Belfast Telegraph

Harrington confident he is ahead of schedule in his recovery from injury

- BY PHIL CASEY

RYDER Cup captain Padraig Harrington insists his recovery from injury is “ahead of expectatio­ns”, despite admitting it could be several months before his wrist is 100 per cent.

Harrington is back in action for the first time since November at the Maybank Championsh­ip in Malaysia and is hoping for some “good karma” in what was traditiona­lly his season opener.

“I wouldn’t say the wrist is 100 per cent, it might not be 100 per cent for about nine months, or at least another six or seven months. I’m working away at it,” the threetime Major winner said.

“Traditiona­lly the Malaysian Open was my first event of the season, so it’s my first event this year and I’m looking forward to that good karma.

“It’s interestin­g to come out here. I hit shots on the range here, I hit shots last week and the wrist is holding up, there’s no doubt about it.

“There’s a certain amount of mobility issues and I need to work on the strength. Maybe hit fewer balls in the short term, but it’s right on track. If anything it’s probably ahead of expectatio­ns.”

Defending champion Shubhankar Sharma shot 21-under par to win the title last year, but Harrington feels the firmness of the greens at Saujana Golf and Country Club will make for a tougher test this week.

“The changes to the greens have substantia­lly changed the way the course will play,” the 47-year-old added.

“They also have nice run-offs. Every green has this five or six yards of fairway run-off where you run on into a little collar of rough; very, very awkward.

“It’s actually not tricky as a golf course, the firm greens are what will make it difficult this week. I think the golf course is difficult in the right way. We’re not used to coming to Asian tournament­s where the greens are this firm. It’s a wake-up call.”

Spain’s Miguel Angel Jimenez is also in the field in Kuala Lumpur as the 55-year-old looks to extend his own record as the oldest winner on the European Tour.

“I’m still playing well on both tours,” said Jimenez, who was 50 years and 133 days old when he won the Spanish Open in 2014.

“Now I dedicate more than 20 per cent to senior golf but I still like to play on the European Tour too. I play maybe six tournament­s a year.

“I still have my category to play and as long as I have my category I will keep playing. If I didn’t feel competitiv­e then I wouldn’t come here. There is no point in coming here just to show up.”

 ??  ?? In charge: Europe’s Ryder Cup captain Padraig Harrington
In charge: Europe’s Ryder Cup captain Padraig Harrington

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