
Photo and article Asian Tour
Scott Hend’s revival continued today after he shot a sublime eight-under-par 62 to take the first-round lead in the US$1.5 million International Series Egypt.
The Australian, who has battled back from prostate cancer, looked like his old self today making nine birdies and one bogey at Madinaty Golf Club – in what is the Asian Tour’s first ever visit to Egypt.
Thailand’s Pawin Ingkhapradit and Seungtaek Lee from Korea shot equally impressive 63s, while South African Jaco Ahlers and Canadian Richard T. Lee returned 64s.
Hend has fully recovered from cancer but says the biggest obstacle his faces now is a lack of confidence.
He said: “I am a 10-time winner on the Asian Tour, I am a 15-time winner around the world, I am an Asian Tour Order of Merit winner, I am second on the Asian Tour Career Money List, I have been playing golf since I was 14 years old, I know how to play, I have just got to keep telling myself that.”
The 49 year old missed cut after cut in the early part of the year but has been playing better since then, most noticeably in last week’s International Series Morocco where he was tied for third going into the final round before shooting a 78 to finish equal 14th.
“It’s just a process, putting the foot in front of the other and trying to get back to where I was,” said Hend, whose last win on the Asian Tour came in the 2019 Maybank Championship.
“Mentally I have suffered a lot from what I have been through, so that’s where I have been really struggling confidence wise. I wasn’t 100%, I tried to play, and I rode on what confidence I did have but I wasn’t 100% so it was a Catch 22.”
He could easily have finished with a lower score today but missed three putts from inside four feet on the outward half and one from a similar length on the way back.
Pawin was bogey free, making three birdies on the front and four on the back.
“I played well from the tee today which is important on this course, and of course I holed a lot of putts,” said Pawin.
“I have been playing well this year, missing the cut for the first-time last week in Morocco, so today is just my form continuing.”
The Thai golfer has been playing on the Asian Tour and Asian Development Tour for the past decade and still chasing his first victory.
SCORES
Andrew Martin last man standing at Vic PGA Championship
Andrew Martin with his Vic PGA trophy – photo PGA of Australia.
38-year-old Victorian professional Andrew Martin has survived a five hole playoff against NSW’s golfer Lincoln Tighe, Victorian Brett Coletta and South Australian Adam Bland, to win the Victorian PGA Championship at Moonah Links, the 2003 Australian Amateur Champion eventually winning with a birdie after he and Tighe were the last men standing through just the first of the five holes..
It would be the much shorter hitter, Martin who found the green at the par 5 in two at their 5th attempt and after Tighe had found the front bunker and could do no better than par, Martin two putted for birdie and just his second PGA Tour of Australasian title.
Martin, who turned professional in 2005, had won an event on the Australasian Tour when successful in a TPS Series event in Sydney in 2021 but that aside his professional career has not really measured up to his success in amateur ranks. This might go some way to changing that.
While the near miss would have been disappointing for Tighe he will be delighted with a return to somewhere near his best after injury issues and poor form for much of this year turned into much better fortunes in recent weeks.
After failing to make the weekend in his first nine tournaments of 2022, Tighe, one of the Australasian Tour’s longest hitters, played very well in recent events in Western Australia and being able to continue that resurgence will be very encouraging for the 33-year-old from Wollongong.
Tighe has recently returned to a former coach Warwick Dewes and the improvement has been significant.
Coletta won the Queensland Open as an amateur in 2016 and has battled away on the Korn Ferry Tour where he missed eleven cuts in succession in 2022 but he too was a talented amateur and this might spark a turnaround in his career despite the playoff loss.
Bland has played the Japan Tour in recent years but his form until recently has been poor although a couple of good performances in Japan in recent weeks suggest he too might be coming right for the Australasian Tour to follow.
The PGA Tour of Australasia now heads to the Nudgee Golf Club in the eastern suburbs of Brisbane for the Queensland PGA Championship ahead of the Australian PGA Championship at Royal Queensland the following week.
SCORES
Ryan Fox challenging Rory McIlroy for Europe’s top spot
In order for that still to be the case at week’s end, Fox will need to win this event but the manner in which he finished off his opening round of 64 and his great form of late suggest the chances of such a victory are possible perhaps even probable.
