Montgomerie not ready to concede
Web posted 04/12/97
If the recent dominance by foreign players at Augusta continues at the 61st Masters Tournament, Colin Montgomerie and Costantino Rocca are among those with a shot at keeping the trend alive.
With defending champion Nick Faldo missing the cut on Friday, along with 1996 runner-up Greg Norman, Montgomerie and Rocca headline the list of non-Americans who begin play today with a legitimate shot at a green jacket.
Seven of the last nine Masters champions have been foreigners.
After Montgomerie's even-par opening round on Thursday, the native of Scotland responded with a 5-under-par 67 in Friday's second round to enter the weekend alone in second place behind Tiger Woods at 5-under par for the tournament.
Rocca, the 40-year-old Italian making his third Masters appearance, carded a second-straight subpar score Friday with a 3-under-par 69, putting him in third at 4-under.
For Montgomerie, sharing the Saturday spotlight with Woods is a challenge he welcomes. The two tee it up as today's last pairing at 2:03 p.m.
``The way (Woods) plays this course tends to suit him more than anyone else playing right now,'' said the 33-year-old. ``And it depends on him. If he decides to do what he's doing, well, more credit to him. We'll all shake his hand and say, `Well done.' But at the same time, there's more to it than hitting the ball a long way, and the pressure's mounting more and more.''
Though last year's tie for 39th was a major disappointment, Montgomerie feels he holds a considerable advantage over the 21-year-old phenom, playing in only his third Masters and first as a professional.
``I've got more experience, a lot more experience in major golf than he has, and hopefully I can prove that,'' said Montgomerie, making his sixth Masters appearance. ``It's one thing having it. The next thing's proving it.''
``Colin's obviously a great player,'' said Woods, who shot 66 Friday to go to 8-under-136 for the tournament. ``Right now, he's playing probably the best golf in Europe. I get along with Colin fine. He's a great guy, and I'm looking forward to the round tomorrow.''
Rocca, who missed the cut last year and tied for 41st place in his Masters debut in 1994, hopes a strong showing in Augusta leaves a lasting impression on American soil.
Rounding out the list of foreign players in contention is Spaniard Jose Maria Olazabal, tied for fourth place at 3-under after two rounds, and a pair of South Africans - Nick Price in a tie for seventh at 2-under, and Ernie Els tied for 10th at 1-under.


