Golf: World stage awaits Monty's magic
Golf: Amiable Scot heads the European Order of Merit for sixth successive year but a greater challenge still beckons
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Your support makes all the difference.COLIN MONTGOMERIE is not the only player in the history of the European Tour to win the order of merit six times. A measure of his achievement in completing the feat in the minimum time possible is that it took Seve Ballesteros 16 years to set the record. The first three may have taken three years but the last three took 13 as the tour the Spaniard helped create developed into an exhausting, fiercely competitive nine-month marathon.
Major champions such as Nick Faldo, Ian Woosnam and Bernhard Langer have only won the money list twice each and Jose Maria Olazabal not at all. In his premium strength six-pack, Montgomerie has seen off first all the old stars of the tour and now the new ones.
Darren Clarke's impressive victory on Sunday at Montecastillo in the Volvo Masters, the season's finale, was good enough to leapfrog Lee Westwood into second place on the order of merit, but not to dislodge Monty as the king of the castle. "This is a very proud moment for me and my family," said Montgomerie. "Darren and Lee are world-class players. Their time will come."
"Lee and I did our best to beat Monty but it was not good enough," Clarke said. "We tried to beat him this year and now we know how difficult it is to win the order of merit once. To win it six times is an amazing feat."
The irony is that the trophy handed out to the leading money winner every season is named after Harry Vardon, a man commemorated for winning the Open Championship six times. Perhaps it is because of the fact he has not yet triumphed in the greatest of championships that Montgomerie finds the annual money race such a motivating factor. He is unique in never having taken a backward step on the order of merit in his 11 seasons on tour.
As you would expect, and reasonably enough, the 35-year-old Scot rejects the notion that sight of the same man being crowned Europe's No 1 - in a season when that was well down his list of priorities and when he has been far from his best at times - shows up a weakness in the strength of the tour.
"It's getting closer," he said. "It didn't come down to the last putt like it did against Sam Torrance in 1995 but at the same time the standard is improving, as I have said many times before. And I have had to improve along with it.
"There are a lot of players coming through. I played with [Andrew] Coltart today and he has really, really improved, and I'm looking forward to playing in the World Cup with him in Auckland. It is always nice to see new players coming though who are ambitious and performing well, but to still be top of the tree.
"Ever since 4 January, when I won the Andersen Consulting [World Championship], it was always going to be a great year. Winning the Volvo PGA was super for me and the two wins later on were great. I was in the position coming in here as the No 1 on the rankings and no-one wants to be No 2. But it wasn't that I wanted to be No 1 so much as the fact that someone else wanted to be No 1. That's what kept me going.
"Although I've had a slight hiccup during the year, I feel I am improving. My course management is better and I am mentally tougher than ever before."
That is certainly the case on his domestic circuit, where he clearly feels completely at ease. His performance at Montecastillo was similar to his victory in the PGA at Wentworth in that although he was not on best form from tee to green, he holed the putts that needed holing by sheer willpower.
Once renowned for dropping shots at the last through lack of concentration, Montgomerie scored birdies at the 18th on each of the first three days last week. The one on Saturday provoked one of the most surreal moments in the history of sporting press conferences, in the first 10 minutes of which Monty just repeated the phrase: "A bloody good effort, that."
But on the world stage it is a different story. Montgomerie spent two days with his chin inches from the ground as he missed the cut at the Players' Championship, was hounded by spectators at the US Open, missed the cut - again - at the Open and collapsed miserably on the weekend at the US PGA event.
"Hopefully, I haven't played my best yet," he said. "Hopefully, there are situations in which I can improve and compete at certain levels. I'd like to get to the stage of winning more around the world."
Westwood, too, for all his laid-back image, may be prone to overreaching in the bigger tournaments, but that humbling quadruple-bogey seven at the 14th on Sunday cannot detract from a superlative year. No one in world golf can match his eight victories in eight different countries in the last 12 months.
At 25, Westwood has already shown the Montgomerie-like ability to absorb setbacks and keep moving in the right direction. After years of players impressing on their Ryder Cup debuts and then disappearing, four of the five rookies from Valderrama - Westwood, Clarke, Thomas Bjorn, when he can stay fit, and Jesper Parnevik, third at the US Tour Championship but who will play more in Europe next season - have enhanced their reputations a year on.
But with the European Tour still in transition, Mark James is likely to lead the least experienced European team for two decades to Brookline next September. James will look for the continued progress of the likes of Sweden's Patrik Sjoland and Coltart, who is pulled on by the friendly rivalry with Westwood, Clarke and Paul McGinley in the Andrew Chandler management stable. Both Sjoland and Coltart achieved their maiden wins and went on to finish in the Top 10 of the order of merit for the first time.
