The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Syme to face Scotland partner

SCOTTISH AMATEUR: ‘Something has to give’ in quarter-final with Howie

- STeve scoTT golF correspond­enT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

Connor Syme and Craig Howie were unbeatable as a pairing for Scotland, but one of them has to beat the other in this morning’s quarter-finals of the Scottish Amateur at Royal Aberdeen.

The 21-year-olds won all their games for Scotland in the European team Championsh­ip in France two weeks ago.

Syme’s progress has been near seamless in reaching the last eight for the first time but he now comes up against his friend, who fought off the dangerous Euan McIntosh after being two-down.

Both felt the change in conditions at Royal Aberdeen yesterday – at last the prevailing wind off the left and against on the back nine – favoured them.

“It definitely makes things trickier and means you absolutely have to keep the ball in play,” said Syme, a 3 and 2 winner over Irvine’s Stuart Easton.

“The fourth round has always been the obstacle. I lost there three times in a row, so it’s nice to get over that hump,” he added.

Yesterday afternoon Howie won three holes in a row from the 15th to turn his match against McIntosh, now 47 and in the Scotland internatio­nal squad with Howie and Syme after a 27 year gap.

Howie said: “It’ll feel strange to play against Connor after we played and won so many games a couple of weeks ago, but I guess something has to give.”

Robert MacIntyre, the Amateur finalist, showed signs of hitting his straps after a testing week when he pulled away from Graeme Robertson, the 2014 beaten finalist at Downfield, who is looking to win back his internatio­nal place.

MacIntyre admitted losing his game playing for GB&I in the St Andrews Trophy last week, but found it again when the wind got up at Balgownie, beating Robertson 4 and 3

He faces a case of Beware The Injured Golfer in his friend Alasdair McDougall, who was rushed to A&E last Thursday with an abscess but has come through five rounds.

The 21-year-old was going to pull out and didn’t quite know if he could play when he rolled up on Monday, but after finding a few practice swings didn’t irritate his dressed wound and restrict him, he’s progressed perfectly well.

Confusion reigned at the conclusion of the second last-16 game between Nairn’s Andrew Burgess and the host club’s Mark Halliday, with the multipleti­mes Royal Aberdeen club champion turning on his heel for the 19th hole only to see Burgess offering his hand.

An error on the scoreboard­s at the seventh had Halliday believing he was one better than he actually was, the pair going through the chronology of holes together on the 18th green before the older man realised his error.

“I’d made a mess of the seventh and headed straight for the next tee not speaking to the scorer, so maybe that’s where the confusion started,” Burgess said.

“Myself and Sean (his caddying brother) were certain of the situation the whole way round, but you don’t really check with your opponent in tight games like that.”

Halliday admitted he had lost track of the scoreline, and the chances of an allRoyal Aberdeen quarter-final had vanished almost simultaneo­usly as Fintan McKenna, the 18-year-old who’d already ousted club mate Steven Buchan, lost his ball on the 19th against Forres’ Jeff Wright, who will now meet Burgess.

In the final match of the last 16, fatigue finally caught up with Portlethen lefthander Ben Murray, who lost on the last green to George Duncan of Windyhill.

If the seven-round schedule in the Scottish was not hard enough, Murray played a medal at his home club before his second-round tie at Royal Aberdeen on Wednesday, winning that match and then his third-round tie later in the day against Kyle Reid.

 ?? Picture: Kenny Smith. ?? Connor Syme moved into the last eight of the Scottish Amateur with a 3 and 2 win over Irvine’s Stuart Easton.
Picture: Kenny Smith. Connor Syme moved into the last eight of the Scottish Amateur with a 3 and 2 win over Irvine’s Stuart Easton.

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