Two time winner Dimi Papdatos – looking to continue success at 13th Beach

One of the PGA Tour of Australasia’s more popular events, the Vic Open, begins at the 13th Beach Golf Club’s two course facility on Thursday, the event highlighting two separate events for women and men, both playing for separate purses of A420,000.

The figure pales in comparison to the A1.6 million on offer in previous years when jointly sanctioned with the then European Tour but nevertheless the venue and format, which includes the men and women’s events being played concurrently, has proven popular since moving to the Bellarine Peninsula from Spring Valley in 2013.

Dimi Papadatos will defend the title he won by a narrow one shot over New Zealander Ben Campbell, the women’s event won last year by Hannah Green who won her first Australian title as a professional when she took that title by six shots over Gold Coast golfer, Karis Davidson.

For Papadatos, it was his second Vic Open title and his 5th as a professional having previously won in 2017.

Papadatos again embarked on a campaign in Europe in 2022 following his win but there was not a lot to get excited about as he played both Challenge and DP World Tour events but he has an affinity with the layouts at the Creek and Beach courses at 13th beach and might do well again.

It may however be some of the emerging young players who end up as contenders by week’s end and the likes David Micheluzzi, Elvis Smylie, an improving Shae Wools Cobb and Hayden Hopewell might make their presence felt.

Green not only won this event twelve months ago but she would win the following week in a mixed Australasian Tour event (the TPS Murray River) and went on to record several top tens on the LPGA Tour and is currently the 19th ranked player in the Rolex World Rankings.

Green is not in this week’s field however and the women are headed in terms of world ranking by Korea’s Ji Yai Shin, a still prolific performer on the Japan and Korean LPGA Tours. Shin has also an excellent record in Australia having won the 2013 Australian Women’s Open, the RACV Ladies Masters and the Actew AGL event in Canberra. The two time Women’s British Open champion is a formidable force and the event is fortunate to have a player of her standing in the field.

Others of note are last week’s winner of the TPS Murray event, Sarah Jane Smith, TPS Victoria winner, Min Yoon, and LPGA players Grace Kim, last year’s runner-up Karis Davidson, Sarah Kemp, Su Oh and the legendary Karrie Webb.

MEN’S FIELD

WOMEN’S FIELD


Sarah Jane Smith – photo Australian Golf Media

A stunning weekend including rounds of 63 and 65 have given US based Queenslander, Sarah Jane Smith, a five-shot victory over Australians Shae Wools-Cobb and Andrew Martin at the TPS Murray River event at the Cobram Barooga OLD Course on the NSW Victorian Border.

It is the second consecutive win by a woman in a TPS PGA Tour of Australasia event following on from the victory of Min Yoon at the Rosebud Country Club last week.

The win provided the 38 year old with her first professional victory since her win in New York on the LPGA Tour’s feeder tour in 2008 and just her second as a professional.

Smith, one of Australian female golf’s best players as an amateur, turned professional in 2004 and gained LPGA Tour status a year later and although she has managed to retain her playing privileges to the LPGA Tour in many of the years since, she is currently without status there and so this win is a great boost as she looks to sustain her professional career.

After a poor season on the LPGA Tour last year after narrowly regaining her playing rights at the end of 2021, Smith made the decision not to attend the Tour School in December and so returned to the Sunshine Coast where she spent time with highly regarded coach Grant Field whose many other clients include Cameron Smith.

“I didn’t feel done at the end of last year, but I knew I wasn’t in the right place for (LPGA) Tour school,” said Smith. “I thought I’d come home, play the Aussie Open, it worked out that I could see Grant, spend some time with him.

“He’s been drumming into me that ‘it’s not over unless I want it to be’. To see everything come together this quickly is incredible. Because I was basically done at the end of last year, unless something changed drastically. I’m pretty happy, a little bit surprised with this.

“Grant gave me one thing that made me feel good all day. He told me to enjoy the (expletive) out of it, but he told me ‘just because you feel different doesn’t mean the skills won’t be the same’. That’s something I’ve felt when I was nervous before, I worried it would go away. I’d hit one bad shot and it would snowball. Today I kept repeating that, reminding myself that just because I felt like that, it wasn’t going to be any different.”

