The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Day admits he is running on empty at Baltusrol

TITLE DEFENCE: World No 1 has troubled run-up to year’s final major

- Phil casey

World No 1 Jason Day has said he is running on empty ahead of his US PGA title defence after completing an unwanted grand slam of disrupted preparatio­n for this year’s majors.

After suffering with a back problem before the Masters, a cold at the US Open and a rib injury scare at the Open, Day arrived at Baltusrol feeling under the weather and then spent Tuesday evening in hospital after his wife had an allergic reaction.

The 28-year-old will therefore defend his first major title after just one practice round yesterday and could lose his place at the top of the world rankings if he finishes 29th or worse and Dustin Johnson is outright second or better.

“I was always going to take Monday off, and Dash and Lucy (his children) are sick right now and Dash passed that on to me a little bit,” Day said. “I’m just a little bit under the weather. “Then Ellie had an allergic reaction last night and had to go to the hospital. We were there until 2am or something like that. So I’m kind of running on E (empty) right now,” he said.

“I haven’t seen the course. I don’t know what it looks like.

“I was with Doug Steffen, the head pro, last night at the champions’ dinner. I went through pretty much every hole with him for about 20, 30 minutes.”

Day’s Players Championsh­ip win in May was his seventh in 17 events, a phenomenal run of results which included winning his first major title at Whistling Straits with a record total of 20 under par – recently matched by Henrik Stenson in the Open at Troon.

And although his worst finish in five appearance­s since then is a tie for 27th, Day acknowledg­es the pressure is on to maintain his high standards.

“I think the bar’s been raised ever since Tiger Woods came around,” added Day, who will play the first two rounds at Baltusrol alongside Phil Mickelson and Rory McIlroy.

Despite problems with his preparatio­n, Day finished 10th in the Masters and eighth in the US Open, while being on the “wrong” side of the draw at the Open contribute­d to a tie for 22nd.

“I think if you try a little bit too hard sometimes, you can kind of shoot yourself in the foot. I think that’s what I did in the first two majors,” added Day.

“I’ve got to really try and manage my patience out there, because I have very little patience right now. Just for some reason, every time I get a little bit under the weather, I’ve got zero patience.”

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Jason Day has had just one practice round at Baltusrol ahead of his US PGA title defence.
Picture: Getty. Jason Day has had just one practice round at Baltusrol ahead of his US PGA title defence.

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