Big
Denis O'Sullivan is hoping to come home in style and win next
week's £250,000 AIB Irish Seniors Open at Powerscourt.
But
only four years ago the 53-year old was on the scrapheap of Irish
amateur golf.
After
an international career spanning 16 years, O'Sullivan was told
his amateur career was effectively over.
But
the Corkman refused to accept that his best days were behind
him and now he's showing the critics that they were wrong to
write him off as a contender by taking the European Seniors Tour
by storm.
Two
wins last year - in the Senior Tournament of Champions and the
end-of-season Abu Dhabi Seniors Tour Championship - saw him finish
third in the 2000 Senior Order of Merit with winnings of over
£90,000 sterling.
And
he's determined to boost his career earnings to over £200,000
this week by snatching his home tournament in picturesque County
Wicklow.
"Oh
yes, I'd really love to win at Powerscourt," he said this
week. "I want to be number one in Europe and that means
winning tournaments. But I have a few other ambitons too."
It's
certainly a huge change from the situation in 1991, when O'Sullivan's
amateur career came to an abrupt end.
Winner
of the Irish Close Amateur Championship in 1985 and the East
of Ireland Championship in 1990, O'Sullivan was far from a spent
force in 1991 and he's still bitter.
"I
felt I still had a lot of golf left in me," he said. "I
still wanted to play but I was 41 years of age and in this country
they write you off in golf when you're in your thirties, so it
was frustrating."
O'Sullivan
went on to become an Ireland selector but he threw in the towel
in frustration at the lack of change at the top in a domestic
scene that he reckons is run "by alickadoos for alickadoos."
"I
was bored," he said this week. "They weren't taking
notice of what I wanted and what I wanted was to pick the best
Ireland team. All they (the other selectors) were interested
in was picking their friends."
Not
a man to sit still, O'Sullivan decided he wanted to give something
back to Irish golf and went to the European Senior Tour qualifying
school in 1997, securing his card.
"I
knew it was the end of my amateur career once I teed it up in
the School, but it was something I had always dreamed of doing
and I didn't want to have any regrets in life later on."
All
of a sudden he was rubbing shoulders with hardened campaigners
like Tommy Horton, Neil Coles and Brian Barnes, and playing with
legends of the stature of Bob Charles or Gary Player.
"It's
just fantastic being out there with guys I had paid to go and
see play or guys I had watched on TV, like Bernard Hunt and Ian
Stanley. There's a fantastic family atmosphere in Europe
"In
the States it's dog eat dog and they don't want to see Europeans
coming in and taking their money, but in Europe it's tough on
the course and great afterwards where you can have a drink and
a bit of a laugh with great people."
It's
certainly a huge contrast to the highly insular US Senior Tour,
a scene that doesn't take kindly to foreign raiders.
O'Sullivan
found that out the hard way. Last November he failed in his bid
to win a US Senior Tour card after spending over £8,000
in a month-long trip that took him through pre-qualifying and
what he called a "very nasty" experience at the final
qualifying school.
"I
played terriblly in the first roudn of final qualifying and didn't
get my card but the Americans were just horrible and made me
feel so unwelcome on that first tee that I was problably more
worried about them than I was about my own game," he recalled.
But
it's been a huge learning experience for O'Sullivan who will
only play on the US Senior Tour if he an go back in style as
Europe's number one senior.
"I
won't try and pre-qualify again. I'm aiming to be number one
in Europe and that will get me in over there. Other that that
I'll be back over there later this month for the US Senior PGA
Championship at in Paramus, New Jersey, which I'm really looking
forward to."
Meanwhile,
the European Senior Tour continues to blossom and three years
down the road, O'Sullivan has banked over £170,000 in prize-money.
Yet
despite his financial success, the Leesider still works for the
Leasing Company of Ireland as a salesman when the Tour is not
in full swing.
"I
haven't been a professional golfer all my life so I never dedicated
my entire day to golf and I can't start doing it now," he
revealed. "The Tour runs from April to October and in between
it's nice for me to get into the office for four or five hours
a day. I really enjoy working and when you take away £40,000
expenses and 48 percent tax out of £91,000 there's not
the kind of money that people might think you're making."
A
win in next week's Irish Senior Open event would cover a year's
tour expenses almost to the penny exactly, and in the absence
of the injured Christy O'Connor Jnr and David Jones, O'Sullivan
will be one of the home favourites for an event he would dearly
love to win.
He
showed his determation to finish well by playing a practice round
at the County Wicklow venue in January.
"Wherever
they place the tees, it's certain to be a tough course - not
a place for short-hitters," he said. "And I was delighted
with the condition of the greens."
O'Sullivan's
career reached its high point last season when he captured the
Senior Tournament of Champions and the end-of-season Abu Dhabi
Seniors Tour Championship.
"Winning
a golf tournament is a feeling that you just can't beat,"
he said. "It's addictive and I'm really looking forward
to doing it again."
An
incredible 25 under-par for those two final tournaments last
season, O'Sullivan appears to have carried that impressive form
into the 2001 season with a sixth place finish in the season
opener, the Royal Westmoreland Barbados Open.
"Yes,
I'm playing very nicely thank," he said ominously. "If
the putter is working, who knows."
Big in Japan
Darren
Clarke headed East and won the Chunichi Crowns event recently.
But he isn't the first Irishman to make it big in the 'Land of
the Rising Sun'.
Rosses
Point native Jude O'Reilly has made a huge impression on Japanese
tour star Shigeki Maruyama and now caddies for him fulltime.
A
President's Cup player, Maruyama shot to fame last year when
he fired a sensational 13-under-par 58 in the US Open qualifying
last season.
O'Reilly's
mother, Gretta, is a former lady captain at Co Sligo while Jude
spent several season on the Japanese tour before accepting a
job with Maruyama.
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