logo
Calum Hill looks to shine on home soil at Nexo Championship

Calum Hill looks to shine on home soil at Nexo Championship

The Nationala day ago
In fact, forget the peaks. It tends to be an endless series of troughs.
As for DP World Tour champion Calum Hill? Well, ups and downs are all just part of the day job.
A month or so ago at the Renaissance, Hill was right in the thick of it after a first round 65 in the Genesis Scottish Open. The next day, he was nursing the wounds of a 77 that led to him missing the cut.
What were we saying about peaks and troughs, again?
'The Scottish Open was very odd,' said Hill, who is back in action on home turf at this week's Nexo Championship at Trump International Golf Links.
'On the second day I putted just as well as day one and every putt caught on the edge. Every shot took a bounce and ended up on a downslope. It was just one of those days where it just gets away from you.
'It's funny. I could go on peaks and troughs with golf but when it's been a trough I'd be thinking my game is nowhere close.
'But it's never felt far away this time. There are better things in there, I just need it all to click.'
Hill certainly got it to click in South Africa earlier this season when he won his second DP World Tour title at the Joburg Open.
Since that triumph, it's been a bit of a mixed bag. In his last 12 events, he's enjoyed a share of third at the Italian Open, but he's also endured six missed cuts, including three in a row heading into this week's stop-off near Aberdeen.
The links test here will be as hard as a clump of Rubislaw granite and an early reconnaissance mission a few weeks ago was quite an eye-opener.
'I think I started triple-bogey and double-bogey,' he said with a wry smile. 'I didn't know where I was the first few holes. But it was still good fun.
'The difficult thing is it's not like some links course where you get a bit of leeway. Here it's fairways or bushes and it's quite penal.
"You'll have a lot of reloading. It's very strong off the tee and the greens are slightly upturned so you have a lot of runoffs. So, if you get it wrong it could be like ping pong.'
In the here, there and everywhere birl of touring life, golfers have to quickly adapt to all manner of conditions, challenges and curiosities.
The DLF Golf & Country Club in New Delhi, for instance, is widely viewed as the hardest course on the circuit. So, where does Trump's track sit?
'It's not quite as extreme as India,' said Hill. 'It (DLF) is the most extreme in that you hit either the fairway or you're in the munch. This is not far off India, mind you.
"In India, you don't get the 30mph winds like you do here. You can ask me the question again on Sunday.'
While Hill looks to get himself back in the swing, his fellow Scot, Danny Young, has made the trip north in a buoyant mood following his maiden win on the HotelPlanner – formerly Challenge – Tour last weekend.
Young, who also qualified for The Open during a decent summer, bolstered his push for promotion to the main DP World Tour with a timely success in the Scottish Challenge at the Roxburghe near Kelso.
'Absolutely,' he replied when asked if he can contend again on this step-up to the cut-and-thrust of competition on the main tour.
'My game is good. I'm familiar with the course and the way the forecast is supposed to be. I think it should favour the home-grown players a bit, having played a bit more in heavier winds off the sea.
'Little things like having the patience to play links golf can add up a bit in your favour. So, I don't see any reason why I can't compete at this level.'
Prior to his breakthrough win, Young had finished second and third on the HotelPlanner Tour before making a major debut in The Open at Portrush.
This week's examination will provide a very different test to the parkland layout of the Roxburghe and Young is very much up for the challenge.
'You are going to make mistakes, you are going to make bogeys,' added he 32-year-old from Perth. 'Last week was pretty score-able and the weather was beautiful, so you could go and make a lot of birdies.
"This week it will be more a case of trying to take the opportunities when they present themselves.'
Opportunity knocks again for the upwardly mobile Young.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scot overcomes 'brutal' test to make most of unexpected Nexo Championship chance
Scot overcomes 'brutal' test to make most of unexpected Nexo Championship chance

Scotsman

time4 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Scot overcomes 'brutal' test to make most of unexpected Nexo Championship chance

