Living legend Mary McKenna
is having a new lease of life on the fairways, 31 years after
making her Curtis Cup debut.
The 52 year old recently added
the British and Irish Senior Open titles to her many titles after
a six-year lay-off and admitted: I missed it so badly.
McKenna will always be remembered
for her eight Irish Ladies Close titles and nine consecutive
appearances in the Curtis Cup.
But despite the passing of
the years, the Donabate star has never lost the will to win.
And to prove it she'll be back in a green sweater at Woodbrook
next Saturday and Sunday (21-22 Oct.) when Ireland take on England
in a senior international match.
Said McKenna: "I love
being competitive again and to win a British Senior Open is a
wonderful feeling. I'll play in the Irish championships again
next season and stay as active as possible."
Last month McKenna knocked
in a 10-foot putt on the 18th green at Aberdovey in Wales to
win the Senior Women's British Open Amateur Championship at her
first attempt. Her win came just a week after her victory in
the Irish edition and proved that Irish golf has a fantastic
asset in one of the most steely competitors the game has ever
seen.
Recently retired from her job
at the Bank of Ireland, where she worked organised internal bank
sports for many years, McKenna is set to continue to work for
the good of the women's game in Ireland.
"I think we have a wonderful
crop of young players coming through and it's only a matter of
time and self-belief before we win the Home Internationals again.
"We haven't got a very
wide base here but young players like Alison Coffey, Elaine Dowdall
and Claire Coughlan are really pushing us on and I think we can
compete with the likes of England. But we've got to work hard
and the problem is getting girls interested in taking up the
game.
"We've got to get more
of the younger kids, get them at a younger level and get them
involved in the training schemes, such as the one the ILGU ran
at Black Bush for school children earlier this year.
"Only this way an we hope
to discover the talent and bring people on so that they continue
to play the game."
McKenna got her first experience
of international competition as far back as 1968, when the Curtis
Cup was played at Royal County Down and she travelled north to
support her Donabate clubmate, Vivienne Singleton.
"Despite having been runner-up
in the Irish Championship earlier that year, I didn't really
know many people in golf at that time. And I certainly knew nothing
about the American players."
That all began to change, however,
when McKenna won the Irish championship at Ballybunion in 1969.
"I made the Vagliano Trophy
team in 1970 when twelve were on the side and only eight were
chosen for the Curtis Cup. So then I went to Sunningdale Old
Course for the Curtis Cup trials. That was a huge thing for me
at that stage of my career. There was a total of 15 of us there,
playing three rounds of three-balls in round robin competition."
McKenna claimed her place with
ease and played in the first of her nine Curtis Cup matches at
Brae Burn later that year.
It wasn't until her last Curtis
Cup appearance, at Prairie Dunes in 1986, that McKenna would
finally taste victory and make history by winning the Curtis
Cup for the first time on American soil 13 matches to 5.
Although Great Britain and
Ireland retained the trophy in 1994 when they claimed a 9-9 half
at the Honors Course, that 1986 win still stands as one of the
greatest achievements of European golf. For McKenna though, there
is one moment that stands out above all others.
She once said: "I experienced
the altitude of Denver, thunder and lightning storms in Apawamis,
New York, and the morning fog in San Francisco. But the realisation
of one of my greatest ambitions was to see the Republic of Ireland's
first staging of the Curtis Cup at Killarney in 1996."
McKenna's presence helped spur
the side to victory and with her will to win and fierce competitive
spirit, this golfing legend is not ready to fade away just yet.
She added with a grin: "I'll play in the Irish Close again
next year. If the putts start to drop, who knows what might happen."
+++++
Fans are already snapping up
tickets to see Tiger Woods, David Duval Ernie Els and Co. at
Mount Juliet next September.
The giants of world golf will
gather at the Kilkenny course from 17-22 September for the $5
American Express Championship part of the four-event World
Golf Championships series.
Ireland will have three men
in the field, with Mount Juliet touring pro Padraig Harrington
flying the flag alongside Paul McGinley and Darren Clarke.
Said Harrington: ""It
shows just how highly rated this country is within the world
of golf that both the Ryder Cup and the World Golf Championships
- American Express Championship will be held in Ireland within
the next five years. Knowing just how sports mad we Irish are
there is little doubt that the event will be a huge success."
Tickets can be booked through
Ticketmaster at (01) 2469900 or from www.ticketmaster.ie and
there is a hospitality sales hotline number, (01) 6762728.
+++++
Ireland is set to invade South
America this winter, without stars Michael Hoey or Stephen Browne.
South of Ireland champion Justin
Kehoe and Ballyclare's Johnny Foster wear the green jersey in
the Juan Carlos Tahilade Cup in Los Lagartos Country Club, near
Buenos Aires from 13-16 December.
With British Amateur champion
Hoey set to turn professional after the Masters and European
Amateur champion Stephen Browne now a member of the paid ranks,
Kehoe and Foster received the call.
+++++
Irish Close champion Gavin
McNeill and Walker Cup player Graeme McDowell represent Ireland
in the Simon Bolivar Cup in Caracas, Venezuela, from 7-10 November.
Meanwhile, Fred Daly Trophy
winners Holywood will compete in a four-nation final with England,
Scotland and Wales at La Manga from 14 November to 1 December
while Senior Cup winners Mallow will compete with defending champions
Shandon Park in the European Club championship in Medici, Italy,
next month.
+++++
Irish Youths champion Mark
Ryan (Grange) and runner-up Mark O'Sullivan (UCD and Galway),
will compete in the European Under-21 Championship at Turnberry
from 25-26 October.
Gingerhaired Ryan has
been one of the up and coming stars of the amateur scene for
a couple of years now while O'Sullivan recently led UCD to their
first National pennant when the students took the Barton Shield
at Newlands.
Top
©
Brian Keogh 2001
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