DAVID CAMERON
shook off his runner-up tag in style this week when he won the Kingarth
club’s championship for the first time in four final appearances. After
a disastrous start, it took all of his fighting spirit to rescue the
tie against current Port Bannatyne title-holder Donald Standaloft who
had romped to a four-up lead by the sixth hole. Even that early five-handicapper
Cameron was staring defeat in the face after losing the first, fourth,
fifth and sixth holes. To his great credit, he pulled himself together
and hit back strongly. Birdies at the seventh and ninth reduced the
leeway to two down at the turn against his three-handicap opponent who
had potentially scored three-under-par 31. Then, as the golfing gods
switched allegiance, it was Standaloft’s turn to struggle with a wayward
tee shot at the tenth and an over-hit wedge into the wind at the eleventh.
Two pars enabled Cameron to get back on level terms. A beautifully weighted
putt for birdie two at the twelfth put him in the lead for the first
time and when he won the fourteenth in par a stunning comeback was almost
complete. In a grandstand finish Standaloft hit a glorious drive to
within 12 feet at the par-four seventeenth but just failed with his
eagle attempt to keep the game alive. Cameron matched his opponent’s
birdie to take his first title with a 2 and 1 victory having covered
the last 11 holes of the final in four under par. Standaloft, who won
the title in 2006, had earned his final place with a 7 and 6 win over
Richie More in the semis, while Cameron went through after defending
champion Gordon Pettigrew withdrew with an ankle injury. There was also
a fighting comeback in the final of the “wee championship” for the Cuthbertson
Cup when John Girvan (24) recovered from a two-hole deficit for a last
green victory over Ian McDougall (18). Girvan took a crucial lead when
he won the seventeenth in net three and followed up with a superb approach
at the eighteenth to secure his first-ever trophy win. All finalists
produced excellent golf on a course that has recovered remarkably from
the problems of the winter thanks to the hard work of green keepers
Jim Speirs and Joe McCabe.
WALTER McLEAN
and Jim Muldoon were last-game heroes as Port Bannatyne retained the
Burnside Cup last Saturday in a rare away win at Kingarth. With the
score locked at 2-2 the pair sealed victory in the annual social match
with a two-up success over Phil Matts and Jim Wylie. Other victors for
the Port in a close tussle, with four of the five games going to the
eighteenth, were Iain MacLeod and John Preston who beat David Bryden
and John Bunyan 1 up, and Jackie Paterson and Alex Greer with a win
by the same margin over Bobby Speirs and James McAlister. Ian McDougall
and George Cuthbertson secured Bute’s first point with a 2 and 1 win
over Jimmy Dunn and John Marshall while John Girvan and Leonard Ferguson’s
2 up victory over Andy Williamson and Andy Cormack gave the home club
their other success.
KINGARTH
golfers are back in competitive action tomorrow (Saturday) in the June
medal with the usual ballot at the clubhouse at 8.30am.
COMPETITION
postponements, caused mainly by the condition of the course following
the havoc of the winter, have led to alterations to the club’s fixture
list. The first round of the Sir Harry Hope Cup will now take place
on Saturday, July 12, the McDougall Trophy stableford competition moves
to Saturday, July 26, Captain’s Day to Saturday, August 16, and the
James Lamont Quaich medal round to Saturday, August 23.