The Scotsman

Lawrie will become golf agent if foot surgery fails

- By MARTIN DEMPSTER

“My name is Lawrie, Paul Lawrie”. No, the Aberdonian isn’t fancying himself as rival to Idris Elba to take over from Daniel Craig as the next James Bond. It does seem appropriat­e, though, given that his latest venture in the golfing world is as an agent.

The extent of that role will hinge on a foot operation he will undergo soon. He might also need back surgery to give him a chance of having a crack at the Senior circuit once he turns 50 on 1 Janaury.

However, under the Five Star Sports Agency banner, Lawrie has already signed up Sam Locke, the Silver Medal winner in last month’s Open Championsh­ip at Carnoustie, and he’s looking to add more clients – and not just golfers.

Once his youngest son, Michael, graduates from Stirling University in a couple of years, the aim is to get some football players on the books, too, and Lawrie has watched his beloved Aberdeen plenty of times over the years to feel confident about venturing into another sport.

“We signed young Sam and David Law is about to sign,” he revealed of the new company that has been keeping him busy since shutting down his 2018 campaign due to that persistent foot problem and recurring back trouble. “I’ve also been looking after my son Craig’s sponsorshi­p and my own for a while. So I’ve been kind of thinking that if I don’t get back to the level I want to be at, that’s what I am going to be doing, an agent.

“Michael’s at Stirling Uni studying business management so when he graduates that’s something he wants to do. But he wants to do the football side more while I’d do the golf. If my foot recovers, we’ll hire somebody to

0 Paul Lawrie, right, has signed up young Scot Sam Locke, the Silver Medal winner in last month’s Open Championsh­ip at Carnoustie.

PAUL LAWRIE run the company with my input on the side as opposed to full-time. But I am actually enjoying it. It’s amazing how much goes in to it. I have always been a player who just focused on playing and didn’t do the other stuff. But I have been though it, good and bad, management and playing. I kind of know what is required, what is good and bad for these players.

“The plan at the moment is for me to look after Sam, David, Craig and myself and see how we go. If we get better at it, then if big players feel we can look after them, then we’d look at that. But, at the minute, I’m going to walk before I run. I like doing that. I don’t like digging straight in and, all of a sudden, you don’t do a good job and it becomes poor.”

The new company will also be involved in events, the first of which will be a Paul Lawrie Invitation­al at Gleneagles next summer. “It will be a massive pro-cel-am event with a big gala dinner at night in the hotel,” he said.

“We will promote and sell and raise a lot of money for charity. It is going to be a huge event.”

Unlike the first time he did some commentary work at the 2010 Ryder Cup in Wales, Lawrie enjoyed various bits of media work during his enforced absence from The Open, missing out , of course, at the venue where he claimed the Claret Jug in 1999. “I enjoyed the on-course stuff, explaining the shots, the most and that might be for me,” he said of options that might lie ahead.

However, the two-time Ryder Cup player hasn’t yet called time on his playing career and hopes to have finally got to the bottom of his foot trouble.

“I have a ruptured tendon which needs surgery,” he said. “I’m waiting for my surgeon, Professor Gordon Mckay at Ross Hall, to get back to me. He is not sure if he is going to do it this week or next week but he says it will be a recovery period of 13 weeks or so.

“We’re not sure yet about the back, whether we need surgery or not, or just manipulate it a wee bit. I was down seeing somebody else about my back and he was saying it’s more my pelvis that’s causing the problems as opposed to my back.

“I’m not a big fan of operations and all that kinda carry on. But needs must and hopefully by January we will be fit to go. That’s the plan.”

England have added Ben Stokes to their squad for this weekend’s third Test after his acquittal at Bristol Crown Court.

Stokes, cleared of a charge of affray yesterday, was not in the 13-man squad England announced the previous day to face India at Trent Bridge.

But within two hours of the end of his court case, the England and Wales Cricket Board issued a brief statement which read: “Ben Stokes will now join the England squad for the 3rd Specsavers Test against India, which starts at Trent Bridge on Saturday.”

An independen­t Cricket Discipline Commission disciplina­ry investigat­ion into the behaviour of Stokes and team-mate Alex Hales – which acts under the auspices of the ECB – was put on hold last September, while court proceeding­s took precedence. But in its statement, the ECB confirmed the CDC will soon resume its deliberati­ons.

It added: “Now that the legal proceeding­s have concluded, the disciplina­ry process for Ben Stokes and Alex Hales can be scheduled by the Cricket Discipline Commission.

“Considerab­le detail has been heard in this weeklong court case and, in due course, there will be a range of matters for the board to fully consider.”

Stokes, pictured, was cleared, alongside codefendan­tryanali,following the late-night events 11 months ago – when a fight broke out in the street outside a Bristol nightclub.

England subsequent­ly ruled their premier allrounder out of the remainder of the ongoing oneday internatio­nal series against West Indies and then last winter’s Ashes – before his return during the tour of New Zealand.

The 27-year-old stayed in the team this summer, apart from a spell out with a hamstring injury, until he had to miss last week’s Lord’s Test victory over India – because of a clash with his court case.

“I have been through it, good and bad, management and playing. I kind of know what is required, what is good and bad for these players”

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