Ryder Cup hero Philip Walton
looked back on five years in the doldrums yesterday and confessed:
It's been a nightmare.
The hero of Oak Hill in 1995
opened with a 74 at the K Club with former Republic Ireland striker
Niall Quinn on his bag.
But the Dubliner revealed that
his bad luck goes back to an incident in South Africa in 1996
that shattered his confidence.
Walton was disqualified in
the third round of the Dimension Data Pro-Am for signing a wrong
score in the second round.
He said: "I've missed
out at the tour school for the past four years but things have
changed since the Ryder Cup in '95
"My game is as good or
better than back then. The difference is in the head - it just
switched off.
"The year after the Ryder
Cup I played steady. But then in South Africa something happened.
I was disqualified, lying second and I haven't got over it. It's
a long story.
"I'm not blaming that
for what has happened to me but ever since that moment it's been
tough."
In the second round in Sun
City, Walton played a wrong ball and then played from the wrong
place when trying to rectify his mistake.
The second two-shot penalty
had not been included on his card and he was disqualified for
signing for a wrong score when the error was discovered the next
day.
One of the quiet men on tour,
the Dubliner hated the hype and fame surrounding the Ryder Cup.
But he insists that it was
his lack of confidence that caused him to crash out of sight
in the late 90s.
He said: "I'm a quiet
guy anyway, and I don't really like the lights. I just lost my
confidence with a certain shot.
"I didn't want the limelight.
But I've watched the video of the Ryder Cup once or twice and
my hands still sweat when I watch it.
"The last time I saw it
was two years ago. We were going through the videos at home and
the kids were putting on Arnie or something like that."
Yesterday Walton played steadily
from tee to green but had no luck on the greens, despite getting
some help reading them from gangling caddie Quinn.
Starting at the tenth, he reached
the turn in one over but holed from 20 feet at the second to
get back to level before his putter went cold.
He said: "I had chances
at the third and fourth but didn't take them and then dropped
one at the fifth when just missed the green and missed a six
footer.
"Then I three-putted from
15 feet at the seventh. I played well put had 34 or 35 putts
but had a lot of putts shaving the hole."
Quinn was happy with is debut
as a caddie, despite a sleepless night worrying that he might
make the same mistake that cost Ian Woosnam in the Open in 2001.
He said: "I counted the
clubs ten times before we went out. I was counting them in my
sleep last night.
"I was aware of the Woosie
thing but it was a great experience. If he hits the ball as well
and a couple of putts go in he will be okay. He needs to play
all four rounds."
And Walton appeared to be happy
with Quinn's contribution.
He joked: "He's a good
lad. The best caddie I have had all year. But I couldn't afford
him every week. So far so good, we are still on speaking terms.
"He kept me going and
picked a few clubs for me we didn't get many clubs wrong between
us.
"He's quite good at reading
lines. On the last I just missed from 20 feet. He said it was
off the left and I said it would be straight. In the end it just
missed on the right, so he was spot on."
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© Brian Keogh 2003
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