Daily Dispatch

Rose eager to bend backwards to get into the swing

-

JUSTIN Rose will hope a troublesom­e back injury does not put paid to his Hong Kong Open title defence as the new European Tour season gets under way today.

The Olympic champion was forced to pull out after the first round of last week’s Hero World Challenge in the Bahamas, but he made the trip to Hong Kong regardless.

Rose isn’t the only top player with fitness concerns at the opening event of the European Tour season, which also rounds off this year’s Asian Tour’s schedule.

Masters champion Danny Willett is coming off a two-week break to recover from a bad back while Ian Poulter, the 2010 champion, returned from five months out in October.

England’s Willett, 29, skipped the World Cup in Melbourne and the British Masters to rest his back, but he admitted he was still not fully fit.

“I made a decision to pull out of the World Cup a couple of weeks ago, mainly because we knew this was the start of [the new] season, and it’s a place I wanted to come back to and hopefully put a good show in,” said Willett. He, who is looking to recapture his Augusta form, said his back recovery was a work in progress and pointed to the injury woes of his compatriot­s Rose and Poulter.

“I don’t think there are many guys who could say they are 100% all the time, purely because of how much travelling we do – sleeping in different beds and trying to play a sport that doesn’t quite fit with the natural movement of the body,” he said.

Poulter, 40, made a last-minute dash to Hong Kong from his home in Florida last year when he realised his European Tour about to lapse.

He has had a less frenetic build-up to this year’s event – but said his long lay-off had left him short of tournament practice.

“I’ve felt over the last six weeks I’ve played some good golf, there’s a little bit of rust there, having had five-anda-half months off, not holing putts I would normally convert,” said Poulter.

One leading player who is injuryfree is the big-hitting American, Patrick Reed, 26, who tied for third membership was last year course.

Reed said the US’s Ryder Cup victory in October would add extra spice to exchanges with his European rivals when they tee-off today.

“The US side is a little more vocal this year,” he said. “It was in desperate need to win this past year, it had been so one-sided, we needed to get that spark back.”

Australia’s Scott Hend is expected to seal the Asian Tour’s order of merit title, while Spain’s Miguel Angel Jimenez returns. — AFP at the venerable Fanling

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa