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Scott out to dethrone Smith as king of Royal Pines


Cameron Smith and Adam Scott will push Presidents Cup allegiances to one side in a head-to-head Australian PGA Championship battle to claim the mantle as the king of RACV Royal Pines Resort.

The green jacket he proudly paraded prior to claiming the Joe Kirkwood Cup in 2013 made Adam Scott the pied piper of Australian golf while Smith has won over the Gold Coast crowds with successive wins that puts him within reach of a rare piece of Australian golf history.

The pair are coming off a deflating defeat as part of the International team that lost to the USA 16-14 at Royal Melbourne last Sunday but with an opportunity to head into 2020 with a healthy injection of confidence that only comes from winning.

Scott made it known immediately following the Presidents Cup that Smith’s reign at Royal Pines was his next target and will be leading the charge to ensure his fellow Queenslander’s attempt at a threepeat falls flat.

“Obviously Cam’s had a good run here, but that’s got to come to an end at some point,” Scott said following Wednesday’s pro-am in which he played with Greg Norman Medal winner Hannah Green and rugby league legend Johnathan Thurston.

“I’m sure it’s not just me who wants to take the Aussie PGA, there’s probably a hundred plus other guys who would like to do it this week.

“But I’m certainly feeling good after last week. And the fact that I haven’t won a trophy for too long, I definitely would like to change that right here.

“I feel like I’ve been in a similar spot in my career to this before. If I remember, maybe 2012 I was playing at a very high level and I didn’t win all year. I ended up winning the Australian Masters at the end of the year.

“I’m at that point where I just need to keep pushing myself along, keep the intensity at the right level because I’m doing the right things, it’s going the right way.

“A breakthrough win here this week can carry me a long way into next year with Augusta only a few months away now.

“It’s important that I kind of get that win, and the confidence that those wins give you can take you a long way.”

Smith was engaged in a 36-hole shootout with World Cup teammate Marc Leishman as he chased back-to-back titles 12 months ago and doesn’t expect any friendly banter should he and Scott face off down the stretch over the weekend.

“I don’t think the atmosphere would be any different. ‘Leish’ and I, as good of mates as we are, we both still want to win, we’re still competitors,” Smith said as he attempts to become the first player in 112 years to win three successive Australian PGA titles.

“The talk on the last nine holes last year was pretty minimal. We’re all here to do the same thing, and it got… it didn’t get intense, but it definitely got a little bit different on that back nine on Sunday, for sure.”

Nominated for the Greg Norman Medal for a season on the PGA TOUR in which he had nine top-10 finishes including two runner-ups and was the best performed Australian player in each of the four men’s majors, Scott will end 2019 with his highest end-of-year ranking since 2016.

But the world No.18 says it is trophies – not ranking points – that he is chasing as he nears his 40th birthday.

“I’m not necessarily motivated to be the No.1 player in the world as much as I’m motivated to win a major championship,” said Scott, the 2013 Masters champion who has been drawn to play with 2009 Open champion Stewart Cink and exciting Aussie youngster Min Woo Lee the first two rounds.

“If you start getting up there, then maybe that motivation will come again, but to win some trophies and win some tournaments, certainly the majors, there are a few other specific tournaments around the world I would like to win that I haven’t won. 

“I felt like whatever years were my best golf, a couple of these slipped away, one in a playoff here (in 2014) to win the PGA again and there was an Australian Open or two that I was close at.

“It would be nice while I’ve got a few decent years left in me to kind of wrap up a few more wins down here and leave as strong a legacy in the Australian game as well.”


Two-time defending Australian PGA champion Cameron Smith concedes he is still coming to terms with Sunday’s gut-wrenching Presidents Cup defeat but is confident the competitive juices due Thursday morning will aid his pursuit of a historic threepeat.

Not since Dan Soutar won the first three titles from 1905-1907 has a player won three consecutive Australian PGA championships, Smith’s imposing record at RACV Royal Pines Resort putting him position to achieve a feat not attempted since Robert Allenby at Coolum in 2002.

Fifth in 2015 and tied for 15th 12 months later, Smith’s recent record at Royal Pines is without peer and that combined with the comfort of having friends and family close at hand should hold him in good stead when his title defence commences at 6am on Thursday morning.

