Edmonton Journal

McIlroy plans busy schedule ahead of Masters

Coming off first winless year since 2008, former World No. 1 hits ground running

- DOUG FERGUSON

Rory McIlroy took off the final three months of the year to heal his body and clear his mind, and he appears eager to get back to work.

With a series of announceme­nts over the last week, McIlroy revealed what likely will be his most ambitious schedule ahead of Augusta National in the 10 years he has been eligible for the Masters.

The most McIlroy has played before the Masters was seven tournament­s — in 2009, the first year he was eligible for all four majors, and in 2016. Next year he is planning to play eight.

McIlroy, coming off his first winless year since 2008, will start the new season with two tournament­s in the Middle East (Abu Dhabi and Dubai) before he embarks on a busy PGA Tour schedule. He is playing the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am (California) for the first time, followed by the Genesis Open at Riviera (California) and the Honda Classic (Florida).

Most peculiar about McIlroy’s schedule is he is skipping the World Golf Championsh­ip in Mexico City and instead will play the Valspar Championsh­ip at Innisbrook (Florida) for the first time, then play the following week at Bay Hill (Florida).

He will also reportedly play the Dell Match Play in Austin, Texas, where two years ago he reached the semifinals.

That means McIlroy will play three straight weeks (Pebble, Riviera, Honda), take a week off, then another three weeks in a row (Valspar, Bay Hill, Match Play), then have a week off before the Masters.

Meanwhile, The Guardian is reporting McIlroy’s best mate, Harry Diamond, will remain his caddy. McIlroy split with J.P. Fitzgerald after the British Open, and Diamond worked for him the rest of the year.

LAST CHANCE

Brandt Snedeker flew halfway around the world to play in the Indonesian Masters. He hopes it can lead to an invitation to that other Masters.

Snedeker is No. 51 in the world, and this is the last tournament available for him to play. The Top 50 at the end of the year earn a spot in the field at Augusta National. Snedeker, who missed five months with a sternum injury, will have plenty of competitio­n.

Four other players have hopes to get into the Top 50 — Satoshi Kodaira (No. 50), Dylan Frittelli (No. 55), Kiradech Aphibarnra­t (No. 56) and Yusaku Miyazato (No. 58).

The Indonesian Masters may not be the last chance for everyone.

Aphibarnra­t last week won the Thongchai Jaidee Invitation­al on the Asian Developmen­t Tour, which offers minimal ranking points. That victory, however, makes him eligible for the final ADT event in Thailand called the Boonchu Ruangkit Championsh­ip. Depending on how he fares in Jakarta, if Aphibarnra­t wins in Thailand, he might get enough points to crack the Top 50.

Augusta National also takes the Top 50 in the world from the March 25 ranking two weeks before the Masters.

GARCIA’ S AWARD

A green jacket, a bride, a baby on the way and now the awards are starting to cap off a memorable year for Sergio Garcia.

The Masters champion was selected as the European Tour golfer of the year, the first time he has won the award. Garcia won three times this year, including the Dubai Desert Classic and the Andalucia Masters, to go along with his first major championsh­ip at Augusta National.

The award was decided by a panel consisting of golf media.

“This is an amazing honour,” Garcia said. “I think both on and off the golf course, it has been a unique and unbelievab­le year, and one that I will definitely remember my whole life.”

The U.K.-based Associatio­n of Golf Writers also honoured Garcia with its Golf Writers Trophy. It’s the second time Garcia won the AGW award. He also won in 1999 when the 19-year-old was runner-up to Tiger Woods in the PGA Championsh­ip, won two European Tour events and went 3-1-1 in the Ryder Cup.

“To be voted the award for a second time, it is extremely exciting and hopefully I will be able to win it again,” Garcia said.

DRUG SUSPENSION

Mark Hensby has been suspended for one year under the PGA Tour’s anti-doping policy for failing to provide a sample.

He becomes the fourth PGA Tour member to be suspended since the policy took effect in 2008.

Under the policy, the tour does not release where Hensby was playing when his name was selected for drug testing. Hensby, who has not had full PGA Tour status since 2008, is a past champion. He missed the cut in nine of the 14 events on the Web.com Tour this year. He played twice on the PGA Tour, missing the cut at the Barbasol Championsh­ip and getting disqualifi­ed at the Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip in late October, the last event he played.

The 46-year-old Australian won the John Deere Classic in 2004 and played in the Presidents Cup the following year.

GO LOW

For the second time this decade, the PGA Tour had two players break 60 in the same year. Paul Goydos (John Deere Classic) and Stuart Appleby (Greenbrier Classic) did it in 2010, while Justin Thomas (Sony Open) and Adam Hadwin (CareerBuil­der Challenge) did it this year.

Perhaps a better example of how scoring is getting lower is not one round but rather all four of them.

There were 120 players who posted all four rounds in the 60s in 2017 without winning, and 23 players did it more than once.

Eight players had all four rounds in the 60s without winning at three tournament­s — Webb Simpson, Sean O’Hair, Ollie Schniederj­ans, Richy Werenski, Brian Harman, Tony Finau, Brian Gay and Charley Hoffman.

FINAL WORD

“I hope he manages his expectatio­ns more than everybody else’s expectatio­ns, like he’s going to come back and be Tiger of the past. I think he still has a little bit of time on his side, but not a whole lot.” — Greg Norman on Tiger Woods.

 ?? CHRIS CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE ?? Rory McIlroy plans to play at least eight tournament­s leading into the Masters next year.
CHRIS CARLSON/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE Rory McIlroy plans to play at least eight tournament­s leading into the Masters next year.

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