Young gun Graeme McDowell survived
three holes from hell to make his first cut as a pro.
But there were tears for pal
Michael Hoey as he slumped to a two over par 73 to miss out by
six.
The young guns had captured
the imagination of the Irish golfing public but only McDowell
was able to rise to the occasion this time.
And now that the pressure is
off, Rathmore kid McDowell is set to make a run at the leaders
today.
But he had to sweat in the
end to make the cut right on the one under par limit.
One under par with three to
play he finished like a veteran with three solid pars for his
71.
"I had a fair idea about
the cut. I had a feeling that level par might not be enough and
that if I dropped a shot coming in I wouldn't make the cut.
"I hit an okay seven iron
into seven and made two putts and then had to hole a five foot
return for par at the eighth. At nine I just didn't want to go
right so I hit it way left and wedged to the bottom tier and
two putted. But it wasn't a nice feeling.
"I wasn't nervous. But
it wasn't a fun position to be in and I was happy enough to be
in for the weekend. I'm playing the easy nine holes badly. I'm
making bad mistakes and making bogeys from the middle of the
fairway and you can't be doing that out here.
"I made a few changes on the range and then on the 18th
I didn't want to go anywhere near the green but my two iron lay
up hit the back of the bunker that's short of the green and shot
off into the water.
"Then I made a double
bogey from the middle of the fairway in the second, missed the
green and then had three whacks. At that pint of the round I
felt really down because I had worked hard to get where I was
and then threw it al away.
"Birdied the fifth from
three feet but gave it back at the sixth when I leaked the tee
shot into the bunker and then couldn't get it up and down."
Hoey needed something special
to make the cut but put himself under pressure with a bogey
at the second.
"I need to improve a lot,"
he said disconsolately. "I trying to change the way I hit
the ball and I'm not making the cuts. I'm a little disappointed
but there's always next week.
But there was joy for old guard
Philip Walton and Eamonn Darcy.
The Darce came home in four
under par 31 for a superb 68 to finish just four behind the leader
on five under.
"It was hard out there
today and I struggled on the back nine but I had no pressure
today as this is my second last tournament and I got a few birdies
coming home."
Walton shot a two under par
69 to make the cut with a shot to spare on two under.
"I'm hitting it great
off the tee and I'm going to give it an lash tomorrow. Just need
a few more putts to fall and I'll be fine."
There was double disappointment
for amateurs Colm Moriarty and Noel Fox.
Moriarty shot a two under par
69 to finish on level par but missed an eight foot birdie putt
at the 18th to miss out by one as Fox had 75 for a six over par
total.
Top
© Brian Keogh 2002
Back
|