Ryder Cup hero Paul McGinley
is one of the saddest men in golf this weekend.
As millions of armchair golf
fans get ready to glue themselves to the Masters coverage from
Augusta, McGinley will be trying hard not to watch.
Having dropped out of the top
50 in the world he is no longer invited to the big events.
Twelve months ago he was on
cloud nine as he drank in the atmosphere on his Masters debut
and planned for great things ahead.
"That was a big breakthrough
for me. To come to the Masters for the first time, into a golf
course that you're not familiar with, with game not as good as
I wanted it to be, and then to perform really well gave me tremendous
satisfaction," he said
But while the 36 year old Dubliner
did sink the winning putt in the Ryder Cup last September, little
else went right for him last year.
Despite being well below his
best form he played in all four rounds at Augusta but missed
an automatic invitation to return this year when finished one
shot outside the top 16.
"At the time, it wasn't
a big deal because I thought I would still be in the top 50 in
the world," he confessed. "You never know, do you?"
On his return to Europe McGinley
helped Great Britain and Ireland to the Seve Trophy at Druids
Glen and then won in the Irish Professional Championship at Westport.
But he soon began to show signs
of an alarming slump in form and eventually plummeted from 29th
to 135th in the World Rankings by the end of the year.
Now back to 106th, he's preparing
to claw his way back to the top by sheer graft and determination.
"It's a shame to miss
the Masters," he groaned. "It's all a result of dropping
out of the top 50 in the world but I'm working very hard to get
back there again.
"I'm doing a lot of practice
here in Portugal, the family is with me and I'm having a little
bit of a break. I missed exemption for the Masters this year
by a shot but I suppose I'll watch bits of it on TV - I won't
be watching it endlessly. I'll take an interest but it's tough
to take when you have been there and expected to get back."
McGinley is more worried about
getting results in the season ahead although his next event in
Europe doesn't come until the Canarias Open de España
in two weeks time - a five-week lay-off since he played in the
Qatar Masters in March.
He confessed: "I played
well enough in the four tournaments I've played this year but
when you are not in the top 50 in the world it's a pretty poor
schedule."
Despite missing the cut in
the Asian Open before Christmas he has finished 18th in the Johnnie
Walker Classic, 17th in the Carlsberg Malaysian Open, 47th in
the Dubai Desert Classic and third in Qatar.
Now McGinley is determined
to get his game back to the levels of 2001, when he had 12 top
ten finishes including one win and claimed eighth place in the
Order of Merit as well as a Ryder Cup spot.
"You have to really be
in the top 50 if you want to play all the big tournaments and
it's a bit stop and start for me now. It's all about playing
well and that's what I'm focusing on.
"I've been working hard
at it with Bob Torrance in Scotland over the winter. I was with
Bob for about five years at the start of my career and it's back
to basics for me. My hands and arms started to dominate my swing
and I have got back to where I am using my bigger muscles again."
McGinley has no doubt that
he can get back to where he was and re-live the glories of the
Ryder Cup and the Masters in 2004.
He insisted: "Yes, I'd
like to think I can get back in that position. I'm not happy
finishing 20th or 30th in the Order of Merit in Europe so that's
what the whole focus is - to get back in the top 50 in the world.
"But I deserve to be where
I am because I had a poor season relatively speaking last year
from the Ryder Cup. The ball is in my court and there is no point
in complaining.
"I want to focus on Europe
and get my ranking back up. Last year was a big learning curve.
I played a lot in America early last season and without that
experience I wouldn't have had as successful a Ryder Cup as I
did.
"There's no question that
stood to me in the end, but at a cost of losing world ranking
points. But I knew at the start of the year that's the way it
would be and I have to get on with it."
McGinley now has the greatest
motivation any golfer could have - the desire to get back to
the level need to play in the Ryder Cup and the four Majors.
"That's where it's at.
That's where all the excitement is and once you have had a taste
for it you want to get back to it. It was brilliant to have the
opportunity to sink the winning putt in the Ryder Cup. Not only
was it brilliant to have the opportunity, but it was brilliant
to go ahead and do it.
"Last year I had a disappointing
year personally, but no way can I look back on the year and be
disappointed. Doing what I did in the Ryder Cup gave me an identity
as a player. I stood up to the highest pressure and managed to
come through it. I'm already looking forward to the Ryder Cup
in Detroit in 2004. Once you get a taste of what it is about,
you just want more of it."
McGinley has certainly come
a long way since he turned professional in 1992 but he will have
to rely far more on the fighting qualities that got him to the
top.
He said: "I think I actually
get more satisfaction when you have to fight like hell, when
it's just not going for you and when the bounces are not going
your way.
"One of the great things
about this game is learning to relish the challenge of playing
badly, because you're not going to play well every week."
Now McGinley is facing the
greatest battle of all - the fight to reclaim his place among
the greats.
(Pros)
The door to PGA events been wedged open for Ireland's struggling
tour pros.
Non-PGA members will get a
chance to play more local events, thanks to a change in PGA rules.
In the past, only PGA members
or the holders of full European Tour cards were entitled to play
in Irish PGA events.
It meant that new pros or players
with Challenge Tour, Senior Tour or Ladies European Tour status
were left out in the cold.
Now all players can enter PGA
events for professionals only thanks to the creation of a new
category.
The catch is that they can
only play in pro-ams if they receive a sponsor's invitation and
cannot take part in the Irish Club Pro Tournament or the Ad Golf
Series.
The will also have to apply
for membership of the PGA.
(Damian)
Damian Mooney looks likes the man to beat on the home circuit
after his six-shot win in the ¤15,000 Great Northern Hotel
Pro-Am tournament at Bundoran.
The Laganview professional
finished on eight under par as Headfort's Brendan McGovern took
the runner-up spot on two under.
(Sherry)
Ireland finished third in the Sherry Cup in Spain last weekend.
The team of Noel Fox, Justin
Kehoe, Colm Moriarty and Andrew McCormick finished just behind
Spain with England taking the title.
(Ladies)
Ireland is sending a five-strong team to the Helen Holm Scottish
Ladies' Open Stroke Play Championship at Royal Troon from 26-27
April.
Claire Coughlan, Sinead Keane,
Darragh McGowan, Tricia Mangan and Deirdre Smith will wear the
green.
Top
© Brian Keogh 2003
Back
|