There might even be a place for Sergio Garcia, the best young player to emerge since Olazabal, who turns pro after the US Masters, or Justin Rose, who can prove he is Kipling's sort of man by putting behind him his Open triumph and the disaster of his professional debut by emerging from the Qualifying School later this month with his tour card.
SEASON'S AWARDS
BEST ROUNDS OF THE YEAR
Darren Clarke's closing 63 at Montecastillo, the lowest final round of the season to win and when only victory would give him a chance of winning the money list; Justin Rose's 66 in the worst of the weather on the second day of the Open at Royal Birkdale. It tied the Open record for an amateur held by Frank Stranahan and Tiger Woods, and was two shots better than the best of the rest - the eventual champion, Mark O'Meara.
SHOT OF THE YEAR (WORTH $1M)
Colin Montgomerie's three-iron from 223 yards over water to 10ft at the final hole at Grayhawk, Arizona to beat Davis Love in the final of the Andersen Consulting World Championship in January.
SHOT OF THE YEAR (WORTH NOTHING)
Justin Rose's last as an amateur, a 45-yard pitch from the rough over the bunkers at the 72nd at Royal Birkdale, into the hole, to cause the biggest roar of the year.
SURPRISES OF THE YEAR
The 17-year-old Rose finishing equal fourth in the Open, the best performance by an amateur for 45 years; the 18-year-old professional Rose not making the cut in any of his seven starts on the European Tour.
WORST DEBUT OF THE YEAR
Ignacio Garrido at the US Masters. His first round 85 began with a topped drive off the first tee which did not carry as far as the ceremonial opener by 96-year-old Gene Sarazen.
COMEBACKS OF THE YEAR
Tiger Woods from eight shots behind with a round to play at the Johnnie Walker Classic in Thailand. A closing 65 put him in a play-off with Ernie Els which he won at the second extra hole; David Carter, from undergoing emergency brain surgery in Dubai in February 1997 to winning the Irish Open in July.
ANTICLIMAXES OF THE YEAR
Mathias Gronberg winning the European Open by 10 strokes; Mark James being announced as the European Ryder Cup captain.
WORST TIMEKEEPER OF THE YEAR
Lee Westwood won twice in the weeks before major championships and, despite five worldwide victories, has not won the European Tour's player of the month award. Even his back-to-back double straddled May and June.
FINAL 1998 EUROPEAN ORDER OF MERIT AND LATEST 1999 RYDER CUP STANDINGS
Name Earnings
1 C Montgomerie pounds 993,077
2 D Clarke pounds 902,867
3 L Westwood pounds 814,386
4 M A Jimenez (Sp) pounds 518,819
5 P Sjoland (Swe) pounds 500,136
5 T Bjorn (Den) pounds 470,798
7 J M Olazabal (Sp) pounds 449,132
8 E Els (SA) pounds 433,884
9 A Coltart pounds 388,816
10 M Gronberg (Swe) pounds 358,779
11 S Leaney (Aus) pounds 310,643
12 P Baker pounds 307,163
13 S Struver (Ger) pounds 293,208
14 S Torrance pounds 286,807
15 P Price pounds 283,885
16 S Allan (Aus) pounds 267,743
17 R Karlsson (Swe) pounds 267,285
18 B Langer (Ger) pounds 262,347
19 D Carter pounds 244,424
20 I Woosnam pounds 237,570
21 E Romero (Arg) pounds 234,148
22 R Claydon pounds 233,913
23 J Sandelin (Swe) pounds 231,375
24 C Rocca (It) pounds 220,759
25 G Chalmers (Aus) pounds 220,672
26 J van de Velde (Fr) pounds 214,163
27 G Turner (NZ) pounds 210,977
28 G Orr pounds 209,516
29 P Harrington pounds 208,013
30 P McGinlay pounds 201,970
31 S Luna (Sp) pounds 201,624
32 D Howell pounds 199,040
33 R Goosen (SA) pounds 191,249
34 A Cejka (Ger) pounds 184,673
35 P Broadhurst pounds 181,839
36 P O'Malley (Aus) pounds 172,448
37 S Webster pounds 170,871
38 P Mitchell pounds 167,536
39 G Brand Jr. pounds 167,500
40 I Garrido (Sp) pounds 166,866
41 C Hainline (US) pounds 165,792
42 P Fulke (Swe) pounds 160,418
43 J Spence pounds 158,612
44 R Allenby (Aus) pounds 152,413
45 A Cabrera (Arg) pounds 150,792
46 T Gogele (Ger) pounds 150,041
47 K Tomori (Japan) pounds 149,789
48 D Gilford pounds 149,569
49 M Florioli (It) pounds 137,384
50 V Phillips pounds 136,768
51 P Lonard (Aus) pounds 136,453
52 I Garbutt pounds 133,991
53 M Roe pounds 126,149
54 P Quirici (Swit) pounds 124,731