Fighting back to earn a point for the International team against world No.4 Justin Thomas at Royal Melbourne Golf Club on Sunday, Smith’s joy soon became despair when the US team clinched an eighth straight victory, the emotional letdown taking its toll on the Queenslander.

“Being such a stressful week, it always takes it out of you,” conceded Smith, who will play alongside American Cameron Champ and PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit leader Ryan Fox for the opening two rounds.

“Just like being in contention, I feel like the next week I’m always a little bit slower and a little bit down on energy.

“Personally, last week was great. I knew they needed the point on Sunday afternoon and to get that done was awesome. Then in the space of 10 minutes ‘Kuch’ (Matt Kuchar) holed that putt on 17 for us to lose, so it was quite gut wrenching. 

“It still kind of hasn’t sunk in yet, just the disappointment, I guess.

“We all tried so hard, we all played for each other and it was an awesome week.

“Not to get the result we wanted was quite difficult to take. 

“But in saying that, I’m sure that the crowd will be good tomorrow and I’m sure I’ll be up for the challenge.”

Admitting that part of the fatigue he is feeling was due to a late night with his International teammates in Melbourne on Sunday, Smith is not so much focused on making history but certainly motivated by it.

“For sure, especially being in my backyard essentially,” Smith said of the prospects of a historic third consecutive Joe Kirkwood Cup.

“I don’t really like thinking about, you know, ‘What if.’ I’m just going to try to do my job to the best of my ability and if it happens on Sunday, great.

“But if not, you know, I’ve given it my all.”

As for the fuel with which he will use to reenergise prior to teeing it up on Thursday, the 26-year-old has already placed an early order for Uncle Trev’s world famous lambs fry and bacon.

“We might have to start cooking that about 2.30am in the morning for a 6.00am tee time,” Smith surmised.

“It’s been the secret recipe I guess the last few years.

“It’s worked out good so we’re going to keep it going.”


Stewart Cink’s replica Claret Jug – spelling mistake and all – takes pride of place in his Atlanta home; now the 2009 Open champion wants to add the Joe Kirkwood Cup to his trophy cabinet.

A late withdrawal 12 months ago, Cink returns to Australia for the first time since the 2003 Australian PGA Championship at Coolum and is ready to go toe-to-toe with the brash new youngsters taking world golf by the scruff of the neck at RACV Royal Pines Resort.

Featuring in a marquee group in the opening two rounds alongside local favourite Adam Scott and West Australian young gun Min Woo Lee, Cink and his wife Lisa spent three days in Queenstown prior to arriving on the Gold Coast but will put any holiday vibes on hold from Thursday.

“I would like to leave here with a trophy, that’s the goal,” said Cink, a six-time PGA TOUR winner with close to $US38 million in career prize money.

“I’ve played golf a long time and I feel like if you set your sights highest and you really dial it in and try to achieve the best, you’re more likely to maybe get there. That doesn’t mean you will, but you’re more likely to. 

“It’s been a long time since I had a trophy and since I won, and my wife is caddying for me this week, so that would be extra special to be able to deliver her the customary 10 per cent cut that a caddie would receive, and no more.”

Cink is one of a number of 40-somethings in the field this week defying father time, his wife’s battle with breast cancer that began in 2016 and is ongoing a reason to pause and reconsider his commitment to tournament golf.

“It opened my eyes a little bit and I dug around in some corners that maybe I hadn’t dug around in for a few years,” admitted the 46-year-old.

“It gave me a new sense of intensity and intention when I was out there practising every day and going through all the off the course things I need to do.

“The result was that it showed up in better scores and it gave me sort of this new confidence that I think I can compete and I can carry this all the way past my 50th birthday and who knows what happens after that.”

Impressed not so much by how far they hit the ball but the manner in which young players today assert themselves at the game’s elite level, Cink is adamant that he continues to hit the ball far enough to be able to compete and has the added bonus of experience on his side.

“I don’t see driving distance as being something that I’m wowed by the young players. I’m more wowed by the seasoned nature of their ability to just play great golf when they first come out on Tour and no one knows their name,” said Cink, currently ranked 196 in the world.

“It used to be that there was two or three years of getting your feet wet out on the PGA TOUR before you even were considered to be ready for success and that doesn’t exist anymore. 

“But you don’t have to be that long to be able to competitive, you just have to be adequate and I’m well more than adequate in driving distance.

