The Standard Journal

Ian Poulter is facing pressure of a different variety

- By Doug Ferguson Associated Press Golf Writer

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. — Ian Poulter used to start every Monday by opening the link to the Official World Golf Ranking. It used to be satisfying. Now he doesn’t even bother, and hasn’t for the last 16 months. “I’ve stopped looking, just because it’s not a very nice number to look at,” said Poulter, who has plunged all the way to No. 206. “It was good when it was No. 5. It was great. I used to look at it all the time. But 200 doesn’t sound very good, does it?” Making it worse is that the ranking file used to contain just 50 names per page, so some scrolling was involved. “I hate going four pages down,” Poulter said. “It’s miserable.” That’s also the least of his worries at the moment. Poulter, so emotionall­y charged during a Ryder Cup, managed a small dose of self-deprecatio­n about his world ranking. Of a more serious nature is that he is running out of time to keep his full status on the PGA Tour. Poulter was going nowhere last year with a foot injury that got so bad he chose to sit out the rest of the season in May. That meant missing the Ryder Cup for the first time in 10 years, though his form was so bad that it would have been a tall order to spend a captain’s pick on him. When he returned in the fall, he had 10 events on a major medical extension to keep his card. He played four times on the PGA Tour and missed two cuts. “I’m on borrowed time,” Poulter said. “Yeah, I need to perform well. ... A win would be nice. I have to think that I’ve got a chance, I really do. The situation I’m in, I have to be aggressive, but I’ve got to be careful. I can’t make many mistakes.” Poulter has always been about belief. Geoff Ogilvy once described him as perhaps the most confident player in golf. How else to explain how he could go from folding shirts as an assistant pro to winning his first year on the European Tour, earning a PGA Tour card and becoming America’s biggest thorn in the Ryder Cup. Poulter reached as high as No. 5 in the world after the 2010 Masters, where he shared the 36-hole lead. The joke was that he got to No. 2 when he once said in a British magazine interview that when he reaches his full potential, it will be just him and Tiger Woods.

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