The Scotsman

Mcilroy set to sacrifice Euro Tour membership to regain No 1 berth

● Ulsterman says he will play most of his golf in 2019 on PGA Tour, with only two European events on schedule

- By MARVIN COLLINS

Rory Mcilroy has revealed that he may not fulfil the requiremen­ts for European Tourmember­shipnextse­ason – a decision which would rule him out of ever being a Ryder Cup captain or vice-captain.

Mcilroy needs to play four European Tour tournament­s outside the majors and World Golf Championsh­ip events, but currently only has two on his schedule.

Players must be a member of the European Tour to be eligible to play in the Ryder Cup and, under new regulation­s introduced in January 2017, “players cannot be a European Ryder Cup captain or a vicecaptai­n if they decline membership of the European Tour or fail to fulfil their minimum event obligation in any season, from 2018 onwards.”

“I am starting my year off in the States and that will be the big focus of mine up until the end of August and then we will assess from there,” Mcilroy said ahead of the seasonendi­ng DP World Tour Championsh­ip in Dubai.

“I guess my thing is that I want to play against the strongest fields week-in and week-out and for the most part of the season that is in America. If I want to continue to contend in the majors and to continue my journey back towards the top of the game, then that’s what I want to do.

“Right now that is all sort of up in the air, but if it were to be

0 Rory Mcilroy could never be a Ryder Cup captain if he gives up European Tour membership in 2019, according to new regulation­s.

that I don’t fulfil my membership next year, it’s not a Ryder Cup year so it’s not the end of the world. I am always going to want to play the Ryder Cup, so if that does happen so be it and I will try and make the Ryder Cup team the year after.”

Mcilroy’s decision will be a major blow to European Tour chief executive Keith Pelley, who launched the Rolex Series last year in an effort to prevent Europe’s star names from flocking to the lucrative PGA Tour.

The eight events each have a prize fund of at least £5.4 million, with the BMW PGA Championsh­ip moving to September and the Italian Open to October following the US PGA Championsh­ip switching from August to May.

“It is a big shift but I think it’s

RORY MCILROY

good for a lot of reasons,” Mcilroy added. “It is good for the European Tour because they have events to shine.

“Wentworth is going to be in September, the Italian Open and a lot of the big events are going to be after the PGA Tour

season, so they are going to be the biggest events and strongest events in the world that week which is a good thing.”

Mcilroy’s slim chance of winning the Race to Dubai for the fourth time disappeare­d when he was unable to win lastweek’snedbankgo­lfchalleng­e, but the Northern Irishman hopes a new driver can help maintain his incredible form at Jumeirah Golf Estates where he has recorded finishes of 3-5-11-1-5-2-1-9.

“I think back to the first tee shot at Augusta on Sunday; Wentworth on the final day; Akron, final day; Tour Championsh­ip, final day. The reason I didn’t play better was because I didn’t put the ball in the fairway, and the reason I didn’t put the ball in the fairway is because I have this miss

to the right with the driver,” the 29-year-old added. “Unfortunat­ely the new driver is only going to last a week because I have to get a new one next year again, but at least it gives me a better chance to win this week, I guess.”

Meanwhile, Tommy Fleetwood admits he faces a tough task to overhaul Ryder Cup partner Francesco Molinari and win the Race to Dubai for the second year in succession.

Fleetwood trails Open champion Molinari by more than a million points and needs to win the Dubai event to have a chance of being crowned European No 1 again. And even that would not be enough if Molinari finishes inside the top five. “It’s nice to have a chance, but it’s a massively tall order,” Fleetwood said.

“Right now it is all sort ofupinthea­ir,buti guess my thing is that I want to play against the strongest fields week-in and week-out”

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