Walker Cup skipper Garth McGimpsey
rubbished claims of bias against Irish players and roared: "I'm
looking for winners."
High profile figures in the
Irish game are miffed that only 28 Irishmen have been capped
since the competition began in 1922.
Calls have been made for a
move to a Ryder Cup style selection system instead of the traditional
six - man selection committee.
But the Ulster legend dismissed
those claims are "rubbish" as he prepared for the biggest
test of his career.
He said: "If the players
have been good enough to play Walker Cup then they have been
picked. I don't know what's happened in the past.
"I had to struggle myself
to get onto the team and perhaps it has been slightly harder
for Irish players because we have had to travel across to the
UK to be seen by the selectors.
An Irishman has played in every
edition since 1981 but feelings are still running high amongst
former Irish greats who failed to get the call up.
"They have always made
it tough for Irish players," said a former Ryder Cup star.
"When the likes of Darren Clarke can't get picked you have
to ask questions. "
"The R and A selectors
will never give up their power," said another former Ireland
international. "An Order of Merit system would be fair but
they love their little bit of power and they won't give it up."
Padraig Harrington, Paul McGinley
and Philip Walton have all played Walker Cup golf with the likes
of Joe Carr becoming a legend because of his multiple appearances.
But McGimpsey does not believe
that an Order of Merit system, with points for high finishes
in designated tournaments, would be an improvement.
"An Order of Merit is
one way, but what would I do then? I think Sam Torrance would
rather have picked all of his Ryder Cup team. I want to have
guys that are coming into form or are in form rather than played
that played well in one event and then held on.
"We have four selectors,
a chairman and a captain. We go to all the tournaments and I
think we will come up with the best team possible. That's what
I'm aiming for anyway."
McGimpsey was British Amateur
champion at Royal Dornoch in 1985 and a member of the Walker
Cup side that made history in 1989 by becoming the first side
to beat the Americans on their own patch.
His record of four West of
Irelands ('84, '88, '93, '96), three Easts ('88, 94, '98), five
Norths ('78, '84, '91, '92, '93) and one Irish Close championship
('88) is right up there with the greats of Irish golf.
And he firmly believes that
he will pick the best side to take on the Americans, regardless
of nationality.
"All I can do is pick
the best team and set them on their way," he said. "In
my mind there is nobody on this team at the moment.
"There are a few guys
that might have to do a bit less than others because they have
a good track record and maybe have played in the past but if
one of those guys has a bad season he will struggle."
McGimpsey's job begins with
a squad session at Ganton early next month before the season
proper gets underway.
Then he will spend every weekend
for the next three months checking out the best golfing talent
in Britain and Ireland.
He explained: "We are
looking for winners really. There are more than 30 guys in the
panel an plenty more who have a chance to get on this side. No
doors have been closed and I want to see as many people as possible.
"We'll be at all the big
events - the Lytham Trophy, the Irish Open at Royal Dublin, St
Andrews Links trophy, the Amateur Championship, the Scottish
Strokeplay, Welsh strokeplay, the Berkshire and the European
Team Championships in Holland to name but a few.
"We're just looking for
the best golfers we can find - in matchplay or strokeplay. I
don't believe in people being better at matchplay or strokeplay.
If somebody wins a 72 hole strokeplay tournament it's going to
be to his credit."
Standards have been rising
in recent years with three wins for Great Britain and Ireland
from the last four editions.
"There are more good players
to choose from here now," he admitted. "In years gone
by we had two or three good players but for the last while we
have had two or three exceptional players. Unfortunately, they
have all turned pro."
Athlone's Colm Moriarty is
one of the Irish favourites to take a place in the side but
McGimpsey won't be giving any pep talks as the contenders prepare
for the new season
"They don't need motivating.
In fact, they need to be held back in some way. Guys over practice
or get too excited about the event," said the skipper
Appointed last year for a two-year
term, McGimpsey is almost certain to be offered a second bite
of the cherry with an away match in Chicago in 2005.
If he's successful he could
yet skipper the side on home soil when the event comes to Ulster
and Royal County Down in 2007
"That's a long way off,"
he said. "But it's a magnificent course and I'm delighted
for Newcastle. It will be a great spectacle. It was a great
occasion at Portmarnock in 1991 and we generally do things very
well here in Ireland.
"But Ganton is first and
I really want to win there very badly. I'm putting a lot of time
and effort into it. I didn't enjoy being on a losing Walker team.
It's a very hard trophy to win. I've won it as a player and I'd
love to do it as a captain.
"I don't know how much
effect I'm going to have but I think I'm pretty good at putting
players together in a foursomes situation. I'm very confident,
but golf is fickle."
(Mac)
Paul McGinley got one of the
best drivers in the world - and spun out of the Sunningdale Foursomes.
The Ryder Cup hero teamed up
with former F1 world champion Nigel Mansell for the famous event
this week but crashed out in the second round.
McGinley and Mansell won their
first round match by two and one but went down by four and three
in the next round.
But the Dubliner has admitted
that Mansell's advice on concentration helped him sink the putt
that won the Ryder Cup.
"We became friends and
he would tell me what it was like for him in a car moving at
200 miles an hour," said McGinley. "He would tell me
how he had to get into a zone.
"Eddie Jordan set up a
meeting between us and Nigel has been wonderful for me."
(Des)
Des Smyth is raking it in on the Champions Tour - thanks to
his driving distance off the tee.
The 50 year old has banked
an average of $58,000 a week since he joined the mega-bucks
American tour.
An average drive of over 270
yards leaves Smyth amongst the bigger hitters.
He also hit one of the longest
drives of the year - a 335-yard whopper - as he picked up $58,000
in the SBC Classic in California last weekend.
The Drogheda man has pocketed
$233,713 for 13th place on the money list and needs to stay in
the top 31 to keep his card.
(West)
Freezing Sligo promises some
hot competition for this year's West of Ireland Amateur Open
Championship.
The traditional season-opener
at Rosses Point is often lashed by Atlantic storms during Easter
week.
But with the handicap limit
likely to come at 1.4 the lowest in its 81-year history
defending champion Stuart Paul faces stiff competition
in the Standard Life sponsored event.
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© Brian Keogh 2003
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