The event is the penultimate tournament of the 2022 season with only next week’s DP World Tour Championship to come so if Fox was able to claim the title on Sunday it sets up a mouth-watering prospect ahead of next week’s event in Dubai to see just who emerges as the winner of the season long order of merit.
Fox is looking to become the first ever New Zealander to claim the top standing in Europe in any one season, the previous best being when Michael Campbell finished runner-up to Colin Montgomerie in 2005.
“It feels a bit weird to have done that today (shot 64). Had a lot of good numbers, managed to get the yardages right and I putted really nicely”’ said Fox. “Still feels a bit strange to be honest.
“It’s not quite as intimidating off the tee as I used to find it. There are still some tough tee shots around here but I feel like I’ve got a bit more control over the driver and being able to keep it in play. I’ve played at altitude a bit more and sort of have an idea of how everything plays. I felt a bit easier visually hitting the distances than I have in the past.
“You don’t get it very often (everything going well). You very rarely get it for a week but it was very nice to get it for that back nine. I played OK on the front and from 11 on I didn’t miss a shot. Had a lot of really good numbers, which helps. When you’re in that state you just need to get out of your own way and hit shots. I’ve done that well this year, but did it really well today.
“I couldn’t have wished for a better start. I figure if you can get to double digits under par around here for the most part you’re going to be pretty close come Sunday. To be most of the way there after the first round is pretty nice.”
England’s Luke Donald, a world number one for several weeks back in 2012, is one shot behind Fox after his round of 65. It is exactly nine years since Donald won an event of any kind, that being when successful at the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan in 2013.
That Donald has not recorded one top ten anywhere this season highlights the troubles he has continued to have but this was quite turnaround for the now 44 year old, although he admitted it had been unexpected.
“A little bit unexpected to be honest, I wasn’t showing much form coming into this week. Feeling a bit better about my game.”
Min Woo Lee is the best of the Australians in a share of 4th after his round of 68 but he will need to improve further if he is to make it into the field for the DP World Tour Championship. Lee began the day in 73rd place and has projected to now being 60th but he needs to be inside the top 50 to be on a plane to Dubai.
SCORES
Scott Hend’s revival continues in Egypt
Photo and article Asian Tour
Scott Hend’s revival continued today after he shot a sublime eight-under-par 62 to take the first-round lead in the US$1.5 million International Series Egypt.
The Australian, who has battled back from prostate cancer, looked like his old self today making nine birdies and one bogey at Madinaty Golf Club – in what is the Asian Tour’s first ever visit to Egypt.
Thailand’s Pawin Ingkhapradit and Seungtaek Lee from Korea shot equally impressive 63s, while South African Jaco Ahlers and Canadian Richard T. Lee returned 64s.
Hend has fully recovered from cancer but says the biggest obstacle his faces now is a lack of confidence.
He said: “I am a 10-time winner on the Asian Tour, I am a 15-time winner around the world, I am an Asian Tour Order of Merit winner, I am second on the Asian Tour Career Money List, I have been playing golf since I was 14 years old, I know how to play, I have just got to keep telling myself that.”
The 49 year old missed cut after cut in the early part of the year but has been playing better since then, most noticeably in last week’s International Series Morocco where he was tied for third going into the final round before shooting a 78 to finish equal 14th.
“It’s just a process, putting the foot in front of the other and trying to get back to where I was,” said Hend, whose last win on the Asian Tour came in the 2019 Maybank Championship.
“Mentally I have suffered a lot from what I have been through, so that’s where I have been really struggling confidence wise. I wasn’t 100%, I tried to play, and I rode on what confidence I did have but I wasn’t 100% so it was a Catch 22.”
He could easily have finished with a lower score today but missed three putts from inside four feet on the outward half and one from a similar length on the way back.
Pawin was bogey free, making three birdies on the front and four on the back.
“I played well from the tee today which is important on this course, and of course I holed a lot of putts,” said Pawin.
“I have been playing well this year, missing the cut for the first-time last week in Morocco, so today is just my form continuing.”
