The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Gallacher is pick of Scots with Ramsay

Knox and Laird struggle as Finn comes to fore at Dundonald Links

- sTeve scoTT golF correspond­enT

Stephen Gallacher has played in 21 Scottish Opens but has never had as strong a start as he did at Dundonald Links yesterday as the home contingent continued an excellent run on European Tour’s links swing.

Gallacher’s four-under 68 is three behind leader Mikko Ilonen of Finland on a day when even some tricky winds and rain in the final hour or two didn’t stop the strong scoring.

A cut below par looks likely unless conditions worsen today, which makes things exceedingl­y tough for a still offcolour Rory McIlroy.

Richie Ramsay continued to ride the run of form that saw him finish second in Ireland last week, with a birdie out of the bunker at the last completing his 68.

Gallacher didn’t feel he had his best day but scrambled effectivel­y, holed putts for saves and put together three birdies on the bounce to finish without a bogey.

“It was basically hanging on for the five holes before that,” he said.

“I was struggling a bit, but I started to hit fairways and get it close. I didn’t drive it well today, but my short game was sharp and that kept me in it.

“It was tough to get it close because the greens were firming up. There was an unbelievab­le difference with how firm they were compared to earlier in the week.”

Gallacher has finished strongly in his home open before – 63s at Royal Aberdeen in 2014 and once at Loch Lomond – and he knows Dundonald as much as anyone in the field.

“I’ve played here a lot,” he added. “Any time you’re familiar with a golf course it’s easier. You know where to hit it and where to miss.

“You’ve got to get it on the fairways to start. You’ve got to leave it on certain sides of the holes. You’ve got to hit fairways and then get your irons close to get a good score. I holed a lot of nine, 10-footers today, which was nice.”

Gallacher’s mini-goal for the last three weeks was to play well enough to get a place in the Open championsh­ip next week, and it’s a good start to his final chance.

“I’d love to play in the Open so I know I need to play well, and we saw a couple of the guys do it last week, which was brilliant to get more Scots in it.

“I use that as motivation. This is my only chance and I’d love to play at Birkdale. I started to play well in Ireland and this just shows how close it is.”

Ramsay booked his Open spot with his performanc­e in Ireland, and was happy to build on the momentum.

“Today it was just a case of staying patient and letting the momentum come,” he said.

“I had a nice wee run of three birdies on the back nine and that gave me the impetus that I had last week. “That was a massive confidence boost. “The ranking for me is an important thing, and that’s pushed me way up in building a schedule . . . It means I can look forward to some fantastic tournament­s at the end of the year.”

In the meantime the Scottish Open is “a major” as far as he is concerned.

“I’m trying to get in contention and feel the same thing that I felt back nine on Sunday in Ireland, and hopefully maybe do a little bit better,” he added.

“There’s nothing better than practising really hard and coming down the stretch with the pressure.”

Scottish No 1 Russell Knox and the returning Martin Laird had difficulty adjusting. Knox was greatly frustrated by his two-over 74, having gone nine days without touching a club in trying to break his slump, intense practice not having helped.

“It just feels like I am getting punched in the face over and over,” said Knox. “I can’t seem to get anything good to happen, and it’s very frustratin­g.

“I have got to clean it up, I am making too many stupid mistakes. “I bogeyed two par fives today and you just can’t do that. It’s killing my score.”

Laird looked in great shape at threeunder after his front half only to come undone with a triple at the 10th, starting a slide of four bogeys on the back nine that eventually left him finishing with a three-over 75.

Scott Jamieson (76) and Paul Lawrie (77) also struggled, but there was a strong showing from Duncan Stewart, the Grantown-on-Spey player, who shot a two-under 70.

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 ??  ?? Richie Ramsay, top, and Stephen Gallacher the Scottish Open.
Richie Ramsay, top, and Stephen Gallacher the Scottish Open.
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