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Ryan Lumsden is determined to be part of what is shaping up to be a best Scottish performance on the HotelPlanner Tour since Bob MacIntyre was among four graduates at the end of the 2018 season. After recent wins, David Law and Daniel Young have effectively secured their step up from the second-tier circuit to the DP World Tour next season, with Euan Walker also in a card-winning position in the battle to be in the top 20 on the Road to Mallorca Rankings. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Sitting 31st, Lumsden is also in with a shout of securing a seat at the top table next season but, instead of teeing up in the Irish Challenge at Killeen Castle this week, he's in action in the DP World Tour's Nexo Championship at Trump International Golf Links near Aberdeen. Ryan Lumsden, pictured playing in last week's Farmfoods Scottish Challenge supported by The R&A, is off to a promising start in the Nexo Championship at Trump International Golf Links |'I wasn't expecting it all, to be honest,' admitted the London-born player who proudly flies the Saltire through Edinburgh grandparents. 'I'd really committed to getting off the HotelPlanner Tour this year and I have been doing okay on it. A couple of good weeks and I'll have a chance to get my DP World Tour card. 'So I wasn't even thinking about playing here. I'd booked everything for Ireland then last Tuesday I was driving down to play in the Scottish Challenge when I got the text inviting me to play here. 'I had a quick chat with my coaches as I really wanted to play, but I had to decide if it was the correct decision to change plans at the last minute. I've played well in Ireland the last few years. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'But, at the end of the day, you only get so many chances to play in your home event on a golf course this good on the DP World Tour. So it was something I couldn't really pass up on and everyone was telling me 'go for it, go have fun and see what you can do'.' He fared pretty well in the opening round, signing for a one-under-par 71, which included a burst of three straight birdies on his back nine, to sit alongside in-form Young and Grant Forrest as well. 'For sure,' he replied to being asked if he felt pleased to break par. 'I mean, it's brutal out there. The thing with this course is that it feels like every single hole can get you. And then you chuck in 20mph winds gusting to 30mph today, so tricky. 'So, yeah, it is nice to get off to a solid-ish start. I think it was a little bit of a colourful scorecard - a couple of birdies and a couple of bogeys. What I find is that the key is to stay aggressive. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'It's easy to get a bit passive out there and avoid the mistake, just because that's the nature of this golf course. Mistakes are going to punish you massively, but, for me, it is going to be about trying to stay aggressive and keep hitting as good a golf shot as I can.' This is only Lumsden's ninth DP World Tour appearance and his first since 2022. 'It's just so special to be playing back in Scotland and it is really special to have a chance on the main tour,' he said, hoping to have a full schedule of them next season and reckoning that the Scots are feeding off each other this season on the HotelPlanner Tour. 'We are all very close,' he said of the Caledonian contingent. 'I've been paired with Dave Law in two of the last three tournaments while I spend a lot of time with Euan (Walker) and Danny (Young). We'll play cards together in the afternoon, which is nice, and they are all such friendly guys. I think that does bring everyone up when you see your best buds on tour doing well. 'Danny has won after finishing second and third, I came second to Dave a couple of weeks ago while Euan has been playing some great golf. Yeah, everyone uses each other as role models and that pushes you on. It's nice when you've got that tight-knit group of guys.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Daniel Young joined David Law as a winner on the HotelPlanner Tour this year when he landed the Farmfoods Scottish Challenge suported by The R&A last weekend |Young is a perfect example of how it takes time for a player to find their feet on the feeder circuit, having made it to the Grand Final for the first time last year and now playing some incredible golf. 'The level down there is really, really, really high,' said Lumsden, who saw his game blossom at Northwestern University under the watchful eye of fellow Scot David Inglus. 'The courses we play are a little easier, for sure. So they are a little more scoreable. But, if you go and shoot ten or 12 under - as I have done a couple of times this year - you don't really make much headway. 'You need to be pushing to 16 under or 20 under. When we played in Germany, we all thought it was a relatively tough course - long, tight and slopey greens. But someone shot 24 under par. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'The level is very good and I think that's why you've seen a lot of guys come up from the HotelPlanner Tour over the last few years and having massive success. You look at [Kristoffer] Reitain. You look at Angel Ayora and a couple of other guys, including [Martin] Couvra.

