Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Lawrie promising an Open return this year

- BY STEVE SCOTT

PAUL Lawrie will be back at the Open this year, but he will not be coming for a wave goodbye on the Swilcan Bridge.

The 150th Open at the Old Course is clearly the highlight of the golfing year in 2022 and the 1999 champion will use his career exemption again, having opted not to play in 2021 at Royal St George’s.

When Lawrie retired from playing the European Tour full-time at the 2020 Scottish Open, he indicated he might play the Open just one more time. He has a champion’s exemption until age 60 at least and turned 53 on New Year’s Day, but he feels links golf is the one format of the game where he can still compete with the younger guys, so this year might not be the last.

“I’ll be at the Open. I’m looking forward to it,” he said.

“I feel I can get around the Old Course a little easier than a lot of other courses. Obviously it’s links ground so the scoring will be pretty good if the weather is nice, I would imagine.”

Lawrie’s best chance to repeat his 1999 win probably came at St Andrews last time, when he was in outright third place at the halfway point of the weather-disrupted championsh­ip.

He played in the penultimat­e third-round group (on a Sunday) with fellow-Scot Marc Warren, who was tied fourth after 36 holes.

“I was in there after two rounds last time,” he recalled.

“I played with Marc in the third round and, although we both played well, we putted terribly. Neither of us fed off each other well and struggled on the greens and got left behind. That was a killer.”

Seeing the length younger players were hitting the ball and the courses being stretched to match – as well as recurring injury problems – was what led to Lawrie coming off the main tour full-time.

“Some of the venues, with the length they are, there’s no way I can get it around any more,” he said.

“I’m not decrepit or totally gone. The Open courses I think I can get it round, no bother.

“I can scuttle it a bit more than you can when it’s through the air, so I’m looking forward to it.”

The Open may actually be just a warm-up to another major championsh­ip a week later, at one of his favourite venues.

It is the Senior Open on the King’s Course at Gleneagles – only he will be hoping to avoid his friend and fellow-Scot Colin Montgomeri­e in the draw.

“The Senior Open at Gleneagles makes it a great two weeks for me,” he said.

“My only really poor performanc­e in 2021 was the Senior Open at

Sunningdal­e. I was absolutely gutted the way I played, it was absolutely awful.

“I played with Monty and it’s funny, but I still struggle to play with him a little bit.

“In my era he was probably the best Scottish player. Whenever I play with him I feel a little bit under the cosh for some reason.

“But I played poorly last year. I am looking for a much better performanc­e at Gleneagles.”

 ?? ?? Paul Lawrie is planning to play both the Open and Senior Open in July.
Paul Lawrie is planning to play both the Open and Senior Open in July.
 ?? ?? Colin Montgomeri­e
Colin Montgomeri­e

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom