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McIlroy paces himself as Laird looks to impress at Sawgrass

Iain Carter | 21:30 UK time, Wednesday, 6 May 2009

The Players' Championship was showing off its newcomers. The debutants for the event which claims "fifth major" status had been invited into the interview room and the media were let loose on them.

Naturally the biggest knot of hacks tangled around - no longer a teenager but fresh from seeing first hand and still the most likely youngster capable of going the distance here.

But McIlroy was tempering expectations for his Players' debut - seeing this week as the first of four big ones that will see the 20-year-old compete at the Irish Open, the PGA at Wentworth and European Open.

"I need to pace myself," McIlroy admitted before starting to contemplate whether he could get enough golfing mates to chip in to hire a private jet in a couple of weeks. On the eve of the European Open he's thinking of nipping to Rome to watch his beloved Manchester United in the Champions League final.

Rory McIlroy
All of which is a million miles from the thoughts of another UK player who at the same time was sitting in the same interview room.

The American-based Scot, , was more concerned with making sure that a turnaround in fortune over the past fortnight is sustained on this potentially brutal Stadium Course.

"It's got that fifth major feel about it and when I found out last year that I'd qualified to play it was one of those that you put a circle around. It's one of those highlighted on the calendar," Laird told me.

"I was excited to get here, and now I'm here it is living up to what I thought it would be."

Laird scrambled into the all-important top 125 on the PGA Tour in the final week of last season. He'd had two top-four finishes and tied seventh at the Barclays to help make the $852,752 he needed to retain his playing privileges.

"I didn't make all my goals last year but any time you keep your card on the PGA Tour as a rookie it's obviously a good year. That was perhaps the biggest surprise, I didn't realise it would quite be that hard to finish top 125 on the money list.

"It was a good year in 2008, hopefully I can have a better one this year," the Arizona-based Glaswegian added.

The form line hasn't been overly promising. Laird had seven weekends in a row free and unpaid, failing to break seventy in 14 consecutive rounds.

But a change of coach just over a fortnight ago seems to be paying dividends. In New Orleans he opened with a 68 and posted a six under par total to finish in a share of 24th place.

A week later at , the 26-year-old showed commendable nerve to finish his second round with two birdies and guarantee playing at the weekend.

"I'm feeling a lot better than I did two weeks ago," Laird admits. "My game is on the up and I'm feeling pretty confident about this week. I hit the ball really nicely at Quail Hollow and didn't putt great. Hopefully I can get the putter working a bit better here.

"I had been struggling all season and had made one cut all year and decided to go for a new coach, Mark McCann, in New Orleans just for a different look. I saw him on the Tuesday and had by far my best week all year.

"It's amazing how fast confidence can disappear but it can come back just as quickly."

Martin Laird

Laird's ambition is to gain the top 50 world status that would enable him to play on both sides of the Atlantic. For now though, his clubs have stayed firmly in the American bag to give him his best chance of retaining his PGA Tour card.

So at this the most lucrative stop on Tour there is great incentive to make another cut and bank another decent cheque.

Laird plans to try to qualify for the Open at Turnberry and were he to succeed he would seek a sponsors invite to play his "home" tournament, the Scottish Open at Loch Lomond.

"America is where I live, but Scotland will always be my home," the Colorado State graduate says.

He is in a tough school this week at the Players' as it trumpets the depth of its field and the difficulty of the course.

Debate rages on the merits of the island green par three seventeenth - you can see it on the 606 pages on this site. For what it's worth I'm a fan of the drama it creates and I loved this quote from Padraig Harrington that summed it up perfectly.

"Seventeen is perfect. It's not a difficult birdie, but it's a very difficult par," said the Irishman, who despite missing the cut last week, might just be worth watching over the next four days.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Rory is right, he needs to pace himself, and the Press needs to allow him the space to do that.

    Fine line between drama and farce, Iain, between Harold Pinter and Brian Rix. A ball in the drink with a scrambled bogey and the risk of a double is one thing. A succession of balls hitting a firm back shelf and dribbling into the H2O is something completely different. Ask Bob Tway, or Len Mattiace.

    PS: Quite ridiculous comment by Harrington. Did he REALLY say that? Extraordinary, especially from one so prone to big numbers.

  • Comment number 2.

    Hopefully the change of coach will be the spark that the Laird needs to get going this season. Last year he essentially retained his card through a run of 3 or 4 good weeks in a row (although consistently making small cheques over the rest of the season certainly helped) so i'm sure he'll be a million miles from panicking yet.

    I've no problem stating that i'm a huge critic of the 17th - both as a hole and more specifically as a hole at that point in the round/tournament. You say that it creates drama, and that can't be disputed, but one of my issues is that the drama is so contrived. It appears to be a hole that wasn't designed for golfing reasons (as we discussed on the 606 thread it seems it wasn't really designed at all, more a case of the architect being browbeaten by his wife), rather it was created for TV and spectators and, in my humble opinion, that is a terrible reason for a golf hole - it's pretty much akin to these courses popping up where each hole is a tribute to a famous hole at another course; a complete gimmick.

    There are hundreds of quotes out there from the great and the good with regards the 17th but i'd prefer to take a quote from Fuzzy Zoeller (another getting discussed at length on 606) who wasn't actually talking about this hole or course but which perfectly sums up these sort of holes - "Where are the windmills and animals?"

  • Comment number 3.

    Have to say I'm a fan of the 17th, I mean if you replaced the water with grass, it would be odds on to be the easiest hole on the course, and I'd bet that a high 90's% of the field would hit GIR. Surround it with water, and it's more of a mind game. Yes, some of the shots hit the target only to be unlucky and roll off or hit the surround, but that adds to the drama.

    Anyway, c'mon Luke!!

  • Comment number 4.

    Iain,
    Are you also a fan of using 17 as the first play-off hole? (It makes as much sense to me as starting the so-called fifth m(small m)ajor with 145 contestants, haven't seen anyone attempt to justify that one.)

  • Comment number 5.

    Kwini,

    145 I just don't get - with you on that one. As for 17th to start play-off - yes from the purist point of view it's perhaps not ideal with no comeback from a rogue gust of wind. But from the pro sport perspective I have less of a problem. Last year it came down to the most brutal test of nerve - Garcia held his and Goydos didn't - the right man won. Great drama, compelling TV - just what you need when you're searching for sponsors.

  • Comment number 6.

    Cheapens the whole fifth major thing (which I don't subscribe to anyway) though, Iain, having Disney sponsoring it.

  • Comment number 7.

    Iain,
    You have to replace the kindergartner who wrote the Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Poulter report. Pathetic stuff.

Μύ

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