Daily Mail

Masters is the one major I will say with conviction ... I CAN win it

PAUL CASEY’S IN MOOD FOR GLORY

- Derek Lawrenson

Earlier in the year it was the americans who came over to the european Tour and dominated in the Middle east, with victories for Dustin Johnson and Bryson DeChambeau.

Now it’s the turn of the europeans to relish being on american soil and emphasise their Masters credential­s by planting italian, Northern irish and english flags the length and breadth of Florida.

First, there was Open Champion Frankie Molinari holing everything to win the arnold Palmer invitation­al. Then rory Mcilroy got back to winning ways at the Players.

Now, it’s Paul Casey, winning the Valspar Championsh­ip for the second year in a row in a decidedly un-Paul-Casey-like way, showing considerab­le craft and cool on a tense Sunday afternoon when he managed to hold on to the narrow one-stroke lead with which he began.

at 41, is Casey getting better with age? let’s not forget he was a hell of a player when turning in a sterling performanc­e at the 2006 ryder Cup and progressin­g to world No 3 — behind a rampant Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson — in May 2009.

But if we regard his career in two parts, as before and after the lost years between 2012-14 when his game fell apart amid the effects of a nasty divorce and a series of injuries, there are encouragin­g signs that in this second chapter the best may be yet to come.

Content off the course with his second wife, television presenter Pollyanna Woodward, and their two young children, he looks in a different place mentally on it as well. like rory a week earlier at Sawgrass, he was smiling a lot more than we have seen before, relishing the challenge and accepting there would be mistakes on a difficult day, rather than getting frustrated by them, as in the past.

alongside him, Casey now has one of the best caddies in the business in John Mclaren, whom he poached off luke Donald. The pair have worked tirelessly on improving Casey’s wedge play, and attitude, and the benefits are palpable in both areas. it’s a heck of a thing to defend a title successful­ly. You’ve got a lot of extra commitment­s and the burden of heightened expectatio­n. The fact Casey was able to pull it off shows a mental resolve we haven’t seen very often from him before.

Can he win the Masters in a fortnight’s time? Funnily enough, it was a question i asked him the previous week at Sawgrass, while chatting casually after he’d missed the halfway cut at a place where he never does well. What struck me was not just the certainty of his response but its underlying honesty.

‘Yes, i can win the Masters, but that’s probably the only major where i can look you in the eye and say that with total conviction,’ he responded.

‘at the other majors and at plenty of other tournament­s, i see what the guys shoot, their winning scores and i think to myself, “i just can’t see how i could get to that number”.

‘But i can see it at augusta. in the last four years i’ve come away and looked at the winning total and thought that i could have shot that, with a little more luck, better decision-making or whatever. The important thing for me is that it was do-able.’

it certainly must look that way after outplaying world No 1 Johnson on Sunday and digging deep to achieve his victory. in the last four years at augusta, Casey has finished 6th, 4th, 6th and tied 15th. each year his good golf was clearly good enough but each year he’d throw in a destructiv­e 74 or 75 that would prove fatal to his chances. if he can turn those days when he hasn’t got his best stuff into a 70 or 71, who knows?

Perhaps his story will mirror that of another classy ball striker, Mark O’Meara, who always looked as if he would fall just short in the majors and then went on to claim the Masters and the Open in 1998 at the same age Casey is now.

‘i know i haven’t got a lot of years left, and i need to get going,’ said Casey. and here’s a happy omen. The last two europeans to win the Masters, Danny Willett and Sergio Garcia, were ranked 12th and 11th in the world respective­ly going into augusta. Casey is currently 11th.

 ??  ?? CHARLOTTE THOMAS certainly travelled a long road before making her debut in a LPGA event in America last week at the age of 26. Born in Guildford, she completed her schooling in Singapore before attending college in Washington. She turned profession­al in 2016 and joined the women’s tour in Australia, where her three brothers live. She graduated to the top circuit via finishing eighth last year on the Symetra Tour, which sits one rung below the LPGA. Against a field at the Founders Champion: Casey raises the trophy after retaining his Valspar title in Florida on Sunday Open containing all the best players in the women’s game, Thomas (below) marked her American baptism with a final round 66 to claim a share of sixth place. It follows her tied second place in the Vic Open in Australia last month. The English game has a gifted quartet in Georgia Hall, Charley Hull, Bronte Law and Jodi Ewart Shadoff plying their trade in America, with all four ranked in the world’s top 60. Following a much-travelled and surely unique route, it looks as if there might soon be one more.
CHARLOTTE THOMAS certainly travelled a long road before making her debut in a LPGA event in America last week at the age of 26. Born in Guildford, she completed her schooling in Singapore before attending college in Washington. She turned profession­al in 2016 and joined the women’s tour in Australia, where her three brothers live. She graduated to the top circuit via finishing eighth last year on the Symetra Tour, which sits one rung below the LPGA. Against a field at the Founders Champion: Casey raises the trophy after retaining his Valspar title in Florida on Sunday Open containing all the best players in the women’s game, Thomas (below) marked her American baptism with a final round 66 to claim a share of sixth place. It follows her tied second place in the Vic Open in Australia last month. The English game has a gifted quartet in Georgia Hall, Charley Hull, Bronte Law and Jodi Ewart Shadoff plying their trade in America, with all four ranked in the world’s top 60. Following a much-travelled and surely unique route, it looks as if there might soon be one more.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom