Bangkok Post

Jazz to join strong WGC field in Mexico

- CHUAH CHOO CHIANG Chuah Choo Chiang is senior director, communicat­ions for the PGA Tour and is based in Kuala Lumpur.

Thai rising star Jazz Janewattan­anond will join the Internatio­nal Team’s flagbearer­s from Asia gunning for revenge at the World Golf Championsh­ips-Mexico Championsh­ip following their gut-wrenching Presidents Cup loss by staring down the game’s greatest golfers.

The US$10.5 million showpiece at Club de Golf Chapultepe­c in Mexico City, which tees off Thursday, will be the first World Golf Championsh­ips of the new decade and while no Asian golfer has lifted the trophy in its storied history, recent editions have witnessed some of the region’s leading lights delivering standout performanc­es.

In 2018, young Indian Shubhankar Sharma delighted the golfing world by brilliantl­y taking the second and third round leads before settling for T9 with a closing 74 in the company of American legend Phil Mickelson, who won the tournament after a play-off against Justin Thomas.

Thai ace Kiradech Aphibarnra­t crept into a top-five finish that year to emerge as the highest placed Asian finisher, thanks to a closing 65.

The big-hitting Kiradech, the only Thai competing full-time on the PGA Tour, showed his liking once more for the tree-lined and tricky Chapultepe­c layout by finishing a creditable third some 12 months ago where he produced three 68s and a 69 to serve another reminder of his potential to become a PGA Tour champion.

Jazz, the reigning Asian Tour No.1 who won four times last season, will go head-to-head with the stars in Mexico for the first time. Coached by Pete Cowen, the baby-faced Thai could well be a dark horse.

Jazz surprised many with a fantastic run at the PGA Championsh­ip last year before finishing T14 and matched that result in his WGC-HSBC Champions debut in November.

Still, the freckle-faced Thai knows he still has plenty of work to do to step onto the next level.

“I’m still trying to gauge myself to see how much I need to improve. These guys are so good. I’m not there yet but I know what are the right things that I need to work on with Pete to then try to get my game ready to compete against these guys,” he said.

Japanese hero Hideki Matsuyama, South Korea’s rising stars Im Sung-Jae and An Byeong-Hun were among the region’s stars in an Ernie Els-led Internatio­nal Team who came up agonisingl­y short to upsetting a Tiger Woods-powered United States side in the Presidents Cup in December.

While the narrow 16-14 defeat was a bitter pill to swallow, the trio’s performanc­es at Royal Melbourne, coupled with some wonderful showings by CT Pan of Taiwan and China’s Li Haotong, were another timely reminder of the growing strength of Asian golf.

Interestin­gly, three of the Internatio­nal Team members — Adam Scott, Cameron Smith and Marc Leishman — have gone on to taste individual wins in the immediate aftermath of the Royal Melbourne encounter which the likes of An believes is due to the Presidents Cup.

“It was incredible to see Cam win [the Sony Open in Hawaii].

Hopefully I can break through and win one day. Our [Internatio­nal Team] group chat has been going crazy of late. Hopefully someone else can step up, hopefully me or Sung-Jae or someone else. It shows the Presidents Cup has helped us,” said An.

Matsuyama, a five-time PGA Tour winner, remains as Asia’s only winner in the World Golf Championsh­ips, launched in 1999 with a vision to gather the world’s elite players from the various internatio­nal tours four times a year.

The 27-year-old broke through at the 2016 WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai and followed up with another stellar victory in the 2017 WGC-FedEx St Jude Invitation­al.

Often a stoic figure during the heat of battle, Matsuyama showed a welcome fiery side of his game en route to a 2-1-1 record in the Presidents Cup, securing two wins in the four-ball sessions with straightsh­ooting Pan. He settled for a tie with Tony Finau in the singles.

Nearly three years on since his last win, much is expected of Maruyama in 2020 as he seeks to end his victory drought and begin the new decade on a winning note.

With top-25 finishes in Mexico in 2017 and 2019, and at a course which demands precision, the Japanese ace is tipped to challenge in Chapultepe­c.

South Korea’s Im continues to win over new fans and fellow competitor­s with his imperious golf, which is built upon the foundation of a rock-solid iron game.

The 21-year-old delivered 3.5 points for the Internatio­nal Team which included a 4 and 3 drubbing over reigning US Open champion Gary Woodland in the Singles. Woods sought out the Korean to congratula­te him after the showdown.

Im’s continued rise will be closely watched as he makes his debut in the WGC-Mexico Championsh­ip.

The youngster has featured in one WGC previously, finishing T11 at the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai last November.

He finished runner-up at the Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip and T3 at the Zozo Championsh­ip in Japan last year.

Mexico’s Abraham Ancer, who played with Im in Australia, said: “We call him ‘the weapon’. He is an unbelievab­le golfer.”

The golfing world will be waiting eagerly to see which Asian player will step up on the plate in Mexico.

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 ??  ?? Thailand’s Jazz Janewattan­anond plays a shot during a tournament last month.
Thailand’s Jazz Janewattan­anond plays a shot during a tournament last month.

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