have on a career.

Now a Tier One event on the PGA Tour of Australasia, this week’s event has attracted  an interesting mix of the old and the new, the field headed in terms of world ranking Australians by US based Lismore golfer, Rhein Gibson who regained his PGA Tour status via the Korn Ferry Tour in 2019 where he won his first event on a recognised tour when winning the BMW Charity Pro-Am.

Gibson shared second place through 36 holes at last week’s RMS Classic in Sea Island in Georgia but struggled over the weekend in the PGA Tour event to finish midfield. At his best however Gibson is a brilliant player capable of recording some very low scores and did finish 4th in this event three years agoalbeit at a different venue.

Several players who missed out on gaining European Tour cards at the recent European Tour School will look to bounce back, those players including Dimi Papadatos, Jarryd Felton, Zach Murray, Brett Rumford, Blake Windred, Nick Flanagan and David Micheluzzi looking to atone for the disappointment of last week.

West Australian Jarryd Felton missed out on gaining his European Tour card by just one shot last week so perhaps he more than others will be looking to bounce back from what must have been a gut wrenching moment for him. Felton has finished runner-up and 6th in this event previously.

Windred and Micheluzzi are recent graduates to the professional ranks while another recent outstanding Australian amateur, Min Woo Lee, who has just completed his first season on the European Tour, is also in the field.

Player list

 

Su Oh – file photo Henry Peters 

Australian, Su Oh, has completed an impressive finish to the 2019 LPGA Tour season with a share of 6th place at the season ending CME Group Tour Championship in Naples in Florida.

Oh finished five shots behind the winner, Sei Young Kim, but she earned a cheque for US$119,000, second only to the prizemoney earned when runner-up earlier in the season at the Meijer LPGA Classic in June.

The effort completed an impressive run of finishes over recent weeks for the 23 year old.

Oh will finish the season with earnings of US$640,000 and in 33rd place in the money list ranking, her best season on the LPGA Tour.

Katherine Kirk was the next best of the Australians when she finished 18th, Minjee Lee was 55th and Hannah Green 56th.

Minjee Lee finished the season as the leading Australian money earner in 8th place on the money list with earnings just over US$1.5 million.

 

Jon Rahm – Getty Images

Spain’s Jon Rahm has won both the Race to Dubai and the DP World Tour Championship in Dubai, a birdie at the final hole enough to edge him one shot clear of Tommy Fleetwood who had thrown out all stops with five birdies in his last seven holes to just fall short.

Rahm not only secures the largest first prize in tournament golf (€3 million) but he will move to number 3 in the world ranking behind only Brooks Koepka and Rory McIlroy.

“Man, you dream of making birdies on 18 to win a tournament,” said Rahm. “And how I was playing early on, I was hoping not to need that, but it happened, and I came through when I needed it and really proud of myself for that.

“I’ve thought about it (winning the Race to Dubai) all week. I’ve thought about it the last two hours. I’ve thought about it as soon as I made the putt. But it still hasn’t processed in my mind. It’s a thought in there it still has not been internalised.

“It’s really so hard to believe that some of the greatest champions in European golf and Spanish golf haven’t been able to accomplish what I have in just three years. That’s what I can’t really put my mind into.

“Sergio has been a great Spanish champion for years, a major winner. Ollie, two-time major championship winner. Miguel Angel Iimenex has done a great job, as well. Alvaro Quiros has won this event. So many great players throughout the history of Spain that have had a chance and they didn’t get it done.

“It’s just hard to put that in perspective to know that since Seve, I’m the next one to get it done. I mean, I can put the words, but it just doesn’t feel like it’s true. It’s hard to believe.”

Rahm went into the final round in a share of the lead with Frenchman Mike Lorenzo Vera, but he pulled six shots clear after seven holes. The 25-year old dropped consecutive shots on the eighth and ninth holes and his lead was further eroded on the back nine as Fleetwood finished with five birdies in his final seven holes to sign for a 65 and set the target of 18 under par.

That meant Rahm, who had posted two birdies and two bogeys after the turn, then had to birdie the last hole for victory to avoid a winner-takes-all play-off with Fleetwood to decide both the tournament and the Race to Dubai. He duly held his nerve with a superb bunker shot to four feet before rolling in the putt for a 68 to finish on 19 under par and claim the €3million first prize, becoming just the second Spaniard after Seve Ballesteros to be crowned Europe’s Number One.

Joint 54-hole leader Lorenzo-Vera secured third place another shot behind Fleetwood with Rory McIlroy another five shots away in 4th place.

Australia’s Jason Scrivener completed a great finish to the season when he produced the round of the day (65) to jump 19 places to share 10th place this week and finish in 32nd place in the Race to Dubai Rankings.

Scrivener’s last three European Tour starts have yielded close to A$800,000 for the 30-year old West Australian.

Scott Hend was the other Australian to make it into the select field but finished in a share of last place in the 50 man field.

The European Tour’s new season begins this coming week at the Alfred Dunhill Championship in South Africa.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The final round of the Dunlop Phoenix Tournament in Miyazaki in southern Japan has been abandoned due to heavy storms in the area and the 54-hole placings have been confirmed as the final results.

Shugo Imahira, who led by two over Jung Gon Hwang heading into the final round will, therefore, win his second event of the season to go with five other runner-up finishes and take a near unassailable lead on the 2019 Japan Tour money list.

