The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Local lad Fleetwood an Open contender

Brit grew up around corner from Birkdale

- By Steve Douglas

He is the poster boy of the upcoming British Open, his flowing hair and stubbly face adorning the banners draped across lamp-posts on the approaches to Royal Birkdale.

Tommy Fleetwood has the looks of a rock star and the popularity of one in this seaside town in northwest England, especially this week.

Golf’s oldest major is back in Southport for the first time since 2008 and, in Fleetwood, one of the sport’s rising stars, the locals have one of their own to cheer for.

“I’ll have the most support I’ve ever had in my life, from people I’ve grown up with, friends, family, you name it,” Fleetwood said on Monday. “It’s going to be a differ- ent experience, for sure.”

Growing up, Fleetwood lived in a house just round the corner from Royal Birkdale. The place always held a mystical quality to a golf-loving kid who dreamed of winning the Open Championsh­ip from the age of 5.

He’d play at the local municipals — Southport, Formby Hall, and Southport & Ainsdale, where he’d sweep the paths — and would get on Birkdale only when accompanyi­ng his father, Peter, on

evening dog walks.

“I might have bunked on the odd time and hit the odd shot,” Fleetwood recalled. “But that was about as far as it goes.”

The first British Open he went to watch was at Royal Birkdale in 1998. He remembers defending champion Justin Leonard being on the front cover of the program, being in awe of a 22-year- old Tiger Woods walking past him, and faking golfers’ signatures in his autograph book because he failed to get any himself.

Nineteen years on, it’s his signature in demand.

Fleetwood is at his highest- ever world ranking of No. 14, he’s currently the No. 1 player on the European Tour after winning in Abu Dhabi and France this year, and played in the final group on the Sunday of a U.S. Open last month.

To a former coach and mentor, Fleetwood is not just a sentimenta­l pick this week but a logical one.

“He’s the player in form, he’s one of the best players in the world, and he’s playing a course he knows,” Jim Payne told The Associated Press. “Some people talk about pressure he’ll be under but I don’t see that. I only think he can do well. It’s set up for him, really.”

Payne recalls Fleetwood being 10 or 11 when he met him for the first time, and young Tommy playing “like someone who was three years older.”

 ?? DAVE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? English golfer Tommy Fleetwood smiles during a press conference in the second practice day at the British Open Golf Championsh­ip at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England, Monday.
DAVE THOMPSON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS English golfer Tommy Fleetwood smiles during a press conference in the second practice day at the British Open Golf Championsh­ip at Royal Birkdale in Southport, England, Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States