Goosen among world's top 10 golfers set for Beijing (China Daily) Updated: 2005-03-16 09:00
Two-time US Open champion Retief Goosen, ranked fifth in the world, has
confirmed his entry for the Johnnie Walker Classic alongside three of golf's
young guns, world No 9 Adam Scott of Australia, Englishman Luke Donald and his
Ryder Cup teammate Paul Casey.
 Retief
Goosen, from South Africa, studies his putt on the
17th green Friday, March 4, 2005 during the second round at the Ford
Championship at Doral in Doral, Fla.
[AP] | Presented by Johnnie Walker, the
world's leading Scotch whisky, the 1.25 million pound (US$2.35 million) Johnnie
Walker Classic is the Asia Pacific's premier golf event and will be staged on
the Chinese mainland for the first time in the event's 14-year history at the
prestigious Pine Valley Golf Resort and Country Club in Beijing from April
21-24.
The quartet join a field that now features four of the world's top nine
players and is already shaping up to be the strongest ever played in China. It
includes Ernie Els, the world number three; Spain's Sergio Garcia, currently
ranked sixth; Miguel Angel Jimenez, the defending champion; six time major
winner, with two victories in the Johnnie Walker Classic, Nick Faldo; and Korean
Choi Kyung-ju, ranked 29th in the world.
Trailblazer Zhang Lianwei, a multiple winner on the Asian Tour, will lead the
local challenge.
South Africa's Goosen has achieved 24 tournament victories worldwide
including the 2001 US Open Championship at Southern Hills and the 2004 US Open
at Shinnecock Hills. He topped the European Tour Order of Merit in 2002 and
2003, but in 2004 he decided to play more in the US and won the Chrysler
Championship on his way to finishing sixth on the US PGA Money List with prize
money of close to US$4 million.
Goosen will be playing in his sixth Johnnie Walker Classic, having won the
event in Perth, Western Australia in 2002.
Scott, 24, has enjoyed a meteoric rise after turning pro in 2000, ending his
first year as a rookie in 13th spot on the European Money List. Playing more
regularly these days on the US PGA Tour, Scott has won four events, including
the 2004 Players Championship, heralded by many as the "fifth major", and
recently won the Nissan Open in Los Angeles.
Donald will be making his debut in the Classic. The 27-year-old turned pro
just four years ago, after an outstanding amateur career in which he represented
Great Britain and Ireland in two Walker Cup matches and enjoyed multiple wins in
the US. In the short time he has been a pro, he has won three times, once in the
US and the Scandinavian Masters and Omega European Masters in Europe.
Donald, ranked 18th in the world, played a key role in Europe's victory in
the 2004 Ryder Cup and went on to lift the WGC-World Cup in Spain with Casey
later in the year.
England's Casey is also 27, having turned pro in 2000. A member of the
victorious 1999 Walker Team, he became one of only three players in 77 years to
record four victories without a defeat.
In his very first year as a pro, he won the Gleneagles Scottish PGA
Championship. Since then, he has won two further European Tour events and last
year registered eight top-10 finishes. Casey is currently ranked 43 in the world
and will be playing in his second Johnnie Walker Classic.
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