Don't tell teacher, but schoolboy
golfer Clancy Bowe is set to juggle his books with his golf clubs
in a bid for Walker Cup glory.
The 18-year-old Tramore kid
was a shock addition to the Walker Cup training panel this week
- having never played for Ireland at senior level.
The problem is that the dreaded
Leaving Certificate is barring the youngster's attempt to become
Ireland's youngest Walker Cup player since Ronan Rafferty.
Rafferty was just 17 when he
played at Cypress Point in 1981. And while the Walker Cup isn't
until September, Bowe's chances of impressing the selectors will
be severely limited until he finishes his Leaving at CBS Tramore
in Waterford on June 20.
Long hours of study will force
him to miss the Irish Close Championship at his home club as
well as the British Amateur Championship at Troon and the English
Amateur at Hunstanton.
In fact, he might even have to arrange to sit his oral Irish
and French exams at another school, just to make it to the next
squad training session under skipper Garth McGimpsey.
"I just couldn't believe
it," said Bowe of his surprise selection. "When the
letter came I thought it was something to do with the Great Britain
and Ireland Boys team I had played on for the past two years.
"But then I saw a list
of names and the words 'Walker Cup' so I thought I had better
read the letter properly - from the beginning."
Bowe discovered that he had
been invited to Great Britain and Ireland's elite 32-man training
squad - a signal that his talent had not gone unnoticed by McGimpsey
and his fellow selectors.
But his talent had already
been recognised by Open champion and US Ryder Cup player Mark
Calcavecchia.
The American star played eighteen
holes with Bowe in the Carlsberg Tramore Golf Classic, held at
Bowe's home club around the time of the Amex Championship at
Mount Juliet last September.
"He's a mighty fine young
player," said the American at the time. "He's certainly
plenty of talent to work on."
Now the Waterford youngster
has earned the right to join the likes of 42-year-old amateur
legend Gary Wolstenholme and establish Irish internationals Noel
Fox, Justin Kehoe, Gareth Maybin and Colm Moriarty at Ganton
in April.
Clancy said: "It was totally
unexpected but I'm extremely happy. I had a good year last year
but this is the kind of thing that you just don't even dream
about. It certainly take s your mind off the books for a while."
The Waterford youngster made
a huge impression on the R and A selectors when he was unbeaten
in foursomes as the Great Britain and Ireland Boys team beat
Continental Europe in Switzerland last year to take the Jacque
Leglise Trophy.
But he didn't win a championship
at junior level last term and so didn't qualify to take part
in a clinic run by the Darren Clarke Foundation at Portmarnock
late last summer.
In fact, Bowe is so new to
the scene that he is only just coming to grips with what his
selection could mean.
"I haven't even thought
about Youths international level yet, never mind the Irish Senior
team. I've played three seasons at Boys level but even Youths
is a huge step up from there. It's just a huge leap to the Walker
Cup panel - and even though I'm just one of 32 it's great to
be there."
But school comes first and
Ireland's latest golfing star knows that he will need a qualification
to fall back on if things don't work out.
"My real goal is the Leaving.
It's all about time management at this stage. I have to try and
get the best of both worlds at the moment. I suppose a more realistic
goal is the 2005 Walker Cup, so I've got another two and a half
years to get there."
Like his great hero Padraig
Harrington, Bowe plans to take care of his education in case
his golf career doesn't work out.
And like Harrington, he has
decided to do accountancy at a local college so that he can continue
to practice hard on the practice range.
"I was going to go away
and do it, but it's not an option if you want to improve your
golf," he said. "I would only be able to play on the
weekends if I went to Cork or Dublin and I would have to lug
my clubs on a bus or to the course.
"I've spoken to a few
of the big accountancy firms around and they have recommended
this course at DIT in Waterford which will give me a bit of time
to play golf."
And like Harrington, Bowe hopes
that his rise through the Golfing Union of Ireland coaching system
will help him get to the very top in the game.
"I really admire the way
Padraig works," he explained. "To be honest, they say
that he wasn't that good when he was really young but he has
improved every single year since he was about 12. He's just put
in so much work.
"In fact, I went through
a bit of a Padraig Harrington year myself last year, in terms
of second places. I threw away the Leinster Boys and I was second
in the Munster Boys but I just didn't finish anything off for
some reason. At least my foursomes record has been pretty good
- there's just something about team golf that gets me going."
Bowe hopes that his great love
of the game will stand to him as he battles through school and
college before deciding on his future.
"When I get through my
Leaving and an accountancy degree I hope to know where my game
is at and I can take it from there. Obviously I'd love to play
professional golf but I suppose I'll just have to take things
step by step.
"I love reading everything
about the swing, without getting too technical in my own game.
It's a pity to miss the Close at my home course in Tramore because
of my Leaving Cert, so whatever tournament is first on the calendar
after that is my goal. I'm not even sure what tournaments I'll
be playing in. I don't really know the Senior schedule."
Golf Shorts
Smyth
Drogheda's Des Smyth will take on the legends of US golf on his
Champions Tour debut in two weeks time.
Smyth turns 50 on February
12 and will tee it up at Naples in Florida two days later in
the $1.6 million ACE Group Classic alongside Hale Irwin, Tom
Kite, Gary Player, Tom Watson and Ben Crenshaw.
Irwin, Kite, Player and Watson
have 167 career victories between them in the US alone while
Crenshaw, a rookie on the PGA TOUR's Champions Tour last season,
had 19 career victories on the PGA TOUR and won the Masters just
eight years ago.
Padraig
Ryder Cup trio Padraig Harrington, Darren Clarke and Paul McGinley
are set to support a new tournament that will help raise funds
in the battle against suicide.
The 3 T's Golf Tournament -
which will be launched by Harrington on Monday, is the brainchild
of a group of golfing business people who want to generate funds
for this cause.
Every golf club in Ireland
will be invited to qualify for the event which will culminate
in a grand
final in South Africa in the autumn.
Danny
Killarney's Danny Sugrue has hit trouble after swopping his job
as swimming pool monitor for the pro golf scene.
Sugrue, 24, jumped in at the
deep end when he made a surprise trip to the Tour School and
narrowly failed to earn a Challenge Tour card for this season.
But after waiting for a last
minute call up as 16th alternate for this week's Costa Rica Open
on the Challenge Tour's Latin American leg, he carded a horror
85.
"I had nothing to lose,"
he said before the trip. "I had played terrible all year
but it went quite well for me at the School. It should be more
exciting than the pool and I hope to get more experience this
year."
Coach
The hunt is on for Ireland's next golf coach.
The Golfing Union of Ireland
is searching for an experienced pro to replace National Coach
Howard Bennett, who retires next month.
But don't bet on Rathsallagh
guru Brendan McDaid who is set to dedicate more time to fixing
the faults of the average player.
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© Brian Keogh 2003
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