Fighting Riche Coughlan watched
his PGA Tour dreams dashed and revealed: I felt like throwing
in the towel.
The 28 year old Birr battler
has been plagued with bad luck since he cracked his ribs last
year.
First he hurt his back in a
serious car smash at Christmas and then he was laid low by a
vertebrae injury caused by too much practice.
Coughlan lost his card last
year but got a minor medical exemption which gave him with five
tournaments to earn the $326,130 was short.
But bad luck and injuries caused
him to consider giving up the game instead.
"I just couldn't swing
at all. I felt like an old man," he said. "The chiropractor
cracked my back into place so that I could tee it up but it was
no good.
"I just went to pot for
a while and got down on myself. Putts weren't going it, balls
were spinning off greens. For a while I said to myself: 'Screw
this game.'"
But now Coughlan is back on
track that's to a serious training regime and the help of a Californian
golf psychologist.
The problem is that he is struggling
to make ends meet after a season to forget.
A paltry $13,955 on the main
tour and $9,975 from one cheque on the Buy.com circuit is not
nearly enough to meet the ¤2,000 a week out of pocket
expenses.
With only his nest egg and
a grant of ¤15,000 from the Irish Sports Council to fall
back on, times have been hard.
"I'm not as depressed
as I was earlier in the year when I lost confidence in my own
ability," revealed Coughlan.
"My 'head man' as I call
my psychologist, has been very good for me. But you can't help
getting frustrated sometimes when you go out and practice hard
on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and you don't get the results
on Thursday.
"I just believe my day
will come. No matter how long it takes I'll just keep hacking
away at it."
Coughlan lost his card last
year but got a minor medical exemption which left him with five
tournaments to earn $326,130 a figure that would equal
what the 125th player earned to save his card in 2001.
In his third event, the Honda
Classic, he missed the cut by one when a late finisher eliminated
all the players on three under par.
"That really gutted me.
I had two holes to finish on the Saturday morning eight
and nine and lipped out each time for birdie. I finished
on three under and then this guy comes and puts all the three
unders out.
"But that's golf. You
add up the numbers and bow out gracefully, that's the way it
goes."
After missing the cut in Greensboro
in April, Coughlan didn't get his final start until the Buick
Open last month where he rubbed shoulders with Tiger Woods and
Phil Mickelson.
As an added pressure he knew
he had to make the cut just to guarantee himself Buy.com golf
for the rest of the season.
"I had to finish first
or second to regain my card or at worst make the cut. If I didn't
make the cut I had no exemption on the Buy.com because I had
to make 2,000 dollars to make the money I needed to be 200th.
The guys from 150th to 200th place at least get Buy.com status.
"But I was comfortable
out there with Tiger and Mickelson. I was in good shape after
a couple of rounds but there wasn't much steam in the engine
on Sunday."
A cheque for $7,331 for 53rd
place eased the pain of a final round 73 and gave Coughlan Buy.com
status, the minimum he needed.
Now the former Walker Cup player
is facing another battle. He has six more Buy.com events left
to get into the Top 60 in the Buy.com rankings and make sure
of an exemption on that tour next year.
If he fails he will have to
go through the gruelling PGA qualifying school for the fourth
time.
It's all a far cry from late
1998 when Coughlan won his tour card on both the PGA and European
Tours an incredible feat.
"I always look back at
'98 and I think what might have happened if I had played on the
European Tour that year. But I said why not go for the top of
the mountain.
"I've realised now after
five years how mental it is. It's an understanding of your own
ability and playing rather than thinking about mechanics.
"Every time you tee it
up it's a chance to win. Play for the moment."
Coughlan is just waiting for
his moment to come along.
Golf Shorts
(Vets)
Veterans Des Smyth and Christy O'Connor Jnr can still rake in
the cash in the $3 million UBS Warburg Cup.
Drogheda favourite Des, 49,
pocketed a cool $100,000 as a captain's pick for Gary Player
as the USA beat the rest of the World last year.
But there are still two places
up for grabs for the match at Sea Island in Georgia from November
15-17.
Nick Faldo, Bernhard Langer,
Ian Woosnam, Sam Torrance, Eduardo Romero, Isao Aoki, Rodger
Davis and Stewart Ginn have all been named in the Rest of the
World side.
Unbeaten last year, Smyth is
a favourite to get the last invite for a player aged 40
49 while O'Connor Jnr can still make grab one of the spots reserved
for the top two European Senior Order of Merit.
Junior is third in the money
list, ¤26,000 behind England's Denis Durnian.
(Home)
Ireland will be relying on the rookies when the men's Home Internationals
tee off in Wales on Wednesday.
Big things are expected from
debut boys John McGinn, Gareth Maybin, Darren Crowe, Sean McTernan
and Padraig Dooley in the showdown at Royal St. David's.
Veterans Ken Kearney and Noel
Fox, South of Ireland champion Colm Moriarty and West of Ireland
kingpin Stuart Paul backbone the side.
(Big D)
Fact. Darren Clarke has won more in 12 seasons on the European
Tour than Des Smyth, Eamonn Darcy and Philip Walton in a combined
80 seasons. Big Daz has banked ¤9,915,980 to just ¤6,953,670
for the other three.
Only Colin Montgomerie and
Bernhard Langer have won more money than the Dungannon man.
(Graeme)
Portrush kid Graeme McDowell was in good company when he won
his debut pro event in Sweden last month.
So far this year there have
been 14 first time winners but McDowell was also named Asprey
Golfer of the Month for August for his achievement.
op
© Brian Keogh 2003
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