Summary
IT WAS billed as a clash of the Auld Enemies, and on paper it looked like a classic encounter between one of England's finest and the highest place Scot in the tournament. But Lee Westwood and Alastair Forsyth failed to serve up a feast of golf. In the end England won, Scotland lost, and both failed.
On a mid-November day, except that it was in the middle of July, the grey lowering weather was supposed to be more suited to the Scot, but it was Westwood who combated the elements more courageously. The Englishman got off to a flying start with two birdies in the first two holes and suddenly he had moved to three under par and was up there in contention. Forsyth (pictured), by comparison, looked as miserable as the weather, which was pretty dire. The ice-cream van behind the third green was not doing a roaring trade.See the full content of this document
Extract
Big Build-Up Ends in Disappointment for Forsyth
Forsyth's championship fell apart on the first nine. Starting at one under par, and still that way ...
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