Richard Sterne sets early pace with 67 at Nexo Championship
Richard Sterne sets early pace with 67 at Nexo Championship

The National

time5 hours ago

  • The National

Richard Sterne sets early pace with 67 at Nexo Championship

Funnily enough, some readers often say that these writings make them want to cut theirs too. Sterne, meanwhile, is made of, well, stern stuff. A defiant, bogey-free five-under 67 over a blowy Trump International Golf Links gave the 43-year-old South African a timely tonic has he continues to recover from a series of ravaging injuries and surgeries. At the end of an unforgiving day, Sterne was perched at the head of the standings, a shot clear of his compatriots, Thomas Aiken and Louis Albertse, and Norway's Andreas Halvorsen. Wear, tear, aches, pains, hirples and hobbles can be par for the course when you've spent your life thwacking balls with a stick. 'How long have you got?,' replied Sterne when asked to detail the various afflictions that have dogged him down the seasons. 'I've had three wrist surgeries since 2020 and I have a titanium disc in my lower back,' added the six-time DP World Tour winner, who reached a career-high of 29th in the world rankings but now languishes down in 1049th. 'The wrist procedure was a scaphoid ligament which tore and they fixed it and then it tore again. I also tore the TFCC (triangular fibrocartilage complex) in my wrist. It can be a hell of a thing to operate on. 'When I was getting the third wrist surgery, I decided to get my back done as well because I'd had 20 years of it (pain). I could always play but it got so bad, I couldn't even swing a club. 'I was out for nine months with the wrist surgery so I thought I may as well do my back too. I would have pain down my leg, I was living on painkillers. It was not fun. 'The only way I could see myself playing again was to take the chance with surgery. My back was actually easier to recover from. The wrist was more of a worry. I've spent hundreds of hours recovering and being in the gym trying to get my body able to play again. 'I didn't hit a ball for 22 months. You can imagine trying to come back from that. It's been a tough year.' Sterne has played 14 events on the tour his season but has made just three cuts. It's been a sair auld fecht but, having harnessed the testing conditions with a neatly assembled opening round amid the towering dunes of the Menie estate, Sterne is seeing some light at the end of the tunnel. 'I enjoyed today, and it would be nice to play like this for the rest of the year to build some confidence,' said Sterne, who birdied three of the four par-5s and was home and dry before the wind really got howling. 'The wind was not excessive, but it was testing. You can see that in the scores. I hit some shots that I've been working on, and they came off so that gives me confidence too.' Sterne's considered, bogey-free card was in stark contrast to a wild practice round earlier in the week that was played out in the kind of wind that would've knackered the Beaufort Scale. 'I lost eight balls, it was chaos,' he said with a chuckle. 'Some guys played nine holes and then stopped. But I thought, 'bugger it, I'll go and play'. I nearly ran out of balls.' Many of us can empathise with such a predicament. Halvorsen's 68 included an eagle-two on the seventh after his drive rolled up to within six-feet of the hole. Aiken also had an eagle in his four-under round as he trundled in a 20-footer for a three on the long 10th. Englishman Jordan Smith, meanwhile, has been one of the players on European Ryder Cup skipper Luke Donald's radar ahead of the showdown with the USA in New York. The consistent Smith got himself up-and-running with a three-under 69 but with qualifying events running out – the final counting tournament is the British Masters in a couple of weeks - the 32-year-old knows it's a tall order to make the grade. 'I think it would have to be two wins or a win and a really good performance somewhere else,' said Smith of a last ditch push. 'I mean, it's not off the cards, but I think it will be really, really tricky for me to get on the team." America's John Catlin made an assault on the summit as he raced to the turn in five-under, but he got into bother on his back-nine and trudged home in 40 on his way to a one-under 71. It was that kind of day.