“I don’t know if it’s equipment or if it’s just being smart about the way my fitness and my swing mechanics or what, but I haven’t really lost any. That’s not an issue for me.

“I feel like I’m playing as well as I’ve played in my whole career. And as I get older now, my perspective and my expectations probably are changing a little bit.

“But I feel like if you break down golf into the categories, you know, the short game and all that, I think that I’m playing better golf now than I’ve played any time in my career.”

As for that error on the most prized trophy in all of golf, Cink has absolutely no intention of having it corrected.

“The one funny thing about the replica that I probably shouldn’t tell you guys but Turnberry’s misspelled on my replica,” revealed Cink, who triumphed in a playoff over Tom Watson at Turnberry in 2009, the replica inscribed with ‘Turnbury’.

“And everyone likes to say, ‘Oh, my gosh, you should have them change it’ but I don’t want them to change it because it’s an oddity.

“It’s the one-off thing and I just like the story.

“There’s no chance I’m going to change.”


The US PGA TOUR’s newly crowned long drive king and the 2018 European Tour’s biggest hitter have been drawn alongside two-time defending champion Cameron Smith in a power-packed group for the opening two rounds of the Australian PGA Championship at RACV Royal Pines Resort.

The US PGA TOUR’s newly crowned long drive king and the 2018 European Tour’s biggest hitter have been drawn alongside two-time defending champion Cameron Smith in a power-packed group for the opening two rounds of the Australian PGA Championship at RACV Royal Pines Resort.

Two-time PGA TOUR winner Cameron Champ and ISPS HANDA PGA Tour of Australasia Order of Merit leader Ryan Fox will partner Smith for the first 36 holes with Fox in the unfamiliar position of playing with someone who regularly hits it further than he does.

In 2018 Fox averaged a touch under 322 yards in driving distance on the European Tour, falling one spot from his mantle this year behind West Australian sensation Min Woo Lee.

At the conclusion of the Tour Championship Champ was feted as the PGA TOUR’s new purveyor of poundage with an average driving distance of 317.9 yards, adding a further 10 yards to that number in the early stages of the 2019/2020 season.

Not since his early days playing on the Australasian Tour alongside Newcastle’s Lincoln Tighe has Fox come up against a player with superior power and admits he will have to fight his own competitive instincts to stop from getting into a long drive competition with the California native.

“I’m looking forward to seeing it first-hand,” Fox said.

“It might be a bit of a novel thing for me to be honest. Hopefully I’ll try not to get caught up in the long drive comp.

“The first time I saw him was on the range at the US PGA Championship this year.

“It was freezing cold, it was windy, it was wet and they had the Toptracer set up on the range. He had me by 10 miles an hour in ball speed; he was almost 190 (m/h) ball speed and that with four layers on.

“Me, my coach and my caddie were standing there just laughing.

“I’m not short and I don’t think I’ve got that in 30 degrees with just a shirt on and feeling really good about myself.”

Where the burly Fox leaves no doubt as to the impression he makes on the back of the golf ball, Champ’s power is generated by a more effortless-looking speed, a power Fox compared to South African legend Ernie Els.

“Ernie was renowned as the ‘Big Easy’ but he hit it as hard as anyone,” said Fox, who will begin his Australian PGA tilt alongside Champ and Smith from the 10th tee at 6am on Thursday morning.

“He just generated the speed at the right time and his rhythm was really good and Cameron looks like he has that.

“It’s obviously quick, it looks quick but I’m sure if you put my swing and his swing side by side I look like I try to hit it harder. I think he’s just one of those really gifted athletes.

“I’ve talked to his coach Sean Foley about it a little bit at a couple of the majors and he’s pretty excited about where Cameron can go.

“Sean’s an excitable guy and a numbers guy but when you see how excited he is about Cameron Champ you know there’s something special there.

“I’m looking forward to seeing it first-hand.”

Winner of the ISPS HANDA World Super 6 Perth tournament in February, Fox’s record at Royal Pines is only average but the 33-year-old has no doubt power is a plus around the Graham Marsh layout.

“There’s a lot of bunkers you can take out of play if you really bang it,” said Fox, who was tied for 52nd last year.

“There’s still enough trouble around here where you can get caught out but it certainly makes some of the par 5s a bit easier.

