11/12/2014

Harrington Plays Mayakoba Classic

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Pádraig Harrington plays the Mayakoba Classic this week at Playa del Caemen in Mexico this week. following a disappointing 73rd place finish at the Sanderson Farms Classic in Mississippi last week.

Having slipped to 353rd in the latest world rankings, Harrington makes one attempt before the Christmas break to get back up the rankings. Attracted no doubt by the prize fund of $6.1million, with almost $1.1million of it to the winner.

Former US Open and Masters champion Angel Cabrera is the top ranked player in the field at 60th, while five players who have the joint lowest ranking possible of 1,547th are competing at El Camaleon.

Defending champion Harris English is currently 66th in the world after struggling to rediscover the form which brought him a second PGA Tour title in the space of five months.

English was second in the FedEx Cup standings in the early stages of last season but drifted all the way to 32nd, therefore narrowly missing out on a place in the Tour Championship in Atlanta for the second year running.

“Last year I didn’t finish the way I wanted to,” English told a pre-tournament press conference.

“Obviously I was in the driver’s seat to make it to the Tour Championship (open to the top 30 players after the BMW Championship) and missed out again. I finished 31st two years ago and 32nd this past season. It’s close. I know I’m kind of knocking on the door.

“I don’t want to be in that situation again where I’m not having to pull against people but knowing my fate is in other peoples’ hands about getting to the Tour Championship. I don’t want that to happen.

“I want to control my own destiny and it’s really made me realise how important every tournament is.”

English has missed the cut in two of his first three events of the 2014-15 season, but did finish 16th in the Shriners Hospitals for Children's Open in Las Vegas.

“I don’t want to panic,” he added. “In this game you can be so close sometimes. It’s a brutal game. It’ll knock you down when you’re at the highest of the high and it’ll do some unexpected things – when nothing’s going your way you’ll do something crazy. You’ve just got to let it come to you.

“It’s getting a lot better. I’ve been working hard the past couple weeks, couple months and it’s coming together.

“I know it’s not perfect right now. It’ll never be perfect but I’m feeling good. If I can keep getting better and better every day and keep giving myself opportunities, then it’ll click.”

Spanuards Gonzalo Fernandez-Caratano  and Alvaro Quiros also play


Garcia Chases McIlroy in Turkey

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Sergio Garcia hopes to take his pursuit of “quite extraordinary” Rory McIlroy to the last event of The Race to Dubai with victory in this week's Turkish Airlines Open presented by the Ministry of Youth and Sport.

The Spaniard requires victory at the Montgomerie Maxx Royal in Antalya and another at next week's DP World Tour Championship in Dubai in order to have any chance of preventing McIlroy winning The Race to Dubai for a second time in three seasons.

That Garcia is still in the hunt at all is testament to the 34 year old's form this season – having won in Qatar he has also amassed three runner-up finishes, two of them to McIlroy at The Open Championship and WGC-Bridgestone Invitational.

As well as those wins McIlroy collected a second Major Championship of the year at the US PGA Championship and took The European Tour's flagship BMW PGA Championship, and Garcia was quick to praise his opponent for the European Number One crown.

“I'm a big believer that if you have done something extraordinary to be able to achieve that, to win [The Race to Dubai] before the last tournament happens, why shouldn't you be the winner,” said Garcia, who along with Jamie Donaldson and Marcel Siem is one of only three players with a chance to stop McIlroy heading into the penultimate event of The Final Series.

“I think Rory did something quite extraordinary this season and this summer more than anything, and maybe he deserves to be The Race to Dubai Champion, even before we play the Dubai World Championship next week. 

“There's no doubt that it's nice to be a part of it, to have still a little chance of winning it. 

“It's obviously very difficult but to at least be in the race for it and have a possibility of becoming The Race to Dubai Champion, it's something that you look forward to and I'm going to need a couple of really, really good weeks - we'll try it until it's over.” 

Garcia missed the inaugural staging of this event last year, but was determined to come after hearing his fellow European Tour pros rave about the venue.

“I definitely have heard a lot of good comments,” added Garcia. “Obviously it's a fairly new tournament but a lot of good comments. 

“It's one of the things that made my decision easier to come and play this year. I'm excited about seeing the course today - I heard it's in good shape. I heard the rough is a little bit high but it looks really, really good, and obviously the resort is quite spectacular, so we are enjoying that.”