Shane Lowry and caddie mix up signs, but still make big jump in Abu Dhabi

His caddie, Bo Martin, had Lowry aiming at a completely different sign.

Call it a case of Shane Lowry and his caddie mixing up their signs.

On the final hole of Saturday’s third round at the DP World Tour’s 2022 Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship, Lowry lined up his drive with an HSBC sign and piped what he envisioned to be a perfect shot. Unfortunately, his caddie, Bo Martin, had Lowry aiming at a completely different sign.

The mishap put the winner of the 2019 British Open in a difficult spot.

“Myself and Bo, we were aiming at the HSBC sign but his one was 30 yards right of the one I was looking at,” Lowry said after the round. “New course, I thought I hit a perfect shot. I couldn’t believe it came down where it did. It was a bad mistake to make because we shouldn’t be doing it in that situation.”

Shane Lowry of Ireland talks with his caddie Brian ‘Bo’ Martin during the Third Round of the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship at Yas Links Golf Course on January 22, 2022, in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)

Lowry used an impressive two-putt to salvage par, however, and after finishing the day with a 67 he sits just a single shot off the lead heading into Sunday’s final round at Yas Links. Scott Jamieson holds the lead at 11 under while Lowry and Thomas Pieters are a stroke back. Viktor Hovland is in the hunt despite a 74 on Friday; his 70 in the third round has him at 8 under for the tournament, and in a tie for third place with Shubhankar Sharma.

Due to his save on 18, Lowry feels good about his chances heading into the final round.

“I was very fortunate,” Lowry said. “It could have been a different story. I might not be standing here, I might be sitting in the locker room sulking right now.

“But I’m happy with the way I’ve played overall. I’m really happy with how the week’s gone and I’m looking forward to tomorrow.”

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Watch: Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, and Tyrrell Hatton attempting to hit one-yard fairway is as good as it gets

The DP World Tour has always brought the heat in social content.

There’s one thing the DP World Tour (formally known as the European Tour) has always done better than the PGA Tour — social media content. Sure, the PGA Tour has stepped up its game recently with the year-end reviews video and the Shorties Classic, but the Tour’s European counterparts have owned the space for years.

That trend continued Friday.

The DP World Tour sent Rory McIlroy, Collin Morikawa, and Tyrrell Hatton to a race track to see if they could hit a one-yard wide fairway in regulation.

The result was hilarious.

Hatton, known for his one-liners on the course, encouraged his teammates to throw their drivers at one point.

“Throw it. It doesn’t make you a bad person.”

Watch the full video below.

Watch: Blustering wind dominates field in Abu Dhabi before play suspended due to darkness

Intense wind made an even-par effort an incredible feat.

It’s not often that the weather absolutely dominates the field during a round of golf. Friday in Abu Dhabi was one of those days.

This week the DP World Tour is at Yas Links for the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship. Scott Jamieson fired a first-round 9-under 63 and began the second 18 with a  one-shot lead over Viktor Hovland. Like many in the field, Jamieson went the wrong way Friday, signing for a 2-over 74. All in all, the second round effort was impressive and good enough to stay ahead of the pack — for now.

“It certainly wasn’t easy,” he said. “It’s so tricky, obviously hitting shots is tricky with all the gusts but the hardest thing is putting. You get over the ball and you feel like you’ve got to be so tense to stop everything moving but that’s the worst thing you can do when you’re trying to putt. I holed a lot of really good putts from inside five feet today which kept my score respectable.”

You may be asking: “Was it really that bad?” Take a look for yourself.

Hovland, like Jamieson, carded a 2-over 74 — 10 shots worse than his opening round effort. The Norwegian finished before darkness forced a suspension and will be in prime position heading into the weekend.

James Morrison, after starting the week with a 6-under 66, was through 14 holes when the horns blew. He currently stands at even par for his second round with a chance to earn the 36-hole lead with a solid finish Saturday morning.