55 P-U Johansson (Swe) pounds 123,206
56 O Karlsson (Swe) pounds 122,501
57 R Wessels (SA) pounds 121,453
58 M James pounds 121,351
59 M Lanner (Swe) pounds 113,023
60 T Johnstone (Zim) pounds 111,268
61 M Hallberg (Swe) pounds 111,095
62 P Lawrie pounds 107,099
63 R Russell pounds 102,276
64 P Walton pounds 101,465
65 J Payne pounds 100,296
66 J Coceres (Arg) pounds 96,957
67 J Haeggman (Swe) pounds 93,989
68 T Henderson pounds 93,964
69 T Levet (Fr) pounds 93,674
70 D Edlund (Swe) pounds 91,803
71 M Jonzon (Swe) pounds 91,510
72 B May (US) pounds 91,342
73 D Robertson pounds 90,062
74 J Rivero (Sp) pounds 89,526
75 F Jacobson (Swe) pounds 88,440
76 P Senior (Aus) pounds 87,764
77 D Cooper pounds 87,342
78 A Sherbourne pounds 86,548
79 B Davis pounds 82,654
80 M Mouland pounds 82,214
81 M Campbell (NZ) pounds 81,797
82 N Faldo pounds 78,178
83 A Beal pounds 77,195
84 M Long (NZ) pounds 77,136
85 A Oldcorn pounds 75,549
86 J Lomas pounds 75,466
87 M Farry (Fr) pounds 74,845
88 R Jacquelin (Fr) pounds 74,844
89 G Owen pounds 73,940
90 A Wall pounds 73,494
91 S Tinning (Den) pounds 72,153
92 F Tarnaud (Fr) pounds 70,778
93 O Edmond (Fr) pounds 69,269
94 G Evans pounds 67,767
95 P Eales pounds 65,708
96 D Chopra (Swe) pounds 65,700
97 P Haugsrud (Nor) pounds 64,953
98 M Davis pounds 63,779
99 R Muntz (Neth) pounds 63,583
100 R Chapman pounds 63,312
101 R Davis (Aus) pounds 63,158
102 E Darcy pounds 62,571
103 J McHenry pounds 61,396
104 J M Singh (Ind) pounds 59,873
105 S Field pounds 58,875
106 P Affleck pounds 58,809
107 D Hospital (Sp) pounds 58,468
108 S Ballesteros (Sp) pounds 58,068
109 F Cea (Sp) pounds 56,951
110 B Lane pounds 56,803
111 S Grappasonni (It) pounds 56,705
112 M Tunnicliff pounds 55,257
113 M MacKenzie pounds 53,572
114 D Smyth pounds 53,530
115 S Kjeldsen (Den) pounds 52,847
116 T Gillis (US) pounds 52,813
117 M Goggin (Aus) pounds 52,600
118 I Pyman pounds 52,367
119 K Erikkson (Swe) pounds 51,923
120 M Reale (It) pounds 51,464
121 R Boxall pounds 49,008
122 C Whitelaw (SA) pounds 46,631
123 S Scahill (NZ) pounds 45,889
124 W Riley (Aus) pounds 42,904
125 D Lynn pounds 42,700
126 C Suneson (Sp) pounds 42,684
127 G Nicklaus (US) pounds 42,064
128 J Bickerton pounds 40,419
129 S Richardson pounds 38,129
130 R Drummond pounds 36,935
131 J Remesy (Fr) pounds 36,478
132 J Wade (Aus) pounds 36,272
133 A Clapp pounds 35,674
134 W Westner (SA) pounds 35,180
135 J Townsend (US) pounds 34,374
136 P Linhart (Sp) pounds 33,518
137 A Forsbrand (Swe) pounds 33,244
138 S Alker (NZ) pounds 32,693
139 A Hunter pounds 31,583
130 P Hedblom (Swe) pounds 31,571
141 A Kankkonen (Fin) pounds 31,085
132 T Dunlap (US) pounds 30,724
133 M Gortana (It) pounds 30,221
134 H P Thul (Ger) pounds 27,542
135 N Henning (SA) pounds 27,307
136 C Watts pounds 27,174
137 R Coles pounds 24,434
138 I Giner (Sp) pounds 24,294
139 K Storgaard (Den) pounds 23,683
130 K Brink (Swe) pounds 23,325
131 D Borrego (Sp) pounds 22,169
132 E Canonica (It) pounds 20,201
153 G Hutcheon pounds 19,170
154 R McFarlane pounds 18,628
155 A Sandywell pounds 18,172
156 N Vanhootegem (Bel) pounds 17,787
157 B Dredge pounds 17,325
158 R Burns pounds 16,563
159 H Clark pounds 16,431
160 S Cage pounds 16,286
161 J Robson pounds 15,967
162 L W Zhang (China) pounds 15,829
163 S Bennett pounds 15,320
164 N Joakimides (Fr) pounds 15,096
165 R Green (Aus) pounds 14,825
166 R J Derksen (Neth) pounds 14,645
167 R Lee pounds 14,562
168 C O'Connor Jr pounds 14,440
169 C van der Velde (Neth) pounds 14,259
170 F He (Swe) pounds 14,089
EUROPEAN RYDER CUP STANDINGS
Name Points
1 C Montgomerie 381,020
2 D Clarke 235,090
3 M A Jimenez (Sp) 179,510
4 S Struver (Ger) 150,525
5 L Westwood 140,001
6 R Karlsson (Swe) 139,030
7 A Coltart 116,566
8 J Sandelin (Swe) 110,324
9 P Sjoland (Swe) 101,830
10 P Fulke (Swe) 77,330
11 G Brand Jr 76,723
12 A Cejka (Ger) 70,221
13 P-U Johansson(Swe) 69,785
14 S Torrance 67,487
15 C Rocca (It) 63,631
16 S Webster 59,000
17 J Van de Velde (Fr) 57,923
18 F Jacobson (Swe) 55,211
19 P Baker 53,546
20 P McGinley 52,680
(Top 10 on 31 August 1999 qualify; the captain, Mark James, then adds two wild cards.)
