Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Ryder Cup: Wales hopes to end golf hoodoo


The descent has in many ways resembled Welsh golf fans' hopes of seeing the first home-grown winner at the Wales Open…they are there at the start - but then go downhill quickly.

To reach the 2010 course you have to drive down a road which resembles the Whistler ski jump from this year's Winter Olympics.

None more so than Rhys Davies. A second place finish in the Madrid Masters on Sunday topped a week in which he qualified for the US Open in Pebble Beach and gained entry to The Open at St Andrews.

But this year's Wales Open could be the turning point with a number of the Welsh lads arriving in Newport in fine form.

So far this season he has earned €763,465 Euros and lies ninth on the European Tour Race to Dubai rankings - little wonder people are touting him for a place in Colin Montgomery's Ryder Cup team this October.

In a Ryder Cup year, it would be rude not to mention the man many hope will be one of Montgomerie's vice-captains.

The 25-year-old has been Wales' form golfer this term. He marked his debut season on the European Tour with victory in the Trophee Hassan II in Morocco; came second in both Madrid and the Volvo China Open; third in Maybank Malaysian Open and sixth in the Abu Dhabi Golf Championship.

Five top-10 finishes - his best being tied for fourth at the Volvo China Open - sees Donaldson ranked 36th on the European tour and he'll fancy his chances in a field which will be missing many of the leading players.

But Rhys is not alone. Jamie Donaldson arrives in the sort of form which might suggest he will challenge too.

Stephen Dodd - a World Cup winner for Wales - has had three top 10 finishes, while Bradley Dredge, second at the Celtic Manor in 2007, once again teased us with a glimpse of the type of golf he is capable of at the Qatar Masters at the start of the season.

Local boy and 2010 member Phillip Price had seemed to have fallen off the radar until his recent third round of 65 at the Italian Open reminded us of the player who so famously beat Phil Mickelson in the 2002 Ryder Cup at the Belfry.

Who knows if one of these 12 Welshmen will seal victory on home soil? Let us just hope that there will not be an exodus in need of the ski lift before the weekend.

Adding to the list of Welsh representation will be: Sion Bebb, Craig Smith, Stuart Manley, Kyron Sullivan, Garry Houston, Liam Bond and Jason Powell.

Ryder Cup Hospitality

Royal Ascot hospitality

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