As the Tokyo Olympics approach, to help whet your appetite, Robin Bose from thegolfinghub.com, in India, spoke to Indian stars Anirban Lahiri and SSP Chawrasia about their memories of Rio in 2016 ‒ when golf returned to the summer Olympics after 112 years.
Golf was making a comeback to the Olympics in 2016 after a long gap, and the enthusiasm had rubbed off on all the stakeholders. But sport can be unpredictable and that finds no better expression than in Anirban Lahiri’s debut at the Rio Games.
Raised in an Army household, Lahiri was excited at the prospect of turning out in Indian colours. An integral part of the PGA Tour by now, helped by a joint fifth finish at the 2015 PGA Championship, the icing for him was partnering SSP Chawrasia. The two have engaged in iconic duels at the Hero Indian Open and spent time on the Asian Tour and European Tour. So, Rio was being looked at as one more contest with “deep and technical discussions on the short game” by the sidelines.
Since Lahiri knew for a while that he would play, the build-up to the Olympics was good. He finished runner-up to Chawrasia at the Indian Open and enjoyed a joint sixth placing on the PGA Tour. Missing the cut at the US Open wasn’t a dampener as Lahiri opened well at The Open Championship. He looked good for a strong finish but a shoulder injury going into Sunday at Royal Troon triggered a phase of “not so good golf”.
Martin Kaymer of Germany and Lahiri walk on the second hole during the first round of men’s golf on Day 6 of the Rio 2016 Olympics at the Olympic Golf Course on August 12, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)
Lahiri wasn’t ready for competition, and proof was the missed cut at the PGA Championship. The strain of playing across America, Europe and Asia was showing, and led to the tough call of cutting down on tournaments in the coming seasons. Next up were the Olympics but there was no time to name a replacement because of visa restrictions and other paperwork.
Trying to get the best out of a tired body wasn’t the only challenge, wading through official red tape was another mountain to climb. The swing compromised due to the injury and the feel of his driver not right, Chawrasia came to the rescue by offering a spare club. Even then, Lahiri felt the heat and by the second day could not keep pace with the intensity.
As a proud Indian that is a regret and Lahiri is hopeful he gets a chance to complete “unfinished business and set the record straight” in another edition of the Olympics.
The memories outside competition were opposite to what transpired on the golf course. Seated next to Michael Phelps at dinner was memorable but equally inspiring was the story of the Indian judoka and wushu player Lahiri interacted with closely. “It made me realise how tough it is to pursue their love and getting to the Olympics is an achievement in itself. Golf figures way down in the list of disciplines, these guys are even lower down in the order. It was saddening but the struggle is inspiring,” said Lahiri.
Lahiri watches his tee shot on the 16th hole during the second round of the golf on Day 7 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic Golf Course on August 12, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)
Rio, SSP and a new love
Like Lahiri, Chawrasia was fearful of not turning up at Rio in the best shape. It was the week of the Irish Open and discomfort in the C4, C5 and C6 discs prevented him from going through with the full swing. The pain was such that Chawrasia even contemplated pulling out of the following week’s BMW PGA Championship.
Timely advice from the European Tour doctor helped him get in touch with a neurosurgeon and the shot of cortisone worked like magic. Within half an hour, he could go through with the full practice swing. From pulling out to T27 on that Sunday, that was some progress. More than the pay cheque, it was relief. “I had to play the Olympics, else there would have been a lifelong regret,” said Chawrasia.
The fatigue of the long flight from Kolkata to Rio got washed away the moment he entered the Games Village. “There was so much of positive energy; it had to be experienced to be believed.” Chawrasia finished T50, seven rungs ahead of Lahiri, and though the final day 78 rankles, playing alongside Sergio Garcia stands out.
Through the week, friendships were struck that cut across sport and have stood the test of time. Sharing the three-bedroom apartment with Lahiri and a towering 6’3” judoka, the friendly banter in the evening is recounted with fondness.
SSP in action during Round 4 at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic Golf Course in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 14 August 2016. Photo: Soeren Stache/dpa | usage worldwide (Photo by Soeren Stache/picture alliance via Getty Images)
But the biggest takeaway for Chawrasia from Rio was junking tea and embracing coffee. The unavailability of tea in the 24×7 food tent had Chawrasia reaching out for coffee. Growing up in Kolkata, tea was his staple beverage but in light of its non-availability and the affinity for caffeine had Chawrasia making the switch. He started by adding a dollop of milk but the aroma of the coffee beans grew on him quickly and since then it has been two cups of black coffee a day.
What is missed is the unmistakable taste of Brazilian coffee and Chawrasia is still on the lookout as he traverses through Europe and Asia in search of his next international title.
Rory Hie says he is back to 100% fitness after a series of troublesome injuries played havoc with his game following his historic win in the 2019 Classic Golf and Country Club International Championship, in India ‒ which saw him become the first Indonesian to win on the Asian Tour.
“My game is a lot better, this time off Tour has been very beneficial for me,” said the 32-year-old ‒ who is featured in the latest series of the Asian Tour’s Life on Tour video blogs.
He was nursing a right wrist before and during his win in India ‒ impressively, and despite the ailment, achieved wire to wire ‒ and then shortly after that injury started to clear up, the pain and discomfort bizarrely shifted to his left thumb.
“You can see in the pictures of me winning in India, there is strapping on my right wrist. Not long after that, at the Thailand Open I picked up a problem with my thumb; I thought ‘what the heck is wrong with my thumb?’ It lasted two or three months; it was a real pain to deal with, and I was going to see the physio a lot,” he said.
He thinks the problem with the wrist was the result of over exerting himself in the gym, while the thumb predicament probably came about after hitting too many practise balls off a wet mat in Jakarta.
“In Thailand, I could not really hold the club at the top of the back swing, and after that it got worse and worse, and we tried all sorts of things to fix it, but I really needed a long break,” said the Indonesian.
Hie poses with the trophy after winning the Classic Golf and Country Club International Championship at Classic Golf and Country Club on September 15, 2019 in Gurgaon, India. (Photo by Arep Kulal/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
“We had tried ice, massages, we taped it up so I looked like a mummy because at one point I had tape on my right wrist and left thumb. It was pretty bad, I tried to play with a thumb brace at one point. It wasn’t a good way to try and play tournaments. Also, I could not really practice.”
But he soon got his wish for a break when the coronavirus pandemic hit so abruptly and unexpectedly in 2020.
The ensuing long-layoff and, as he is quick to point out, applying the anti-inflammatory spray Perskindol ‒ which he picked up at the Malaysian Open in March, just before the pandemic stopped play on Tour ‒ saw the injury clear up.
“Now, I am back pretty much back 100%, except for a minor eye infection at the moment,” joked Hie, who now plays and practices at Sentul Highlands Golf Club, just outside Jakarta.
He has only played one event since that Malaysian Open ‒ a two-round local event this year ‒ but as well as healing physically, he feels the time off has helped him get on course mentally.
“This period of time off has given me a better understanding of what I need to do, and how I can improve. I don’t expect much in terms of events whether locally or on the Asian Tour this year. We might not have tournaments until next year, maybe. But at the same time I feel it is a good opportunity to get to the level I want to.
“I have the time now to prepare myself. I feel like my game is already in good shape. If it takes a longer time for tournaments to come back, then that is fine. I feel like I am improving almost every day.
“I have also been studying my game a lot. I was looking at my old swing 10 years ago and I was really different. I have been looking at the bio-mechanics of the golf swing and studying the players I like on Tour, more on the biomechanics side through 3D images, and I figured out a lot of stuff, it made a lot of sense to me.”
Hie celebrates after the final round of the Classic Golf and Country Club International Championship at Classic Golf and Country Club on September 15, 2019 in Gurgaon, India. (Photo by Arep Kulal/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
Hie also got into trading on the Indonesian market during lockdown, he says: “It was hard at the beginning and I quickly lost a lot of money. I was like ‘what the heck’. But I made it all back by January. It was fun.”
