The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Gallacher safe but troubled by putting worries

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The Alfred Dunhill Links Championsh­ip has been the late-arriving cavalry for Scottish European Tour profession­als so often in the past, but only Stephen Gallacher left St Andrews with safety secured last night.

Gallacher had a final round 75 in the difficult conditions to drop back from third position overnight to a tie for tenth, but the sizeable cheque has finally taken him comfortabl­y away from the dreaded cut-off mark and even within sight of getting to the season-ending beanfeast in Dubai if he can carry on improved form.

“It was a tough day and very cold, and I just hit a few in the bunkers, which you can’t do around here,” said Gallacher.

“I was six back at the turn and I didn’t think I was really in it, and then hit in the bunker at 10 and had to come out backwards, that was me done, really.”

The frustratio­ns are still coming on, and some pieces of hardware in Gallacher’s collection might pay the consequenc­es.

“It’s been a good week but my putting is still absolutely horrendous,” he said.

“I think I had nine three-putts on the week, so I feel I’ve played so much better than my score. I will go see (putting guru) Phil Kenyon on Thursday, maybe break a few putters and try to get something else to work!

“I’m hitting the ball really well, probably as well as I have for years and years, but I’m just not scoring.

“I’m out at two under today, which is six under for my last 27 holes – and feeling like I’ve left shots out there. And they come back to bite you over 72 holes. Then you hit a few bad ones and get penalised.

“At least I know what I need to do, if I want to keep getting into this position.”

Gallacher can at least play the British Masters at Walton Heath next week – “I love that course as it plays a lot like links” – and opt to miss the Valderrama tournament the week after because he is all but safe.

But no other Scots made the cut at the Dunhill, meaning that apart from Russell Knox – who rolled into the European Tour for a month back in July, reaped €2.4 million, and went back to the USA – only Gallacher and his good friend Paul Lawrie are safe from Q School.

Lawrie, thanks to career earnings, will be able to restart once he has recovered from ankle surgery in the new year. But Scott Jamieson is on the cusp at 107th in the Race to Dubai rankings (110 qualify for cards in 2019), David Drysdale is 111th, Connor Syme 123rd, and Richie Ramsay, Marc Warren and Bradley Neil even further adrift.

Syme and Neil are rookies and are still finding their feet in profession­al golf. But Scotland could lose four experience­d tour profession­als – three of them title winners – in one year unless they can make up ground in the final weeks of the season.

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