The win is worth A$45,000 to Smith and although she has earnings of close to A$3 million in the US, the money earned today will be both a boost of finances and confidence.

RESULTS

 

   

 

 

 


Daniel Hillier – steady start to his DP World career – file photo

Perhaps surprisingly, there were just two Australasians in the field for the Ras Al Khaimah Championship in the UAE, one of them a previous winner at this venue, Ryan Fox, and the other New Zealand DP World Tour rookie, Daniel Hillier, and at the halfway stage of the event, both are tied for 23rd and six shots from the lead.

Fox began his quest to win at the Al Hamra GC for the second time in twelve months at this venue on Thursday with a round of 67 but, although he was well enough placed through eight holes of round two, he dropped four shots in his next three holes to slip out of contention. He recovered with late birdies but the damage was already done and he will need something very special over the final 36 holes if he is to chase down the leaders.

Hillier added a round of 69 to his opening 70 and in just his 5th start as a DP World Tour cardholder after gaining such status via the Challenge Tour in 2022, he has now made all five cuts.

The leaders, current Australian Open Champion Adrian Meronk, Scotland’s David Law and Rasmus Højgaard are tied at the top at 11 under and one clear, Højgaard looking to become the first of a brotherly pair to win the same European Tour title.

Højgaard’s brother Nicolai won this title twelve months ago.

SCORES

 

 


Abraham Ancer – photo Asian Tour

The top of the leaderboard in the opening event of the 2023 Asian Tour season, the US$5 million PIF Saudi International, is littered with LIV Golf members but there are plenty of others within striking distance who might take an opportunity to grab the riches of one of the Asian Tour’s most lucrative event.

Mexico’s Abraham Ancer leads by one over American Cameron Young but in a share of 3rd place and three shots from Ancer are Thailand’s Sadom Kaewkanjana, Australian Marc Leishman and South African Louis Ooosthuizen.

Leishman’s fellow Australian but not a LIV Golf member, Lucas Herbert, is another shot back in 6th place.

Ten Australians made the cut but one who did not was Cameron Smith who despite improving four shots from his opening round of 73 missed out by two shots on making it to the weekend.

Leishman who has been out of form in recent times played in the stunning morning conditions of day two and took full advantage. The highlight of his second round was a holed shot from the fairway at the 10th.

“Hit a 3-iron off the tee and then had perfect yardage with my gap wedge,” said Leishman. “Hit a good shot, landed about a foot past it, a foot right of it, and spun back into the hole. They’re sort of unexpected, but it’s nice when they happen.

“Yeah, really happy. Yesterday to have two under in that weather was pretty pleasing. Then to come out this morning and to put a low one on the board in more benign conditions was pretty satisfying as well. Happy with the start.”

SCORES

Matias Sanchez – photo Australian Golf Media

Victorian 24 year old, Matias Sanchez, has a three shot lead as the TPS Murray River In Honour of Jarrod Lyle event enters the weekend at the Cobram Barooga OLD Course on the border of NSW and Victoria.

Sanchez, a former (2017) Australian Amateur Champion, has struggled in the professional ranks and in fact had missed two of his last three cuts before this week but his round of 64 today which included six birdies and an eagle gave little evidence of the struggles he has endured of late.

“I’m just holing putts so far this week,” said Sanchez. “I’ve been hitting it really good for a while, but I haven’t been making putts at all in the last few months. To hole some today and yesterday has been very nice,” Sanchez said.

“I’ve been hitting a lot of low balls off the tee and keep it in play. Not doing anything silly off the tee and trying to hit the perfect shot. For me, keeping it in play is paying dividends this week.”

In second place alone at present is Queenslander Shae Wools-Coob, yet another product of the successful Sunshine Coast coach, Grant Field.

Like Sanchez the transition to the professional ranks has not been easy for the 26 year old Wools Cobb and two late bogeys put a dampener on his round to some extent but there have been encouraging signs for him over the first two days.

The improving Todd Power Horan and highly talented Perth golfer, Hayden Hopewell, are next are at 7 under and five from the lead of Sanchez.

Victorian Brett Coletta is next in a share of 5th place with the leading women Sarah Jane Smith and American Emma Talley.