And he also appeared in some television adverts for the first time: for UC 1000 water and also K-Link Products.
He adds” “That is something I would not normally have time to do, so it’s helped me keep things very positive.”
Despite the lack of competitive action, @Roryhie ?? ?️ is finding positives from this pandemic. ⛳ Watch our latest episode of #LifeonTour to find out how life has changed for him ?#LOT pic.twitter.com/5CYYUYGWpX
— Asian Tour (@asiantourgolf) June 19, 2021
Black Mountain Golf Club joined Asian Tour Destinations – the exclusive network of golf clubs with direct ties to the Asian Tour – in August last year and so we felt it an opportune time to catch up with Harald Elisson, their General Manager, to find out how things are at Hua Hin’s preeminent golfing venue.
Q. Harald, it has been a difficult 2020 and 2021 for everyone in the golf industry. How have things been at Black Mountain Golf Club?
Yes, it has been a challenging time but we are weathering the storm well. I am delighted to say, as we speak, even though some things are closed during another period of restrictions, the golf course, driving range and restaurant are open – no alcohol sales allowed, of course.
Obviously, we are dependent on tourism, but international visitors are practically non-existent at-the-moment. Normally we would welcome visitors from Scandinavia, the UK, Germany and Switzerland but nobody wants to go through quarantine if they are on vacation. November to March would normally be our busiest period, but the numbers were drastically down last year.
However, on a more positive note we have been very encouraged by the relatively high traffic of visitors from Bangkok at the weekends – domestic tourism during the pandemic has been surprisingly good.
And, despite everything, we have been able to sell real estate as people are still moving here.
Harald Elisson, General Manager, Black Mountain Golf Club
Q. Black Mountain is a wonderful golfing oasis. Can you run through everything you have on site and explain the concept behind the project.
Everything here is under the Black Mountain umbrella. It’s all one golf community and obviously the heart of the whole project is the golf course. We have a wealth of real estate –with condominiums and houses – which continue to grow; we keep building more and selling more. As I said before, even now in the pandemic we keep getting new owners for houses and condos with people moving here, and we keep building new ones as well. Most of the condos are now sold. We have 76 condos and about 100 houses (60 residential and 40 resort villas which operate as a hotel): the condos are two or three bedrooms, while the villas are two to four bedrooms, so there are quite big variety of sizes.
And, of course, we have so many facilities: the water park is probably the main one and there is also a sports area with tennis and volleyball courts.
Guests staying on site have preferential treatment for all facilities.
Q. How does one become a member of the golf club?
A key part of the whole concept here is that golf membership comes with the real estate – all of which overlooks the golf course. The concept is that we only sell memberships to property owners; everyone who is a member lives on site. This has been the plan from the beginning, and it has been very successful. We wanted to create a special and unique atmosphere for the members.
Scott Hend of Australia celebrates with the trophy after claiming victory during the final round on day four of the Thailand Classic at Black Mountain Golf Club on March 13, 2016 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Ian Walton/Getty Images)
Q. Where do your residents come from?
In the beginning, as this is a Swedish investment, it was very heavily influenced by Swedish buyers but over the years it has diversified.
It is now mostly Europeans, Americans and Australians and of course some from Asia. It is very much a mix, but I would say 40% are Scandinavians.
Early on most were buying as a second home but now people are living here on a more permanent basis. We have an international school on site – not owned by Black Mountain but it is located here: so that is a big thing and means a lot of families have moved here. The school is from early years up to secondary.
Q. Last year you became part of the Asian Tour Destinations network. The Tour is excited to have you on board. What is Black Mountain hoping to achieve with this tie up?
Well, let me start by saying that we have been close to Asian Tour going back to when we started the project over a decade ago.
And, of course, we have hosted many Asian Tour events but by becoming part of Asian Tour Destinations we hope to further grow the relationship through brand association, cross marketing and more importantly furthering ties with the other golf clubs who are part of the network.
Thongchai Jaidee of Thailand tees off on the 1st hole during the Pro-am event of the Black Mountain Masters at Black Mountain Golf Club on December 15, 2010 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
And we are already seeing some early benefits of this association – even though it has been difficult to move forward with many things because of the pandemic.
The practice facilities are very popular here, they are in very good shape all year round, so we have already seen some Asian Tour members here practicing and we look forward to welcoming more.
Their presence is great for our residents; it helps elevate the overall atmosphere on site, unlike few other golfing properties.
Q. On that note, you have a number of high-profile professionals associated with Black Mountain. Who are they and what is the relationship?
I am delighted to say that all the professionals are actually residents at Black Mountain.
Thongchai Jaidee and Jazz Janewattananond – both former Asian Tour number ones – and other Asian Tour winners Berry Henson and Simon Yates own property here, as do Johan Edfors and Rikard Karlberg – both winners on the European Tour.
As with the Asian Tour members practising here, having this calibre of professionals live and play in and around the community is a wonderful feature.
General view of the 2nd green during the third round of the 2016 True Thailand Classic at Black Mountain Golf Club on March 12, 2016 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Ian Walton/Getty Images)
Q. As you mentioned earlier, your venue is synonymous with hosting world-class tournaments. What has been the objective behind this, and will we see more Asian Tour events there in the future, when conditions permit?
We knew in the beginning we wanted to stage Tour events, and that came to fruition very quickly when we hosted the Black Mountain Masters in 2009 and 2010, when Johan (Edfors) and Tetsuji (Hiratsuka) won respectively.
In addition to the Black Mountain Masters we also held the Thailand Classic, King’s Cup, and Royal Trophy here.
Essentially, hosting tournaments of this scale has been one of the main ways of marketing this whole project. The live television element is the perfect way to promote our property.
So, tournaments have really helped put us on the map and we have been really happy with the results. Certainly, we intend to host more in the future.
Johan Edfors of Sweden, defending champion, relaxes at his golf course villa after a practice round for the Black Mountain Masters at Black Mountain Golf Club on December 14, 2010 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
Former Asian Tour number one Juvic Pagunsan says more “focus” and “mental strength” were the factors behind his popular victory last Sunday in the Gate Way To The Open Mizuno Open – surprisingly, his maiden win in Japan after a decade of trying, and, perhaps even more notably, his first triumph on one of the region’s main Tours since claiming the Pertamina Indonesia President Invitational on the Asian Tour in 2007.
“I had been practicing very hard and trying to really focus on my game,” said the Filipino, whose victory also earned him a berth in this year’s Open Championship field at Royal St George’s, July 15-18.
“I was a little bit worried that I would never win again, but I kept practicing, playing and working on getting mentally stronger, that is why I was able to win again.”
Juvic celebrates his birdie on the 18th hole during the third and final round of the Barclays Singapore Open at the Sentosa Golf Club on November 13, 2011 in Singapore, Singapore. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)
Since turning professional 15 years ago the Filipino star has recorded eight runner-up finishes on the Asian Tour and seven on the Japan Golf Tour Organization – an impressive track record, even though it is void of titles.
One of those second placed finishes came in the Barclays Singapore Open in 2011, where he was beaten by Spain’s Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, aka “Gonzo”, in that famous sudden-death play-off that had to be completed on Monday morning. Although disappointed to lose, Pagunsan was consoled by earning a cheque for US$666,660 – which helped him secure the Asian Tour Order of Merit title.
But at the age of 43 many thought Pagunsan had missed the boat on another victory.
The Filipino – who is also a two-time winner on the Asian Development Tour – is philosophical about it.
“If the tournament is yours, it is yours, but if it is not, it’s not, but if you still keep playing you have a chance to win,” he says.
“It is nearly 11 years in Japan right now and I always came up second but last week I broke that curse and I did it, I finally won.
