Miguel Gaspar runner-up In an Olazábal golf course

Miguel Gaspar runner-up  In an Olazábal golf course, photo by Tristan Jones

Miguel Gaspar runner-up In an Olazábal golf course

Miguel Gaspar runner-up In an Olazábal golf course: At the La Monacilla golf course in Spain, Miguel Gaspar, reached the best result of his professional career in international golf tournaments, becoming runner-up of Alps de Andalucia, €48,000 prize-money tournament, held in the region of Huelva, in Spain, the win came a week after his friend Pedro Figueiredo, won a Challenge Tour tournament.

It was an Alps Tour Golf event, one of the third divisions of the European professional golf and the top-5 of the Order of Merit at the end of the season climbs to the Challenge Tour, the European second division.

The professional of Belas golf club, who now trains at Quinta da Ria Golf Club, Algarve, led the leaderboard after a first round of 66 strokes, 6 under the Par of La Monacilla Golf, and on the following days, with rounds of 72 and 70 he remained in the hunt of a possible first title that escaped him by 2 shots.

“I’m a little sad because I felt I had a good opportunity, but golf is just like that. I feel very good about my game in general. I played very well in the first day, without a single mistake. I did not play very well on the second and on the third day. I did not hit the ball very well, “the 26-year-old Portuguese told the Challenge Tour Press Office.

La Monacilla Golf Club

La Monacilla Golf Club

“We played in a big golf course with a great design, where it’s important to have good shots from the tee to score well, “he added.

The La Monacilla Golf Course is a design of José María Olazábal, the twice Masters champion and former Ryder Cup star, and opened in 2010. It is one of the best golf courses of the 2018 Alps Tour Golf.

It features fairways with subtle shapes and slopes, as well as large, well protected greens.

The golf course design fits perfectly with the natural shape of the land and this, allied to the quality of the golf holes, means that La Monacilla is a great golfing challenge for players of all handicaps.

There are six tees on each hole, allowing each golfer to choose the layout that best fits to their level of play. Of course the ‘pros’ played from the back tees.

The Alps de Andalucia was won by French Alexandre Daydou (68 + 72 + 66), from Reunion Island.

Daydou had already lost two play-offs on this Tour and finally grabed the title, collecting a prize of €6,960, to jump from 19th to 4th in the Order of Merit, behind the Spanish David Bordá (the champion of the Obidos International Open), Louis Boyer and Marcus Mohr.

Miguel Gaspar, secured 2nd place, on a golf course amoungst 131 players and pocketed €4,728, he should have jumped to the 12th place, but he is not a Tour member. He played only to get more professional experience.

La Monacilla Golf Club

La Monacilla Golf Club

“As I only had this sporadic invitation (for the Alps Tour Golf), since I’m playing on the Challenge Tour, also by invitation, I did not become a member”, he explained to Tee Times Golf.

Professional since 2013, Miguel Gaspar was one of those players who felt more acutely the difficult transition from amateur to professional.

A contemporary of Ricardo Melo Gouveia and Pedro Figueiredo, with who he played in the the World Amateur Championship (The Eisenhower Trophy), in the Portuguese national team, he was always one of the best amateurs of his generation, having even won the FPG Cup, one of the national amateur Majors.

But as a professional, even stopping his studies to devote himself to golf, and despite having one of the most beautiful swings of national golf, his good scores took a long time to show up.

He started to feel something different in his game at the end of the last year and this season the results were gradually coming up.

In the Portugal Pro Golf Tour, the international satellite tour that we can roughly categorize as one of the (many) fourth European divisions, played between November and April, Miguel Gaspar finished below Par in 12 tournaments.

In the opening event of the PGA Portugal Tour of 2018, the Optilink PGA Open, he was 7 under the Par and one month later, in the second tournament of this Portuguese professional tour, the Axis PGA Open, in Ponte de Lima, he was 3rd at level Par.

The signs were all there. Sooner or later a great result would appear and it was meant to be in Spain. When almost nobody talked about him, Miguel Gaspar reminded us that he still has a beautiful and increasingly competitive game. But why did this metamorphosis occur now?

Quinta da Ria Golf Course

Quinta da Ria Golf Course

“The big difference is that since March 2017 I started to be coached by Sebastião Gil and to train at Quinta da Ria“, elucidated.

“In Belas Golf course I have the best conditions possible in Lisbon, but here in Quinta da Ria golf course (between Tavira and Vila Real de Santo António) I have the best in the Algarve and I can be more focused on my daily work,” he added.