Notable names in the field and where they stand:

Ian Poulter (T-2)
Shane Lowry (T-5)
Adam Scott (T-16)
Tyrrell Hatton (T-23)
Tommy Fleetwood (T-30)
Collin Morikawa (T-60)
Rory McIlroy (T-60)

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After two months off, DP World Tour back in action in Abu Dhabi

United Arab Emirates hosts the first of four consecutive events.

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The DP World Tour (formerly known as the European Tour) saw its 2021-22 season get off to rocky start.

The season-opening Joburg Open in November was rocked by the omnicron COVID outbreak and shortened to 36 holes. Then the next two events were canceled.

This week, the tour is back on track at the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship at Yas Links in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. It’s the first of four straight events in the UAE and has drawn the likes of Rory McIlroy, Viktor Hovland, Ian Poulter, Tyrrell Hatton and Shane Lowry.

After the first round, though, it’s Scott Jamieson in the lead. His 9-under 63 set the pace after 18 holes.

“It’s eight weeks off from tournament golf out here so you’re always a little bit on edge probably to start off the day but birdie at the first kind of settled any edge there was and it was just really solid all day,” he said. “This is the first off-season I haven’t actually peeled the skin back and tried to figure out how to get better.”

Hovland shot a 64 and is a one back. Thomas Pieters is solo third after firing a 65. Defending champion Tyrrell Hatton, James Morrison, Ian Poulter, Takumi Kanaya and Victor Perez are all tied for fourth at 6 under. Rory McIlroy had four birdies but also four bogeys and shot even-par 72, good for a tie for 77th.

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Accountant, car salesman, Lexi Thompson’s fill-in caddie and DP World looper — this Carnoustie native has a fascinating story.

“I have the car sales and the financial advising to fall back on if it goes pear-shaped. It can be a ruthless business.”

The life of a tour caddie is never dull. Paul Drummond will vouch for that.

His first event as an official bagman on the DP World circuit — formerly known as the European Tour — ended up with him spending 10 days in a quarantine hotel and forking out an additional $4,000 in expenses.

Instead of enjoying three events in South Africa with new boss Norwegian golfer Espen Kofstad, Drummond got 36 holes in at the ill-fated Joburg Open before the whole Omicron palaver kicked off and led to a frenzied scramble for flights that was as chaotic as the Keystone Cops trying to co-ordinate air traffic control.

“There were caddies who have been out on tour for 35 years and they said to me, ‘if you can handle this week, then you can handle anything,’ ” reflected the 31-year-old of a tumultuous introduction to the tour. “Some of them said it was the worst week they’d ever experienced. It’s not put me off, though.”

Drummond, a qualified accountant who is also a car salesman in the family business, was thrust into the limelight earlier this season when he was employed by American golden girl Lexi Thompson for the week of the AIG Women’s Open in his own backyard of Carnoustie.

He had caddied numerous times before over his hometown links but guiding someone with the global profile of Thompson through its abundant rigors was a whole new ball game. It whetted his appetite for more, though.

“I’d always wanted to do full-time caddying but it’s quite hard to get into,” he said. “A mate of mine, Matthew Southgate, who is a tour player, told Espen about me and that’s how it started.

“It was a good time for me to give it a go. I have the car sales and the financial advising to fall back on if it goes pear-shaped. It can be a ruthless business. If the player is not getting the results, then the first thing to change is the caddie or the coach. With caddying you never know when the next paycheck is coming but I want to go out and do well. I want to climb the ladder and I’d like to caddie for someone in the top 50 and do the majors. I’ve got a foot in the door so that’s a start.”

Telling a professional golfer that ‘you’ve got 212 yards to the front edge with the wind coming in from the left’ may be slightly different from championing the fuel efficiency of a tidy little hatchback in the forecourt but confidently talking the talk is standing Drummond in good stead.

“The main attribute of a caddie is how you deliver the message, the yardage or whatever,” he said. “I’ve had people caddie for me in the past and if they are a bit wishy-washy then it doesn’t give you much positivity when you’re standing over the shot. You need to deliver the message with authority.”