“Hopefully I can win again, every year, and every tournament I keep positive.”
Juvic poses with the winning trophy at the end of the final round of Pertamina Indonesia President Invitational Golf Tournament at the Damai Indah Golf and Country Club in Tangerang, on the outskirts of Jakarta, 28 October 2007. AFP PHOTO/Bay ISMOYO (Photo credit should read BAY ISMOYO/AFP via Getty Images)
Remarkably, he marched to victory last weekend carrying his own clubs (partly due to COVID-19 restrictions) as: “I didn’t have a private caddie and I didn’t want to use the push carts.”
It was the third time this year he had carried his bag in Japan, but whereas on the two previous occasions he lugged a full set, this time he felt it best to make his bag lighter and carry 11 clubs (legally you are allowed to carry 14).
He added: “I am getting older and the last two times with 14 clubs were really heavy. I don’t like to use the electric carts, since you have to go all the way around the greens.”
Out went his three, four, six, and eight irons and in came a 19-degree utility club, four wedges and a winners’ cheque for ¥12,000,000 (US$109,304) – elevating his career earnings in Japan to ¥237,625,768 (US$2,163,489).
As for his trip to the Open he says:
“I have had a lot of experience playing links golf. I actually made the cut the first time I played the Open (he finished tied 72nd in 2012 at Royal Lytham & St Annes). But missed the cut in 2014 (at Royal Liverpool). I will try and draw on those experiences when I play this year.”
ENDS
When Thongchai Jaidee turned professional in 1999 – to much fanfare following an all-conquering amateur career – the last thing on his mind would have been the distant and ancient land of Wales.
But 13 years after joining the ranks of play-for-pay – and indeed on this day in 2012 – it was there, at the ISPS Handa Wales Open, that he recorded what is considered to be one of the greatest victories by an Asian golfer.
Thongchai had already claimed four European Tour events up until that point, but they were all joint-sanctioned events in Asia.
Whether he was able to transfer that kind of form onto European soil, where conditions were vastly different, was an unknown variable.
Thongchai poses with the trophy after winning in Wales (Photo by Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images)
However, in the summer of 2012, Thongchai – who was 42 years old at the time – silenced any doubters when he overcame a star-studded field at a wet and windy Celtic Manor Resort – the venue for another closely fought European win at the Ryder Cup just two years earlier.
The Thai golfer closed with a one-over-par 72 for a six under total and a one-stroke victory over Dane Thomas Björn, Spain’s Gonzalo Fernandez-Castaño, Dutchman Joost Luiten and South African Richard Sterne.
“I want to say thank you to all my family, all the supporters and the sponsors here,” he said.
“Conditions were quite tough for me.
“I tried to hit everything on the fairway – that’s the main thing – then hit the ball on the green. It was very, very tough for me, not like Thailand!”
The victory also meant he became the first player from Thailand to win in Europe.
Thongchai celebrates with his caddie (Photo by AMA/Corbis via Getty Images)
The former paratrooper, world ranked 199, led by one overnight, but fell one behind after running up a double-bogey seven at the ninth.
But with typical Thongchai bravado he made three birdies in rapid-fire succession from the 10th and another on the 15th to seize control.
That gave him the luxury of being able to bogey the 16th and 18th and still take the £300,000 first prize.
At the time it was his 16th win as a professional and he could have been forgiven for sitting back and resting on his laurels but the win in Wales proved to be the first of many European conquests.
He went on to win four more titles in Europe to help cement his position as one of the greatest golfers produced by the Asian Tour.
Thongchai tees off on the 18th hole during the final round. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)
Asian Tour members produced a hat-trick of victories last week with Juvic Pagunsan from the Philippines – the 2011 Asian Tour Order of Merit champion – claiming his maiden title in Japan, while Korean Kyongjun Moon and China’s Yanwei Liu won on their respective domestic circuits.
Pagunsan triumphed in the Gate Way To The Open Mizuno Open, and, as the event name suggests, secured his ticket to this summer’s Open Championship – to be played at Royal St George’s Golf Club from July 15-18.
Helped by birdies on 15 and 16, he closed with a four-under-par 68 at the Setonaikai Golf Club in Okayama to end on 17-under-par 199, and finish three ahead of Ryutaro Nagano from Japan.
KASAOKA, JAPAN – MAY 30: Juvic Pagunsan of the Philippines celebrates winning the The Mizuno Open. (Photo by Toru Hanai/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)
Pagunsan, who finished second in the Asia-Pacific Diamond Cup earlier in the month, has been playing on the Japan Golf Tour Organization for the past decade and was thrilled to finally win there.
“It has been 10 years, 10 years! It took me 10 years to win! Now I am relieved,” he said, after his round. “I get to go to UK. I can go again. Could I get my visa? How is the quarantine measures?”
Remarkably, the 43-year-old won with only 11 clubs in his bag, because due to COVID-19 precautions caddies are only allowed to follow their golfers in carts – so Pagunsan chose to lighten his bag by removing his 3, 4, 6, and 8 irons.
Credit: KPGA Korean Tour
Moon moved to the top of the Money List on the Korean PGA Tour when he claimed the KB Financial Live Championship at Black Stone Icheon Golf Club.
He closed with a three-under-par 69 to finish on eight-under-par 208 – three ahead of compatriot Jeongwoo Ham, in what was the fourth event of the season in Korea.
Over on the China Tour, Liu won the Zhengzhou Classic at St Andrews (Zhengzhou) Golf Club. He shot a one-under-par 71 on the last day for a tournament total of eight under – one better than former teenage-star Jason Hak from Hong Kong.
It was also their fourth event of 2021.
Shaun Norris from South Africa claimed his fifth title in Japan on Sunday – and first since 2019 – when he won the inaugural Golf Partner Pro-Am Tournament after a thrilling sudden-death play-off at Toride Kokusai Golf Club.
Norris, a two-time winner on the Asian Tour, beat fellow Asian Tour member Scott Vincent from Zimbabwe and Japan’s Tomoharu Ostuki after two extra holes.
Ostuki, the leader after each of the first three rounds, made bogey on the 72nd to send the tournament into overtime but dropped out after making a double on the first play-off hole. On the following hole Vincent failed to save par to hand victory to Norris.
“I wasn’t able to come to Japan Tour last year so I am way down on the Money race, but I will fight hard to catch up. I want to win at least two more this season,” said Norris, who earned a cheque for just over US$122,000.
Scott Vincent of Zimbabwe (Photo by Graham Denholm/Getty Images)
The South African had closed with a seven-under-par 63 for a four-round total of 21 under.
He said: “I felt I had an advantage against the other two”, as he explained his last win in 2019 at the ANA Open came after a five-way playoff.
His victory was made more impressive by the fact that he pushed his cart all week, as his brother and regular caddie was ill.
“I wish my brother was here with me to celebrate,” added Norris, who turned 39 earlier this month.
Filipino Angelo Que, a three-time winner on the Asian Tour, finished in a tie for fourth – three shots short of the play-off.
KIAWAH ISLAND, SOUTH CAROLINA – MAY 23: Phil Mickelson of the United States celebrates with brother and caddie Tim Mickelson after winning on the 18th green during the final round of the 2021 PGA Championship held at the Ocean Course of Kiawah Island Golf Resort on May 23, 2021 in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
At the PGA Championship, where American Phil Mickelson made his history by becoming the oldest winner of a Major at the age of 50, four Asian Tour members competed but failed to make it through to the weekend.
Americans John Catlin and Kurt Kitayama missed the cut by five with Thailand’s Jazz Janewattananond and Rikuya Hoshino from Japan further down the leaderboard.
American John Catlin begins the next chapter of his meteoric rise in the game tomorrow when he makes his debut in a Major, at the PGA Championship – on the daunting Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, South Carolina.
