There's
more to great golf than life in the pro ranks just ask one of Ireland's
top amateurs, Dubliner Noel 'Foxy' Fox.
If you fancy yourself as a future pro, take the advice of a Walker
Cup candidate and think along and hard.
The current East of Ireland and Irish Amateur Open champion, Fox
has great amateurs scrambling to make an impact on the big stage.
He knows all about the lure of big-money pro ranks - and just how
high the standards are. Warned Fox: "I was bitten by the bug,
but I'm cured now and I have to say that I have absolutely no aspirations
to turn professional.
"I saw loads of great players struggling to make it on the
mini tours in the US - guys that could have played on the PGA Tour
- and that convinced me that the pro game wasn't for me."
Coming from a man who regularly drives the ball over 290 yards,
plays off a plus handicap, and burn up courses like Portmarnock,
County Louth or Royal County Down, this is food for thought.
"Length, a fantastic short game and fearlessness", says
Fox, "that's what it takes.
"You have to be really long off the tee and have a magical
short game just for starters. But if you don't have the physical
attributes to begin with, then you're just wasting your time."
Guts are vital too, then?
"Absolutely. These guys don't get afraid when they get to three
under. They just keep going and go to four, five or six or whatever.
There's no fear."
Free from the gnawing doubt that he might have made a decent living
as a pro, Fox is already deep in preparation for the Home International
Championships at Carnoustie from September 13-15.
It's a far cry for the days when the Dubliner, who now manages a
property business for his father, honed his game on the US mini
tours in Florida.
It was there, on the not so glamorous Golden Bear Tour and the Tommy
Armour Tour, that he discovered the dog eat dog lifestyle of the
lower echelons of the great golf circus.
The son of a wealthy Dublin accountant, Fox could have found the
finance to launch an all-out assault on the pro ranks a couple of
seasons ago.
"I did think about it seriously alright," he admits. "But
there are other goals to aim for in life, on and off the course."
The sight of top American amateurs and young pros struggling to
make an impression on the mini tours over the Florida winter convinced
the 26-year-old that life on the circuit wasn't for him.
Said Noel: "There were some fantastic players that couldn't
get onto the US PGA Tour or even the second division version, the
Buy.Com Tour.
"They were playing in mini events on the Golden Bear Tour and
the Tommy Armour Tour. And the competition was ferocious."
And he added modestly: "If it was a one day event and you shot
a 68, someone would probably go out and shoot a 61 or a 62. That's
when I realised that I really had no chance."
But what about guys like Keith Nolan, David Higgins or Richie Coughlan,
top Irish amateurs now plying their trade on the US PGA Tour, European
Tour and the Challenge Tour? Fox
doesn't pull his punches.
"I could never beat those guys when they we were amateurs,
so what chance would I have against them in the professional game?,"
he asks honestly.
"The best thing a young player with ambitions to turn pro could
do these days is to play with someone like Paul McGinley or Padraig
Harrington and just compare. They'd probably find that they have
a lot of work to be done on their games."
As Cobie Le Grange, the great South African tour player of the 1960s
and 70s told his son Nico: "If you can't break 70 on any course
on the world, don't even think about turning professional."
In fact, Nico Le Grange was just one of a star-studded international
field to trail home behind Fox in the Irish Amateur Open championship
last June.
It was Fox's third 'major' victory, following earlier wins in the
'East' in 1995 and the 'West' two years ago. And it prompted a call
up to the St Andrew's Trophy team just a week later, followed almost
immediately by a second win in the 'East', this time over Mark Murphy
in a play-off.
But for Fox, ambition still burns bright, even if he has given up
on a dream showdown with Tiger Woods and company.
Walker Cup selection would make Fox's career.
If he is to make the Great Britain and Ireland team to face the
Americans at Ocean Forest Golf Club in Georgia next year, Fox must
put in solid performances during what remains this season.
A member of the winner GB & I St Andrew's Trophy squad earlier
this year, flaxen-haired Fox has in effect been recognised by the
R & A as a potential member of the Walker Cup team.
And with Ireland colleague Graeme McDowell knocking on the door
of Walker Cup selection, Fox is looking forward to the challenges
that lie ahead.
Can he follow in the Walker Cup footsteps of millionaire pros Padraig
Harrington, Paul McGinley, Ronan Rafferty and Philip Walton?
Will he join the pantheon of the great Irish amateurs, alongside
Joe Carr, Garth McGimpsey or Jimmy Bruen? The journey starts at
Carnoustie.
And as Fox himself says: "This is what it's really all about."
Golf
Shorts
David Higgins is becoming the Goliath of the Challenge Tour.
The four-shot victory in the Rolex Trophy pro-am in Switzerland
last week was the Waterville man's third success of the season.
As he told Teeing Up just over a month ago: "Winning is a great
feeling and I intend to do it again."
How right he was.
Since he first featured in these pages in July, the 27-year-old
has claimed two more Challenge tour titles.
And with only seven events remaining, he looks almost certain to
take the Challenge Tour's Order of Merit.
Said a delighted Higgins: "Once I had my European Tour card
back I knew I could continue to play my best golf."
So much for the handicap of playing with a driver borrowed from
his brother Brian.
Higgins lost his clubs two weeks ago and missed the cut in the North
West of Ireland Open at the Slieve Russell.
But it's all smiles now.
"I don't miss them at all," he joked this week. "And
I don't think Brian will be seeing his driver again, either."
Justin
time
What a week it was for Justin Kehoe.
After romping home in the final of the Belgian Youths in Brussels
last weekend, he flew home to help UCD to their first national title
in 60 years.
Kehoe teamed up with Mark O'Sullivan and Mark Campbell as the Dublin
university took the Irish Club Youth's crown at Murvagh by the incredible
margin of 16 shots!
Tiger
II
Only hours before Tiger Woods repeated the feat at Firestone, Connemara
teenager Derek McNamara fired a stunning round of 61 to set up a
spectacular victory of his own.
While Tiger did the trick at the WGC/NEC Invitational, the 16 year-old
boys international burnt it up on his way to carrying off the Irish
Boys' Amateur Close Championship at Strandhill in Sligo.
'Supermac' shot rounds of 70 and 71 to trail Conor Doran by four
shots at halfway.
But a barrage of birdies saw him shoot an incredible 8 under par
61 in round three.
Then he finished off the opposition with a 'modest' 66 in the last
round to win with five to spare.
Tiger isn't the only golfer burning bright.
Top
©
Brian Keogh 2000
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