A Major win is just around
the corner for one of Ireland's trio of golfing superstars
just as long as they don't lose the hunger.
That's the view of veteran
Eamonn Darcy as he prepares for his final season before joining
the Seniors when he turns 50 in August.
The Darce has seen it all in
a 31-year career that includes four Ryder Cup appearances and
15 tournament wins around the globe.
After losing his edge in recent
years "battling against 23 year olds every week", Darcy
is chomping at the bit again as he looks forward to life in the
senior ranks.
This will also be a memorable
year for Irish golf with four European Tour events including
the American Express championship - taking place on our shores.
And Darcy feels that it could
be an historic one too as Darren Clarke, Padraig Harrington and
Paul McGinley go chasing the Major championships.
He said: "It's going to
be a huge year and it wouldn't surprise me in the least if we
had a Major winner.
"The three boys have everything
it takes and they're all going in the right direction. They now
want to win all the time and that's important. You have to be
hungry for success and try to improve all the time.
"The three of them have
become serious operators and I think they are every bit as good
as any of them out there winning majors at the moment.
"It's just a question
of having the stomach for it and getting the right breaks. And
I've no doubt that they have the talent."
Darcy's Major chance came at
Royal Birkdale in the 1991 British Open, where he eventually
finished tied for fifth behind Ian Baker-Finch.
"I had my chance and I
gave it my best shot. But Baker - Finch was incredible on the
last day. I was out in 31 but he shot 29 and I was still two
behind playing the back nine.
"In the end I had a seven
at the 15th which was a double but felt like a quadruple. It
just knocked the stuffing out of me."
It also signalled the beginning
of the end for Darcy as a force on the tour as his Order of Merit
position fell alarmingly.
Never out of the top 50 in
Europe between 1974 and 1991, Darcy fell to 59th in 1992 before
losing his card at the end of 2000.
And the big man now admits
that his loss of appetite for the game may have cost him in recent
years.
"I didn't totally lose
the hunger but perhaps in the last couple of years my goals haven't
been that good, but I'm hoping to get the appetite back.
"Once you get to Seniors
age you really start to get excited about it and I'm hoping to
get invites into two or three tournaments in America this year
and then go to the tour school.
"In the future I'd like
to play on the US Seniors Tour although Christy Junior told me
it' still very difficult and that there lots of good players
around.
"But it's better than
playing with 23 year olds all the time that are hungry for success,
the way we were when we started off.
"My problem in recent
years has been getting the ball in the hole so I've decided to
go to a long putter. My putting has been holding me back but
the long putter might help me. Ian Woosnam told me to go with
it and it's given me more confidence.
"It's not the full length
long putter, it's a cut down version I had done of a Ping model,
something I concocted myself, that comes up just above the belly."
"I don't know how it will
go because it's not tried and tested but we'll see soon. Just
look what it did for Langer!"
Darcy will play in around 12
events on the European Tour this season before he turns 50 on
7 August and takes a step into the unknown.
"I have an invitation
to Dubai as a past champion so that will be my first tournament
then I'll try to get into Qatar. After that I'll have to wait
and see but the Spanish Open would also be another one I'd like
to play in because I've won that too."
But the Wicklow legend is also
thinking about the Ryder Cup at the K Club in 2006 and the race
to become the first Irishman to captain the European side.
"My hat's in the ring
too and has been for some time. I let my views know to the committee
about three years ago and I'd certainly be over the moon if I
got the job.
"It would be a great honour
to be asked, and after four Ryder Cups and having holed the putt
that helped us win at Muirfield Village in '87 I think I have
a chance. I'm also still in touch with the scene because I'm
playing the tour but a lot can happen between now and 2006."
In the meantime Darcy is looking
forward to being reunited with former Ryder Cup team mate Seve
Ballesteros at Druids Glen in April.
"Seve has always said
nice things about me. He sent me a lovely letter recently asking
me to play in the Pro-Am at Druids Glen before the Seve Trophy
and I said I'd be delighted to."
Maybe some of the Druids' magic
will rub off on Darcy's new-fangled putter as he heads off on
tour again with the enthusiasm of a 19 year old.
+++++
Shark visit
Greg Norman is set to return
to Irish shores in July.
The multi-millionaire Australian
will open his latest design the exclusive new links course
at Doonbeg on Clare's Atlantic coast.
But Doonbeg members are hoping
that the Great White Shark's commitments will allow him to cut
the ribbon on the opening day of the Palmer Cup, on 8 July.
The Aussie superstar is determined
to open the course in person - but only when he has time.
Norman's 228 ft, $60 million
expedition yacht, the 'Aussie Rules' is also set to be commissioned
in early July.
The Palmer Cup is an annual
match-play competition between top college golfers from the United
States and the best university talent from Great Britain and
Ireland.
Ulsterman and Walker Cup player
Graeme McDowell has taken part in the last two editions and is
expected to return this year.
The Palmer Cup returns to Ireland
in 2004, when Ballybunion's Old Course plays host to the event.
Smurfit Irish PGA
The PGA Irish Region is battling
to bring the Big Three to the Smurfit Irish Professional Championship.
But negotiations are proving
difficult.
The championship traditionally
clashes with the World Matchplay at Wentworth in October, where
Padraig Harrington and Darren Clarke are likely to take part.
Sponsors Smurfit and the PGA
are working hard to attract all Ireland's tour players, including
Paul McGinley, Philip Walton, Des Smyth, Eamonn Darcy and David
Higgins.
Although the week following
the Seve Trophy at Druids Glen, from April 25-28, looks a likely
date it clashes with the Spanish Open.
An announcement is expected
next week.
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© Brian Keogh 2002
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