The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Rose’s mission I want to give something back to golf in the United Kingdom

Telegraph Junior Championsh­ip,

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Justin Rose is putting his money where his clout is. Today sees the launch of the Justin Rose Telegraph Junior Golf Championsh­ip and as well as the Englishman pinning his name to the event and providing all of the reflected repute that comes with it,

Telegraph Sport can also reveal he is paying for the sponsorshi­p himself.

For Rose, 38, this is the time to return the favour to the grass roots from which his extraordin­ary career sprouted and then blossomed all the way to the status of major winner, world No1 and Ryder Cup stalwart. Rose calls his Telegraph Junior win in 1997 “an important milestone” and in that sense this alliance is the perfect fit.

“This is a nod to where I’ve come from and my journey,” Rose said. “I’ve done lots of charitable stuff in the US, but this is my first way of trying to give back to golf in the UK and is really, really important to me. The championsh­ip is 35 years old and, as well as me, there have been some other winners who have gone on to big things, including Matt Fitzpatric­k, Oliver Fisher, Melissa Reid and Jodi Ewart Shadoff, while Tommy Fleetwood finished second.

“The quality of those champions shows it is run incredibly well and I wanted to get behind a well-oiled machine. But I still would love to help and grow it. We’ve added some players and spots to the field this year and my aim is to see different categories going forward and to broaden its reach.”

Yes, Rose’s influence has already taken effect, with the most notable developmen­t, at his behest, being the 12 girls who will go to this year’s finals on the Algarve, as the females gain numerical parity with the boys in the televised 54-hole strokeplay event. As a role model, there will be nobody better for these competitor­s to look up to, although it is interestin­g that Rose would advise none of them to copy his route.

“I never like kids to compare themselves to where the top players were at a certain age,” he said. “We all develop so differentl­y. If a boy or girl ever asks me ‘what handicap were you playing off at the age of 12 or 14?’ I tell them I was off plus-one at 12 and plus-three at 14, but stress the point it doesn’t matter and none of that meant I was destined to get to world No1.

“The game came easily, obviously, when I was young. I was always ahead of my peers. I was always the youngest on the England team, the youngest to play in the Walker Cup, the youngest to do that, the youngest to do this, the 17-year-old who finished fourth at the Open.

“But then, I struggled when I started as a pro and in 21 consecutiv­e missed cuts, I went from being the can’t-miss kid to the hapless no-hoper. It got me really frustrated and searching in the wrong directions. And the point I’ll make is that you can’t force it and that it will be

unpredicta­ble. ‘Perseveran­ce’ is the word I will preach, because I think that most powerfully embodies my career. Just keep moving forward and dedicating yourself to improvemen­t.

“I eventually discovered I am pretty good when I get focused on something and I fully believe it when I tell myself I am on an upward progressio­n. From winning on the European Tour, to winning on the PGA Tour, to playing on a Ryder Cup team, to winning a World Golf Championsh­ip event, to winning a major, to winning an Olympic gold, to becoming world No1. The story I tell myself often does manifest itself and becomes true.”

Today, he will begin his final prep event ahead of the Masters, the WGC Match Play here in Austin, Texas, and will play Emiliano Grillo in his first group match. It is a big title with big money and big ranking points (he could return to world No1), but there is a bigger picture awaiting in Georgia in two weeks’ time.

“That’s what I mean about doing it your own way,” Rose said. “I was criticised in some quarters for basically taking off the whole of February after winning in San Diego, but that was about peaking for Augusta and giving myself that freshness and that advantage over everybody else. With the new calendar and the [US] PGA being brought forward to May, the energy levels will be all the more important and I make no secret that the majors are my goal. I’m proud of my US Open title [in 2013] and know that great players like Monty [Colin Montgomeri­e] never made that breakthrou­gh, but I don’t want to be stuck on one.

“I feel like I have an opportunit­y to find that rich vein of form and knock off two or three. That’s what I’ve seen Jordan Spieth do, Rory [Mcilroy] do, Padraig [Harrington] and last year Brooks [Koepka]. They got that belief going, they played well at the right time, they had their run. Why shouldn’t I?

“And you know, people talk about Sergio [Garcia] beating me in that Masters play-off two years ago, but I could easily have two green jackets by now.

“It was only Jordan and that record-setting performanc­e [in 2015] that denied me. You have to tip your hat to a display like that, but I know I’ve played golf there that’s been good enough to win and if I prepare well and execute I’ll definitely have further opportunit­ies at Augusta.

“But yeah, I’m 38 and do I want to leave it much longer? Of course not. There is a sense of urgency, but I’m not going to panic or give myself ultimatums, as that would be the worst thing to do. I’ll tell the boys and girls that – do it in your own time. And don’t give up.”

‘I’m 38 now. There is a sense of urgency, but I’m not going to panic’

 ??  ?? Backing the future stars: Justin Rose is financing the sponsorshi­p of the Telegraph Junior Golf Championsh­ip out of his own pocket
Backing the future stars: Justin Rose is financing the sponsorshi­p of the Telegraph Junior Golf Championsh­ip out of his own pocket
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