It was only a month ago that the 30 year old claimed the Austria Golf Open – following five gripping sudden-death play-off holes against Germany’s Maximilian Kieffer – to secure his third victory on the European Tour in eight months, which moved him into the top-100 on the Official World Golf Ranking.
“I’d love to crack that top-50 in the world,” said the Californian, after winning in Austria.
“Just to get a chance to play in some Major Championships – I’ve actually never played in a Major. I’m thinking this gives me a very good chance to play in the US PGA Championship, that was kind of my goal.
Catlin with the Austria Golf Open trophy on April 18 (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)
“Hopefully it’s good enough and to get into those events and to have the chance to win a Major, that’s been my goal since I was a kid.”
Well, that was all made possible soon after when he received a special invitation to play in the PGA Championship – the second Major of the year, where American Collin Morikawa will defend.
“It’s very exciting [to get to play in the PGA Championship]. It’s the only level of golf I haven’t been to yet,” Catlin said, more recently.
Catlin has been rewarded for his success by being paired in a high-profile group consisting of two other rising stars in the game: Scottish lefthander Robert MacIntyre and big-hitting American Cameron Champ. They tee-off on the 10th at 7.49am, local time.
Catlin celebrates winning the 2019 Thailand Open, after a three-man play-off at Thai Country Club on November 10. (Photo by Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
While it was only a month ago that Catlin completed his hat-trick in Europe, it was only five years ago that he burst onto the scene and became a prolific winner.
He claimed the Combiphar Golf Invitational in Indonesia on the Asian Development Tour in 2016, won again on that Tour the following year, and in 2018 triumphed three times on the Asian Tour – leading to him to being voted by his peers the Asian Tour Player of the Year. And, he won on the Asian Tour the following season, at the Thailand Open, before taking Europe by storm in September 2020 with victories in the Estrella Damm N.A. Andalucía Masters and the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open.
A remarkable and inspiring streak for a player who had been struggling to find a place to regularly play tournaments after turning professional in 2013.
Catlin will try and emulate the success of his compatriot Shaun Micheel – who in 2003, after having cut his professional teeth in Asia and won the 1998 Singapore Open, claimed the PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club, ranked 169th in the World, becoming one of the biggest underdogs to win a Major.
Jazz walks to the 10th tee during the final round of the 2019 PGA Championship at Bethpage Black course on May 19, 2019 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
Six-time Asian Tour winner Jazz Janewattananond from Thailand, who impressively tied 14th in this event in 2019, tees-off at 1.31 in the afternoon, on the 10th; Japan’s Rikuya Hoshino, winner last week at the Asia-Pacific Diamond Cup, starts at 9.12am on the first; and Asian Tour winner Kurt Kitayama from the United States is off at 12.30pm, also from hole one.
Berry Henson is virtually a household name on the Asian Tour, and it all started for the popular American during this month of May a decade ago.
In fact, it was on this very day in 2011 – shortly after having made it through Qualifying School, in 11th place – that he marched to victory in Manila, claiming the ICTSI Philippine Open, at Wack Wack Golf and Country Club.
Winning the National Open of the Philippine’s is a rare privilege as it is one of the oldest National Opens in the game – in 2011 it was the 95th edition of the tournament – and Henson was made to work very hard to secure the title.
Despite suffering from dehydration over the closing holes during the third round, he finished the day with a two-shot lead, and then fired a final round one-over-par 73 to narrowly beat local-favourite Jay Bayron from the Philippines by a single shot.
Henson celebrates during the final round of the Philippine Open on May 15, 2011 in Manila, Philippines. (Photo by Khalid Redza/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
Henson made a brave up-and-down at the last, holing a tension-packed putt for par from three feet, to win with a four-round total of five-under-par 283 – on the notoriously difficult East Course.
“I feel like I went 72 rounds with Manny Pacquiao this week and didn’t get KO’d,” Henson said, after his win. “I played on a very difficult golf course and the weather was brutal. It was a hard win.”
He earned US$47,550 with the victory.
South Africa’s Jbe Kruger finished third, while Digvijay Singh from India was fourth.
Henson held a three-shot lead heading into the back nine, but bogeys on 12 and 17 opened the door for Bayron.
Henson plays a shot during day three of Philippine Open (Photo by Khalid Redza/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
“We were all struggling to make birdies and stay aggressive on the back nine,” Henson said. “I made a couple of mistakes coming in but everything worked out for me on the last hole.”
Bayron made an eagle on the second, but bogeys on 14 and 15 were setbacks from which he could not recover.
“Honestly, I was playing for second after the 15th hole,” said the 2005 Southeast Asian Games team gold medallist. “I tried to keep the thought of winning out of my mind for the entire round. Finishing second is a good result for me and I hope to build on this confidence.”
Henson was 31 years old at the time and it was the culmination of a remarkable and inspiring start to his journey in Asia.
Just two weeks before winning in the Philippines he had claimed the Clearwater Masters, in Malaysia, on the Asian Development Tour.
This came on the back of him having arrived at the Qualifying School with just US$5,000 in his bank account.
Said Benson, in an interview more recently: “I had one sponsor and he said, ‘hey it’s sink or swim, we either get a card or we are done’.”
Former Asian Tour Order of Merit winner David Lipsky has achieved his life-long ambition of playing on the PGA Tour, following an outstanding season on the Korn Ferry Tour – the development circuit that feeds the PGA Tour.
The American is currently in fifth place on the Korn Ferry Tour ranking, and, although another 15 events remain, he has already comfortably secured his playing privileges for the 2021/2022 season on the PGA Tour. The top-25 earn their Tour cards.
He has been playing some of the finest golf of his career, including winning the TPC San Antonio Challenge last year, and he nearly won the Emerald Coast Classic last month, but lost in a play-off.
CRANS-MONTANA, SWITZERLAND – SEPTEMBER 07: David Lipsky of USA plays a shot on the 18th hole during the playoff against Graeme Storm of England during the final round of the Omega European Masters at Crans-sur-Sierre Golf Club on September 7, 2014 in Crans-Montana, Switzerland. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
Lipsky first made his name in Asia: he was a medallist at the Asian Tour Qualifying School in 2012 and won the 2012 Handa Faldo Cambodian Classic, in his third start on Tour.
And after a brilliant season, two years later he claimed the Asian Tour Order of Merit title – helped in a big way by winning the cash-rich Omega European Masters, an event sanctioned with Europe.
He also won the Alfred Dunhill Championship in South Africa in 2018, for a second European Tour title.
“I’ve played internationally for years and the European Tour for five or six years,” Lipsky said. “The whole goal was to try and get back and play the PGA Tour.”
“I took a little bit of a risk doing it,” he said. “I was playing really well in Europe, making good money, but I knew, ‘Why not now?’”
SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA – MARCH 17: David Lipsky of the United States holds the trophy of the Handa Faldo Cambodian Classic at Angkor Golf Resort on March 17, 2012 in Siem Reap, Cambodia. (Photo by Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
The American grew up in Southern California and played at La Canada High School, where American star Collin Morikawa attended.
Despite having achieved his goal of securing his PGA Tour card, the 32 year old is still very focused on more success on the Korn Ferry Tour.
“I have my eyes on number one now,” he said.
“Keep playing solid like I’m doing, keep the confidence and momentum going, and we’ll see what happens with that, end of the season.”
Indian duo look back on the Rio Olympics in 2016
As the Tokyo Olympics approach, to help whet your appetite, Robin Bose from thegolfinghub.com, in India, spoke to Indian stars Anirban Lahiri and SSP Chawrasia about their memories of Rio in 2016 ‒ when golf returned to the summer Olympics after 112 years.
Golf was making a comeback to the Olympics in 2016 after a long gap, and the enthusiasm had rubbed off on all the stakeholders. But sport can be unpredictable and that finds no better expression than in Anirban Lahiri’s debut at the Rio Games.