“I know for most of the field the third hole is almost out of reach and for me it’s touch and go if I hit a really good one. You add 30 or 40 yards on to that which I think Cameron’s got it all of a sudden becomes a fairly reachable par 5. The same with 12. That can be a pretty nasty hole at times and when you’re going in there with a 7-iron instead of a 4-iron the shot should theoretically be a little bit easier.

“I know what it’s like a little bit. Length is good when it’s going where you want it to go, it’s a curse when it’s not.

“Obviously Cam’s been playing some pretty good golf of late having a win a couple of months ago so I’m sure he’s in a good space and I’m sure the golf course will set up well for him.”


He did it three times this year on the US PGA Tour and now former Australian Open champion Stephen Allan has played his way into the field for this week’s Australian PGA Championship at RACV Royal Pines Resort on the Gold Coast.

Allan was one of six players to earn a start at Royal Pines in Monday pre-qualifiers conducted at Lakelands Golf Club and Keperra Golf Club in Brisbane, Allan shooting 64 at Keperra to finish one shot clear of Troy Moses with Maroochy River’s Shae Wools Cobb snaring the third spot with a round of 67.

New Zealand’s Fraser MacLachlan led the way at Lakelands with a superb round of 6-under 66, Andrew Campbell and Sam Eaves also earning a tee time on Thursday after finishing one shot further back.

It’s fitting reward for Eaves, the PGA Professional at Warwick Golf Club, who finished third at the recent PGA Professionals Championship at Hamilton Island, his runner-up finish in that event two years ago earning him a start at the 2017 Australian PGA Championship where he played all four rounds.

A spot in the field at the Australian PGA is nothing new for Allan who rose more than 600 places in the Official World Golf Rankings a fortnight ago due to his tie for 16th at the Emirates Australian Open.

Winner of the Australian Open in 2002, Allan qualified to play the John Deere Classic and BArbasol Championship in consecutive weeks in July and made his third appearance on the PGA TOUR in 2019 when he qualified to play The Military Tribute at The Greenbrier.

After missing the cut at Royal Pines in 2015, Allan returned to the Gold Coast last year where he finished tied for 56th, a third round of 77 preventing him from making an even stronger impression.

With the six qualifying positions determined the field for the Australian PGA Championship is now finalised, headlined by 2013 champion Adam Scott, two-time defending champion Cameron Smith and two-time US PGA TOUR winner Cameron Champ.

Exciting Aussie youngsters Min Woo Lee, Zach Murray and Maverick Antcliff will be eager to claim a tournament co-sanctioned with the European Tour while the likes of former Open Champion Stewart Cink, England’s David Howell, course-record holder Ross McGowan and Spain’s Alejandro Canizares adding to the international flavour.

Pre-Qualifying Results

Keperra Golf Club
Stephen Allan     64
Troy Moses         65
Shae Wools Cobb             67

Lakelands Golf Club
Fraser MacLachlan           66
Andrew Campbell             67
Sam Eaves           67


South Australian Wade Ormsby will endeavor to rid himself of five years of torment when he returns to RACV Royal Pines Resort this week for the Australian PGA Championship.

Two years ago Ormsby arrived on the Gold Coast on an emotional high after recording his maiden European Tour win at the UBS Hong Kong Open yet it is the playoff heartache hanging over him from the 2014 PGA Championship at Royal Pines that remains raw to the touch.

Tied with good friend Adam Scott and Greg Chalmers at the conclusion of 72 holes, Ormsby missed a golden opportunity from inside 10 feet to win on the second playoff hole; one further trip down the 18th hole and he was eliminated altogether.

Chalmers ultimately triumphed on the record seventh playoff hole, a win Ormsby was not present to witness first-hand: “I was halfway to the airport by then.”

Speaking on this week’s PGA Golf Club podcast, Ormsby unwittingly revealed the scar left by that defeat and why raising the Joe Kirkwood Cup on Sunday would mean so much to his family.

“It still grinds on me that six or seven-footer I jacked there a few years ago to miss that one against ‘Scotty’ and Chalmers,” Ormsby said.

“Luckily it was on the old green; that green’s been torn up now.

“Obviously any Australian playing at home you want to get one of those big ones under your belt, either an Aussie Open, PGA or Masters when it was about.

“The PGA of Australia is something that is pretty close to the family’s heart so that would one be pretty special.”

It was in 2014 that Ormsby’s father, Peter Ormsby, was awarded life membership of the PGA of Australia and retired after decades of wonderful service in Adelaide earlier this year.