SCORES

McIlroy – enjoys his third Dubai victory – photo Getty Images

Whatever way it is viewed, the final day of the 2023 Hero Dubai Desert Classic became a tournament promoter’s dream.

The two protagonists in a petty spat earlier in the week, Rory McIlroy and Patrick Reed, found themselves head to head against each other over the closing nine holes of the event, McIlroy finding it hard to contain his glee when holing a 14 foot sliding downhill left to right putt at the 72nd hole to take the title by one over Reed.

Reed had approached McIlroy, his caddie and his coach on the driving range on Tuesday to seemingly break some ice that had been developing essentially over Reed’s involvement with LIV Golf and McIlroy’s opposition to it and the pursuit of legal action by Reed’s legal team on McIlroy.

While McIlroy’s caddie shook Reed’s hand, McIlroy essentially snubbed Reed and, as he walked away, Reed threw a tee in McIlroy’s direction. It was perhaps more innocent than it was made out to be but clearly became the subject of a lot of media speculation and a source of tension throughout the week.

So to Monday, which had developed into the final day of the event due to weather disruptions earlier in the week.

Reed, playing in the second to last group, began the final round four shots behind McIlroy but through 13 holes he was 7 under for the round and had drawn level with the Northern Irishman. Both players dropped at shot over the closing holes but birdies at the 17th and 18th by McIlroy saw him move ahead of Reed who had drawn level again when he birdied the last.

McIlroy, who needed to make birdie or better at the 72nd hole to win and avoid a playoff, missed the fairway and, in fact, was lucky to not find the water along the right side of the fairway in the landing zone for a long drive. He was unable to get enough club on the awkward lie to allow him to seriously consider taking on the water short of the green and so layed up to 90 yards and then pitched to 14 feet.

Needing putt to win, McIlroy steeled himself and holed the snaking putt to take his third Dubai Desert Classic title.

McIlroy was doing his best to contain his emotions after the win but it was hard to ignore his clear satisfaction in getting across the line and his need to put the much discussed issues aside. It might be a bit much to suggest but it was to some extent a win by the non-LIV Golf fraternity over LIV.

“I think mentally today was probably one of the toughest rounds I’ve ever had to play because it would be really easy to let your emotions get in the way and I just had to really concentrate on focusing on myself. Forget who was up there on the leaderboard, and I did that really, really well.

“I really feel like I haven’t had my best all week but I just managed my game so well and played really smart. Even that second shot at the last there, you know, I was in two minds. I probably could have got to the green but seeing what happened yesterday and what happened last year, giving myself a wedge to try to get up-and-down to try to get the win.

“Just ecstatic that I gave myself an opportunity the first week back out and yeah again as I said I managed my game well. I definitely feel like there’s tons of room for improvement but it’s a great start to the year.

“I feel like I showed a lot of mental strength out there today, and again, something to really build on for the rest of the year.”

Reed is very much a polarizing figure but whatever your stand is on the rights and wrongs of the way he goes about his business that he was able to force McIlroy to birdie the last to win in such a dramatic week tells the story of an incredibly tough character.

Three LIV golfers finished inside the top ten. Reed, Ian Poulter(6th) and Henrik Stenson (8th) added fuel to the fire of an ongoing debate.

Australian Lucas Herbert, the winner of this event three years ago, produced a final round of 66 to finish alone in third position and two from the winner.

Herbert was playing his first event of 2023 after finishing 2022 with a top 10 at the Australian Open after a messy finish to his final round when contending for the title.

Herbert improves form 67th to 53rd in the world ranking.

“Yeah, it’s promising signs,” said Herbert. “It still feels like there’s some work to do and I can get better than what I produced this week. So that’s exciting. You know, to finish third here in this quality field or second or fourth or wherever it finishes, to do that in sort of quality field, I think it’s good signs ahead for 2023.

“I’m happy with that finish. I felt like we were probably almost playing for second going into the day. It’s pretty hard to spot Rory five shots and try and chase him down to win a tournament.”

