IBC Legend of Golf
September 4, 2011
Bland blows away Open field
Monday, 08 August 2011 15:00 H S Manjunath
September 4, 2011
Winning Team of the IBC Legend of Golf
Adam Robertson, David Carter, Matthew Rendal and Alfons Mensdorff
Monday, 08 August 2011 15:00 H S Manjunath
Don Bland, a US expatriate based in Thailand, shot a closing round of 75 to win the 3rd Angkor Amateur Open yesterday by a comfortable eight shots ahead of Cambodia’s Ly Hong and fellow Thai expat Noel Pittard at the Angkor Golf Resort in Siem Reap.
Having dictated the pace in Saturday’s first round
with a 77, Bland was one shot ahead of Italy’s Marco Scopetta going into
the final round. The American then extended his lead with some measured
golf to win untroubled.
Don Bland of the US
(second left) receives the trophy from Siem Reap Governor Suo Phirin
after winning the 2011 Angkor Amateur Open by eight shots yesterday at
the Angkor Golf Resort in Siem Reap. Photo Supplied
Phnom Penh resident Bruce McClaren turned up
trumps in Division B with a one-shot lead over Jung Sang Chol of South
Korea. Local amateur Tan Savun took the honours in Division C, pushing
Commander Nair of India to second place.
The women’s event was clinched by Evangeline Apuhin of the Philipines, four shots ahead of Lesley Saunderson, a expat based in Phnom Penh.
In a nearest the pin competition, winners included Lewis Coyle, Nicola Donati, Park Sing Ho, Siem Reap Governor Sou Phirin and Commander Nair.
Angkor Golf Resort General Manager Adam Robertson was pleased with the turnout over the weekend. “A field of 65 golfers took to the fairways. We had participants from as many as eight countries making this a truly international event,” he told The Post yesterday.
The women’s event was clinched by Evangeline Apuhin of the Philipines, four shots ahead of Lesley Saunderson, a expat based in Phnom Penh.
In a nearest the pin competition, winners included Lewis Coyle, Nicola Donati, Park Sing Ho, Siem Reap Governor Sou Phirin and Commander Nair.
Angkor Golf Resort General Manager Adam Robertson was pleased with the turnout over the weekend. “A field of 65 golfers took to the fairways. We had participants from as many as eight countries making this a truly international event,” he told The Post yesterday.
No comments:
Post a Comment