Now entering his 17th year on the European Tour, 39-year-old Ormsby is now nearing veteran status himself but has an enhanced sense of belief that he can contend against the likes of Scott, Cameron Smith and Cameron Champ this week.

“The truth is I’m closer to the end than the start but I feel as though my best golf is ahead of me,” Ormsby said of his career trajectory.

“You mature out there. You get a lot more comfortable in your life off the golf course and your belief mechanism goes up. You get in the hunt a lot more. I was never in the hunt my first three or four years on tour so I had to do a lot of learning out there on the road.

“I had to learn how to get in the hunt and throw golf tournaments and how to get in the hunt and try and win golf tournaments. I’m kind of doing that towards the end of my career where a lot of guys do that in amateur golf.

“Royal Pines isn’t a bad golf course for me. It’s got pretty complex green areas where you’ve got to be a bit strategic in the way that you approach them.

“The guys that have been there a bit over the past few years are going to have a bit of an advantage. You’ve just got to keep plotting your way around and take your opportunities when they come; it’s just that type of golf course.

“The game feels in a pretty good place so if I can make some putts up there I won’t be too far away.”


Grant Kenny has won the penultimate event of the 2019 Ladbrokes Legends Tour season with a round of 4-under 66 at the Lismore Legends Pro-Am.

An eagle on the par-5 1st hole and birdies on the 6th and 14th resulted in a bogey-free round for the New South Welshman and a one-stroke victory over Richard Backwell.

“It is great to be playing so well at the back end of the year as I was unable to play earlier in the year owing to a head injury,” Kenny said.

“The course was in great condition and all involved should be hugely congratulated on its presentation.”

Queensland’s Richard Backwell continued his impressive season with a round of 3-under 67 for outright second place.

Backwell’s round included birdies on the 1st, 13th, 14th and 16th holes and a lone bogey on the 12th.

After winning Ladbrokes Legends Tour qualifying school in January, Gilkey has featured at the top of numerous leaderboards throughout the year and the Lismore event was no exception.

The American finished tied for third alongside Mike Zilko at 2-under the card.

Brad Burns leads the Ladbrokes Legends Tour Order of Merit race by a small margin over Michael Harwood with one event remaining in 2019.

The $30,000 Australian Legends Tour Championship will determine the OOM winner when the two-day tournament concludes on Friday 13 December at Byron Bay Golf Club.


Gavin Fairfax has smashed the Wodonga Golf Club course record on his way to an 11-under round at the Elders Insurance Wodonga Pro-Am.

The Redland Bay Golf Club PGA Trainee from Queensland carded nine birdies, including five in a row from holes one to five, and an eagle at the par-5 7th to take a four-shot victory.

Fairfax topped a competitive field of 54 professionals in the club’s return to the Ladbrokes Pro-Am Series.

“It was my first time to Wodonga and it’s clear I loved the course,” Fairfax said.

“I got off to a slow start but then the putter ran really hot and I managed to hole everything I looked at. The course was fantastic shape and I’m glad I made the trip down.

“A big thank you to Head Professional Gavin Vearing for organising the event and to Elders Insurance for their sponsorship. I look forward to coming back next year.”

Brady Watt’s round of 7-under 65 earned the West Australian second place in the hot and blustery conditions, ahead of amateur Daniel Gill in third at 5-under the card.

Scott Barr, Zach Murray, Tim Elliott, Andrew Schonewille and Levi Burns tied for fourth place with rounds of 4-under 68.


The crowds who will converge on Royal Melbourne have their target; now Ian Baker-Finch has nominated the man to bring them to life.

US team member Patrick Reed’s rules infraction in the Bahamas last week continues to be the hotbed of discussion pushing the Presidents Cup towards a genuine rivalry, American playing captain Tiger Woods once again forced to come to his charge’s defence on Tuesday morning.

Australian representatives Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman were not afraid to fan the flames of heat coming down on Reed after viewing his actions in a waste bunker at the Hero World Challenge during the Australian Open, International captain Ernie Els adding that “obviously they didn’t like what they saw”.

Speaking on the PGA Golf Club podcast, Baker-Finch reiterated earlier statements that Reed should not expect a good reception when the first matches tee off on Thursday morning but said that it was equally important for fans of the International team to have someone to cheer for.