The Thai golfer has been playing on the Asian Tour and Asian Development Tour for the past decade and still chasing his first victory.
SCORES
Eight Australians chasing DP World Tour status in Spain
Maverick Antcliff – hoping for a return to the DP World Tour – photo Getty Images / DP World Tour
Eight Australians face the task of finishing inside the top 25 at this week’s Final Stage of qualifying to earn their right to play the DP World Tour next season.
The event is played over 108 holes at Infinitum Resort in Tarragona in Spain with 156 players facing the demanding task of finishing inside the top 25.
Queensland’s Maverick Antcliff is back seeking a return to the European Tour having finished 155th in the DP World Tour rankings this season and recording a best finish of 21st in 30 starts.
West Australians Jarryd Felton and Hayden Hopewell survived Stage 2 last week and get their chance, Felton having won an Australasian Tour event earlier in the year and recently finished 3rd at the WAPGA three weeks ago while amateur Hopewell also won an event on the PGA Tour of Australasia early in the year and recently finished runner-up at the WA Open.
Victoria’s Kyle Michel played his way into this field via Stage 2 last week and NSW’s Dimi Papadatos gets another chance at DP World Tour status having won an event on the PGA Tour of Australasia earlier in the year (the Vic Open) and thus finishing high up on the PGA Tour of Australasia’s Order of Merit.
Wollongong’s Jordan Zunic just scraped into the field after surviving a playoff for one of the final spots at last week’s Stage Two.
And finally Queenslanders Aaron Pike and Louis Dobbelaar are into the Final Stage courtesy of their standing on the PGA Tour of Australasia’s Order of Merit last season.
Tee Times
Alker and Harrington duke it out in Charles Schwab Cup final
Alker with perhaps his most important win thus far – the Senior PGA – photo Montana Pritchard PGA of America
The final event of the 2022 PGA Tour Champions Tour will be played this week when the Charles Schwab Cup Championship is staged in Phoenix in Arizona with the leading 33 available players from the Charles Schwab table to compete over 72 holes.
New Zealand’s Steve Alker has a lead of 618 points over Padraig Harrington, Harrington needing to win the event and Alker to finish worse than solo 6th for Alker to lose the lead he has enjoyed for most of the year in the season long race.
In this final event of the season each dollar earned in this US$2.5 million event converts to two Charles Schwab points and so with a first prize of US$440,000 the remote possibility of Alker being toppled still exists.
There are other scenarios which could also see Alker lose the Cup if Harrington wins but they would require multiple players sharing positions between 2nd and 5th and the likelihood of it happening are possible but hardly probable.
If Harrington is not able to win this week then only Alker can take the title in what has been his first full season on the PGA Tour Champions, having joined as a Monday qualifier in August of 2021.
Alker has won four events and been four times runner-up while Harrington has won on three occasions and been three times runner-up this season so they have been going hammer and tongs for much of the season with Alker in front for most of it.
Rod Pampling is the only Australian in the field and while his season has been overshadowed by Alker, his effort to finish 17th in the standings this season and again retain his status for the PGA Tour Champions cannot be underestimated.
Curtis Luck regains Korn Ferry Tour status
Curtis Luck – file photo
Curtis Luck, the former US Amateur, Asia Pacific Amateur, Eisenhower Trophy and West Australian Open Champion will return to the Korn Ferry Tour in 2023 following the completion of that tour’s qualifying in Georgia over the weekend.
The Korn Ferry Tour is essentially now the only means of accessing the PGA Tour.
Luck was forced to return to the Tour School after finishing outside the top 100 on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2022 but by finishing in a share of 12th place this week, he earns starts in the first eight events of the season before any further starts will be dependent on his performance early in the season.
Luck recorded only one top ten in 19 starts on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2022 and given he missed his last four cuts he has done well to recover and regain his Korn Ferry Tour status.
Luck played the PGA Tour in 2019 after a standout debut year on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2018 but has been trying to play his way back there since.
Dimi Papdatos was the only other Australian in the field and finished outside those gaining status. He is eligible for conditional status for the tour in 2023 but will have to rely on spasmodic starts where available.
