Europe clings to one-point edge over GBI in Seve Trophy KILLENARD, Ireland (AP) -- Continental Europe clung to a 9-8 lead after Britain & Ireland rallied in the foursomes Saturday in the Seve Trophy. The tournament ends with 10 singles matches Sunday. Europe won three and halved one of the four greensomes to open an 8-5 lead, before Britain & Ireland won three of the afternoon foursomes. Scottish Open champion Gregory Havret had a hole-in-one at the 189-yard seventh with a 4-iron in the morning as he and Raphael Jacquelin beat Nick Dougherty and Graeme Storm of Britain & Ireland, 2 and 1. But Dougherty and Justin Rose snapped the French pair's three-match winning streak 2 and 1 in the foursomes. Jacquelin and Havret bogeyed three of the last five holes. "It's a shame. We played great for three rounds but this afternoon was a little tougher," Havret said. "The difference was their short game. Justin holed a chip on 16 and I didn't hole a putt on 17 to stay alive." Colin Montgomerie went down to his third defeat in three matches when he and Storm lost, 3 and 2, to Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano and Robert Karlsson in Europe's only win in the afternoon. Britain & Ireland then won the last two foursomes. Simon Dyson and Oliver Wilson won three of the first five holes and were never caught as they beat Peter Hanson and Soren Hansen, 3 and 2. Dyson and Wilson, beaten in the morning greensomes by the same pair, were determined to win. "We came out firing and I holed a 20-footer at the first and third, and from six feet at the fifth," Dyson said. Then Bradley Dredge and Phillip Archer won on the 18th by two holes against Markus Brier and Miguel Angel Jimenez of Europe when Brier hit the second shot into the lake beside the green. Britain & Ireland have won the trophy on three out of four occasions. Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. |