Scottish Daily Mail

Rory’s firm rebuke for Norman’s Saudi deal

McILROY: I’M EVEN MORE OPPOSED TO BREAKAWAY NOW

- DEREK LAWRENSON Golf Correspond­ent reports from Dubai

Rory McIlroy delivered a withering rebuke to Greg Norman yesterday and took aim at the former officials on the PGA Tour who have now signed up for the Saudi golf revolution.

When asked by Sportsmail, the Northern Irishman made it clear in no uncertain terms that his opposition to a proposed Saudi world tour remains unequivoca­l. If the Saudis thought that appointing Norman as the face of their new operation would lead to a player exodus from the establishe­d tours, they might well be dismayed by McIlroy’s coruscatin­g verdict.

‘I’d say my view only hardened after the first appointmen­ts,’ he responded, referring to Norman. ‘Then, when other selected individual­s also came on board, I’d say that just hardened my opinion even more.’

In Norman’s slipstream came the appointmen­t of at least two officials who made a handsome living working for the PGA Tour, only to give up on retirement and align with the disrupters now seeking to tear the game in two. It clearly does not sit well with McIlroy, chairman of the player advisory council in America.

His determinat­ion to hold on to his principles, whatever the cost, was also apparent when asked about his carbon footprint. The man from Radio 5 Live questioned a number of players competing here at the DP World Tour Championsh­ip this week about the harmful effects of golf on the environmen­t, and most of them looked non-plussed. We are golfers and we have to fly to do our jobs, mate. What do you expect us to do?

Not McIlroy. He recalled a private flight he took home from China, where he was the only passenger on the plane. Feeling guilty, he instructed his management team to find out what he could do to lower his carbon footprint. Following his press conference yesterday, he revealed that it involves paying an excess premium of £150,000 this year to offset the damage.

‘It’s worth it to be carbon neutral by the end of the year,’ he said, with an evident touch of pride.

It says everything about the responsibi­lity that McIlroy, still arguably the sport’s most bankable star, feels to the game that he has turned up this week. It was not on his schedule two months ago, and he cannot win the race to Dubai. He is here because it is the right thing to do to support his home circuit following the big announceme­nt of a World Tour of their own next year.

It would surprise no one, mind, if he ended up flying home with the £2.5million first prize on offer for winning the final event of the season. After coming up trumps in las Vegas in his last tournament, he looks a player at peace again after parting company with coach Pete Cowen, and a world away from the tortured soul at the ryder Cup.

‘I’m going to work it out for myself from now on, using my first coach Michael Bannon and a man who knows my swing better than I do, as a sounding board,’ he said.

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 ?? AP ?? On board: Greg Norman has signed to Saudi revolution
AP On board: Greg Norman has signed to Saudi revolution

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