The same decision was taken a year and a half ago by his pal, Pedro Figueiredo, when, at the peak of a crisis of confidence, he resided temporarily in the Algarve, because he felt that there was a more favorable environment for total concentration in his career.

Sebastião Gil, with his character, makes me a better player and a better person,” added Miguel Gaspar, who, in the last Open of Portugal @ Morgado Golf Resort, in statements to the Press Office of the PGA of Portugal, had already talked about it.

“I learned a lot with David Llewellyn (the Welsh coach who has been coaching several Portuguese, including his friends “Figgy” and “Melinho”), but I felt something was missing. I feel Gil is very sincere and straight forward. He leaves nothing to be said and feels the needs of the Portuguese players. He knows the results of all the Portuguese and wants very much that the Portuguese golf evolves. Of course, he knows a lot about golf, he does not need presentations, he’s been with Butch Harmon (former Tiger Woods coach) and he is the National Team Coach with the most victories in the Portuguese Federation National Team,” said the player.

Finally, there is another aspect no less important, which is related to a certain financial comfort. Miguel Gaspar appeared a few months ago with polo shirts marked by the “Chili Boy” logo: “It’s a new sponsor. They help me with the costs of signing up for tournaments and allow me to attend a gym in Tavira. Both have been very important to me.”

Belas Clube de Campo Golf Course

Belas Clube de Campo Golf Course

In the Challenge Tour, where the level is higher, things have not gone well in 2018 for him, but he has already showed to be worth more.

A few weeks ago, in the Swiss Challenge presented by Suisse Golf Association, he was knockin’ on a top-10 door at the end of a first round of 68. The 79 on the second day made him fail the cut with an aggregate of 5 over Par, but the motivation grew.

“The ambitions have been always the same. I never stop believing. I work to be where I want to be, which is on the European Tour,” he says without rashes or false modesty.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf for Record

Martim Baptista and Jessica Adams Champions of the blood moon Oceânico World Kids Golf

All winners at the 10th Oceânico World Kids Golf, photo by Carla Guerreiro-MR

Oceânico World Kids Golf

Martim Baptista won the most important title of his young career by winning the U-18 tournament of Oceânico World Kids Golf, whose 10th edition took place at the Oceânico Faldo and at the Oceânico O’Connor, the two courses at the Amendoeira Golf Resort, in Silves, Algarve.

After a first half of the 2018 season which he himself considered to have fallen short of the desired, the player from the Vale de Janelas Club regained his temper at Oceânico World Kids Golf, the most important and historic junior golf tournament in Portugal.

He will have his first points at the R&A Amateur World Ranking, as the girls U-18 champion, the Englishwoman Jessica Adams, who played the tournament for the first time, exactly in search of “world ranking points, which are not that easy to get.”

Martim Baptista with the champions trophy, please credit Ramiro de Jesus

Martim Baptista with the champions trophy, please credit Ramiro de Jesus

The difference is that the boys tournament winner had another special prize – an invitation from the PGA of Portugal to play the Amendoeira Classic, a Portugal Pro Golf Tour event, an international tournament for professionals, with a prize Money of €10,000, to be held in 2019.

“I am completely interested in playing the tournament. It’s not normal for us to have this opportunity, to play in a tournament with the professionals,” said Martim Baptista, who scored 230 strokes, 14 over Par of the Oceânico Faldo Course, after rounds of 75, 83 and 72, 2 ‘shots’ better than the big favorite, Gonçalo Teodoro, a member of the Portuguese Golf Federation National squad, and the Dutchman Floris Steunenberg.

«This tournament was very motivating. My best finish this year in the Drive Tour tournaments (the main portuguese junior tour) was a top-5. It’s my first win of the year in na official event and maybe it’s one of my best wins ever. This last round, from the white tees, was my best ever result, but I was also playing for the first time in the U-18s,” added the player coached by Luís Barroso.

Jessica Adams was also, of course, “very pleased to have won the tournament with a good last round on such a hot day, after having struggled in the first two rounds.” The Englishwoman, who left behind by 11 shots the runner up, the Portuguese Inês Pereira, scores 241 strokes, 25 over Par of the Oceanic O’Connor Course, delivering cards of 85, 82 and 74. “It was already worth coming”, said the Briton who wants to become a professional.

Mark Lichtenhein, the LET Chairman gave the prize to Filipa Capelo, the U-16 champion, credit Ramiro de Jesus

Mark Lichtenhein, the LET Chairman gave the prize to Filipa Capelo, the U-16 champion, credit Ramiro de Jesus

One of the highlights of the 10th edition of Oceânico World Kids Golf was the presence of Ladies European Tour (LET) delegation, with the English ‘pro’ Rebecca Hudson, winner of five professional titles, four of which in the LET, and the LET Chairman, Mark Lichtenhein.

