Great champions produce great
rounds of golf and Ken Kearney was no exception to that rule
at Baltray yesterday.
The 33 year-old Roscommon man
tore the heart out of the field with an amateur course record
of 65 in the third round yesterday morning and then, with a quick
lunch under his belt, brushed aside the challenge of West of
Ireland champion Michael McDermott to win the championship by
four strokes.
Overnight leader Pat Murray
of Kinsale saw his chances of victory dashed by an ugly 77 in
the morning. But he rallied well in the final round, shooting
a fine two under par 70 to tie for second place with McDermott
on five under.
Another of the fancied contenders,
Stephen Browne of Hermitage, finished a shot further back on
four under par after rounds of 69 and 68 yesterday, leaving him
to rue opening rounds of 77 and 74.
But the day belonged to Kearney,
whose nine under par aggregate of 283, though not quite in the
same league as his stunning 15 under par winning aggregate of
two years ago was as impressive as it was brilliant.
And even though some of the
leading contenders for the title, such as last year winner Noel
Fox, Michael Hoey, Andrew McCormick or Tim Rice were in action
in the British Amateur in Scotland yesterday, they would have
been hard-pressed to better Kearney's golf over the fast running
and bouncy Baltray links.
The championship was effectively
ended as a contest by Kearney's stunning 65, in which he took
an economic 28 putts.
After holing form 30 feet for
a three at the first, he then added four more birdies in a row
to get to five under for as many holes.
In fact, he never had to hole
anything longer than a 10-footer as he fired further birdies
at the 11th, 12th and 15th to get to nine under for the round.
Needing two pars to equal Eamonn
Darcy's course record 64, set at the Irish PGA championship last
October, Kearney finished bogey-par for a 65 that bettered the
amateur course record of 66 held jointly by the Roscommon man
and Raymie Burns of Banbridge.
"I knew I was getting
myself in a position to win the championship," said Kearney
of his morning round.
"I had played better than
I had scored over the first two rounds and I knew I had a good
score in me so I tried to get under par early on and I just caught
fire."
McDermott could do no better
than a 72 that left him chasing the Roscommon estate agent, four
shots adrift and two matches behind him on the course.
Birdies at the 2nd and 3rd
put Kearney 10 under par and five ahead of his young Dublin rival
before he hit a bad patch from the 6th, dropping three strokes
in a row.
Rough was his downfall at the
6th and 7th before he drove into a fairway bunker at the 8th
and failed to get his par, allowing McDermott to close to within
two strokes.
Then came the key moment. As
McDermott bogeyed the 8th to drop back to four under, Kearney
holed from 15 feet at the 10th and two putted for a birdie four
at the long 11th to go five clear again.
A 10-foot birdie at the 15th
effectively clinched the championship, and although he finished
bogey-birdie for the second round in a row, McDermott's challenge
for the championship had long since evaporated.
Kearney will not be playing
in the Irish Close championship at Rosses Point later this month,
or in the European Team championships in Sweden in July.
"My wife Sinead is expecting
our first child early in July so it would be a bad time to go
away," he explained. "I'd love to come back for the
Home Internationals. But for now I'm just going to enjoy this
win.
"I just plotted my way
around, hitting a lot of two irons and fairway woods. It's a
thinking golfer's course, a great links and I love it."
After yesterday's heroics,
he could hardly say anything else.
Irish Independent East of Ireland
Amateur Open Championship
at Co Louth Golf Club.
Final scores
283 - K Kearney (Roscommon)
72 74 65 72
287 - M McDermott (Stackstown)
74 68 72 73, P Murray (Kinsale) 72 68 77 70
288 - S Browne (Hermitage)
77 74 69 68
290 - A Morrow (Portmarnock)
75 69 74 72
291 - E Power (Kilkenny) 75
73 71 72, D Sugrue (Killarney) 75 72 74 70
292 - G Cullen (Beaverstown)
75 73 72 72
293 - R Cannon (Balbriggan)
73 77 68 75
294 - K Bornemann (Douglas)
79 70 72 73, R Forsythe (Hilton Templepatrick) 77 75 72 70, S
McParland (Greenore) 76 75 70 73, H Hanley (Grange) 75 73 72
74, B McElhinney (North West) 73 71 74 76
295 - M O'Sullivan (U.C.D.)
78 72 76 69, A Morris (Belvoir Park) 75 75 74 71, M Sinclair
(Knock) 75 75 74 71, E McCormack (Slieve Russell) 75 74 72 74
296 - A Pierse (Tipperary)
79 73 74 70, M Campbell (U.C.D.) 77 71 75 73
297 - R Maher (Nenagh) 78 73
71 75, J Kehoe (U.C.D.) 78 72 73 74, C Murphy (Clandeboye) 76
75 74 72, N Goulding (Portmarnock) 74 76 74 73, P Dooley (Cork)
74 74 74 75
298 - S McMonagle (Dunfanaghy)
82 70 76 70, P Martin (Balmoral) 73 68 77 80
299 - G McGimpsey (Bangor)
79 71 74 75
300 - S Paul (Tandragee) 75
75 76 74, V Smyth (Co. Louth) 74 77 75 74
301 - N Lavin (Royal Dublin)
76 69 79 77, R Evans (Moyola Park) 74 75 73 79
302 - B Smyth (Mourne) 82 70
74 76, J Lyons (Birr) 81 70 73 78, R Leonard (Banbridge) 79 72
77 74, P Purdy (Shandon Park) 76 74 78 74, M Owens (Mallow) 73
78 76 75, D Branigan (Seapoint) 72 76 76 78
303 - G Bohill (Co. Louth)
78 74 71 80, N Gorey (Killeen) 77 74 78 74, D Carroll (Grange)
76 72 77 78, C Donovan (Killeen) 75 74 76 78
304 - M McGeady (City of Derry)
78 73 75 78, P Rogers (Dundalk) 76 76 77 75, J Timony (Headfort)
76 74 74 80, C Finn (Douglas) 75 74 81 74
305 - P McDonald (Woodbrook)
76 75 82 72, R de Lacy Staunton (Hong Kong) 75 75 78 77
308 - F Whelan (Laytown &
Bettystown) 76 75 83 74
313 - M Flanagan (Co. Longford)
75 75 85 78
NR
D Baker (Downpatrick) 78 NR,
A Booth (Bundoran) NR, K Sheehy (Athlone) 91 NR
RT
C Glasgow (Clandeboye) RT,
D Dooley (Roscrea) 82 RT, D Baker (Downpatrick) 78 RT
WD
F O'Donoghue (Belvoir Park)
77 WD
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©
Brian Keogh 2000
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