Lock
up the silverware! Graeme McDowell already has a sackful this season
but the 21-year old from Rathmore is hungry for more.
This guy is playing so well he's threatening to win everything following
some truly spectacular performances on the Irish amateur scene this
season.
So spectacular, in fact, that the 21 year-old from Portrush has
almost totally overshadowed the early season exploits of Portmarnock's
Noel Fox.
A winner already of the Irish and Leinster Youths titles, the young
Ulsterman moved up another gear, winning the prestigious Irish Close
Championship at Royal Portrush in June, the World Universities Championship
at Castlerock in late July and then the South of Ireland championship
at Lahinch earlier this week.
As a reward for winning the Shell-sponsored South, McDowell has
won the right to play in the Houston Open in Texas in April and
rub shoulders with the game's top pros.
"It's fantastic," he said. "I'm really looking forward
to it. It has always been my dream to go pro, but not for another
three years."
After such an impressive run most golfers would be thinking of taking
a breather, but not McDowell.
Said the youngster: "I'm right in the middle of my best season
ever and I'm not going to rest on my laurels. There are still a
lot of competitions to go before I'm finished and I just want to
win every time I tee it up."
When you're confident, you're confident and the youngster is still
on a high after seasoned performances that remind some observers
of the youthful exploits of Irish greats such as Ronan Rafferty,
Padraig Harrington or Paul McGinley."
But for a young man who has spent the best part of the year playing
competitive college golf for the University of Alabama, Graeme McDowell's
hunger for victory is even more impressive.
And he won't stop until he achieves his ambition - an appearance
in the Great Britain and Ireland Walker Cup team to face the United
States next year.
"I have the European Individual Amateur in Austria next week
and then it's Palmer Cup, which is university players from Great
Britain and Ireland versus the US at Hoylake. Then it's the Belgian
Juniors and Nations Cup in Brussels and finally the Home Internationals
at Carnoustie, which is a really great track and something special
that I'm really looking forward to."
The year at the United States has obviously made a huge difference
to McDowell, a mechanical engineering student.
Not only has he exploded as a golfer, but he has grown stronger
physically thanks to a serious golf fitness programme.
"I really couldn't wait to get back home from the States because
my confidence was pretty high", he said this week. "I
wanted to compare myself to the players at home because I've worked
really hard on my short game and my fitness. I did a lot of running
and bike work, plus strengthening exercises for the arms and back
in the gym."
Tiger Woods is changing the way the game is taught and played and
McDowell sees the World number one as an example to follow.
"Tiger's got a swing that everyone will try to copy because
it's just a picture of strength. He's just ridiculously good. And
it's not that he's physically huge, it's just that he's so fit.
His physique is incredible and he's just the best by a long way.
"But the fact that he was a college player himself not that
long ago makes everyone over there think, well if Tiger can do it
then so can they, I suppose."
McDowell has taken a leaf out of the Woods book is now hitting the
ball further than ever.
"When I first went out there to Alabama I was probably one
of the shorter hitters on the team, hitting my drives maybe 260
yards but now I'm up there with the rest of them, hitting it 275
regularly."
McDowell's American experience has been an eye-opener but it's something
he feels can only help his game, despite the challenges.
"I never knew there were so many good players over there. I'd
say that the top 50 college players could make it on the PGA Tour.
"I was ranked 150th in the college rankings this year but I
was 9th in the list of freshmen, or first year students, so that
was good after having a fairly average year before I started to
get it going towards the end", he said.
But it is the Walker Cup that fires this young man's imagination.
"The Walker Cup is the long-term goal for me I think the British
and Irish players based in American colleges will have more of a
chance.
"I'd love to play but it isn't always easy for Irish guys.
In fact, we always struggle to get players on the team. But it's
the ultimate for an amateur and hopefully I'm going the right way
about it. If I keep playing the way I am at the moment I'm going
to give myself every chance", said McDowell.
Coached from an early age by his Uncle Eul Loughrey, a greenkeeper
and four handicapper at Royal Portrush, McDowell is living eating
and sleeping golf.
