While Scotland's Paul Lawrie was making his dreams come true in 1999, Dubliner
Peter Lawrie was living out the nightmareside of the pro game.
The journeyman
from Aberdeen clinched the Open at Carnoustie andset himself
up for life, but Dubliner Peter was just back from yet another
exhausting trip to the Asian Tour, desperatelyseeking his golfing
dream on the Old Continent once again.
Aftersplitting
his year between Asia and Europe, making trips home to compete
on the Challenge Tour and the big European Tour events in Ireland,
Lawrie was no nearer his dream of clinching his dream ticket
c a full European Tour card.
Now, nearly
two years down the road, the Dubliner is locked in a desperare
battle with time.
Three times
a non-qualifier at the Tourschool, the clock is ticking for
the 27 year-old who gave himself just five years to make it when
he turned professional in 1997.
Like the
rest of the Challenge Tour brigade, Lawrie doesn t hold any loftier
ambitions for the moment other than the right to play with the
big boys on the European Tour.
Apart from
the rewards for golfingsuccess, it would also give him the chance
to renew acquaintances with old buddies from his amateur days
like Padraig Harrington and David Higgins, and bring back memories
of when life wassimple and bad round didn t mean asleepless
night.
A Tour Card
is all that most of the players on the Challenge Tour are aiming
for,” he told me this week.
The Challenge
Tour itself is a loss making exercise unless you re winning tournaments
regularly,so the idea is to get one of the top 15 cards and
get on the main tour.
Its not
about money, its about getting to where you think you belong.”
Determined
and intelligent, Lawrie also has enough commonsense to know
when to give up. But that time hasn t come just yet.
A university
graduate with a Bachelor of Commerce (B.Comm) degree from University
College Dublin (UCD) Lawries business brain told him to give
himself just five years to make it in the pro game.
I looked
at it as a businessstart-up,” he explains. I figured that
if after five years you weren t making any money and you were
just going to be another run of the mill operator then it would
be better to move on and trysomething else.
Its been
my dream to be a professional golfersince I was a little kid
but you have to look at things in a realistic light and I reckoned
that afer five years I would have given it my all.”
But with
expenses of £800 a week and winnings of just £7,500
in Europe lastseason, the numbers are not adding up for the
man from Dublins Newlands club.
And while
Harrington has won over £3 millionsince he burst onto
thescene in 1996, Lawrie is not in the least bit envious of
his former Ireland team mate.
Its inspring
tosee how incredibly well Padraig has done. He won in his eighth
event on tour and that breakthrough gave him the confidence to
go out and do what he has donesince, which is incredible,”
admits Lawrie.
Although
he has received a £20,000 cash injection from the government
and othersmallsponsorship deals, Lawrie is going to have to
use all his business acumen to keep on top of the figures this
season.
I plan to
play a very fullschedule but I m not going tostay out like
I did last year when I played rubbish golf trying to fix things,”
he reveals.
Working with
UCDsports psycologist Aidan Moran, Lawrie is much more focused
on what he has to do to put four good rounds together thisseason.
I was getting
too far ahead of myself,sometimes five orsix holes ahead. But
now I m just trying to concentrate on theshot in hand and take
things from there,” hesays
Hitting the
ballstraighter than ever thanks to intensive work with Rathsallagh
teaching professional Brendan McDaid, Lawrie is also fitter and
stronger than he has ever been in his career.
And for a
man who once had had get three taxis to take him fromsingapore
to Malaysia, Lawrie is not afraid to go out of his way to achieve
his ambitions.
A winter
stint on thesunshine Tour insouth Africa earlier this year
helped the former Irish Close Champion to hone his game for the
most importantseason of his career.
I hadseven
great weeks down there, finished in the top twenty in thesouth
African Masters and did well enough to make it profitable”,
hesays.
So is he
really going to jack it in a years time if things don t come
right?
We'll have
to wait andsee,” hesays with a grin. I‘m just trying
to live in the present, take it oneshot at a time and let the
clubs do the talking.”
Smoothsmyth
Super veteran
Dessmyth is tops again. But this time its only for his bunker
play.
According
to the European Tour, deadly Des is number one at getting up
and down fromsand for par.
So far
this term he has an incredible 100 per centsuccess rate in the
sandsaves category.
The Drogheda
man, 48, always was asmooth operator around the greens.
Ireland v MGA
Ireland will
bid for a hat trick of wins over the Metropolotian Golf Association
of New York at Portmarnock from May 8-9.
The boys
in green beat the top New Yorkers at Portmarnock Links in 1998
thensurvived thespeedy greens of Maidstone, East Hampton to
make it two in a row in New York in 1999.
This time
aroundstephen Browne, Gary Cullen, John Foster, Noel Fox, Andrew
McCormick, Michael McDermott, Adrian Morrow and Tim Rice have
been called up for duty.
Powerscourt
If you get
to Powerscourt for the AIB Irish Senior Open from May 11-13,
check out the view from the 12th tee.
Movie buffs
will remember the spectacular landscape as the location for the
famous battlescene in Laurence Oliviers 1945 version of Henry
V.
With its
tricky, two-tiered green, the veterans will have to be arrow
straight here too.
Amateur Open
invasion!
Watch out
Noel Fox. A host of International hotshots are bidding for your
Irish Amateur Open title from Mary 11-13.
The field
for the Ulster Bank sponsored event includes 63 overseas players
from 12 countries.
And with
an upper handicap limit of 0.9, it looks as if competition will
be tough.
Whilesergio
Garica had an incredible handicap of plus 5.6 when he turned
pro in 1999, almost half the field for Royal Dublin has a handicap
of between plus four and plus one.
Top
©
Brian Keogh 2000
Back
to Golf
|