Daily Mail

Europe seeing double!

HARRINGTON FIRST, THEN WESTWOOD AS RYDER CUP CAPTAIN

- by DEREK LAWRENSON

PADRAIG Harrington and Lee Westwood are such nailed- on certaintie­s to be the next two European Ryder Cup captains that considerat­ion will be given to making a joint announceme­nt in the new year.

The illustriou­s pair will partner outgoing incumbent Thomas Bjorn in the first round of the Sky Sports British Masters at Walton Heath today and the Dane — one of five people who will decide on his immediate successor in 2020 — gave his blessing to the idea of a double declaratio­n.

‘When you think that Padraig is a three-time major champion and all that Lee has done in the Ryder Cup, I think we can all agree they should both do the job some time,’ said Bjorn, who selected both as two of his fiveve viceviceca­ptains in Paris.

‘What’s important is they both want to do o the job. I can see why a double appointmen­t would work if that was considered the best way to proceed.’

Alongside Bjorn, the quartet who will decide de on who succeeds him are the previous two captains ptains — Darren Clarke and Paul McGinley — plus the European Tour’s chief executive Keith Pelley and a representa­tive of the players’ committee who has yet to be announced. There are reasons of protocol as to why Westwood shouldn’t be declared at the same time, given that McGinley will no longer be part of the selection committee for 2022 — his place will be taken by the 2020 captain — and the identity of the players’ representa­tive could also change.

But Westwood’s credential­s are so strong for the next home Ryder Cup it is hard to imagine anyone else bothering to put their name forward, so it would be no surprise if he was announced at the same time. As for when Harrington (right), at the very least, will be formally declared, that is likely to be in either January or February.

Bjorn is still in a fine mood, just 10 days on from leading Europe to victory.

‘ You might even see me smile this week,’ said the notoriousl­y stern-faced 47-year- old. ‘Shooting 64 or 84 is not going to make much difference at this moment in time. I’m going to enjoy 2018 for all the good things it brought.’ Sporting a rather different mindset this week will be the Moliwood boys, Frankie Molinari and Tommy Fleetwood. Following on from their smash hit partnershi­p in Paris, they will play together for the first two rounds — but Fleetwood, at least, is keen to add some spice to their bromance. The Englishman is currently trailing his Italian friend by a rather large margin iin the Race to Dubai and suggested a little trash-talking tra might be necessary ne to help close the t gap. ‘Ooh, I can’t wait,’ said Molinari, smiling, when told the news. n ‘Do I need to give g him a bit of the cold c shoulder and see if heh can take it?’ In a more serious vein, Fleetwood Fleetw can draw on personal experience as he seeks to catch the Open champion and hang on to his Dubai title. Last year, Justin Rose came from much further back at this stage and almost caught Fleetwood on the line. He said: ‘It’s kind of the opposite to last year where I led for most of the time, but the goal now is to win at least one of these events coming up and to give myself a chance going into the final event in Dubai next month.’ As for the trash-talking, Fleetwood got his first dig in early. After spending a couple of days at home with his young son Frankie, he looked forward to time with the golfing Frankie and quipped: ‘I don’t know which one is smaller.’ The tournament host this week is world No 2 Justin Rose, who may have wished for an afternoon tee- time today after falling victim to a stomach bug. He is due on at 8.20am alongside the last two winners of this title — Paul Dunne and fellow Englishman Matt Fitzpatric­k.

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