Raised in an Army household, Lahiri was excited at the prospect of turning out in Indian colours. An integral part of the PGA Tour by now, helped by a joint fifth finish at the 2015 PGA Championship, the icing for him was partnering SSP Chawrasia. The two have engaged in iconic duels at the Hero Indian Open and spent time on the Asian Tour and European Tour. So, Rio was being looked at as one more contest with “deep and technical discussions on the short game” by the sidelines.
Since Lahiri knew for a while that he would play, the build-up to the Olympics was good. He finished runner-up to Chawrasia at the Indian Open and enjoyed a joint sixth placing on the PGA Tour. Missing the cut at the US Open wasn’t a dampener as Lahiri opened well at The Open Championship. He looked good for a strong finish but a shoulder injury going into Sunday at Royal Troon triggered a phase of “not so good golf”.
Martin Kaymer of Germany and Lahiri walk on the second hole during the first round of men’s golf on Day 6 of the Rio 2016 Olympics at the Olympic Golf Course on August 12, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)
Lahiri wasn’t ready for competition, and proof was the missed cut at the PGA Championship. The strain of playing across America, Europe and Asia was showing, and led to the tough call of cutting down on tournaments in the coming seasons. Next up were the Olympics but there was no time to name a replacement because of visa restrictions and other paperwork.
Trying to get the best out of a tired body wasn’t the only challenge, wading through official red tape was another mountain to climb. The swing compromised due to the injury and the feel of his driver not right, Chawrasia came to the rescue by offering a spare club. Even then, Lahiri felt the heat and by the second day could not keep pace with the intensity.
As a proud Indian that is a regret and Lahiri is hopeful he gets a chance to complete “unfinished business and set the record straight” in another edition of the Olympics.
The memories outside competition were opposite to what transpired on the golf course. Seated next to Michael Phelps at dinner was memorable but equally inspiring was the story of the Indian judoka and wushu player Lahiri interacted with closely. “It made me realise how tough it is to pursue their love and getting to the Olympics is an achievement in itself. Golf figures way down in the list of disciplines, these guys are even lower down in the order. It was saddening but the struggle is inspiring,” said Lahiri.
Lahiri watches his tee shot on the 16th hole during the second round of the golf on Day 7 of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic Golf Course on August 12, 2016 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. (Photo by Scott Halleran/Getty Images)
Rio, SSP and a new love
Like Lahiri, Chawrasia was fearful of not turning up at Rio in the best shape. It was the week of the Irish Open and discomfort in the C4, C5 and C6 discs prevented him from going through with the full swing. The pain was such that Chawrasia even contemplated pulling out of the following week’s BMW PGA Championship.
Timely advice from the European Tour doctor helped him get in touch with a neurosurgeon and the shot of cortisone worked like magic. Within half an hour, he could go through with the full practice swing. From pulling out to T27 on that Sunday, that was some progress. More than the pay cheque, it was relief. “I had to play the Olympics, else there would have been a lifelong regret,” said Chawrasia.
The fatigue of the long flight from Kolkata to Rio got washed away the moment he entered the Games Village. “There was so much of positive energy; it had to be experienced to be believed.” Chawrasia finished T50, seven rungs ahead of Lahiri, and though the final day 78 rankles, playing alongside Sergio Garcia stands out.
Through the week, friendships were struck that cut across sport and have stood the test of time. Sharing the three-bedroom apartment with Lahiri and a towering 6’3” judoka, the friendly banter in the evening is recounted with fondness.
SSP in action during Round 4 at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Olympic Golf Course in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 14 August 2016. Photo: Soeren Stache/dpa | usage worldwide (Photo by Soeren Stache/picture alliance via Getty Images)
But the biggest takeaway for Chawrasia from Rio was junking tea and embracing coffee. The unavailability of tea in the 24×7 food tent had Chawrasia reaching out for coffee. Growing up in Kolkata, tea was his staple beverage but in light of its non-availability and the affinity for caffeine had Chawrasia making the switch. He started by adding a dollop of milk but the aroma of the coffee beans grew on him quickly and since then it has been two cups of black coffee a day.
What is missed is the unmistakable taste of Brazilian coffee and Chawrasia is still on the lookout as he traverses through Europe and Asia in search of his next international title.
Indonesian ace has benefited from long lay-off
Rory Hie says he is back to 100% fitness after a series of troublesome injuries played havoc with his game following his historic win in the 2019 Classic Golf and Country Club International Championship, in India ‒ which saw him become the first Indonesian to win on the Asian Tour.
“My game is a lot better, this time off Tour has been very beneficial for me,” said the 32-year-old ‒ who is featured in the latest series of the Asian Tour’s Life on Tour video blogs.
He was nursing a right wrist before and during his win in India ‒ impressively, and despite the ailment, achieved wire to wire ‒ and then shortly after that injury started to clear up, the pain and discomfort bizarrely shifted to his left thumb.
“You can see in the pictures of me winning in India, there is strapping on my right wrist. Not long after that, at the Thailand Open I picked up a problem with my thumb; I thought ‘what the heck is wrong with my thumb?’ It lasted two or three months; it was a real pain to deal with, and I was going to see the physio a lot,” he said.
He thinks the problem with the wrist was the result of over exerting himself in the gym, while the thumb predicament probably came about after hitting too many practise balls off a wet mat in Jakarta.
“In Thailand, I could not really hold the club at the top of the back swing, and after that it got worse and worse, and we tried all sorts of things to fix it, but I really needed a long break,” said the Indonesian.
Hie poses with the trophy after winning the Classic Golf and Country Club International Championship at Classic Golf and Country Club on September 15, 2019 in Gurgaon, India. (Photo by Arep Kulal/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
“We had tried ice, massages, we taped it up so I looked like a mummy because at one point I had tape on my right wrist and left thumb. It was pretty bad, I tried to play with a thumb brace at one point. It wasn’t a good way to try and play tournaments. Also, I could not really practice.”
But he soon got his wish for a break when the coronavirus pandemic hit so abruptly and unexpectedly in 2020.
The ensuing long-layoff and, as he is quick to point out, applying the anti-inflammatory spray Perskindol ‒ which he picked up at the Malaysian Open in March, just before the pandemic stopped play on Tour ‒ saw the injury clear up.
“Now, I am back pretty much back 100%, except for a minor eye infection at the moment,” joked Hie, who now plays and practices at Sentul Highlands Golf Club, just outside Jakarta.
He has only played one event since that Malaysian Open ‒ a two-round local event this year ‒ but as well as healing physically, he feels the time off has helped him get on course mentally.
“This period of time off has given me a better understanding of what I need to do, and how I can improve. I don’t expect much in terms of events whether locally or on the Asian Tour this year. We might not have tournaments until next year, maybe. But at the same time I feel it is a good opportunity to get to the level I want to.
“I have the time now to prepare myself. I feel like my game is already in good shape. If it takes a longer time for tournaments to come back, then that is fine. I feel like I am improving almost every day.
“I have also been studying my game a lot. I was looking at my old swing 10 years ago and I was really different. I have been looking at the bio-mechanics of the golf swing and studying the players I like on Tour, more on the biomechanics side through 3D images, and I figured out a lot of stuff, it made a lot of sense to me.”
Hie celebrates after the final round of the Classic Golf and Country Club International Championship at Classic Golf and Country Club on September 15, 2019 in Gurgaon, India. (Photo by Arep Kulal/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
Hie also got into trading on the Indonesian market during lockdown, he says: “It was hard at the beginning and I quickly lost a lot of money. I was like ‘what the heck’. But I made it all back by January. It was fun.”
And he also appeared in some television adverts for the first time: for UC 1000 water and also K-Link Products.
He adds” “That is something I would not normally have time to do, so it’s helped me keep things very positive.”
