Philip Walton has a secret
weapon on his bag this week - retired Republic of Ireland striker
Niall Quinn.
Struggling Walton, 41, asked
the ex Arsenal, Manchester City and Sunderland target man to
caddie for him during the ¤2.78 million Smurfit European
Open.
And ten handicapper Quinn has
jumped at the chance to help him turn his fortunes around with
his own brand of psychology.
Malahide man Walton has shown
signs of his old form in recent months with top 30 finishes in
the Italian and Aa St Omer Opens.
Now he has decided to give
regular caddie Dave Noble the week off and opted to give 6 foot
4 inch Quinn instead after becoming friends with the former footballer.
Quinn explained: "I met
Philip playing golf and we became friends. We looked back on
our careers and found a pattern that wasn't too dissimilar.
"I am not a golf person
but what I do is try to get away from the things around me and
try to focus.
"Philip needs a little
help on getting that focus and using the crowd and the thrill
of seeing his name on a leaderboard again as a means to getting
going.
"It might come this week
and it might not. There is no secret weapon to help you to get
back but I think I can help him."
The hero of the 1995 Ryder
Cup at Oak Hill, Walton went into a slump in 1996 and eventually
lost his Tour card.
He has tried to win it back
at the tour school he describes as being like "a prison
sentence", but has failed three times.
Walton said: "Niall's
a good lad and he's a been a great help to me so far. Let's see
how it goes. All I need is one good week."
Quinn, 34, has never caddied
before and he's just hoping not to make a mess of his big opportunity.
He said: "I was a bit
apprehensive at first and scared stiff of making a mistake. I
had a nice day with him today and again tomorrow and hopefully
I won't let him down on Thursday or Friday.
"I played some golf with
him earlier on in the year. I just got chatting to him and comparing
the way I approach things and he approaches things.
"We joked laughingly almost
that I might caddie for him. He said as a joke, 'Maybe I could
do with you out there' and then it went a bit further and he
made the call at the start of the week."
Now Quinn is hoping that his
own brand of personal psychology can help Walton's fragile confidence.
"Everyone knows that Philip
has bundles of talent and I just wanted to get to know him and
he became a friend.
"So now he is looking
for something else now. He is on the way back and things are
starting to go well for him and he feels I can do something for
him.
"Hopefully if he can get
into the contention the crowd will get behind him and he can
get on a roll."
Quinn queued up with the rest
of the caddies and paid the ¤20 for the specially prepared
yardage book.
He joked: "I'll tell him
the yardage and let him do the clubbing. It's great and I'm really
enjoying it. Hopefully I won't make any mistakes and we'll be
here for the weekend."
The leading Irish international
goal scorer of all time with 21 goals, Quinn is not the first
ex-footballer to try his had at caddying.
Last year, former Southampton
ace Matthew Le Tissier helped Richard Bland in several European
Tour events.
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© Brian Keogh 2003
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