SCORES

 

 


Jason Day – file photo

Jason Day’s share of 7th place at this past week’s Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines in Southern California has seen the 35 year old re-enter the top 100 in the world ranking for the first time since the Players Championship last year, working his way back from outside the top 160 when missing the cut at the Fortinet Championship in September.

Day’s finish at one of his favourite venues over the weekend should see him just inside the top 90 when the rankings are revised later today and while a long way from the giddy heights of world number one in 2016, he is headed in the right direction.

Day’s final round of 68 over a layout where he has won a World Junior Championship and two Farmer’s Insurance Opens improved him from 15th overnight to share 7th place with the in-form Jon Rahm who struggled to a final round 74.

I think the week was nice,” said Day. “I had a lot of good memories from this tournament and the golf course itself, so to be able to come in off last week’s good play and then kind of back it up to this week was nice. So I’ve got a week off coming up and then Phoenix and L.A.

“Yeah, I mean, it’s still not quite 100 percent because there’s some shots like yesterday coming down the stretch, I hit a bunch right. There’s just like I’ve got to kind of work out the tendencies and where does the game go in competition, especially the swing.

“Some of it’s good, some of it’s bad, some of it’s in between, but like you’ve just got to get it in the hole at the end of the day when you play competition and I felt like I kind of managed my game pretty well the last two weeks.”

“I’m really looking forward to taking this next week off just to kind of really smash the swing out, try and get into Phoenix with it — I mean, I’m going to go see Chris (Como his coach) down in Phoenix for a couple days before the tournament, which is nice. It’s always good to have like hands-on work with him.

“You know, it’s all positive stuff. I think the game is moving in the right direction that the whole 2 team wants it to move in. I think it’s a good start to the year, I’ve just got to like kind of take the positives and just keep moving forward.”

SCORES

Min A Yoon – photo Australian Golf Media

The first PGA Tour of Australasia event of 2023 has been won by female golfer, Min A Yoon, the Korean’s final round of 63 earning her a one shot victory over local golfer James Marchesani with a further two shots back to 20 year old Gold Coast golfer, Elvis Smylie, David Micheluzzi and Nathan Barbieri.

It was an intense final round battle with as many as five players tied for the lead early in the second nine with Gold Coast golfer Smylie’s round of 64 giving him the clubhouse lead an hour or so ahead of the final group.  Smylie, yet to win an event in his two year professional career, finished runner-up in this event two years ago before turning professional.

Yoon, Marchesani, Micheluzzi and Barbieri were still on the course however and it would be the 20 year old Yoon, ranked 813 in the Rolex World Ranking, who stamped her authority on the event with four birdies and an eagle early in her back nine to open a two shot lead.

Marchesani became Yoon’s biggest threat but he fell one short and finished runner-up on his own with a further two shots back to Smylie, Micheluzzi and Barbieri.

Yoon who plays the Futures Tour in the US without a lot of success, recording not one top twenty in 14 starts there in 2022, earns a very important A45,000 as her 18% of the 250,000 purse.

The event begins a series of events for the PGA Tour of Australasia in Australia and New Zealand over the next two months, the next of those being the TPS Murray River in honour of Jarrod Lyle event beginning this Thursday.

SCORES

 

Ryan Fox alongside Carmen and Javier Ballesteros – photo Getty Images – article by DP World Tour

Ryan Fox has won the 2022 Seve Ballesteros Award after being voted Player of the Year for last season by his fellow professionals on the DP World Tour.

The 36-year-old becomes the first New Zealander to win the prestigious award since Michael Campbell received the honour in 2005, and it comes after an outstanding season during which he won twice and finished in a career-best second place on the DP World Tour Rankings presented by Rolex.

Fox polled 50% of the votes cast in total by the DP World Tour members, with DP World Tour Rankings winner Rory McIlroy taking second place ahead of the 2022 U.S. Open Champion Matt Fitzpatrick in third.

The Kiwi was presented with the trophy by one of Seve’s sons Javier and his daughter Carmen, both of whom travelled to this week’s Hero Dubai Desert Classic on the DP World Tour – a tournament won by Seve himself in 1992 – to officially welcome Fox to the illustrious list of winners.

Fox started 2022 in fine style, picking up his second DP World Tour title at the Ras al Khaimah Classic in February before an emotional victory at the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship in St Andrews in October.

