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Graeme McDowell's career continues to flourish under the direction of the Dublin sports agency as new accounts for Boyport Services Ltd shows the firm enjoyed its most successful year to date in 2012. with profits of £2.643m (€3.1m).
The figures show accumulated profits increased from £3.539m to £6.182m in the 12 months to the end of December last. The cash balance at G-Mac's firm has more than doubled to £3.79m.
McDowell's career is steered by Conor Ridge's Horizon Sports Management agency.
The world No.11 will now head to Asia wher he is due to play at the BMW Masters presented by SRE and the WGC HSBC Champions, both in Shanghai. This will lead up to the World Cup in Melbourne where he will represent Ireland.
McDowell, who professed his love for Victoria's Sandbelt courses last year after playing the Australian Masters at Kingston Heath, will likely team with Shane Lowry for the $8 million purse at Royal Melbourne from November 21st - 24th.
Rory McIlroy's contract to play the Australian Open in Sydney the following week precludes him from playing outside New South Wales this year, so he was unavailable.
The decision effectively confirms McDowell will play for Ireland and not Great Britain at the 2016 Rio Olympics when golf makes its first appearance at the Games since 1904.
Emerging golf power Thailand has also confirmed its top pair will be in Melbourne with the popular Thongchai Jaidee joined by Kiradech Aphibarnrat.
Italian prodigy Matteo Manassero has already confirmed his return to Melbourne to play alongside Francesco Molinari
Jason Day and Adam Scott will lead Australia's charge in the tournament's first time back at Royal Melbourne since 1972.
Bill Haas the 2011 FedEx Cup champion, will partner world No.8 Matt Kuchar as the prime rival to Australia’s dream pairing of Adam Scott and Jason Day.
Haas, ranked 29, was a key member in the recent last week’s Presidents Cup victory for the Americans, as he was at Royal Melbourne two years ago where he found the hard, bouncy style to his liking.
Another player with history on the Sandbelt, Denmark’s Thomas Bjorn 46) will pair with the in-form Thorbjorn Olesen as another threat.
Other key rivals on paper include Sweden’s Jonas Blixt and Peter Hanson.
England’s top tier will not travel, but David Lynn and Chris Wood will still make a formidable combination, while Presidents Cup pair Branden Grace and Richard Sterne will fly the South African flag.
Scotland’s Martin Laird and Stephen Gallacher will fancy their chances.
The 60-man field will compete for $7 million, the richest individual prize in Australia golf history.
Nicolas Colsaerts, Fijian Vijay Singh and Zimbabwe’s Presidents Cup revelation Brendan de Jonge have also all confirmed.
Other featured world top 100 players who will have lesser-ranked team-mates include Dutchman Joost Luiten, Spanish favourite Miguel Angel Jimenez, Welshman Jamie Donaldson and German Marcel Siem.
Japan’s Ryo Ishikawa and Korean pair K.J.Choi and Sang-Moon Bae, while are also entered.
The teams event, first played in 1953 as the Canada Cup, carries an additional $1million in prize money.
The field represents 34 countries, 74 US PGA Tour victories, 31 European Tour champions, 11 players who have played in the Presidents Cup and seven players with Ryder Cup experience.
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