The Star Malaysia

Lefties get it right

Southpaws stamp their mark at the US Masters

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HONG KONG: Left-handers have a great record in the US Masters, despite only about five per cent of the world’s golfers being “lefties”.

This century Phil Mickelson (three wins), Bubba Watson (two) and Mike Weir (one) have triumphed at Augusta.

Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre was the latest lefty to make his Augusta debut last week and, like most observers, was staring intently at the leaderboar­d as eventual champion Hideki Matsuyama attempted to close out.

But “Bob”, as he is known on tour, had his gaze fixed slightly lower down the board because he was in the clubhouse and locked in a six-way tie for 12th at two-under, with only the top 12 and ties automatica­lly gaining invitation­s for next year.

Another left-hander, American Brian Harman, had a 20-foot birdie putt at the 18th that would have moved him to three-under and relegated the other five to tied 13th – meaning no guaranteed return ticket.

When Harman rolled it past the hole, Scotland’s MacIntyre burst out of the clubhouse, jumped on his caddie and started fist-bumping all and sundry, in a celebratio­n considerab­ly wilder than Matsuyama’s half-an-hour later.

Meanwhile, big-hitting US Open champion Bryson DeChambeau found, for the second time in five months, that Augusta offers plenty of defence against his “bomb and gouge” approach after finishing tied 46th at five-over following his tied 34th in November.

In fact, the American, 27, was shown up by a couple of 63-yearolds in the opening round.

DeChambeau’s four-over 76 on Thursday was two strokes worse than German two-time Masters champion Bernhard Langer, whose first green jacket came in 1985, a year before Jack Nicklaus’s last.

But more embarrassi­ngly, DeChambeau’s 76 was matched by the 5ft 4in (1.64m) Ian Woosnam, who was playing his first round in 18 months to mark the 30th anniversar­y of his 1991 Masters triumph.

“Woosie”, who suffers from chronic arthritis, had back surgery 14 months ago. He then pulled his right groin early in the round and could hardly walk.

“I was thinking of coming in after 11,” confessed Woosnam.

“I’m playing on one leg really. Plus I haven’t had a scorecard in my hand for 18 months, so I was pretty damn pleased really.”

Unlike the 27-year-old DeChambeau, whose claim that strong men smashing the ball up to 400 yards will take over the game seemed way off course.

 ?? — AFP ?? Still going strong: Phil Mickelson, seen here playing at last week’s US Masters, is among the five per cent left-handed golfers in the world.
— AFP Still going strong: Phil Mickelson, seen here playing at last week’s US Masters, is among the five per cent left-handed golfers in the world.

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