Despite the lack of competitive action, @Roryhie ?? ?️ is finding positives from this pandemic. ⛳ Watch our latest episode of #LifeonTour to find out how life has changed for him ?#LOT pic.twitter.com/5CYYUYGWpX
— Asian Tour (@asiantourgolf) June 19, 2021
Latest updates from their General Manager Harald Elisson
Black Mountain Golf Club joined Asian Tour Destinations – the exclusive network of golf clubs with direct ties to the Asian Tour – in August last year and so we felt it an opportune time to catch up with Harald Elisson, their General Manager, to find out how things are at Hua Hin’s preeminent golfing venue.
Q. Harald, it has been a difficult 2020 and 2021 for everyone in the golf industry. How have things been at Black Mountain Golf Club?
Yes, it has been a challenging time but we are weathering the storm well. I am delighted to say, as we speak, even though some things are closed during another period of restrictions, the golf course, driving range and restaurant are open – no alcohol sales allowed, of course.
Obviously, we are dependent on tourism, but international visitors are practically non-existent at-the-moment. Normally we would welcome visitors from Scandinavia, the UK, Germany and Switzerland but nobody wants to go through quarantine if they are on vacation. November to March would normally be our busiest period, but the numbers were drastically down last year.
However, on a more positive note we have been very encouraged by the relatively high traffic of visitors from Bangkok at the weekends – domestic tourism during the pandemic has been surprisingly good.
And, despite everything, we have been able to sell real estate as people are still moving here.
Harald Elisson, General Manager, Black Mountain Golf Club
Q. Black Mountain is a wonderful golfing oasis. Can you run through everything you have on site and explain the concept behind the project.
Everything here is under the Black Mountain umbrella. It’s all one golf community and obviously the heart of the whole project is the golf course. We have a wealth of real estate –with condominiums and houses – which continue to grow; we keep building more and selling more. As I said before, even now in the pandemic we keep getting new owners for houses and condos with people moving here, and we keep building new ones as well. Most of the condos are now sold. We have 76 condos and about 100 houses (60 residential and 40 resort villas which operate as a hotel): the condos are two or three bedrooms, while the villas are two to four bedrooms, so there are quite big variety of sizes.
And, of course, we have so many facilities: the water park is probably the main one and there is also a sports area with tennis and volleyball courts.
Guests staying on site have preferential treatment for all facilities.
Q. How does one become a member of the golf club?
A key part of the whole concept here is that golf membership comes with the real estate – all of which overlooks the golf course. The concept is that we only sell memberships to property owners; everyone who is a member lives on site. This has been the plan from the beginning, and it has been very successful. We wanted to create a special and unique atmosphere for the members.
Scott Hend of Australia celebrates with the trophy after claiming victory during the final round on day four of the Thailand Classic at Black Mountain Golf Club on March 13, 2016 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Ian Walton/Getty Images)
Q. Where do your residents come from?
In the beginning, as this is a Swedish investment, it was very heavily influenced by Swedish buyers but over the years it has diversified.
It is now mostly Europeans, Americans and Australians and of course some from Asia. It is very much a mix, but I would say 40% are Scandinavians.
Early on most were buying as a second home but now people are living here on a more permanent basis. We have an international school on site – not owned by Black Mountain but it is located here: so that is a big thing and means a lot of families have moved here. The school is from early years up to secondary.
Q. Last year you became part of the Asian Tour Destinations network. The Tour is excited to have you on board. What is Black Mountain hoping to achieve with this tie up?
Well, let me start by saying that we have been close to Asian Tour going back to when we started the project over a decade ago.
And, of course, we have hosted many Asian Tour events but by becoming part of Asian Tour Destinations we hope to further grow the relationship through brand association, cross marketing and more importantly furthering ties with the other golf clubs who are part of the network.
Thongchai Jaidee of Thailand tees off on the 1st hole during the Pro-am event of the Black Mountain Masters at Black Mountain Golf Club on December 15, 2010 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
And we are already seeing some early benefits of this association – even though it has been difficult to move forward with many things because of the pandemic.
The practice facilities are very popular here, they are in very good shape all year round, so we have already seen some Asian Tour members here practicing and we look forward to welcoming more.
Their presence is great for our residents; it helps elevate the overall atmosphere on site, unlike few other golfing properties.
Q. On that note, you have a number of high-profile professionals associated with Black Mountain. Who are they and what is the relationship?
I am delighted to say that all the professionals are actually residents at Black Mountain.
Thongchai Jaidee and Jazz Janewattananond – both former Asian Tour number ones – and other Asian Tour winners Berry Henson and Simon Yates own property here, as do Johan Edfors and Rikard Karlberg – both winners on the European Tour.
As with the Asian Tour members practising here, having this calibre of professionals live and play in and around the community is a wonderful feature.
General view of the 2nd green during the third round of the 2016 True Thailand Classic at Black Mountain Golf Club on March 12, 2016 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Ian Walton/Getty Images)
Q. As you mentioned earlier, your venue is synonymous with hosting world-class tournaments. What has been the objective behind this, and will we see more Asian Tour events there in the future, when conditions permit?
We knew in the beginning we wanted to stage Tour events, and that came to fruition very quickly when we hosted the Black Mountain Masters in 2009 and 2010, when Johan (Edfors) and Tetsuji (Hiratsuka) won respectively.
In addition to the Black Mountain Masters we also held the Thailand Classic, King’s Cup, and Royal Trophy here.
Essentially, hosting tournaments of this scale has been one of the main ways of marketing this whole project. The live television element is the perfect way to promote our property.
So, tournaments have really helped put us on the map and we have been really happy with the results. Certainly, we intend to host more in the future.
Johan Edfors of Sweden, defending champion, relaxes at his golf course villa after a practice round for the Black Mountain Masters at Black Mountain Golf Club on December 14, 2010 in Hua Hin, Thailand. (Photo by Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
Juvic Pagunsan says his win in Japan was a case of mind over matter
Former Asian Tour number one Juvic Pagunsan says more “focus” and “mental strength” were the factors behind his popular victory last Sunday in the Gate Way To The Open Mizuno Open – surprisingly, his maiden win in Japan after a decade of trying, and, perhaps even more notably, his first triumph on one of the region’s main Tours since claiming the Pertamina Indonesia President Invitational on the Asian Tour in 2007.
“I had been practicing very hard and trying to really focus on my game,” said the Filipino, whose victory also earned him a berth in this year’s Open Championship field at Royal St George’s, July 15-18.
“I was a little bit worried that I would never win again, but I kept practicing, playing and working on getting mentally stronger, that is why I was able to win again.”
Juvic celebrates his birdie on the 18th hole during the third and final round of the Barclays Singapore Open at the Sentosa Golf Club on November 13, 2011 in Singapore, Singapore. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images)
Since turning professional 15 years ago the Filipino star has recorded eight runner-up finishes on the Asian Tour and seven on the Japan Golf Tour Organization – an impressive track record, even though it is void of titles.
One of those second placed finishes came in the Barclays Singapore Open in 2011, where he was beaten by Spain’s Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano, aka “Gonzo”, in that famous sudden-death play-off that had to be completed on Monday morning. Although disappointed to lose, Pagunsan was consoled by earning a cheque for US$666,660 – which helped him secure the Asian Tour Order of Merit title.
But at the age of 43 many thought Pagunsan had missed the boat on another victory.
The Filipino – who is also a two-time winner on the Asian Development Tour – is philosophical about it.
“If the tournament is yours, it is yours, but if it is not, it’s not, but if you still keep playing you have a chance to win,” he says.
“It is nearly 11 years in Japan right now and I always came up second but last week I broke that curse and I did it, I finally won.
“Hopefully I can win again, every year, and every tournament I keep positive.”
Juvic poses with the winning trophy at the end of the final round of Pertamina Indonesia President Invitational Golf Tournament at the Damai Indah Golf and Country Club in Tangerang, on the outskirts of Jakarta, 28 October 2007. AFP PHOTO/Bay ISMOYO (Photo credit should read BAY ISMOYO/AFP via Getty Images)
Remarkably, he marched to victory last weekend carrying his own clubs (partly due to COVID-19 restrictions) as: “I didn’t have a private caddie and I didn’t want to use the push carts.”
It was the third time this year he had carried his bag in Japan, but whereas on the two previous occasions he lugged a full set, this time he felt it best to make his bag lighter and carry 11 clubs (legally you are allowed to carry 14).
He added: “I am getting older and the last two times with 14 clubs were really heavy. I don’t like to use the electric carts, since you have to go all the way around the greens.”
Out went his three, four, six, and eight irons and in came a 19-degree utility club, four wedges and a winners’ cheque for ¥12,000,000 (US$109,304) – elevating his career earnings in Japan to ¥237,625,768 (US$2,163,489).
As for his trip to the Open he says:
“I have had a lot of experience playing links golf. I actually made the cut the first time I played the Open (he finished tied 72nd in 2012 at Royal Lytham & St Annes). But missed the cut in 2014 (at Royal Liverpool). I will try and draw on those experiences when I play this year.”
ENDS
On this day In 2012 Thongchai became the first Thai to win on European soil
When Thongchai Jaidee turned professional in 1999 – to much fanfare following an all-conquering amateur career – the last thing on his mind would have been the distant and ancient land of Wales.
But 13 years after joining the ranks of play-for-pay – and indeed on this day in 2012 – it was there, at the ISPS Handa Wales Open, that he recorded what is considered to be one of the greatest victories by an Asian golfer.
Thongchai had already claimed four European Tour events up until that point, but they were all joint-sanctioned events in Asia.
Whether he was able to transfer that kind of form onto European soil, where conditions were vastly different, was an unknown variable.
Thongchai poses with the trophy after winning in Wales (Photo by Martin Rickett/PA Images via Getty Images)
However, in the summer of 2012, Thongchai – who was 42 years old at the time – silenced any doubters when he overcame a star-studded field at a wet and windy Celtic Manor Resort – the venue for another closely fought European win at the Ryder Cup just two years earlier.
The Thai golfer closed with a one-over-par 72 for a six under total and a one-stroke victory over Dane Thomas Björn, Spain’s Gonzalo Fernandez-Castaño, Dutchman Joost Luiten and South African Richard Sterne.
“I want to say thank you to all my family, all the supporters and the sponsors here,” he said.
“Conditions were quite tough for me.
“I tried to hit everything on the fairway – that’s the main thing – then hit the ball on the green. It was very, very tough for me, not like Thailand!”
The victory also meant he became the first player from Thailand to win in Europe.
Thongchai celebrates with his caddie (Photo by AMA/Corbis via Getty Images)
The former paratrooper, world ranked 199, led by one overnight, but fell one behind after running up a double-bogey seven at the ninth.
But with typical Thongchai bravado he made three birdies in rapid-fire succession from the 10th and another on the 15th to seize control.
That gave him the luxury of being able to bogey the 16th and 18th and still take the £300,000 first prize.
At the time it was his 16th win as a professional and he could have been forgiven for sitting back and resting on his laurels but the win in Wales proved to be the first of many European conquests.
He went on to win four more titles in Europe to help cement his position as one of the greatest golfers produced by the Asian Tour.
Thongchai tees off on the 18th hole during the final round. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)
The Claret Jug was at The Mizuno Open for the occasion
Asian Tour members produced a hat-trick of victories last week with Juvic Pagunsan from the Philippines – the 2011 Asian Tour Order of Merit champion – claiming his maiden title in Japan, while Korean Kyongjun Moon and China’s Yanwei Liu won on their respective domestic circuits.
Pagunsan triumphed in the Gate Way To The Open Mizuno Open, and, as the event name suggests, secured his ticket to this summer’s Open Championship – to be played at Royal St George’s Golf Club from July 15-18.
Helped by birdies on 15 and 16, he closed with a four-under-par 68 at the Setonaikai Golf Club in Okayama to end on 17-under-par 199, and finish three ahead of Ryutaro Nagano from Japan.
KASAOKA, JAPAN – MAY 30: Juvic Pagunsan of the Philippines celebrates winning the The Mizuno Open. (Photo by Toru Hanai/R&A/R&A via Getty Images)
Pagunsan, who finished second in the Asia-Pacific Diamond Cup earlier in the month, has been playing on the Japan Golf Tour Organization for the past decade and was thrilled to finally win there.
“It has been 10 years, 10 years! It took me 10 years to win! Now I am relieved,” he said, after his round. “I get to go to UK. I can go again. Could I get my visa? How is the quarantine measures?”
Remarkably, the 43-year-old won with only 11 clubs in his bag, because due to COVID-19 precautions caddies are only allowed to follow their golfers in carts – so Pagunsan chose to lighten his bag by removing his 3, 4, 6, and 8 irons.
Credit: KPGA Korean Tour
Moon moved to the top of the Money List on the Korean PGA Tour when he claimed the KB Financial Live Championship at Black Stone Icheon Golf Club.
He closed with a three-under-par 69 to finish on eight-under-par 208 – three ahead of compatriot Jeongwoo Ham, in what was the fourth event of the season in Korea.
Over on the China Tour, Liu won the Zhengzhou Classic at St Andrews (Zhengzhou) Golf Club. He shot a one-under-par 71 on the last day for a tournament total of eight under – one better than former teenage-star Jason Hak from Hong Kong.
It was also their fourth event of 2021.
South African triumphs in sudden-death play-off
Shaun Norris from South Africa claimed his fifth title in Japan on Sunday – and first since 2019 – when he won the inaugural Golf Partner Pro-Am Tournament after a thrilling sudden-death play-off at Toride Kokusai Golf Club.
Norris, a two-time winner on the Asian Tour, beat fellow Asian Tour member Scott Vincent from Zimbabwe and Japan’s Tomoharu Ostuki after two extra holes.
Ostuki, the leader after each of the first three rounds, made bogey on the 72nd to send the tournament into overtime but dropped out after making a double on the first play-off hole. On the following hole Vincent failed to save par to hand victory to Norris.
“I wasn’t able to come to Japan Tour last year so I am way down on the Money race, but I will fight hard to catch up. I want to win at least two more this season,” said Norris, who earned a cheque for just over US$122,000.
Scott Vincent of Zimbabwe (Photo by Graham Denholm/Getty Images)
The South African had closed with a seven-under-par 63 for a four-round total of 21 under.
He said: “I felt I had an advantage against the other two”, as he explained his last win in 2019 at the ANA Open came after a five-way playoff.
His victory was made more impressive by the fact that he pushed his cart all week, as his brother and regular caddie was ill.
“I wish my brother was here with me to celebrate,” added Norris, who turned 39 earlier this month.
Filipino Angelo Que, a three-time winner on the Asian Tour, finished in a tie for fourth – three shots short of the play-off.
KIAWAH ISLAND, SOUTH CAROLINA – MAY 23: Phil Mickelson of the United States celebrates with brother and caddie Tim Mickelson after winning on the 18th green during the final round of the 2021 PGA Championship held at the Ocean Course of Kiawah Island Golf Resort on May 23, 2021 in Kiawah Island, South Carolina. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
At the PGA Championship, where American Phil Mickelson made his history by becoming the oldest winner of a Major at the age of 50, four Asian Tour members competed but failed to make it through to the weekend.
Americans John Catlin and Kurt Kitayama missed the cut by five with Thailand’s Jazz Janewattananond and Rikuya Hoshino from Japan further down the leaderboard.
