One of the great gentlemen
of Irish golf will stride the beautifully manicured fairways
of Adare Manor during this week's AIB Irish Seniors Open.
Big David Jones all six
feet five of him is back and ready for action after a year-long
absence from the game.
But the affable 54 year old
Bangor man can consider himself lucky to be playing golf at all
after suffering a career threatening shoulder injury in April
last year.
A fall on a golf trip to Las
Vegas left him with a badly broken collar bone that took months
to heal and left him contemplating an 'early' retirement from
competitive golf.
"For a while things were
looking very black," he confessed. "It was quite worrying
and it looked as though I was going to have to have surgery on
it if I wanted to play golf again.
"It did heal eventually
last October but although I had healing in my collar bone I had
very little mobility and couldn't move my arm above shoulder
height in any direction. So I had physiotherapy on a weekly basis
for about four months, which sorted it out. There's a little
bit of movement in the shoulder that will never come back but
there's no reason why I shouldn't play well again."
Always a fierce competitor,
Jones will not be at Adare simply to make up the numbers alongside
Christy O'Connor Jnr, Ian Stanley and US number one Bruce Fleisher.
"Adare It's my first event
for a long, long time. I went to the Kenya Open in March for
a laugh and played okay. I usually go down there for an extended
Safari and to play in the tournament. But the last senior's game
I played was a skins game in Egypt in November 2000, which I
won incidentally.
"I'm not interested in
playing seniors golf unless I can be competitive. Every year
I say that I'll see how it's going after 12 or 15 events on the
tour but as long as I get a bit of fun out of it and make a few
quid it's enjoyable.
"It's not like a week-in
week-out rat race. It's possible to have a parallel career as
a golf course designer and that's what I'm hoping for."
Jones is now a very successful
golf course designer with several projects on the go, including
the new National Golf centre at Hilton Templepatrick, a course
he designed with David Feherty back in 1998.
"I did a course with David
in Turkey back in 1993 called National Golf club and I'm doing
another course down there, a lovely 36 hole complex," he
reported. "I'm also doing one for the Jockey Club of Kenya
at their property in Nairobi and I'm doing a number of things
in Ireland. I did nine holes for Mitchelstown back in 1992 and
I'm doing the second nine of that so I'll probably visit them,
during Irish Open week."
But the £2.3 million
complex at Hilton is set to become Jones' most impressive project
to date.
The Ulster branches of the
Golfing Union of Ireland and the Ladies Golf Union have come
together with Sports Council, the R and A, the PGA and the owners
of the Hilton complex to create a practice and training facility
that should be the first of several national golf centres.
Explained Jones: "It is
due to start later this summer, with big training facilities,
outdoors and indoor. We've got lottery funding and everybody
in bed on it actually and it should be really good.
"Although it's being built
under the auspices of the Ulster branch it being seen as an all-Ireland
facility. The Golfing Union is hoping to do two or three of these.
I think they see one of them in the North, one in Cork-Limerick
and the main headquarters in Dublin. But this is the first one
that has actually come to the board and it's looking very exciting."
Jones has come up with an innovative
design for a "sophisticated outdoor range" with individual
targets, slopes, tees and short game areas that allow you "to
replicate any shot that you are likely to find in the playing
of golf in a driving range environment."
There will also be an indoor
facility with a 350 sq m artificial green, bunkers, chipping
areas, driving range areas, physiotherapy rooms and offices for
the Ulster Branch of the GUI.
"I've great hopes for
it. The design, even if I say so myself, is quite unique looking
on paper and I hope we can translate it to the ground,"
he explained.
"It's a series of interlinked
targets all of which are lit at ground level so they are very
clearly identifiable but when you look from the range you can
only see the one you're looking at.
"It doesn't look like
one huge area with a lot of flags in it. If you're hitting at
the 150-metre marker it has all the appearance of looking at
a green, a 400 sq. m golf green that's 150 metres away and you
can't see the other targets that adjoin it.
"At the far end of the
range we will have an elite coaching area for the Golfing Union
and the Ladies Union coaching scheme, playing into targets that
are behind the targets that the public will be using.
"It will be part of the
Hilton complex and operated by Hilton but it will be the focus
for the national coaching scheme."
Jones hopes to successfully
combine his design career with his competitive instincts and
add to his solitary senior victory to date - the 1999 Jersey
Seniors Open.
"I've been working at
my game a bit and the shoulder seems to be behaving itself. I've
had three decent years in the seniors, only one win, but I have
had 20 top five or ten finishes. I had a run of bad form in 2000
and but towards the end I had a third and a second and then the
win in Egypt. So I was kind of really looking forward to 2001
before the injury but there you go. Now I'm looking forward to
Adare Manor and I've heard great reports about it.
"Sooner or later I'm going
to have to decide whether I'm a senior golfer or a golf course
designer. Having had a few good years in the seniors I haven't
had to make the decision yet because both sides of my career
were going really well.
"But then I thought last
year that I was having that decision made for me and I'm just
pleased to be out playing again."
The local crowds are sure to
appreciate the long, flowing swing and graceful style. David
Jones is back.
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© Brian Keogh 2002
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