Since last year the LET has paid special attention to the junior tournament at the Amendoeira Golf Resort and in this year’s speech Mark Lichtenhein praised the increase in the girs participantion department, but stressed that “we need more girls to play.” The LET’s Chairman is talking with Oceânico, and who knows, maybe one day the girls champion will have an invitation to a professional tournament, as it happened this year in the boys tournament.

Good news for Portuguese young players who shine every year at Oceânico World Kids Golf.

This year, Filipa Capelo won the U16s, after last year being runner-up; Ana da Costa Rodrigues and Inês Belchior were runners-up respectively in the U-14 and U-12, one year after they won in the lower age events; and Maria Francisca Salgado became champion in the U-9.

n the men’s section, besides Martim Baptista becoming the first Portuguese U-18 champion since Cristiano Marcela in 2015, there were two more Portuguese winners: Daniel Sardo in the U-10s and João Iglésias in the U-14s.

The South African Calvin Holmes, who triumphed in the U-16 with a tournament record of a 63 (-9) second round, continues his process of Portuguese citizenship and maintains the desire “to play one day for the Portuguese national team.”

Oliver and John Robertson won the Child & Parent Contest, credit Ramiro de Jesus

Oliver and John Robertson won the Child & Parent Contest, credit Ramiro de Jesus

The full list of champions of the 10th Oceânico World Kids Golf is as follows:

U-9 – Jack Dirkin (England), 61 stableford gross points (22 + 21 + 18), 7 under Par of the O’Connor Course; and Maria Francisca Salgado (Portugal), 14 (4 + 5 + 5), +51;

U-10 – Gabriel Sardo (Portugal) 100 points stableford gross (33 + 31 + 36), 8 over Par of the O’Connor Course;

U-12 – Kostka Horno (Spain), 117 points stableford gross (40 + 38 + 39), 9 under Par of the O’Connor Course, and Leanne Kokolay (England), 55 (16 + 20), +55;

U-14 – João Iglésias (Portugal), 217 strokes (71 + 71 + 75), 1 over Par of the Faldo Course, and Emilie von Finckenstein (Germany), 233 (75 + 74 + 74), 7 over Par of the O’Connor Course;

U-16 – Calvin Holmes (South Africa), 213 strokes (76 + 63 + 74), 3 under Par of the Faldo Course, and Filipa Capelo (Portugal) 226 strokes (76 + 74 + 76), 10 over Par of the O’Connor Course;

U-18, Martim Baptista (Portugal), 230 strokes (75 + 83 + 72), 14 over Par of the Faldo Course, and Jessica Adams (England), 241 strokes (85 + 82 + 74) 25 over Par of the O’Connor Course.

All champions won for the first time at the Oceânico World Kids Golf, but Leanne Kokolay, from the Lakes District, was the net champion in 2017 and this time got the gross, and Emilie von Finckenstein was runner-up last year and went one better in 2018, as it happend with Calvin Holmes: “after being second for so many times, it was about time to win.”

The 10th Oceânico World Kids Golf atracted 147 players from 17 countries and the Child & Parent 9 holes Par-3 Contest was won by Oliver and John Robertson, from England.

Calvin Holmes had a tournament record and gave a speach next to Ela Clark from the World Golf Awards, credit Ramiro de Jesus

Calvin Holmes had a tournament record and gave a speach next to Ela Clark from the World Golf Awards, credit Ramiro de Jesus

Ela Clark, from the World Golf Awards, presented the prize giving ceremony, there were more than 100 prizes to be distributed, and the historic 10th edition concluded with a unique red blood moon lunar eclipse and fireworks during the final gala diner. A week to remember.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf

Oceânico World Kids Golf A serious tournament In a holiday environment

Oceânico World Kids Golf

Oceânico World Kids Golf

Six of the 2017 champions returned this week to the Amendoeira Golf Resort, in Silves, to celebrate the 10th edition of Oceânico World Kids Golf, the most important international junior golf tournament in Portugal.

Portugal’s Ines Belchior (U-10) and Ana da Costa Rodrigues (U-12), England’s Sarah Mardani (U-14), Britons Luca Randall (U-9), Oscar Lent (U-10) and Owen Meeds (U-16) are the last year’s champions who returned to the Amendoeira Golf Resort to defend the title, although some of them have, however, moved to the upper age group.

