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Hanson, Ja! Molinari and Jimenez, Si! for the Ryder Cup
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 23:30
An hour after winning the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles, Edoardo Molinari was again jumping for joy after learning it had earned him a Ryder Cup wild card.
Molinari was selected as a wild card by European Captain Colin Montgomerie along with Luke Donald and Padraig Harrington to complete the 12 man team.
Swede Peter Hanson and Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain were able to start celebrating earlier without waiting for Captain Colin Montgomerie's decision an hour later.
They did what they had to do to clinch the final two automatic spots for The Celtic Manor Resort on October 1-3, while Simon Dyson, who began the week hoping that a win would get him into the side, finished sixth.
Hanson, who won last week's Czech Open to leap from 15th on the points table, required top 43 and was 19th, shooting a 72 and said: "It feels great. I was very tired coming here and I've been battling trying not to think about making the team. I think I'm going to celebrate tonight - and tomorrow as well."
Peter will be celebrating his success here in Sweden the next few weeks before he begins training hard for the greatest adventure in his golfing life so far. The Ryder Cup will be played at Celtic Manor in Wales October 1 to 3, 2010.
"I will be competing in the Vivendi Cup in Paris September 23 to 25. It is a smaller event, but I'm going there to recover the tournament feeling. It will be tremendous fun to play in the Ryder Cup, especially after I worked so hard in recent months to earn a place on the team. Right now, I feel great joy and, above all, a huge relief that everything is final," said Hanson.
The 29 year old Italian, whose brother Francesco was already in the team, was two behind Australian Brett Rumford with three holes of the final counting event to play.
He two-putted the long 16th, sank a curling 30-footer at the 194-yard 17th and then hit a chip to within 18 inches of the final hole to add the title to the Barclays Scottish Open he won at Loch Lomond last month.
European Ryder Cup captain Colin Montgomerie called it one of the best performances he had seen under pressure in all his 24 years on the European team - and was delighted to announce the first brothers in the match since Bernard and Geoff Hunt in 1963.
Being chosen ahead of the World Number nine ranked Paul Casey and double U.S. Tour winner Justin Rose clearly meant the world to Molinari, who last season won the Challenge Tour.
"I would have been happy a year ago to have enough money to keep my card by this time," he said.
"Colin told me he was proud of what I had done and I said 'Thank you very much and I can't wait to get to Wales.' It was quite an emotional moment for me because this means I will be playing with my brother and that is something that is almost unreal. Hopefully we can make as many points as we can for the team. I think I had to win to get onto the team because I was up against so many strong players," said Molinari.
In relateing his conversation with the Captain, Edoardo said, "I could tell from the way he said it that if I had finished second then it wouldn't have been good enough. For two brothers to be playing in the Ryder Cup - at that level of sport - is an amazing achievement. I said we wouldn't lose a point, so maybe four halves would do it!"
He and Francesco were Omega Mission Hills World Cup winners last November and, incredibly, they played the final round together both at Loch Lomond and again at the Johnnie Walker on Sunday.
Molinari's latest triumph left him an agonizing one point short of gaining an automatic selection off the world points list, but that did not matter when he was called to see the Captain after his win.
Donald and Harrington was similarly delighted to hear the news as they completed their final rounds of the Barclays Championship where they were competing in America.
"I'm thrilled today to hear I'm a part of the European Ryder Cup Team,” said Donald. “It's been an important goal of mine since I missed out last time because of my surgery. I've worked very hard to be here, and I'm thankful to Colin and his team for believing in me too. It's a very exciting year for our team as we work to bring the Ryder Cup back to Europe and I'm excited that I'm going to be able to play a role in it."
Padraig Harrington, who heard the news of his selection on the sixth hole of his final round when his wife, Caroline, gave him the thumbs up, said: “I am delighted to have been selected as one of Colin's wildcard picks for this year's Ryder Cup matches and hope to reward his faith in me with some strong performances for the European Team. I can’t wait to be part of the team at Celtic Manor and hope that the experience I have gathered in my previous appearances will be of benefit to the team. I'm sure with the help of the amazing atmosphere the crowds will create, it will be a fantastic contest."