The final day was robbed of a possible last round charge from Hideki Matsuyama, who began the day five behind the leader, his winning chances blotted by a horror opening hole quintuple bogey on day two.

Matsuyama would eventually share 8th place with amongst others Brad Kennedy who led the Australians an earned the equivalent of A$53,000 for his 4th top ten in his last five starts of the 2019 Japan Tour season.

Kennedy’s fellow Gold Coaster Anthony Quayle finished tied for 20th, Matthew Griffin was 41st, New Zealander Mike Hendry 53rd and Brendan Jones 56th.

The Japan Tour now heads to the island of Shikoku for the Casino World Open, the second to last event of the season.

Australian Rhein Gibson is back on the PGA Tour for the 2019/2020 season and although yet to record a top 30 in his six events since regaining his PGA Tour card via the Korn Ferry Tour, he has begun the RSM Classic in Sea Island in Georgia in a manner that suggests he might do considerably better than that.

Gibson finds himself in a share of 2nd place and just two shots from leader, Tyler Duncan, at the halfway mark of the US$6.6 million event after a second round of 64 followed his opening 66 on Thursday.

Gibson, born in Bendigo but raised in Lismore, has returned to the PGA Tour after first playing there in 2016. He played very well on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2019 and earned the right to play the PGA Tour again.

New Zealand’s Tim Wilkinson is another to have regained PGA Tour status this season and is in 18th place at 8 under and six from the lead while the only other Australian to make the cut, Matt Jones, is 34th.

Scores

 

Su Oh has continued her recent solid run of form on the LPGA Tour and finds herself alone in 5th place at the season-ending CME Group Tour Championship in Naples in Florida.

Oh added a second round of 67 to her opening 69 and although trailing the current leader, Sei Young Kim, by four shots she is just two shots out of second place.

“It’s really nice,” said Oh when asked about her improving form late in the season. “I hit the ball really well the last two days. Probably not that great on the front nine yesterday, just scrambled well. I just played solid, really. Just made the most out of my opportunities.

“It’s kind of an annoying 6 on that par-5. Didn’t really do anything that crazy, but sometimes you just walk off with a 6 and try and make it up. Yeah, overall I played really solid the last two days.

Between Oh and Kim are Germany’s Caroline Masson, Brooke Henderson and the now ever present Nelly Korda.

Katherine Kirk is 26th, Minjee Lee 42rd and Hannah Green 49th.

Frenchman, Mike Lorenzo-Vera, has opened up a three-shot lead at the season-ending DP World Tour Championship Dubai, putting a gap of three shots between he and Spain’s Jon Rahm and England’s Tommy Fleetwood.

Lorenzo-Vera, who played alongside World Number Two Rory McIlroy, opened his second round with back-to-back birdies on his way to carding a three under par round of 69 in the eighth and final Rolex Series event of 2019.

He had briefly held a five shot lead on the back nine after his sixth birdie of the day on the 14th hole, but while the 34 year old dropped shots on the 15th and 18th holes to finish on 12 under par at Jumeirah Golf Estates, he remains in pole position to win the $3million first prize – the richest in tournament golf.

Ryder Cup players Fleetwood and Rahm, both of whom are bidding to overhaul Race to Dubai leader Bernd Wiesberger, are both on nine under par after respective rounds of 68 and 69.

Rahm had double bogeyed the eighth hole and was two over par heading to the ninth tee, but the Spaniard birdied that hole and picked up four more shots on the back nine, including an eagle on the last, to share second place with Fleetwood, who posted his seventh birdie of the day on the final hole.

Austrian Wiesberger carded 17 pars and just the solitary birdie on the 11th hole for a round of 71. He lies nine shots off the pace in a four-way tie for 13th position on three under par, meaning that as it stands, Fleetwood, who won last week’s Rolex Series event, the Nedbank Golf Challenge Hosted by Gary Player, would win the Race to Dubai.

Four-time Major Champion McIlroy double bogeyed the sixth hole in his two over par round of 74, but the Northern Irishman remains a threat six shots back in a share of fifth place on six under par, with the DP World Tour Championship, the Rolex Series and the Race to Dubai all set for a fascinating finale this weekend.

Jason Scrivener is one of two Australians to have made it into the select field of 50 and he finds himself in 20th place at 1 under, while Scott Hend is in 48th place at 7 over.

SCORES

 

Brad Kennedy- four from the lead – file

Two of the Japan Tour’s most dominant players share the halfway lead at the Dunlop Phoenix Tournament in Miyazaki in southern Japan, Yuta Ikeda and Shugo Imahira at 5 under and ahead by one over Jung Gon Hwang and the impressive American rookie Collin Morikawa.

Ikeda has won 21 events on the Japan Tour in the last ten years, the last of those coming earlier this year when winning the Gate to the Open Mizuno Open while Imahira led the money list in 2018 and is again leading in 2019.

At 2 under par and just three from the lead is yet another exciting American in Cameron Champ who we will see in Australia later in the year when he competes at the Australian PGA Championship.

The talk of the day however was the great recovery from an opening hole quintuple bogey by former champion Hideki Matsuyama. Matsuyama began the event with an opening 66 on Thursday but he would open with a five over par 9 on day two. He recovered from the shock to record a round of 75 to be at 1 under and just four shots from the lead.

Brad Kennedy leads the Australians in a share of 13th place at 1 under and, like Matsuyama, four from the lead, Anthony Quayle is 1 over, with Brendan Jones the next best at 4 over.

SCORES