The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Drysdale hits 500 as he searches for elusive win

EUROPEAN TOUR: ‘Double D’ hopes to ‘slip under radar’ thanks to Jimenez

- STEVE SCOTT stscott@thecourier.co.uk

David Drysdale hates the limelight at the best of times, so he’s relieved that his big anniversar­y at the Hero Open at Forest of Arden is being somewhat overshadow­ed by someone else’s.

The Scot reaches the milestone of 500 European Tour events this week, only for in the same week the ageless Miguel Angel Jimenez passing Sam Torrance’s all-time tour record of 702 tournament­s.

It looks like it would take the 45-yearold from Cocksburnp­ath in Berwickshi­re at least another six seasons to get up close to the 56-year-old Jimenez’s total, but Drysdale is slightly amazed that he’s been out here so long.

“Obviously I’ve been aware it’s been coming for a while, but it really isn’t that much of a big deal to me,” he said.

“I thought it was going to happen in India in March. Maybe now at Forest of Arden I can kind of sneak under the radar, you know me.

“As far as I’m concerned all it means is I’m old and I’ve been out here a really long time!”

That doesn’t tell half the story, however. Drysdale first got on tour in 2002, was in and out for six years in which he went through all sorts of tribulatio­ns – not retaining his card by under £500 in winnings one year, missing a putt at the final hole of Tour School to miss out, among others – but you could never accuse him of not giving everything he had.

In 2008 he finally stuck and he’s been on tour ever since, 12 consecutiv­e seasons and 16 in total, which is a record that few can match and one to be proud of, he grudgingly admits.

However, the knock on Drysdale is that he’s never won a European Tour event, and has taken over the record for most tournament­s played without winning.

There have been plenty of close things, the latest being the closest of all, losing a multi-hole play-off to Jorge Campillo in the Qatar Masters, the last event before lockdown, earlier this year.

“I wasn’t quite sure what to think about that afterwards,” he said.

“Obviously a win or two would really set the seal on my career and I certainly won’t be personally fully satisfied if I don’t get one.

“But with lockdown I had a lot of time to reflect on Qatar, and I realised there wasn’t anything more I could have done.

“Jorge holed everything in the play-off and he deserved to win, but yes, it was a great week and the best opportunit­y to win I’ve had, I think.

“My only real regret now is not knowing where that performanc­e and a run of form would have taken me. I would have played Kenya and India immediatel­y afterwards, but instead we had a threemonth break, and I struggled to get my head into it at the British Masters on the first day.

“Second day was much better and we’ll try to take it forward at Forest of Arden.”

Drysdale played as callow rookie in 2002 at the last event at Forest of Arden, the English Open, and did well.

He was in the final group on the Saturday with eventual winner Darren Clarke, but admitted the experience­d Northern Irishman “left me in the dust” and he eventually finished 10th.

“I often wonder what would have happened if I’d won then,” he said.

“You see the kids like Renato Paratore and Rasmus Hojgaard win early and they never know the struggle it is to win.

“They’re probably better players than me, which is something, but sometimes you just have to have luck go your way as well.”

Winning would be nice, but sticking 18 seasons and all of the last 14 on tour certainly counts for something, and there is certainly no better and more united team on the entire tour than “Double D” and his wife, manager and caddie Vicky.

Childhood sweetheart­s, they married in 2004 and since Vicky started carrying the bag in 2016, they’ve been basically inseparabl­e.

“She’s my wife, my caddie, my manager, my inspiratio­n and mentor and everything else,” he said in the European Tour’s blog this week.

“Vicky has travelled with me for most weeks for the majority of my time on Tour so we have always been a pretty good team, but our relationsh­ip has grown even closer since she started caddying.

“She first did it for one week in South Africa in 2016 when my regular caddie couldn’t make it, and I tried another couple of guys on the bag after that but it didn’t work.

“We decided to give it a go as full-time husband and wife, as well as player and caddie. It has been a lot of fun (most of the time!) and has worked out perfectly.

“Put it this way: if you are a Tour profession­al for over 10 years and you find one person that you can share everything with and not want to kill each other at the end of the week, then you have found the perfect match, and I certainly have that with Vicks.”

 ?? Picture: SNS. ?? David Drysdale has played on the European Tour for a total of 16 seasons.
Picture: SNS. David Drysdale has played on the European Tour for a total of 16 seasons.
 ??  ?? Miguel Angel Jimenez will set new European Tour record this week.
Miguel Angel Jimenez will set new European Tour record this week.

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