Soft-spoken Corkman Denis O'Sullivan
is fed up being Mr Nice Guy.
And as he faces into his fifth
season on the European Seniors Tour in Barbados next week, Ireland's
number one is set to get tough and stake his claim to the really
big bucks.
O'Sullivan, 53, has won four
times and banked a tidy ¤445,000 in prize-money since
joining the paid ranks in 1998.
But he's still looking to hook
one of the big titles, such as the Senior British Open, which
would smooth the path to the Senior big time on the US Seniors
Tour.
Victory at Royal County Down
in July would virtually guarantee O'Sullivan the top spot on
the money list and a shot at the US Tour School finals.
But it would also mean an extra
$100,000 bonus as a member of Gary Player's the Rest of the World
team in the UBS Warburg Cup.
The $3 million Ryder Cup style
event for players over 40 guarantees every man a minimum of $100,000
just to tee it up and O'Sullivan wants a piece of the action.
"The Warburg's got to
be my goal," he said. "Des Smyth played in it last
year and it's just huge - on a world scale - and probably the
biggest thing we'll ever get to play in a this stage of our lives."
In the Warburg Cup each 12
man team consists of six players aged 40-49 and six players over
the age of 50, and O'Sullivan is determined to make Player's
side at Sea Island Golf Club on St. Simons Island in Georgia
from November 14-17.
Last year a World side that
boasted the likes of Isao Aoki, Nick Faldo, Bernhard Langer,
Sam Torrance and Ian Woosnam lost narrowly to a US side that
included Mark Calcavecchia, Scott Hoch, Hale Irwin, Mark O'Meara
and Tom Watson.
Explained O'Sullivan: "The
top two on the European Seniors tour get in this time so I've
got to improve a lot on last year to make it. I played well but
then lost my momentum towards the end.
"But this year is going
to be different and I'm not going to make the same mistakes again.
"There are two tournaments
that are very important now - the British Seniors and the Welsh
Open. They're worth almost half a million sterling each so if
you win one of them you're almost guaranteed to be in the Warburg
Cup."
But that will be easier said
that done and O'Sullivan knows that he has to win big.
To do it he's put himself through
a punishing winter fitness programme that he hopes will help
him last the pace.
Last season the former Irish
amateur champion picked up a mysterious virus in late summer
and could manage just one top ten finish in his last six events.
"I just played so badly
for he last five or six weeks," he said. "I'm normally
a fit individual but I was just getting tired very quickly and
had no stamina.
"I think I ate something
very weird somewhere because we had Turkey and Greece and Tunisia
and Portugal and Spain all wrapped into about six or seven weeks.
When you're changing Continents and eating different foods it's
not easy.
"When I came home I was
really worried and I got my blood checked but nothing showed
up so a month later I went back in and I said, 'Look there's
got to be something wrong because I've really felling unwell',
but there wasn't and now I actually feel great."
"I joined a gym at Rochestown
Park Hotel and I worked really hard there before going off to
South Africa to practice."
Unlike other years, O'Sullivan
has taken his pre-season preparation extremely seriously.
"I'm just back from three
weeks in Cape Town and I just practiced at Royal Cape and played
a lot of other courses locally.
"I've never done it before.
Last year I didn't do anything and I was really annoyed with
myself when I go to the first event in Barbados because I hadn't
been anywhere with quick greens so I said there was no way I
was going to let that happen again.
"I'm hoping that this
will pay off because I've put in a lot of work and I'm feeling
quite confident."
The AIB Irish Seniors Open
at Adare Manor in May will be O'Sullivan's first appearance on
home soil.
And it's tournament the hopes
to do better in after disappointing the home fans by failing
to challenge in the national event for the past three seasons.
He explained: "There is
more pressure in the home event. Everyone expects you to do well.
When you're away you can do your own thing. Nobody is at you.
They don't remind you how you are doing.
"I shouldn't feel it at
home. There's no reason in the world why I should do so poorly
but I think I was just trying too hard and the big thing about
golf is that you just let it happen.
"I know I was trying so
hard not just for me but for everybody else. I'm not going to
fall into that trap this year."
But O'Sullivan knows that the
European Tour will be tougher than ever this year, despite the
fact that there will be no 36-hole cut and that the fields will
be slightly smaller.
Said Sullie: "There are fewer guys and the talent is very
good. Some new guys have come in again this year like the American
Steve Stull who went ape at the Tour School and won it by ten
shots."
If al goes well he might try
his hand at the US Seniors Tour School again, despite a nasty
experience at the hands of unfriendly US pros two years ago.
"I'll think about it,"
he said. "It I'm playing well I'll go. Top man in Europe
gets to final qualifying and if I get there I'll know how to
handle the situation."
Could this be the year when
Denis finally becomes the Menace?
Westport
Darren Clarke, Padraig Harrington
and Paul McGinley will play a new -look Westport next month.
All three are committed to
the Smurfit Irish Professional Championship at the western course
from April 25-28.
Explained secretary manager
Paul O'Neill: "We have three new holes - the seventh, eighth
and 18th and hope to have them in play for the championship.
"But it all depends on
the Irish Region of the PGA and their requirements with regard
to the set up of the course."
One of the longest championship
courses in the country at 7,086 yards, the par 73 layout is sure
to test the big guns.
Ladies
Leinster are banking on a sister
act to retain their Girls' Interprovincial title.
Carlow sisters Karen and Tara
Delaney will be hoping to lead the champions to victory at Headfort
from 3-5 April.
Playing off five and six the
two youngsters will backbone the Leinster defence of the title
against Connacht on the opening day at the County Meath venue.
Juliet
Mount Juliet are considering
a move back to their old course set up after the American Express
World Championship next September.
The course will be narrower
and longer for the WGC event but it could be changed back if
amateurs find it too tough.
Said superintendent Aidan O'Hara:
"We will consider putting the fairways back to where they
were if the members are unhappy.
"It's not our intention
to make things more difficult for the ordinary player."
© Brian Keogh 2002
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