Ryan Lumsden makes most of Nexo Championship invitaion
Ryan Lumsden makes most of Nexo Championship invitaion

The Herald Scotland

time5 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Ryan Lumsden makes most of Nexo Championship invitaion

Getting promotion from the HotelPlanner Tour to the DP World Tour ain't easy but the current crop of Scots jockeying and elbowing for position are making a decent fist of it in 2025. David Law, Danny Young and Euan Walker are all currently sitting inside a top-20 spot on the rankings that would be rewarded with a ticket to the main circuit at the end of the campaign Ryan Lumsden, meanwhile, is currently on the outside looking in at No 31. The 28-year-old Anglo Scot, runner-up to Law in the Czech Challenge last month, could've bolstered his promotion push by competing in this week's Irish Challenge but an invitation to play in a DP World Tour event and test himself at a higher level was too good to refuse. A battling one-under 71 at a wind-swept Trump International Golf Links left him handily placed after the opening round of the Nexo Championship. 'I wasn't expecting it all,' he said of the opportunity to tee-up in this £1.7 million championship. 'I'd really committed to getting off the HotelPlanner Tour this year and I have been doing okay on it. A couple of good weeks and I'll have a chance to get my DP World Tour card. 'So, I wasn't even thinking about playing here. I'd booked everything for Ireland then last Tuesday I was driving to play in the Scottish Challenge when I got the text inviting me to play here. 'I had a quick chat with my coaches as I really wanted to play, but I had to decide if it was the correct decision to change plans at the last minute. "I've played well in Ireland the last few years but, at the end of the day, you only get so many chances to play in your home event on a golf course this good on the DP World Tour. 'It was something I couldn't really pass up on. Everyone was telling me 'go for it, go have fun and see what you can do'.' Under the shrewd tutelage of Edinburgh exile David Inglis at Northwestern University in Chicago, London-born Lumsden was an impressive US college campaigner during his days in the amateur game. He qualified for the US Open at Shinnecock Hills in 2018 which was quite a giddy high following the painful low of losing 9&8 in the final of the Scottish Amateur Championship at Prestwick the previous year. Despite that sair yin, Lumsden, who joined the paid ranks in 2019, still looks back fondly on those amateur dramatics, both good and bad. 'The Scottish Amateur was a funny one,' reflected Lumsden. 'I'd played great golf all week and woke up on the final day and just had nothing. Sometimes that happens in golf. 'But getting to play in those tournaments and for the Scotland team are still my best memories in golf. Playing in the European Team Championships and Eisenhower Trophy was a rare privilege. It was an honour, and it definitely shaped the golfer I am today.' The keen cut-and-thrust of the HotelPlanner Tour, meanwhile, keeps Lumsden on his toes. 'The standard is really, really high,' he said. 'If you go and shoot 10 or 12-under, as I have done a couple of times this year, you don't really make much headway. You need to be pushing 16 to 20-under.' Nobody was going to blast the lights out at Trump's place yesterday and Lumsden was pretty happy with his day's work. 'It was brutal out there,' he said of a relentless buffeting. 'The thing with this course is that it feels like every single hole can get you. And then you chuck in 20mph winds gusting to 30mph today and it's just very tricky. 'I struggled on my front nine. I just didn't have it off the tee. But, when I made the turn, I knew there were going to be a few chances and I was like 'come on, let's go'.' Grant Forrest, a winner on the DP World Tour in 2021, also opened with a 71 as did the aforementioned Young, who was then asked into the TV commentary box to pass on his links pearls of wisdom. "I may last 30 seconds,' he laughed as he headed to the booth. 'I'll keep the language PC.' Martin Laird, making his first appearance on Scottish soil since 2018, may have been temped to utter something a tad fruitier after a trying 77.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store