The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Lawrie: Peer pressure won’t stop slow play

Former Open champion says confrontin­g players did not work out well for him

- STEVE SCOTT

Trying to use peer pressure among fellow golf profession­als to end slow play doesn’t work – and Paul Lawrie has lost friends as a result.

The former Open champion, slowly making a return to playing competitiv­ely after ankle surgery, was launching the Farmfoods Paul Lawrie Invitation­al yesterday. The charity event, taking place at Gleneagles Hotel in July, will benefit his own foundation and the My Name’5 Doddie Foundation, which was establishe­d by rugby great Doddie Weir to raise funds for research into motor neurone disease.

Lawrie also addressed his own attempts to curb slow play in the light of the high-profile incidents involving Bryson DeChambeau in Dubai and JB Holmes at the Genesis Open in Los Angeles at the weekend.

“I don’t know what can be done,” he said. “I’ve tried confrontin­g players a couple of times when it got outrageous, guys I always got on well with, and both times it went very badly.

“I hear people saying, ‘the players need to police it’. Well, I have tried that and that doesn’t work either. It just puts you off your game, never mind him.

“He’s obviously not bothered about being a slow player. He knows he’s upsetting the guys he’s playing with, and telling him that is not going to make him play any quicker.”

Lawrie was critical of his own European Tour in the case of DeChambeau, when the tour’s social media team put out a video of the American taking more than a minute and a half over a routine shot.

“That shot Bryson was hitting at the 16th in Dubai was 120-odd yards,” he pointed out. “It can only be a wedge, it’s a lovely temperatur­e in Dubai and you are not worrying about your ball not flying properly. Yet he’s taken a minute and 40-something seconds.

“I don’t understand how the European Tour can show that video online and not do anything about it,” he said. “Is it because he’s winning and the sponsors don’t want that?

“I don’t know the reasons, but there must be. They have monitoring systems in place, and slow play is just getting worse and worse.

“There’s clearly something that is stopping the tours dealing with it. I don’t want to have a go at them, but if they wanted to sort it out, I think they could.”

Lawrie is now going to split his time between the main tour and the seniors so it doesn’t affect him as much personally, but he is concerned about the effect on young players.

“Years ago I’d be raging as he’s costing you money, now you just think, ‘if the officials are not going to sort it out, there’s nothing I can do about it,” he said. “I wouldn’t raise it with players now, it didn’t get a nice reaction.

“In the Foundation, we’ve had a few kids that we’ve spoken to, making them aware about the time it should take. You have to try to educate them as they are coming through. That’s all you can do.”

Lawrie will go back on Tour in Oman and Qatar – where he is a former champion – but has no aspiration­s other than playing pain-free for the first time in years after undergoing invasive surgery last September to cure a longstandi­ng ankle problem.

That was an option that came about entirely by chance, after he had downed tools in April last year as the pain – which he’d felt since his great season of 2012 when he made the Ryder Cup team for Medinah – had become unbearable and he was contemplat­ing that might be the end of his career.

“I was watching (son) Michael in the East of Scotland Open at Lundin Links and (former Scotland rugby team physio) Stuart Barton was behind me in the coffee queue and introduced himself,” he said.

“He said he was sorry I’d pulled out of the Scottish and the Open and asked was there anything that could be done, and it just went from there,” he said. “When I stopped I was thinking that might be me all done, and if it was that I didn’t have an issue. I’m very proud of what I’ve achieved in my career and if it was over then it was over.”

Barton, now in private practice, put Lawrie in touch with surgeon Gordon McKay who did the surgery, and while pacing himself gradually, Lawrie has played pain-free for the first time in seven years.

I wouldn’t raise it with players now, it didn’t get a nice reaction

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