In the wide and varied world of this very individual game, the approach of the men’s world No. 318 Kofstad is in stark contrast to the methods employed by women’s world No. 12 Thompson.

“I did everything for Lexi,” said Drummond. “Yardages, lines, everything because she doesn’t carry a book. So if she hit it off the back of the green then, unfortunately, it might’ve have been me who was responsible. Espen is totally different. All I do with him is verify the number he gets from his own yardage book. He likes to take complete ownership of his game.”

While further work with Thompson in the U.S. was a possibility — “we got on great but the time of the year was wrong and I would’ve had terrible problems getting a Visa” — Drummond is relishing the prospect of getting out on the European circuit with Kofstad in the new year.

“It’s a shame those first three events got wiped out but I think Espen can do well and I’m hoping we can get in the mix and get the juices flowing,” he said.

As for the here, there and everywhere traveling that the DP World Tour demands? Well, Drummond won’t mind that. He’ll just have to get used to caddie class, though.

“I used to work as a financial controller with St Andrews University and regularly traveled to Hong Kong, Canada and the U.S. on business class,” he said. “As a caddie, I have to turn right on the plane now,” he added with a wry chuckle.

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More issues at a pro golf tournament in South Africa — this time it’s another torrential downpour

More rain is in the forecast for Sunday, bringing into question if more golf will be played.

It’s been another difficult week for a professional tournament abroad — this time at the South African Open, held at the Gary Player Country Club in Sun City.

Last week, the DP World Tour — formally known as the European Tour — was scheduled to kick off its 2021-22 season at the Joburg Open, but experts from the World Health Organization met to assess a COVID-19 variant in South Africa that has been rapidly spreading among young people and had already spawned numerous mutations, according to a story by USA TODAY.

The variant has been dubbed “omicron” and classified a “variant of concern,” the most worrying type by the WHO and one of the first indicators that it is worth considering as an increased threat. The tournament was nearly canceled and then a rough week of weather finally halted it at the midpoint, as Thriston Lawrence was given the trophy after just 36 holes.

This week, an impressive field stuck to commitments and arrived at the SA Open Championship, including PGA Tour players Garrick Higgo, Dylan Frittelli, and Christiaan Bezuidenhout.

Before play began a number of players were forced from the field as Dylan Mostert, Teaghan Gauche, Siyanda Mwandla, and Darren Fichardt all tested positive for COVID.

Then on Saturday, during the third round of play, a dramatic thunderstorm rolled through the area, bringing some intense, wet weather.

Due to the weather, organizers couldn’t fit in the end of the third round, and although the plan is to get players out early Sunday before cranking up the final round, another rainy day is expected for the region.

Justin Harding, who has a pair of victories on the European Tour, is currently in the lead at 11 under while Daniel van Tonder and Oliver Bekker trail by a single stroke.

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Adam Scott, UNIQLO to host AJGA tournament in Los Angeles in 2022

The UNIQLO Adam Scott Junior Golf Championship is bound for L.A. in February.

A handful of the world’s best junior golfers will be bound for Los Angeles in 2022 for a new tournament hosted by a PGA Tour star.

On Tuesday it was announced that apparel retailer UNIQLO and the American Junior Golf Association would hold the UNIQLO Adam Scott Junior Golf Championship at River Ridge Golf Club in Los Angeles, Feb. 18-21, 2022.

The AJGA, Japan Golf Association and Golf Australia will team up and select 78 players, ages 12-18, to compete. Scott, a 14-time winner on the PGA Tour and the 2013 Masters champion, will host a discussion and run a clinic with participants.

“It is a great honor to host such a wonderful tournament with UNIQLO, which we have been working with for many years. When I was a junior player, I learned not only the fun of playing golf, but also about other important things in life, such as honesty and respect,” said Scott via a press release. “Together with UNIQLO, we have created a tournament we hope will be a valuable learning opportunity for young people.”

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‘A true trailblazer and gentleman:’ Golf world reacts to the passing of Masters legend Lee Elder

One word constantly came up when describing Elder.

