Daily Mail

Rose: You’re putting money before majors

HOW SOUTH AFRICAN’S CHILDHOOD ORDEAL LED TO PORTRUSH HORROR

- By DEREK LAWRENSON at Royal Portrush

JUSTIN ROSE accused golf’s rulers of putting the cash-laden FedEx Cup above the glory of the majors when coming up with this season’s crazy schedule. ‘It’s just too condensed,’ said Rose, the first of the big names to criticise the decision to cram all four majors into a 13-week spell by

AN Open at Port rush is understand­ably significan­t for the likes of Northern Irishmen Darren Clarke, rory McIlroy and Graeme McDowell.

But few will find their return to this wonderful stretch of links more poignant than young South African Christiaan Bezuidenho­ut.

It was here, after playing in the British Amateur five years ago, that the 25-year-old failed a random drugs test and was banned for two years. Initially it appeared that Bezuidenho­ut was destined to become just another sorry statistic, but the story behind his failed test turned out to be extraordin­ary.

Bezuidenho­ut was taking beta blockers prescribed to help him cope with anxiety and an associated speech impediment that had threatened to ruin his life and destroy his career.

ever since inadverten­tly drinking rat poison from a coke

bottle as a toddler, he had suffered problems associated with his central nervous system.

‘I used to just live in my own world because I was always scared of having to engage in conversati­on with my stutter,’ Bezuidenho­ut said. ‘When I talked to people I knew I would struggle, so I had a fear of answering the phone, saying my name or being asked a question. I would withdraw from a group because I feared speaking.

‘During my junior days, I used to dread public speaking, which was a requiremen­t when you won a tournament. I went to a psychologi­st when I was 14 and we worked on how to work with my stutter to have enough confidence to talk in public.

‘She gave me the beta blockers, a medication that helps reduce your blood pressure and treat anxiety. I used the medication for seven years during my amateur days, which helped me become more confident and enjoy my life again.’

Once Bezuidenho­ut’s back story was known, his ban from golf was reduced to nine months. ‘I wrote the medication down on the form prior to the drugs test, making no secret of the fact I was using it,’ Bezuidenho­ut wrote in a blog this year on the european Tour website. ‘When my dad phoned and told me I was suspended I just broke down. It was awful. It felt like my life was over.

‘The worst part was all the stories that came out from people in golf and supposed close friends back home.

‘I was accused of using it to better my performanc­es, which really hurt me and my family. A lot of nasty things were said. Labels like that are hard to shake off and I reached a very low point in my life.

‘I had a hearing and they reduced my sentence after confirming I had not used the drug for any performanc­e-enhancing benefits. They were the longest nine months of my life, but I turned this into energy to help me come back stronger.’

A product of the ernie els golf academy in South Africa, Bezuidenho­ut turned pro in 2015. his passport to the Open, and a reunion with a golf course he will never forget, was winning the Andalucia Masters at Valderrama last month.

It was his fourth win as a profession­al but his first on the european Tour and came after a pep talk from els. ‘It’s been a huge learning process and I’ve made mistakes,’ he said.

At Portrush — where he will play with Andy Sullivan and Alexander Levy tomorrow — Bezuidenho­ut has the chance to erase bad memories and continue creating better ones.

 ??  ?? Hitting out: Rose practises at Portrush yesterday
Hitting out: Rose practises at Portrush yesterday
 ?? PICTURE: IAN HODGSON ?? Unfinished business: Bezuidenho­ut on the course
PICTURE: IAN HODGSON Unfinished business: Bezuidenho­ut on the course
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 ??  ?? THE PEN 2019
THE PEN 2019

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