Bay of Plenty and Wellington, the most successful golf
districts in recent times, forged to the front on another wet
day in the national men's interprovincial teams event in
Palmerston North yesterday.
Bay of Plenty, which has won the titles five times in the
past seven years, had to work hard to beat Aorangi South
Canterbury 3-2 and Otago 4-1 to join Canterbury at the top of
division one with three wins.
Canterbury edged out Southland in the morning and Aorangi
South Canterbury in the afternoon, both by 3-2 margins, to
remain in contention for the semifinals.
Wellington, which was beaten by Bay of Plenty in the last two
finals, scored two well-earned wins as players struggled with
rain delays at the Manawatu Golf Club.
Wellington produced an outstanding effort to dispose of
Auckland 3-2, meaning the powerful northern team will have to
win all its remaining matches and likely need other results
to go its way if it is to advance to the play-offs.
The team from the capital backed up with a 4 to victory over
Tasman to move to a share of the lead in division two with
Hawkes Bay.
Manawatu-Wanganui remained in the hunt when Ewen Westergaard
nailed a 4m birdie putt on the last hole to square his match
with Shaun Jones and earn a half with Hawkes Bay.
That left Manawatu-Wanganui sharing third place with Waikato.
Earlier, Hawkes Bay looked to have secured the points when
former New Zealand representative Leighton James bagged a
6.5m birdie putt on the last to win his match 1 up.
Wellington made 24 birdies to beat Auckland in a high-quality
match.
Wellington's wins went to Adam Church, Thomas Spearman-Burn
and Sean Kells, while Auckland's wins were secured by Fraser
Wilkin and Ryan Fox, who beat fellow international Peter
Spearman-Burn 2 up.
The pair traded birdies in a rollercoaster match before an
eagle from Fox at the 14th gave him the winning advantage.
The loss to Bay of Plenty yesterday was Otago's first of the
tournament.
In the early stages of the round, Otago was in control with
Andrew Hobbs, Mitch Bosley and Michael Minty all in front at
the turn, while Duncan Croudis, fresh from his return from
China, turned a two-down deficit after five holes to be
square at the turn.
But on the homeward nine the Bay team showed its class with
Andrew Stewart beating Otago No 1 Brent McEwan on the 17th
green.
Hobbs lost the initiative on the homeward nine to also lose
by 2 and 1, while Bosley lost his match to Kieran Muir
despite birdieing the final hole.
Otago's only game scores came from Croudis, who overcame
jet-lag to score a half on the final hole with Bradley
Kendall, while No 5 Michael Minty led all the way but
finished square with the Bay's Nic Meyer.
Otago coach Ben Gallie was disappointed with the loss but
said that the margin did not deflect the closeness of the
encounter.
He also was aware that the constant weather delays did not
help his team which led by 3 to 1 after the first nine holes.
Otago is favoured to add to its winning margin in the fifth
and only round to be played this morning when it meets
Poverty Bay-East Coast.
In other match-ups, division one leader Bay of Plenty plays
Canterbury, Wellington takes on Manawatu-Wanganui and Waikato
faces Auckland.
There are two further rounds tomorrow, with semifinals and
the final on Saturday.
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