Jiménez needed a top nine finish to make sure and was joint third. The Spaniard, who made a late decision to play because he was in danger of being knocked out, could have gone to his nephew's wedding as it turned out.
But the 46 year old, who will win his fourth cap, stated after a level par 72 that included missing a tap-in bogey putt on the 17th: "It means a lot. It's very important to me and I'm glad to be part of the team again."
Hanson made it five rookies in the side along with Rory McIlroy, Martin Kaymer, Ross Fisher and Francesco Molinari - and Edoardo Molinari then made it six.
The last time Europe had more was in 1999. Sergio Garcia was one of seven in that defeat and this is the first time he has failed to make the side since.
But he will be there, as Montgomerie also announced that the 30 year old becomes his fourth assistant captain alongside Paul McGinley, Thomas Bjorn and Darren Clarke.
Hanson Wins Czech Open - Earns Spot on Ryder Cup
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 23:30
Tough Decisions for Montie This Week
Colin Montgomerie will have to pick three from Paul Casey, Padraig Harrington, Luke Donald and Justin Rose when he names his Ryder Cup wild cards on Sunday. That much became certain when Peter Hanson won the Czech Open yesterday.
Hanson is all but assured of his debut. The 32-year-old, who held a four-stroke lead going into the final round, seemed to be crumbling under the pressure when he suffered three successive bogeys from the second and then double-bogeyed the 12th. But a birdie on the 16th drew him level with Dubliner Peter Lawrie and the unheralded Englishman Gary Boyd and despite a 74 he scraped into the three-man shootout.
On the second sudden death hole, an 18-foot birdie putt gave him his second title of the season — and a dream date on October 1. Hanson only secured a sponsors' invite on Monday and was clearly overjoyed.
The Swede's play-off victory in Celadna leapfrogged him above Paul Casey into the top nine who will automatically go forward into the biennial match against America at Celtic Manor in five weeks' time. Casey will now throw himself at Monty's mercy; just like Europe's other three golfing heavyweights.
A brilliant driver with a solid short game, Hanson will not let down Montgomerie. In any normal circumstance he would be delighted to have him on his team. But this is far from a normal situation — and is anything but comfortable for the Europe captain.
There is one qualifying event remaining, but the big-named quartet have all decided to tee it up in the Barclays in New Jersey this week rather than the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles. Only Rose would have had no chance of playing his way in by right if he had made the trip over.
The upshot from it is that at least one supposed certainty is going to be left disappointed by Montgomerie's announcement.
Swedish Golf Federation Re-Shuffles the Deck
Wednesday, 08 September 2010 23:30
There will be a new look to the Swedish Golf Federation as changes are being made in the organization.Right on the heels of the announcement of a drop in membership and, worse, a drop in the number of tee times booked, the Swedish Golf Federation announces a change in the responsibilities of its management.
Jan Ekblom will have responsibility for overseeing investment in business analysis. General Secretary Gunnar Hakansson takes over operational responsibility in the area of Business & Events and Bo Bengtsson has been named Deputy Secretary-General.
"We are now strengthened on analysis that will produce material making it easier for the Federation and the golf clubs to make more informed and better decisions in tough economic times. This is a priority that is fully in line with our stated mission to spend more on communications to better illustrate the benefits of our sport," says the Swedish Golf Federation General Secretary Gunnar Hakansson.
Jan Ekblom will work with business analysis. He begins his new duties immediately and will leave his present position as Head of Business & Events.
Per Svensson and the golf tourism project will be moved from the GIT to Business & Events. Per also will be working to develop new business ventures.
"We will focus more on our business now as the economy brightens, in particular, by strengthening Per Svensson's role to be responsible for new projects, besides tourism issues. I will take the role of operations executive," said Hakansson.
There will be a strengthening the department of Club & Construction. Anna Bauer will be Project Manager and Operations Coordinator. She moves from the position of Project Manager for the Golf School.
Internal IT, Internal Service and GIT will merge into one department with Bo Bengtsson as Director and Eva Bergstrom as Coordination Manager. This merger will provide better service to clubs, golfers and Federation partners. As noted, Bo Bengtsson is simultaneously appointed as the Deputy Secretary General of the Federation.
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