SCORES
Several Australians advance to Europe’s Final Stage Qualifying
Perth’s Hayden Hopewell finished 4th at his venue – photo AAC
Several Australians will advance to the final Stage of qualifying for next season’s DP World Tour following the completion of stage two qualifying at four separate venues in Spain overnight.
The final stage will begin this coming Friday in Tarragona in Spain where 156 players will attempt to gain a DP World Tour card for next season.
At the Desert Springs Golf Club in Almeria, West Australian amateur Hayden Hopewell, a winner of the WA Open while an amateur, finished 4th at his venue and advances to the final stage in Tarragona in Spain next week.
In Girona, Perth’s Jarryd Felton finish 8th and is safely through while NSW’s Daniel Gale has missed out by one shot and remains an alternate.
Victorian Kyle Michel and NSW’s Jordan Zunic have advanced via their venue in Alicante, Junic surviving a playoff for the final spot.
The final stage begins on Friday 11th November.
Correction Braden Becker who I had reported as making it through has missed out – an earlier run down of qualifiers from DP World Tour was incorrect. Apologies
Daniel Hillier’s European playing rights officially confirmed
Daniel Hillier with the trophy which set up his European Tour playing rights – file photo Getty Images
New Zealand’s Daniel Hillier was unable to finish the season off in style at the Rolex Challenge Tour Grand Final in Mallorca but for the 23-year-old Wellingtonian it is a case of mission accomplished in 2022.
Hillier finished in a share of 23rd in the 45-man player field in the final event of the 2022 Challenge Tour season but will finish the year in 7th place amongst the rankings and be included in the leading twenty players who earn their DP World Tour status for next season.
A win and a 4th place in consecutive weeks in France in the second half of the season had already secured his playing rights on the European Tour but his final placing is now official.
Hillier took advantage of an invitation to play at the recent Portugal Masters and finished 12th, suggesting he will be right at home when stepping up in what appears might be his first DP World Tour event as a cardholder at the Australian PGA Championship later in November.
No joy for Australasians at Women’s Asian Pacific Championship
Huang Ting-Hsuan – photo R&A
Chinese Taipei’s Huang Ting-Hsuan has won the Women’s Amateur Asia Pacific Championship in Pattaya in Thailand, her strong closing nine of 33 reversing a four shot deficit through nine holes of her final round to claim the title by two shots over Natthakritta Vongtaveelap of Thailand, the highest world ranked player in the field.
16 year old Huang, the 83rd ranked player in the women’s amateur world rankings, will now play in next year’s AIG Women’s Open and the Amundi Evian Championship as part of her reward for taking this increasingly prestigious title.
It was not a good week for the 12 Australasians in the field. Kelsey Bennett from NSW contended for much of the opening two rounds but faltered over the weekend and her final round of 76 saw her eventually finish in a share of 21st and it was New Zealand’s Fiona Xu and Vivian Lu who finished as the leading Australasians when they shared 13th place.
Queensland’s Justice Bosio finished as the leading Australian in 19th place.
SCORES
Scott Hend’s recent improvement continues in Morocco
Scott Hend – file photo
After what he might term an ‘annus horribilis’ to date in 2022, Scott Hend has continued his recent improvement and at the halfway stage of the Asian Tour’s International Series Morocco at Royal Golf Dar Es Salam, the Queenslander is in a share of 3rd place and three shots behind Canadian Richard T Lee.
In recent events in Europe for Hend there have been some encouraging signs, more especially an 11th place finish in Morocco, his best finish of the year to that point and it may be that he is able to end the year on a high note.
Hend has struggled for much of the year on the DP World Tour, to the point where he has now lost playing rights in Europe. As one of the Asian Tour’s greatest money winners over his lengthy career there, however, he has returned to play a tour on which he has enjoyed significant success including ten titles, a money list win in 2016 and three other runner-up finishes on the Order of Merit.
This week’s event is one of a series supported by Liv Golf Investments in their partnership with the Asian Tour and carries a purse of US$1.5 million.
Todd Sinnott is the next best of the Australians in a share of 9th place through 36 holes.
SCORES