Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Golf's new generation hungry for success in 2014


Every year it gets tougher. With good reason the established stars remind us that fields get deeper and deeper.
Several of the biggest names in the game begin their 2014 season in Abu Dhabi this week with the knowledge that a new generation of players are thirsting to replace them at the top of the game.
This was more than evident talking to some of the most promising youngsters at last week's Volvo Golf Champions event at the superb Durban Country Club in South Africa.
Tommy Fleetwood, Matteo Manassero, Victor Dubuisson and Peter Uihlein are all the right side of 25 and were in the Champions field courtesy of victories on the European Tour last year.
These are players, along with the PGA Tour's Jordan Speith, 20, and Hideki Matsuyama, 21, who will shape a future that also includes Northern Ireland's Rory McIlroy, 24.
Fleetwood hopes to spend his 23rd birthday contending for the title in theHSBC Abu Dhabi Championship this Sunday. He will not lack for confidence after a fine third-place finish in Durban.
Currently ranked 89 in the world, the Southport youngster is a man in a hurry after landing his first victory at the Johnnie Walker Championship at Gleneagles last summer.
"I'll consolidate in 20 years' time," Fleetwood told BBC Sport. "I really have to kick on and make the most of the opportunities that I've got. You can't let anyone overtake you in this game.
"I've got to make sure I'm a better player at the end of this year than I am right now."
Fleetwood feels well equipped to build on his maiden victory, which came at the home of this year's Ryder Cup.
"I've learned that I can win. That's a massive thing," he said. "You always feel like you can win but proving you can is huge."
This is his third full season on Tour and Fleetwood resembles a sponge soaking up the ways of the professional game.
"I was lucky towards the end of last year to play with Lee Westwood, Henrik Stenson, Rory McIlroy and Sergio Garcia," he added.
"Just watching those guys play, you just realise what they can do. They don't make mistakes and are so strong at all aspects of the game.
"Everything I've done in the last six months has been huge motivation to make sure that I keep going."
Fleetwood's maturity is matched by the 20-year-old Manassero, who claimed the fourth title of his career when he won the BMW PGA Championship in May.
The following week he was fourth in Sweden but last week's 10th place in Durban was the Italian's first top-20 finish since then.
Manassero has switched club manufacturers for 2014. Like McIlroy a year ago, he has ditched the Titleist brand that helped him to so much youthful success - in favour of Callaway.
"I definitely thought about the possibility of making a wrong decision and maybe wasting a season," Manassero admitted.
"But it was very easy to wash that thought away and think about the positive things. Sometimes innovation makes you concentrate more and makes you happy about teeing it up and going to the range."
A more significant change, perhaps, will be an altered mental approach. "It doesn't seem like I can last the full season being free with my mindset and being able to play with relaxation," Manassero told BBC Sport.
"This is a downside that I definitely need to improve because the season is very long. With all the competitions, you have to last for at least seven months with your game.
"But, more than your game, your mindset always has to be flat [level-headed] and not with peaks and downs.
"I'm going to try not to waste mental energy. You want to be able to relax. This will be my way to last an entire season without being stressed and tired."
Manassero is targeting the match against the United States at Gleneagles in the autumn but knows he has much to do to make it into Paul McGinley's European team.
"I can say that the Ryder Cup is in my mind for sure," he said. "I haven't started the first few months of qualification well, but there is so much golf to be played.
"From now until September we are going to need nine months of high-quality golf. If I make the team, I will probably be the happiest man in the world."
There is every chance that should the young Italian play in his first Ryder Cup in September, Dubuisson will be one of his team-mates. The 23-year-old's fifth place in Durban lifted him to the top of the European points list.
Victory at the 2013 Turkish Airlines Openand finishing third at the season-ender in Dubai have made him Europe's most exciting prospect. His challenge is to sustain the momentum for large portions of the coming year.
Now ranked 30 in the world, the quiet Frenchman can look forward to a Masters debut in April and a place in all four majors.
That is also the target for Uihlein, who does not discount earning a place in the American Ryder Cup team while based on the European Tour.
The former US Walker Cup star is ranked 63 in the world and is on the cusp of securing a place in next month's WGC Matchplay in Arizona.
"I have just gotta put the pedal down and keep working at it," he said. "I'm trying to get into Augusta, trying to get top 50 in the world. Short-term, I am trying to make it to the Matchplay and then get to the Masters."
They are a cosmopolitan bunch, but share in common a desire to succeed. Fleetwood, Manassero, Dubuisson and Uihlein are part of a coming generation that will be impossible to ignore.

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Duval says he'll quit golf if 2014 doesn't pan out

David Duval, 2011 Farmers Insurance Open

If His Play Doesn’t Improve in 2014, Duval Says He’ll Do Something Else

A mid-life career change may be in the near-future for David Duval, according to a recent torrent of tweets from the one-time top-ranked player in the world.
“As a player you need to perform and if I don’t do that in 2014 I will do something else,” the 42-year-old informed his followers on Twitter, in the course of a 14-tweet barrage.
Duval’s drawn-out decline, marked by injuries, mechanical issues and struggles with the mental game, has dropped him well below the radar to No. 1,528 in the World Golf Rankings.
He has failed to make the cut in 22 of his last 28 starts, and only played the weekend in two of 11 tournaments in 2013.
Duval says he’s made progress through recent work with Matt Kuchar’s swing guru, Chris O’Connell.
But in his tweets, he also promised, “without hesitation,” that 2014 will be the last year he relies on the kindness of strangers, er, sponsors, as he tries to get back on his golfing feet.
What he would do instead of golf remains an open question.
But this much seems certain: with more than $18 million in career earnings, he’ll have a decent cushion if he’s forced to look for other work.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

This week's heroes and zeros?

Heroes
1. Adam Scott. He thrilled the home folks with a win at the Australian PGA, along the way bolstering his Player of the Year cause. Only one question: which year does it count toward?
2. The Turkish Open. For a brand new tournament, it created a lot of buzz with an exotic locale, strong leaderboard and, of course, Tiger. It must just kill the McGladreys of the world that they can’t pay Woods to show up.
3. Chris Kirk. Hey, I kinda like the club-slamming. It certainly made this victory memorable. If Kirk can learn to further harness that, uh, passion, he won’t have to wait so long to earn another W.
4. Teresa Lu. After eight years of toil, she finally earned her first LPGA win, in Japan. That she did it by firing a 64 on Sunday -- the low round of the week -- makes it all the sweeter.
5. Seminole Golf Club. The ultra-exclusive Florida club will open its doors for the 2021 Walker Cup. I hope the folks at Cypress Point and Pine Valley are paying attention.
Zeros
1. Briny Baird. Ooof, that was ugly. Even by his standards.
2. Peter Dawson. The R&A godfather is once again overseeing another kneecapping of the Old Course. Hey Petey, here’s a thought: if you had been doing your job all along, driving distance for pros wouldn’t be so out-of-control, and we wouldn’t have to mess with golf’s most important course.
3. Bob Hope. Whatever was left of his legacy at the Palm Springs Tour stop is officially kaput now that Southern California native Phil Mickelson, in an effort to cut back his wear and tear, is jilting the Hope in favor of playing in Abu Dhabi.
4. Sneds. He injured himself hopping off a Segway. This will do nothing to bolster golfers’ claims that they are real athletes.
5. Brittany Lincicome. Known as Bam-Bam, the long-hitting Lincicome went’ Pffft-Pfffft during a disastrous final round in Japan. Well, at least she is the best fisherman on the LPGA tour.