The game of golf has lost a legendary ambassador.

On Monday it was announced that Lee Elder, who became the first Black man to compete in the Masters Tournament in 1975 at Augusta National Golf Club, has died. He was 87 years old.

At the 2021 Masters, Elder joined Jack Nicklaus and Gary Player as an honorary starter on the first tee, but was unable to swing due to his health. As the news broke, the golf world reacted on social media to honor the pioneer for diversity in the game.

Here’s a sampling of how the golf world reacted to the passing of the trailblazing Lee Elder.

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PGA Tour

Jack Nicklaus

U.S. Ryder Cup team

LPGA

Harold Varner III

USGA

Sports Illustrated

DP World Tour

Masters

PGA of America

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DP World Tour debut tournament shortened to 36 holes, Thriston Lawrence captures first win

COVID-19 shortened it first, then heavy rain left the course unplayable.

The DP World Tour, formally known as the European Tour, along with the Sunshine Tour and city of Johannesburg decided on Friday to shorten the Joburg Open to 54-holes in an effort “to help non-South African resident players, caddies, and tournament support staff return to their home countries.”

This move was forced by a new COVID-19 variant spreading through South Africa dubbed “omicron.”

The debut tournament for the DP World Tour suffered weather delays on Thursday and Friday, and the inclement storms continued on Saturday. Due to lightning storms and heavy rain, large parts of Randpark GC were left unplayable.

So after just 36 holes, a champion was crowned.

Thriston Lawrence, who has only played in 21 events on the Euro Tour since 2014, fired back-to-back 65s to win by four shots over Zander Lombard. The 25-year-old South African arrived this week with an affiliate membership to the DP World Tour, but because of his win, now has exemption until 2023.

Thriston Lawrence of South Africa celebrates with the trophy following a 36-hole victory of the JOBURG Open at Randpark Golf Club on November 27, 2021, in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)

The next two stops on the original DP World Tour schedule were both slatted to take place in South Africa. Those events, due to the COVID-19 variant, have already been removed from the Tour’s website.

As it stands now, the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championship is the next up, scheduled for January 20-23.

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Discovery of COVID variant in South Africa rocks DP World Tour

The season-opening event will go on, but the next two events were removed from official schedule.

The tour formally known as the European Tour was scheduled to kick off its 2021-22 season with three consecutive events in South Africa. The first round of the DP World Tour’s first event at the Joburg Open was hampered by inclement weather and eventually postponed by lightning.

Friday brought worse news.

Experts with the World Health Organization are meeting to assess a COVID-19 variant in South Africa that has been rapidly spreading among young people and has already spawned numerous mutations, according to a story by USA TODAY.

Several nations, including Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, and Japan, have responded to news of the variant by moving Friday to restrict air travel from several southern African countries. The European Union, which is made up of 27 nations, is also recommending a ban on flights from southern African countries, despite WHO officials warning against rash decisions.

The Washington Post reports that global financial markets are already reacting, with the Dow Jones industrial average sinking more than 800 points after news of the discovery of a coronavirus variant in South Africa.

The DP World Tour released a statement indicating South Africa has been placed on the travel red list but still plans to forge ahead and complete the Joburg Open as planned on Sunday.

The two events after that have already been dropped from the DP World Tour’s official website. The South African Open Championship, Dec. 2-5, which was co-sanctioned with the Sunshine Tour, will now just be a Sunshine Tour event. The Alfred Dunhill Championship, which was scheduled for Dec. 9-13, has been canceled altogether, due to, according to the DP World Tour, the adverse effect the travel restrictions will have on the field.

Also in the USA TODAY report: scientists have little information about the variant and its potential for danger right now, said Dr. Maria Van Kerkhove, the World Health Organization’s COVID-19 technical lead, on Thursday.

“What we do know is that this variant has a large number of mutations, and the concern is that when you have so many mutations it can have an impact on how the virus behaves,” said Van Kerkhove.

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