John Catlin set for PGA Championship debut
American John Catlin begins the next chapter of his meteoric rise in the game tomorrow when he makes his debut in a Major, at the PGA Championship – on the daunting Ocean Course at Kiawah Island, South Carolina.
It was only a month ago that the 30 year old claimed the Austria Golf Open – following five gripping sudden-death play-off holes against Germany’s Maximilian Kieffer – to secure his third victory on the European Tour in eight months, which moved him into the top-100 on the Official World Golf Ranking.
“I’d love to crack that top-50 in the world,” said the Californian, after winning in Austria.
“Just to get a chance to play in some Major Championships – I’ve actually never played in a Major. I’m thinking this gives me a very good chance to play in the US PGA Championship, that was kind of my goal.
Catlin with the Austria Golf Open trophy on April 18 (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images)
“Hopefully it’s good enough and to get into those events and to have the chance to win a Major, that’s been my goal since I was a kid.”
Well, that was all made possible soon after when he received a special invitation to play in the PGA Championship – the second Major of the year, where American Collin Morikawa will defend.
“It’s very exciting [to get to play in the PGA Championship]. It’s the only level of golf I haven’t been to yet,” Catlin said, more recently.
Catlin has been rewarded for his success by being paired in a high-profile group consisting of two other rising stars in the game: Scottish lefthander Robert MacIntyre and big-hitting American Cameron Champ. They tee-off on the 10th at 7.49am, local time.
Catlin celebrates winning the 2019 Thailand Open, after a three-man play-off at Thai Country Club on November 10. (Photo by Paul Lakatos/Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
While it was only a month ago that Catlin completed his hat-trick in Europe, it was only five years ago that he burst onto the scene and became a prolific winner.
He claimed the Combiphar Golf Invitational in Indonesia on the Asian Development Tour in 2016, won again on that Tour the following year, and in 2018 triumphed three times on the Asian Tour – leading to him to being voted by his peers the Asian Tour Player of the Year. And, he won on the Asian Tour the following season, at the Thailand Open, before taking Europe by storm in September 2020 with victories in the Estrella Damm N.A. Andalucía Masters and the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open.
A remarkable and inspiring streak for a player who had been struggling to find a place to regularly play tournaments after turning professional in 2013.
Catlin will try and emulate the success of his compatriot Shaun Micheel – who in 2003, after having cut his professional teeth in Asia and won the 1998 Singapore Open, claimed the PGA Championship at Oak Hill Country Club, ranked 169th in the World, becoming one of the biggest underdogs to win a Major.
Jazz walks to the 10th tee during the final round of the 2019 PGA Championship at Bethpage Black course on May 19, 2019 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images)
Six-time Asian Tour winner Jazz Janewattananond from Thailand, who impressively tied 14th in this event in 2019, tees-off at 1.31 in the afternoon, on the 10th; Japan’s Rikuya Hoshino, winner last week at the Asia-Pacific Diamond Cup, starts at 9.12am on the first; and Asian Tour winner Kurt Kitayama from the United States is off at 12.30pm, also from hole one.
Berry Henson triumphed on this day a decade ago
Berry Henson is virtually a household name on the Asian Tour, and it all started for the popular American during this month of May a decade ago.
In fact, it was on this very day in 2011 – shortly after having made it through Qualifying School, in 11th place – that he marched to victory in Manila, claiming the ICTSI Philippine Open, at Wack Wack Golf and Country Club.
Winning the National Open of the Philippine’s is a rare privilege as it is one of the oldest National Opens in the game – in 2011 it was the 95th edition of the tournament – and Henson was made to work very hard to secure the title.
Despite suffering from dehydration over the closing holes during the third round, he finished the day with a two-shot lead, and then fired a final round one-over-par 73 to narrowly beat local-favourite Jay Bayron from the Philippines by a single shot.
Henson celebrates during the final round of the Philippine Open on May 15, 2011 in Manila, Philippines. (Photo by Khalid Redza/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
Henson made a brave up-and-down at the last, holing a tension-packed putt for par from three feet, to win with a four-round total of five-under-par 283 – on the notoriously difficult East Course.
“I feel like I went 72 rounds with Manny Pacquiao this week and didn’t get KO’d,” Henson said, after his win. “I played on a very difficult golf course and the weather was brutal. It was a hard win.”
He earned US$47,550 with the victory.
South Africa’s Jbe Kruger finished third, while Digvijay Singh from India was fourth.
Henson held a three-shot lead heading into the back nine, but bogeys on 12 and 17 opened the door for Bayron.
Henson plays a shot during day three of Philippine Open (Photo by Khalid Redza/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
“We were all struggling to make birdies and stay aggressive on the back nine,” Henson said. “I made a couple of mistakes coming in but everything worked out for me on the last hole.”
Bayron made an eagle on the second, but bogeys on 14 and 15 were setbacks from which he could not recover.
“Honestly, I was playing for second after the 15th hole,” said the 2005 Southeast Asian Games team gold medallist. “I tried to keep the thought of winning out of my mind for the entire round. Finishing second is a good result for me and I hope to build on this confidence.”
Henson was 31 years old at the time and it was the culmination of a remarkable and inspiring start to his journey in Asia.
Just two weeks before winning in the Philippines he had claimed the Clearwater Masters, in Malaysia, on the Asian Development Tour.
This came on the back of him having arrived at the Qualifying School with just US$5,000 in his bank account.
Said Benson, in an interview more recently: “I had one sponsor and he said, ‘hey it’s sink or swim, we either get a card or we are done’.”
Former Asian Tour number one qualifies via Korn Ferry Tour
Former Asian Tour Order of Merit winner David Lipsky has achieved his life-long ambition of playing on the PGA Tour, following an outstanding season on the Korn Ferry Tour – the development circuit that feeds the PGA Tour.
The American is currently in fifth place on the Korn Ferry Tour ranking, and, although another 15 events remain, he has already comfortably secured his playing privileges for the 2021/2022 season on the PGA Tour. The top-25 earn their Tour cards.
He has been playing some of the finest golf of his career, including winning the TPC San Antonio Challenge last year, and he nearly won the Emerald Coast Classic last month, but lost in a play-off.
CRANS-MONTANA, SWITZERLAND – SEPTEMBER 07: David Lipsky of USA plays a shot on the 18th hole during the playoff against Graeme Storm of England during the final round of the Omega European Masters at Crans-sur-Sierre Golf Club on September 7, 2014 in Crans-Montana, Switzerland. (Photo by Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
Lipsky first made his name in Asia: he was a medallist at the Asian Tour Qualifying School in 2012 and won the 2012 Handa Faldo Cambodian Classic, in his third start on Tour.
And after a brilliant season, two years later he claimed the Asian Tour Order of Merit title – helped in a big way by winning the cash-rich Omega European Masters, an event sanctioned with Europe.
He also won the Alfred Dunhill Championship in South Africa in 2018, for a second European Tour title.
“I’ve played internationally for years and the European Tour for five or six years,” Lipsky said. “The whole goal was to try and get back and play the PGA Tour.”
“I took a little bit of a risk doing it,” he said. “I was playing really well in Europe, making good money, but I knew, ‘Why not now?’”
SIEM REAP, CAMBODIA – MARCH 17: David Lipsky of the United States holds the trophy of the Handa Faldo Cambodian Classic at Angkor Golf Resort on March 17, 2012 in Siem Reap, Cambodia. (Photo by Asian Tour/Asian Tour via Getty Images)
The American grew up in Southern California and played at La Canada High School, where American star Collin Morikawa attended.
Despite having achieved his goal of securing his PGA Tour card, the 32 year old is still very focused on more success on the Korn Ferry Tour.
“I have my eyes on number one now,” he said.
“Keep playing solid like I’m doing, keep the confidence and momentum going, and we’ll see what happens with that, end of the season.”
Recent Comments