The Scottish Mail on Sunday

COUNTDOWN TO THE OPEN

SIR NICK FALDO LOOKS AHEAD TO BIRKDALE

- By Derek Lawrenson GOLF CORRESPOND­ENT

You realise that six majors actually adds up to a darn good career

WHERE else for Sir Nick Faldo to celebrate his 60th birthday on Tuesday but at The Open? Every landmark birthday he has enjoyed has been spent at the biggest event in the sport that has been his life and passion.

His 30th birthday fell during the third round of his first Open victory at Muirfield in 1987. He was competing in the 126th Open at Troon for his 40th, while his 50th saw him play nine holes at Carnoustie with Rory McIlroy.

This time he’s not a competitor but the R&A, in recognitio­n of Faldo’s status as a three-time Open champion, have granted him permission to play 18 holes at Royal Birkdale with defending champion Henrik Stenson, Olympic gold medallist Justin Rose and South African legend Ernie Els, who will be competing in his 99th major.

Get ready for a fairway serenade or two of ‘Happy Birthday’.

‘I’m very grateful to the R&A for letting me play this fourball,’ Faldo told The Mail on Sunday.

‘Golf has been my life, so this will be a great start to the day.

‘Henrik and Rosey will play nine holes each and we’ll play against Ernie and Louis (Oosthuizen, another former Open winner).

‘We’ve rented a couple of houses nearby and so after that there will be an afternoon tea where fellow golfers and other business associates will, hopefully, drop in between three and six.

‘Then in the evening, we’ll have another party where we’ll be leaping around like youngsters.’

What a week he’s got in store. Before heading up to Birkdale, he will help his mum Agnes celebrate her forthcomin­g 90th birthday with a lunchtime party.

And Fanny Sunesson, who carried the bag when he won five of his six majors, turned 50 a few days ago.

‘I’ve also got another close friend who’s about to turn 70, so it’s going to be some week,’ he said.

‘Fanny is going to be at Birkdale and I was looking at some old photos last week of our days together, like that one on the steps when we won the Claret Jug at St Andrews.

‘Then I realised it was 27 years ago — 27 years ago! Where on earth does the time go?’

Faldo admitted he had reached the stage in life where he liked to sit back in his favourite armchair and reminisce.

‘I’ve been doing that quite a lot,’ he said. ‘I’ve been thinking about the amazing success that Fanny and I enjoyed. We got together in 1990 and that summer we won two majors, almost won three.

‘At the time we were so blasé, we didn’t think anything of it. We were just doing our thing but now you look back and you can see that our thing was actually very impressive.

‘There’s always part of being a competitor that never leaves you, who thinks you should have done more and thinks about the majors you didn’t win. But then you think how difficult they are to win.

‘Look at what’s happening now, with seven first-time major winners in a row.

‘Even Rory (McIlroy) is suddenly finding how difficult it is, after cruising to his first four.

‘Phil (Mickelson) has the most of the present brigade with five, so that gets me a nice bit of respect off the young players in America as I go about my TV work.

‘It also makes you think that six majors actually adds up to a pretty darn good career.’

As you can probably gather, Faldo is one of those people who is embracing the idea of turning 60, rather than dreading it.

‘When you think it’s literally half my life ago that I won my first Open, that’s pretty cool,’ he said.

‘But then you think that’s 30 years ago, so that hurts a little. But I enjoy my life. I spend most of my time as a TV commentato­r being surrounded by 20-something athletes, so that keeps you young.

‘I really admire those people who are in their 80s and they’re still proactive. The game plan for me is to keep going.’

Part of the celebratio­n of this time in his life has been rediscover­ing being a golfer.

After years spent leaving the clubs largely in the attic as he concentrat­ed on his TV work, Faldo has played a couple of events recently on the over-50s Champions Tour in America. That will continue with an appearance at the Senior Open at Royal Porthcawl next week, before he embarks on a two-month stint back on the senior circuit in the US.

‘I’ve been a golfer for almost half a century, so why not celebrate that

over the next few months when I’m not doing my TV work?’ he asked.

‘I still love trying all the equipment and the exercise routines. Those two events in America have given me a taste for it again, and I think I’ll be better prepared and put in a better performanc­e at Porthcawl.’

The fates have aligned in all sorts of ways this week.

Faldo’s landmark coincides with the 25th anniversar­y of the last of his three Open wins, which also happens to be the last time an Englishman won.

It was at Birkdale that he played in his first Open in 1976; at the Southport links in 1983 that he unravelled over the back nine in the final round and realised his swing couldn’t cope with the pressure on Sunday afternoon at a major.

‘That Open in 1983 was an amazing one for me,’ he said. ‘I began the event double bogey, double bogey and still shot 68, which has to be the best unknown 68 of my entire career. Then with nine holes to play, I blew up. It wasn’t long afterwards that I came to the conclusion that I needed to rebuild my swing to become a better golfer, one that could win The Open.

‘My last victory in 1992 was the most draining of all. I frittered a four-shot lead and I looked at the leaderboar­d on the 14th green and was two back. I was blowing it in fine style and I would have been badly scarred if I’d lost that. I said to myself: “You better play the best four holes of your career to rescue this” — and I just about did so.’

Ask Faldo if there’s anything left on his bucket list, and it seems appropriat­e that the man who didn’t pick up a club until he was 13 but still reached the golfing summit wants to see Everest.

‘From a distance — I’m not into climbing the darn thing,’ he said.

‘I think if you live a hectic life, your bucket list actually becomes quite simple.

‘I’d love to spend a month in my house without leaving it, and I still haven’t done that. Most of all I enjoy spending quality time with my four kids. They’ve all got their own worlds now but they’re good fun. We have a good time together.’

Faldo at 60, then, might be more content than he’s ever been. The restless, driven soul at 30 who put golf above everything has matured into a man who is appreciati­ve of life’s bigger picture and its endless possibilit­ies.

But he still loves golf. He’ll always love golf.

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 ?? Picture: JEREMY SUTTON-HIBBERT/GETTY IMAGES ??
Picture: JEREMY SUTTON-HIBBERT/GETTY IMAGES
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