Oceânico World Kids Golf was, until 2017, the only Portuguese junior tournament to count towards the R&A Amateur World Golf Ranking, and this year, althought other events already offer ranking points, the tournament made several partnerships to keep a Major status.

The Tournament Golf College (TGC), for instance, brings athletes from its school in England and promotes abroad the Portuguese tournament.

Presentation ceremony of the 10th edition, photography by Ramiro de Jesus

Presentation ceremony of the 10th edition, photography by Ramiro de Jesus

Another exemple is provided by the PGA of Portugal, that gives the U-18 champion an invitation for the 2019 Amendoeira Classic, a Portugal Pro Golf Tour event, with a prize-money of €10,000, with “pros” from all over Europe.

And another sign of this tournament’s strengh are its several partnerships with prestigious media, which allow it to have a very good media coverage, including broadcasts on Sky Sports in the UK and SportTV (via CN Sports) in Portugal.

Oceânico World Kids Golf continues to grow and to consolidate its position and its 10th edition incrised the numbers of players (147, from 136 last year) and represented countries (17 from 13 in 2017).

Taking into account that it is a key event for Tourism in the Algarve, bringing hundreds of people for a week to Silves, it is worth noting that there are athletes from Australia, Austria, Germany, South Africa, Belgium, China, Scotland, Spain, France, Holland, England, Ireland, Norway, Portugal, Poland, Wales and Switzerland.

The players bring their families and coaches in a mix of a holiday environment with a high level competition.

Lucas Lopes Azinheiro, Calvin Holmes and Max van de Kuilen, photography by Carla Guerreiro

Lucas Lopes Azinheiro, Calvin Holmes and Max van de Kuilen, photography by Carla Guerreiro

At the opening ceremony, Chris T. Howell of Oceânico Group, the mentor of this project, referred to the quality of the two courses that host the competition, Oceânico Faldo and Oceânico O’Connor Jr.: “We have worked hard on the courses and they are in fantastic conditions, very close to what you can find in major championships around the world.”

After a few practice rounds and the first two rounds of the competition, several were the young players who spoke about these good playing conditions, especially the British who made several comparisons with the much drier courses they have played in recent times, due to the drought which has plagued the UK in recent weeks.

Calvin Holmes, photography by Ramiro de Jesus

Calvin Holmes photography, by Ramiro de Jesus

Ela Clark, the presenter of the World Golf Awards, who this year serves as the official speaker of the tournament, also recalled at the opening ceremony that “The Faldo Course received in 2016 the award for best golf course of the year.” It is not every day that most of these youngsters have the opportunity to compete in such a tough and challeging course as this one designed in the Algarve by former world No. 1 Nick Faldo.

The first two days of competition already took place under the heat, with temperatures temperatures exceeding the 30 degrees Celsius (86 Fahrenheit) and little wind.

In the evening of the second day, at the Par-3 9 hole course of the Amendoeira Golf Academy, it was held the Parents & Children doubles competition with a very special host, the English professional player Rebecca Hudson, a four times winner on the Ladies European Tour.

On the third day all players are invited to rest, to do some tourism and to attend the 10th edition Party with several activities for youngsters and children.

And they, by Friday, things will get serious again, with the last round of the Oceânico World Kids Golf.

Gonçalo Teodoro, photography by Carla Guerreiro

Gonçalo Teodoro, photography by Carla Guerreiro

The leaders after the second round (only gross standings) are:

U-9 – The Portuguese Maria Francisca Salgado, 9 points (4+5) stableford gross, +35, and the English Jack Dirkin, 43 (22+21), -7.

U-10 – The Spanish Yago Horno, 66 (31+35), +6.

U-12 – The English Leanne Kokolay, 36 (16+10), +37, and the Spanish Kostka Horno, 78 (40+38), -6.

U-14 – The German Emilie von Finckenstein, 149 strokes (75+74), +5, and the Portuguese João Iglésias, 142 (71+71), -2.

U-16 – The Portuguese Filipa Capelo, 150 (76+74), +6, and the South-african Calvin Holmes, 139 (76+63), -5.

U-18 – The English Jessica Adams, 167 (85+82), +23, and the Portuguese Gonçalo Teodoro, 150 (69+81), +6.

The 63 second roud, 9 under Par of the Oceânico Faldo Course, from Calvin Holmes, in a bogey free round of 9 birdies, is a tournament record in its history. What a way to celebrate the 10th edition.

Hugo Ribeiro / Tee Times Golf