New Straits Times

DAY ALMOST WALKED AWAY

Australian star ‘didn’t want to play’ after mum’s cancer scare

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Major-winner Jason Day said yesterday he was targeting getting back to world number one after his mother’s cancer scare had left him not wanting “to be on the golf course.”

“My mum getting lung cancer was very difficult,” the Australian told reporters ahead of the US PGA Tour’s CJ Cup, which begins in South Korea today.

“I don’t have any grandparen­ts. I don’t have my dad. I don’t have anyone. If I lost my mum all I would have would be my two sisters,” said the world number nine on Jeju Island.

“So realising how much she sacrificed for me growing up it meant a lot to me to be there for her. And I didn’t want to be on the golf course.

“I knew that if she was going to die then I wanted to spend as much time as I could with her,” he said, his voice cracking with emotion. “Because I only get to see her once a year.

“Fortunatel­y the surgery (in March this year) went well and now I’m able to focus back on golf.”

After making his major championsh­ip breakthrou­gh by winning the 2015 US PGA Championsh­ip, the 29-year-old went on a hot streak to rise to the top of the world.

Day was still number one at the start of this year, but with his last win coming a year and a half ago at the Players Championsh­ip, his ranking has tumbled.

He missed the cut at the US Open and finished outside the top 20 in the Masters and the British Open.

Day has shown glimpses of form since, finishing ninth place in the US PGA Championsh­ip in August and recording two top 10s since.

“It was a little bit of a combinatio­n of things why I had this poor season. I was a little bit burnt out from last year and the year before,” said Day.

“I didn’t know how to handle being number one. Next time I get there again, I will handle it a little bit differentl­y,” said Day, who has not been outside the world’s top 10 since the end of the 2013 season.

“I still worked very hard to get through that burnt-out stage. And then my mum got lung cancer.

“Hopefully the distractio­ns that I’ve had on and off the golf course have gone away, and I can focus on climbing back to number one.”

Ten of the world’s top 30 will tee off on Jeju Island, south of the mainland, in the second event of a three-week swing as the US PGA Tour spreads its wings further into Asia.

World number four and US PGA Champion Justin Thomas is the top-ranked player at the par72 Nine Bridges course for an event which carries a first prize of $1.665 million (RM7.03 million) as part of a massive $9.25 million purse.

 ??  ?? Jason Day could not hold back his tears talking about how he wanted to spend as much time with his mother after she was diagnosed with lung cancer.
Jason Day could not hold back his tears talking about how he wanted to spend as much time with his mother after she was diagnosed with lung cancer.

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