That man, according to Baker-Finch, is Chinese Presidents Cup rookie Haotong Li.

“We have to get our Internationals really geed up and get everyone around them yelling and barracking for them,” said Baker-Finch, a former assistant captain to both Peter Thomson and three times alongside Gary Player.

“The guy that I’ll be looking for to take a bit of a leadership role is Haotong Li from China. He’s a really aggressive young player and I think he will relish this type of atmosphere. He will try and get the crowd geed up.

“A few of the other guys – guys like CT Pan, Adam Hadwin, Joaquin Niemann, Abraham Ancer – they’ll be quiet and just go about doing their job. They are wonderful players and great to watch but I don’t see them being ‘rah rahs’ and trying to get the crowd behind them.

“I want the people out there to really get behind the International team. You may not know many of them that well but they’re all tremendous blokes and they’ll make a great team.”

At Royal Melbourne in an unofficial capacity this week so that he can immerse himself in the full Presidents Cup experience, Baker-Finch expects a mixed response to the American team from local fans.

The raucous band of Fanatics will undoubtedly have something special in store for Reed but the 1991 British Open champion doesn’t expect it to reach the type of fervour that comes out on both sides of the Atlantic during the Ryder Cup.

“I think he’ll be received – and deservedly so – poorly. That’s our 13th man. The Fanatics will be unrelenting,” Baker-Finch added.

“He will handle that well, because he likes to be the victim and he is a tough character in that way but I don’t think the crowds are going to cut him any slack at all.

“As Marc Leishman said, I thought it was pretty ordinary what he did last week and didn’t own up to it. The Aussie fans will let him know that.

“Because the Australian fans are so great, sport-crazy, aficionados of sport and the game, they will be looking forward to seeing their heroes and the stars that they watch every week on TV.

“I’m sure they’ll be clapping the Internationals just that little bit more but they’ll still be clapping the Americans. There won’t be any great Ryder Cup-style, battlefield feel around Royal Melbourne.”


It is shaped to represent the Seychelles nut that is native to Praslin, and by claiming it Aussie veteran Peter Fowler became an instant internet sensation.

A final round of 3-under 67 saw Fowler register his seventh seniors tour title in Europe at the MCB Tour Championship – Seychelles at Constance Lemuria, the third leg of the Staysure Tour’s conclusion to season 2019.

By virtue of winning Fowler picked up €48,370 in prize money (approx. $78,164) but it was the distinctive trophy for which he gained instant notoriety, prompting world No.49 – and golf’s No.1 Twitterer – Eddie Pepperell to express his thoughts via social media.

“One of the greatest trophies I’ve seen,” Pepperell posted.

“Congrats Peter. Did you have to think extra carefully about where you kissed it before holding it aloft?”

Such banter will likely be lost on Fowler who credited a continuing focus on fitness for a win that comes six months after celebrating his 60th birthday.

“The golf ball doesn’t know how old you are. Since I’ve turned 60, I’ve said that I still need to work hard,” Fowler told European Tour Media.

“If you look at Bernhard Langer and the other senior guys who are doing well around the world they continue to work hard on their fitness. That’s important for us because our fitness is dropping, but I’m trying to keep mine up there.

“I’ve proved over the last 10 years that your fitness is key to success.”

Fowler began the final round four shots adrift of leader James Kingston of South Africa but went bogey-free on the back nine as Kingston and other challengers wilted in the heat.

Winner last year at the Wllow Senior Classic, Fowler began his final round with impetus, birdieing the opening two holes and reaching the turn 2-under par after a birdie at the sixth followed by a dropped shot at seven.

As Kingston dropped three shots in the space of four holes, Fowler carded eight consecutive pars from the eighth to the 15th before a birdie at 16 set the clubhouse lead at 4-under par, a mark that would prove too much for the chasing pack.

“I made lots of birdies this week,” Fowler added. “I was fortunate to only have one bogey on my card today and that paid off.

“I played quite conservatively on the par fives towards the end but managed to get the job done.

“I opened with two birdies and then birdied the sixth and that really settled me down.

“I played quite well and had a lot of birdie chances but didn’t make them until I got to the 16th, but I kept a lot of bogeys off the card and that was important.”

Staysure Tour
MCB Tour Championship – Seychelles

Constance Lemuria, Praslin, Seychelles

1              Peter Fowler      70-69-67—206   €48,370


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