STATS PREVIEW FOR THE VOLVO CHINA OPEN
Shanghai Silport GC, 25-28 November
THE LOWDOWN
Ireland's Ryder Cup Paul McGinley is playing in Shanghai
|
Just when you thought it was all over, the 2005 European Tour
season tees off this week in - naturally enough - November 2004, just a month after the old campaign finished in Valderrama.
The Tour schedule doesn't reach Europe itself until mid-March but trips to Asia, Africa, Australasia and the Middle East should give the pros plenty to keep them
occupied in the meantime, including three events this year.
Many of the
players made the trip to Shanghai in May this year for the BMW Asian Open
won by Miguel Angel Jimenez at Tomson Shanghai Pudong Golf Club.
But few of
the overseas pros this week - the field largely comprises local Chinese
players - will be familiar with Shanghai Silport GC.
It should give them
quite a test, according to Mikael Eriksson, who is tournament director.
It is reasonably long at 7,073 yards (par 72) and although fairly
flat, can take some negotiating in the usual strong winds at this time of
year.
It boasts uniformly tight fairways, stacks of huge sandy waste areas,
high Bermuda grass rough and plenty of water hazards.
There are, however,
barely any trees. Back the straighter drivers this week, says Eriksson.
PLAYERS TO WATCH
A $1 million prize fund has persuaded a bunch of big names
from Europe to make the long trip to probably China's most modern city.
Lawrie is among a host of Europeans playing China
|
The
event will offer 1999 Open Champion Paul Lawrie the chance to put a wretched
2004 season behind him but he faces serious opposition from among others,
British Masters champion Barry Lane, twice-Ryder Cup winner Paul McGinley
and Thomas Bjorn.
Lian-Wei Zhang, the first Chinese player to win on the
European Tour when he pipped Ernie Els to win the Caltex Masters in
Singapore in 2003, heads the home challenge.
WHERE WILL IT BE WON AND LOST?
EASIEST HOLE: The course starts and finishes with par fives which are all
pretty testing.
The 554-yard final hole, though, offers arguably the
best chance of a birdie, a straight, well-struck drive setting up a long
iron or three-wood approach to a generously sized green.
It's no cakewalk,
though.
There's a large lake on the left and one of the course's many sandy
waste areas on the right.
The water runs to around 60 yards short of the
undulating green. Like the rest of the course, it has been beautifully
prepared and set up for its European Tour debut.
HARDEST HOLE: The par-four third will cause most problems, simply because of
its distance.
It again has water on the left but only the wildest of hooks
should end up in the lake there.
High rough, though, which fringes another
tight fairway presents much more of a threat.
The chief difficulty at the
468-yard hole is simply reaching the green safely with two blows.
If the
wind is against here, many of the field will need to take a three-wood
second simply to reach the putting surface.
Information provided by Reuters Stats