The 2016 Challenge Tour graduate dedicated his victory at the Home of Golf to the late cricketing great Shane Warne, whom he paired up with in the popular Pro-Am format on numerous occasions, including finishing runners-up together in the 2021 contest.

In addition to his pair of victories, Fox showed remarkable consistency to notch up four second place finishes – at the Soudal Open, Dutch Open, Horizon Irish Open and the Nedbank Golf Challenge – as well as a further four top tens.

His excellent form led to a meteoric rise up the Official World Golf Ranking as he climbed from outside the top 200 into the world’s top 50 for the first time, peaking at a career-best 23rd after his victory at the Old Course.

The Player of the Year Award, named after the legendary Seve Ballesteros, last year amalgamated with the former Golfer of the Year award to become one singular honour voted for by the players, helping further commemorate the Spaniard’s incredible legacy.

Fox said: “It’s probably not something that I expected ever in my career. I would like to say it’s something I dreamed of, but you look at those names on the trophy and I probably don’t count myself as one of those. That is pretty cool, and to have Javier and Carmen come out and present it made it even more special.

“Last year I thought I had a chance but a few other guys played pretty well, Rory, Matt, Jon Rahm, especially at the end of the year.  So when Keith Pelley told me I was pretty shocked and obviously pretty chuffed as well. To have your peers vote for you makes it that extra bit special.

“Obviously Dunhill Links was a big highlight for me last year, to win around the Home of Golf, it doesn’t really get any better. I shared the experience with Shane Warne for the previous four or five Dunhills that I played, and it was a bit sad without him there last year. To honour him that way made it even more special.

“Seve is such an icon of golf, and I’m a bit of a golf nut. I knew the history of Seve but probably didn’t quite understand then, growing up in New Zealand, quite the influence he had over here. It’s cool to hear the stories from some of the older guys that played with him, but to have my name on the Seve Ballesteros Award, it’s kind of surreal. It’s pretty cool to be part of a little bit of history in that regard.”

Keith Pelley, Chief Executive of the DP World Tour, said: “Ryan’s form throughout 2022 was nothing short of outstanding. His two wins were undoubtedly the highlight, but to record a further eight top tens shows a remarkable level of consistency that clearly impressed his peers.

“Ryan is not only an immensely popular member of the DP World Tour, but also someone who cares deeply for the Tour as is illustrated by the valuable work he does, and the intelligent opinions he offers, as a member of our Tournament Committee.

“I also want to say thank you to Javier and Carmen Ballesteros for making the effort to travel to Dubai to present the award to Ryan. It meant a lot to him and to every one of us at the DP World Tour to have them there to represent their father.”

Javier Ballesteros said: “Well, I’m very happy that Ryan got the award. I think it’s important that Ryan got it with two wins, and of course he played a full season on the DP World Tour.  It left me very happy,  considering he’s a fantastic guy as well.

“For me, it’s very important and we are very proud to have our father’s name on this award. It’s a prize that is given by the players and to have his name on the award, it’s a very good way to keep his legacy alive.”


Shyla Singh and Abel Eduard  – photo Golf NSW

The New South Wales Amateur titles have been completed at the Pennant Hills Golf Club in Sydney with Kingston Heath member Abel Eduard proving to be somewhat of a giant killer when he accounted for Australia’s current hottest amateur golfer, Harrison Crowe, in the men’s event and Southport Golf Club (Gold Coast) member Shyla Singh defeating her fellow Gold Coaster Godiva Kim to win the women’s title.

Defending champion Crowe, who had been the current NSW Open and Amateur Champion along with the Asia Pacific Amateur title, was up early in his match when he moved two ahead through 13 holes but Eduard fought back to square the match at lunch and then took a 4 up lead within six holes of the resumption in their 36 hole match.

The match would eventually end at the 35th hole with Eduard winning 3&1.

The women’s encounter was a roller coaster affair with both Singh and Kim leading at various stages although Singh would win seven of 13 holes in the latter stages of her match after she too was all square at the halfway mark of the 36 hole final.

Singh would win 4 &3 and achieved some level of atonement for her loss to Sarah Hammett in the final of this very event last year.

SCORES