Toronto Star

Beef feasting on the joys of life

Britian’s Andrew Johnston arrives at Baltusrol on a roll and already a fan favourite

- BARRY WILNER

SPRINGFIEL­D, N.J.— Andrew Johnston already has had a busy few days in the New York area. You know, pastrami at Katz’s Deli, sampling burgers throughout Manhattan, and getting a taste of the fare from his newest sponsor, Arby’s.

He even worked behind the counter at the fast-food restaurant.

Where else would a guy nicknamed Beef begin his first trip to the PGA Championsh­ip?

The bearded Brit with the neverfadin­g smile and jovial outlook is relishing his new-found popularity. He admittedly spent more time than he should have signing autographs and chatting up fans at Baltusrol — several of whom were wearing ginger beards in his honour. And he’s been all over social media.

Quite a change for a guy who barely was on golf’s radar before winning the Spanish Open this year and finishing eighth at the British.

Except it hasn’t changed the 27year-old Londoner.

“As a personalit­y and stuff, just be yourself, man,” Johnson said Wednesday after an early practice round. “So you’ve just got to be comfortabl­e in who you are, what you do.”

The fans are embracing Johnston, as much for his outgoing persona as for his shotmaking and putting. Where some athletes might back away from interactio­n with the public as they seek their place in their sport, Johnston is all in.

“I love the support and I love trying to give back my time,” Johnston said. “It means so much to me.” So does golf, and Johnston recognizes for all the fun he is having — and all the entertainm­ent he is providing — that if his game goes south, so might the recognitio­n and adulation. After all, he’s been on the European Tour for portions of six seasons and only this year has he made a breakthrou­gh, reaching No. 88 in the world ranking and earning six top-15 finishes. Johnston has played in only two tournament­s on American soil, this year’s U.S. Open, where he tied for 54th, and the World Golf Championsh­ip at Firestone (tied for 42nd).

So his outsized image right now is more responsibl­e for his burgeoning popularity than is his game.

“It might come across like that to some people, but as I’ve said before, it’s all about the golf,” he said. “First thing’s first is the golf. “I want to keep pushing forward, and the first thing, the most important thing is the golf before anything else. I want to come away and look back in so many years and think, ‘Yeah, that’s been a great time on the

“I’m hoping he keeps the good play up, I think we need more personalit­ies in this game.” JASON DAY ON ANDREW JOHNSTON

golf course.’ And not going, ‘Oh yeah, well, it was good for that period of time, but we had a good laugh.’

“No, it’s all about the golf. That’s the first thing that is most important, yeah.”

Defending champion Jason Day has met Johnston only once, describing him as looking “like a top bloke.”

“Looks like a guy you want to go down to the pub and have a beer with, even if you don’t drink,” Day said. “It’s good to see stories like that and I’m hoping that he keeps the good play up, because I think we need more personalit­ies in this game.”

You aren’t likely to find Johnston brooding his way through a round, even if the bogeys are more prevalent than the birdies. He knows that being himself is just as much a key to beating par as finding fairways and greens.

“I know a lot of the guys, and they are good people, you know,” he said of his fellow touring pros. “But obviously everyone’s different and some guys are more quiet than others. I don’t know, I just seem to enjoy having a good time and having a laugh. So I guess it comes across as a bit different. That’s just me.”

 ?? MATT DUNHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Andrew Johnston, here at the British Open where he finished eighth, is one of golf’s more colourful characters.
MATT DUNHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Andrew Johnston, here at the British Open where he finished eighth, is one of golf’s more colourful characters.

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