Ryder Cup weak link Paul McGinley
prepared for next week's Belfry showdown by raging: I'm no mental
case.
Out of form McGinley has plummeted
out of the World's top 50 and lost the fantastic form that saw
him win the Wales Open and claim 11 top ten finishes on his way
to a Ryder Cup spot last year.
Since the postponement of the
matches because of the September 11 atrocities, McGinley's game
as fallen apart.
He has dropped from 35th to
70th in the world and is 49th in the Volvo Order of Merit with
eight missed cuts and just two top tens from 18 events in Europe.
But he refuses to admit that his problems are in his mind.
He said: "It's definitely
technical rather than mental. If it was mental I would be playing
well in practice and then poorly in tournaments but I have been
having really bad practice rounds too.
"This time last year I
was at the top of my confidence and obviously I'm not playing
as well at the moment, but that's golf. It goes in cycles. One
minute you feel like you will be an automatic top ten and then
next you are struggling.
"I just went too far down
the road with my game technically and paid the price. I started
using my hands and arms too much and didn't use my legs the way
I should have but I've rectified that."
The Americans are likely to
target out of form players like McGinley, Lee Westwood and Welshman
Phillip Price but he's not concerned.
"How do I feel like being
targeted as one of the weaker players? I suppose we'll be doing
that with some of the Americans too. It doesn't bother me and
I have enough to worry about trying to concentrate on my own
game.
"My individual goal is
just to win the Ryder Cup. I don't care if I lose all my matches
but we win the Cup itself in the end because it is a team game."
He also refuses to accept that
he has become so obsessed with the Ryder Cup for the past 12
months that he hasn't been able to concentrate on his own game
"I haven't been obsessed
with the Ryder Cup," he said. "But it's been at the
back of my mind for sure. I've been much more concerned about
how poorly I have been hitting the ball than the Ryder Cup.
"I do as many things as
I can to relax. I'm a big West Ham fan and I love Celtic too
but every job has its up and downs.
"As for the pairings,
Sam has to decide who will play together but I'd like to think
that I will be paired with Padraig at some stage."
He joked: "Maybe our thick
Dublin accents will confuse the opposition because it has been
too long since we did Irish at school to speak in Irish."
If McGinley is no unduly worried
about his Ryder Cup debut he IS hurt that he was left out of
the field for this week's American Express Championship at Mount
Juliet.
Last year's edition in Louisville
was cancelled after the September 11 attacks when McGinley and
the other players were already at the venue.
But the 35-year-old Dubliner
believes the organisers should have invited all the members of
BOTH Ryder Cup teams to Mount Juliet this week.
Five Europeans and two Americans
failed to qualify for the Amex championship and have had to sit
out the important week before the Ryder Cup
McGinley said: "Obviously
I'd prefer to be there in Ireland playing in a World Championship
event but I've nobody but myself to blame.
"I was in the Belfry on
Thursday for a practice round and that's a nice feeling, to be
part of a Ryder Cup squad.
"But I still think I should
have been invited to the American Express Championship along
with all the other members of the Ryder Cup side.
"I think the organisers
have made a big mistake by not inviting the members of both Ryder
Cup teams to take part the week before the Ryder Cup."
With nowhere to play this week,
McGinley took the opportunity to get an early look at the Belfry
before the Ryder Cup clash.
But as a huge GAA fan, the
Dubliner admits that he won't be watching fellow Irishmen Padraig
Harrington and Darren Clarke in action at the Kilkenny course.
"Sure, I'd prefer to be
there in Kilkenny but I certainly won't be watching any of it
on television on Sunday," he said. "I'll be watching
Kerry and Armagh in the All Ireland Football final, make no mistake."
Normally a player who likes
to shoot at the pins, McGinley feels that the matchplay format
of the Ryder Cup definitely suits the Europeans.
"It's a lot more aggressive
form of golf. You can go for it far more than you would in a
strokeplay event and that means that's good for Europe because
we are more experienced at that style golf. We have all played
a lot of matchplay over the years.
"But the standard of golf
is going to be very high and there will be a lot of birdies.
But it is probably going to come down to who putts the best really.
"As for the Belfry people
think that it is an easy course but having played it the other
day I can say that it is as tough as ever. I t looks the best
I have ever seen it.
"It's in absolutely perfect
condition and anybody who thinks it's an easy course is kidding
themselves."
McGinley's family will be at
the Belfry to support him along with hundreds of Irish fans on
a course where he has played well in the past. Last season he
finished second at the Birmingham course in the Benson and Hedges
International Open. He'd prefer to forget how he missed the cut
there this term.
(Walker)
Irish quartet Justin Kehoe,
Noel Fox, Gary Maybin and Colm Moriarty have been included in
the 2003 Walker Cup squad.
Skipper Garth McGimpsey is
cranking up to defend the title at Ganton from 6-7 September
next year and Ireland has a great chance of adding to its historic
role.
England's Gary Wolstenholme,
already a four-times Walker Cup player, has also been named in
the squad of 24 players.
Kehoe, the world University
Champion, Fox and Moriarty will be joined by Andy McCormick for
the World Amateur Team championships in Kuala Lumpur next month.
(Aidan)
Mount Juliet green keeper Aidan O'Hara can't wait for the American
Express Championship to finish.
"There is so much that
can happen to greens,: he said. "We are trying to keep them
at the same pace, 11.5 on the stimpmeter, which is what the European
Tour wants. We could go far higher but they have more pin position
options that way."
Top
© Brian Keogh 2003
Back
|