"Golf is my life. I don't mind all the competition. In fact,
if I'm not playing for three or four days, I find myself getting
bored," he said. "Golf is everything to me and I just
try and win everything I play in. That's the attitude you need if
you want to get in the Walker Cup team because I really want to
play in the next match at Sea Island. It's in Georgia, which isn't
too far from my school in Alabama."
A semi-finalist in the North of Ireland championship at Royal Portrush
and 10th in the East of Ireland at County Louth, McDowell is following
in the footsteps of his great hero, Garth McGimpsey.
McGimpsey has won 14 major amateur domestic title, the British Amateur
Championship, and has played in the US Masters and three Walker
Cup sides.
"When I was a kid growing up he was the man that we all wanted
to watch. He was always somebody that I looked up to and when I
beat him in the South I knew I could beat almost anyone and win
anything," said McDowell this week. "I just want to beat
him every time I play against him. I wasn't the least bit nervous
at Lahinch."
With youth, nerve and skill on his side, who'd bet against beating
Europe's best at Austria's Styrian Golf Club next week.
Boys Home Internationals
Ireland's boys can take their revenge for that European Team Championship
defeat by Scotland last month with victory in the Home Internationals
at Portmarnock.
Backboned by the super six who helped Ireland reach the final in
Holland, there are five newcomers to the team for the Boys' Home
Internationals, which take place at the famous Dublin links from
Wednesday to Friday next.
Eoin Arthurs (Forrest Little), Clancy Bowe (Tramore), David Gannon
(Co. Louth), Brian McElhinney (North West) and Ulster Boys champion
Richard Kilpatrick (Banbridge) will make their international debuts
alongside Connor Doran (Banbridge), Kenneth Fahey (Connemara), Philip
McLaughlin (Ballyliffin), Derek McNamara (Connemara) and Martin
McTernan (Co. Sligo).
Philip Parkin
We all have trouble getting the hole, but it's hard to beat
this story from Sky Sports golf expert Philip Parkin.
Parkin won the British Amateur Championship at Turnberry in 1983,
and an automatic invitation to the play in the Masters at Augusta
the following spring.
"I was so excited", Parkin told me during the recent Senior
British Open at Newcastle. "It was a dream come true because
I'd heard so much about the greens that I couldn't wait to see them
for myself."
The Welshman immediately dashed out, putter in hand, to search for
a putting green to practice on.
Said Parkie: "It was amazing and so I got down on my hands
and knees to touch the green. But you couldn't even distinguish
the blades of grass. It was like a fabric, better than a billiard
table. Incredible. The best putting surface I had ever seen in my
whole life"
After several seconds searching for some practice holes to putt
towards, Parkin finally realised what was wrong.
Revealed Philip: "It was no wonder there were no practice holes.
I had been standing on the first tee!"
Gary
Player
Gary Player may be Mr Golf, but the nine times Major winner still
has his heroes.
After missing the cut in the Senior British Open at Royal County
Down last week, the man in black pounded ball after ball on the
range at the weekend, searching for his game.
Taking an occasional break, the great South African spent over an
hour chatting with his practice ground neighbours. The subject -
Ben Hogan's famous 'move', the secret of the American's legendary
ball striking.
Needless to say, Player didn't see eye to eye with his fellow South
African and 1991 Senior British Open champion, his brother in law
Bobby Verwey.
The Hogan legend lives on, but 64 year-old Player still searches
for perfection.
Ladies golf
Something is stirring Down Under.
Rebecca Coakley's stunning six shot win in the Irish Ladies Open
Strokeplay Championship at Birr last weekend has created quite a
buzz.
Born in Australia of an Irish father and English mother, Coakley
was brought to Ireland when she was born but left to live in Australia
when she was five.
Despite that she was very much at home in Birr, shooting rounds
of 70, 71 and 64 to finish well clear of Cork's Claire Coughlan.
Said Rebecca: "I come back nearly every summer and I'm hoping
to come back for good because I'd love to play for Ireland. I'm
thinking of playing amateur for the next couple of years and then
maybe I'll turn professional."
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©
Brian Keogh 2000
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