(GB or Irl unless stated)
STATISTICAL BREAKDOWN OF 1998 EUROPEAN TOUR
DRIVING ACCURACY
(The frequency, expressed as a percentage, of the player hitting the fairway on par fours and par fives.)
Name Frequency
1 P Fulke (Swe) 76.1
2= D Gilford 74.2
2= M Reale (It) 74.2
2= A Hunter 74.2
5 M A Jimenez (Sp) 74.0
5= S Bennett 74.0
7 C Montgomerie 72.9
7= V Phillips 72.9
9 P Eales 72.4
10= P Linhart (Sp) 71.9
10= A Oldcorn 71.9
12 L Westwood 71.7
DRIVING DISTANCE
Name Metres
1 E Canonica (It) 295.8
2 A Cabrera (Arg) 288.8
3 S Webster 283.1
4 E Els (SA) 282.5
5 C Suneson (Sp) 282.2
6 P Quirici (Swit) 280.3
7 D Clarke 279.3
8 D Thomson 278.5
8= C Montgomerie 278.5
10 C Whitelaw (SA) 278.4
11 S Luna (Sp) 278.3
12 T Henderson 278.0
GREENS IN REGULATION
(The number of shots a player should take to reach the putting surface on any given hole: one for par threes, two for par fours and three for par fives. A player scores one GIR for each hole played that meets or beats the criteria. The GIR Index is the number of Greens in Regulation achieved divided by the number of holes played.)
Name GIR
1 A Cejka (Ger) 78.5
2 C Montgomerie 76.2
3 P Baker 75.7
3= D Clarke 75.7
5 M A Jimenez(Sp) 75.3
6 P O'Malley (Aus) 74.9
6= E Els (SA) 74.9
8 I Garbutt 74.8
9 B May (US) 74.5
10 A Coltart 74.3
PUTTS PER ROUND
Name Putts
1 S Ballesteros (Sp) 27.9
2 J Townsend (US) 28.4
3 R Claydon 28.5
4 P Harrington 28.6
4= A Beal 28.6
6= P Lawrie 28.8
6= P Broadhurst 28.8
6= D Chopra (Swe) 28.8
9= R Karlsson (Swe) 28.9
9= G Turner (NZ) 28.9
9= G Brand Jnr 28.9
12 G Chalmers (Aus) 29.0
STROKE AVERAGE
(Average number of strokes per round.)
1 D Clarke 69.45
2 C Montgomerie 69.66
3 L Westwood 69.85
4 E Els (SA) 69.89
5 J M Olazabal (Sp) 70.25
6 B Langer (Ger) 70.50
7 M A Jimenez (Sp) 70.57
8 P Sjoland (Swe) 70.59
9 T Bjorn (Den) 70.64
10 G Turner (NZ) 70.67
11 S Torrance 70.80
12 A Coltart 70.81
SAND SAVES
(Achieved by getting up-and-down in two from a green-side bunker. Expressed as a percentage of the number of sand saves achieved divided by the number of greenside bunkers visited. Green-side bunker defined as being within 10 yards of green.)
1 T Johnstone (Zim) 81.6
2 P Walton 77.5
3 J Haeggman (Swe) 77.3
4 P-U Johannson (Swe) 75.6
5 O Karlsson (Swe) 74.2
6 J Bickerton 72.9
7 S Bennett 72.0
8 B Langer (Ger) 71.4
8= I Garrido (Sp) 71.4
10 S Allan (Aus) 70.5
11 E Els (SA) 69.2
12 A Cabrera (Arg) 69.0
(GB or Irl unless stated)
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