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Stenson hopes to make it 14th-time lucky on his UAE return

- Paul Radley

I was pretty pleased with the back end last year and have time to prepare this week. We will try and make it happen this year

Given that Henrik Stenson fired the course record in the third round of the inaugural tournament, has been here every year since, and has won multiple times in the desert besides, it is reasonable to wonder quite how the Falcon Trophy has managed to evade his grasp.

The Swede will start his 14th consecutiv­e attempt at winning the Abu Dhabi HSBC Championsh­ip presented by EGA when he tees it up alongside Dustin Johnson and Louis Oosthuizen at 7.30am tomorrow.

He has been a runner-up in the capital twice before, and has also had a string of top 10 finishes.

That represents a fair run at the competitio­n, but he is hopeful he can depart on Saturday night with some swag, too. “I feel like I have had the same answers to the same questions every year now for the past couple of times,” Stenson said.

“It is always tough winning golf tournament­s, and it is equally as tough to try and guess when it is going to happen.

“But I was pretty pleased with how I played on the back end of last year, and have some time to prepare this week. We will try and make it happen this year.”

As a former UAE resident, Stenson feels at home in this country, and it has shown in his results having won the Dubai Desert Classic once, and the DP World Tour Championsh­ip twice.

“It always feels good to come back to this part of the world, having made it my home for quite a few years in the past,” Stenson said.

“It is the way I have started my year every year for all 14 editions. It is kind of the ‘same old’ but it is good to be back.”

Familiar he might be with the old surroundin­gs, but Stenson, like the rest of the field, is beginning a new learning process with regards to the alteration­s to golf’s rule book.

The sport’s lawmakers have introduced a variety of modificati­ons designed to modernise the game, and Stenson suggests they may take some getting used to.

“Most of the things are there to make it easier, better and quicker,” Stenson said.

“At first, it is going to be a learning curve for everyone, we are going to have to spend some time getting to know the ways of dropping, and how to address certain situations on the golf course.

“Once we have, that is going to be the norm, and we won’t think what the rules were 10 years ago. It is a constant developmen­t.”

 ?? Getty ?? Henrik Stenson, left, has played in all 13 of the Abu Dhabi Golf Championsh­ip, finishing runner-up twice
Getty Henrik Stenson, left, has played in all 13 of the Abu Dhabi Golf Championsh­ip, finishing runner-up twice

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