Ice cool Padraig Harrington
ground out a clinical two under par 70 in sweltering heat at
the K Club yesterday. But the young Dubliner is on the prowl
for richer pickings than the £2 million Smurfit European
Open a major championship.
According to his coach Bob
Torrance, hardworking Harrington will win one of the four major
championships within the next couple of years.
Torrance said: "There's
no question. I think Padraig will win a Major within the next
year or two. He is undoubtedly the most improved player in the
world in recent times and you could see that at in the US Open
at Pebble Beach last year where he could have finished second
had he not called a penalty on himself."
The 29 year old went to Torrance
two and half years ago and said: "I'm prepared to make a
lot of changes. I want to be the best golfer in the world."
Since then he has reinvented himself as a player and used his
mental toughness to become one of the men to beat.
And it showed on one of the
toughest courses on the European Tour yesterday where he recovered
from a poor run early in his round to play the last 12 holes
in two under par. After starting with birdies at the second and
the par five fourth, bogeys at the fifth, sixth and 11th, forced
the Irish star to work hard for his score.
Level par at the turn, Harrington
birdied the par five 10th from six feet, gave the shot back at
the next where he was stymied by a tree, and then had a two at
the 12th thanks to a six iron to 15 feet to get to one under.
Another chip and putt birdie at he last left him with a smile
on his face despite missing a handful of excellent chances throughout
a workmanlike round.
Harrington said: "It was
a grind alright, and after the start and I had one eye on safety
on the way home. But in the past it could have been 74 or a 75
but there is still a long way to go in the tournament and I'm
well in the hunt.
"I missed a few chances
out there - on the 8th and 9th from about eight feet and again
on the 13th, the 16th and 17th where I lipped out but I'm pleased
with my concentration on the back nine."
That concentration is just
one of the weapons the soft-spoken Ryder Cup star has mastered
in recent times. Working with Torrance, Harrington has completely
revamped his swing, adding a massive 30 yards to his driving
distance, and leaping from nowhere to 20th in the world rankings.
Added Torrance: "Don't
get me wrong, Padraig wasn't a bad player before he came to me,
but he was prepared to make a lot of changes to his swing. We
changed everything and I'd say that he has everything it takes
to win a major championship."
Harrington and Torrance Senior
worked intensively together in the run-up to the Murphy's Irish
Open. And they've continued in that vein this week as Harrington
bids to hit top form in time for the Open at Royal Lytham and
St Anne's in two week's time.
Ranked 24th in the world at
the start of the season, Harrington jumped four places to 20th
thanks to last Sunday's seven under par 64 at Fota Island. But
according to Torrance, that first major championship is just
around the corner.
Said the Scot: "A coach
is only as good as his pupil and Padraig has got everything it
takes. "He's incredibly dedicated and if he gets a chance
to win he'll take it. He's got heaps of talent and above all,
he's a wonderful person."
Like Jack Nicklaus and Tiger
Woods, Torrance feels that Harrington's happy-go-lucky on-course
attitude will win him a lot of friends.
"Woods smiled and tipped
his cap even when he hit bad shots at last year's Open and Padraig
has that quality, as Nicklaus had," he said But it hasn't
been easy for the Dubliner to transform his game from that of
a top amateur to one of the best in the world.
Torrance explained: "We
had to change absolutely everything. Some changes mean that a
couple of other things are sorted out automatically but normally
you have to change them one at a time.
"With Padraig we have
worked so that he now creates more leverage in his swing and
can hit the ball 30 yards further off the tee.
"Golf starts from the
ground up so we worked on his leg action and then on his takeaway
and then on the start of his downswing where his right elbow
was too deep and he wasn't getting the right strike."
With two wins on tour last
season in Brazil and Spain, Harrington has consolidated his position
this term with four runners-up spots and two fifth place finishes
in eleven events. Earnings of £444,066 sterling put him
fourth in the Order of Merit and after his Murphy's Irish Open
exploits the Dubliner now tops the Ryder Cup Points table from
Pierre Fulke and fellow countryman Darren Clarke.
But while Harrington was grinding
out the kind of rounds that have marked him out as one of the
truly great professionals on tour, it was another forgettable
day for the rest of the Irish competitors.
Apart from Harrington, Paul
McGinley was the only Irishman to match the course on his way
to a level par 72 as all the remaining home players finished
over par. A double bogey at the eight where he found water saw
the Dubliner turn in two over par.
And although he hit back with
a hat trick of birdies from the 10th he lost his momentum when
a blocked three iron at the par three 14th forced him to take
another bogey and go back to level par.
Said McGinley: "I had
too many mistakes again. I hit two loose shots at the 8th and
the 14th and paid the price by dropping three shots. It was obviously
a little tougher in the afternoon with the slight breeze making
it harder to get up at the par five 18th.
"But this is no Mickey
Mouse course and I would have been happy with a 69. Level is
okay and not a bad start but I'll have to keep working at it."
The K Club took its fair share
of Irish victims on a perfect day for golf. Damien McGrane was
left to regret some poor driving in his 73 while Des Smyth came
undone at the fearsome 424 yard 17th on his way to a three over
par 75.
Two under par to the turn,
the Drogheda man was level par playing the penultimate hole but
pulled his drive into the river Liffey that guards the left hand
side of the fairway to run up a triple bogey seven. Said Smyth:
"It's disappointing. I was starting to leak a few shots
on the back nine and the 17th just put the tin hat on it for
me."
Stephen Hamill and David Higgins
both shot two over par 74s to maintain their hopes of making
the cut. But Eamonn Darcy (75), Philip Walton (76) and John Dignam
(77) will all struggle to make the cut tonight.
One man who certainly won't
make the weekend is former European number one Ronan Rafferty.
The Warrenpoint man, 37, failed to make even one birdie yesterday
and slumped to an eleven over par 83 that included three double
bogeys and five bogeys.
Top
©
Brian Keogh 2001
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