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Blooming Rose all set for St Andrews

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Iain Carter | 13:00 UK time, Monday, 5 July 2010

The shadows were lengthening, the course was deserted, the action was over. One man stood on a green doing his most important work of what had been a very long day.

This was Justin Rose at TPC River Highlands in Connecticut, on 27 June. He had just . To use his word, he was "gutted".

He had thrown away a four-stroke advantage heading into the final round of the Traveller's Championship. His putting had been atrocious and his success in his previous outing at The Memorial was suddenly looking rather less substantial - perhaps not much more than a one-week wonder.

Rose was inconsolable, even his toddler son Leo was struggling to put a smile on Dad's face. There was only one thing to do. It was to leave behind the family and discover where his putting touch had gone as soon as possible.

Rose celebrates

So the US-based Englishman retreated to the house he had rented for that week. It overlooked the ninth green and that's where he headed.

As Bubba Watson tearfully celebrated his play-off victory, Rose was on that green, already working on a couple of tips passed on after his putting meltdown had opened up the tournament to Watson and Co.

One week on and it was . He confirmed himself as the form player of the moment, combining a largely brilliant putting display with yet more superb ball-striking to provide his second win in three starts.

He triumphed at the in Pennsylvania by parring the last seven holes for a one-stroke victory. Given what had happened seven days earlier this was a triumph of nerve. On this latest back nine, he saw a five-stroke advantage eroded to the narrowest of margins.

By holding on for his second PGA Tour win, Rose confirmed that he remains a player with the fortitude to continue to make career advances after taking the proverbial two steps back.

Twas ever thus with Rose, from the moment he , turned pro and promptly missed 21 consecutive cuts.

This is a player who has won the European Tour Order of Merit mainly through weight of results in majors and WGC events in 2007 and finished 81st in the same money list just one year on.

When we commentate on majors for 5 live we invariably receive texts asking how Justin Rose has fared. Often we have to tell the listener he hadn't played that week; ineligible, not good enough to be with the elite.

Since finishing fourth in that 1998 Open, Rose has missed 19 of the 47 majors that have been played. In that period he has also had superbly successful spells, good enough to make him Europe's number one and a Ryder Cup player.

But there has always been a constant quest for improvement and that has, on occasion, led to loss of form and worrying slumps when this normally affable and approachable player has become far removed from his accepted image.

Earlier this year he was at a particularly low ebb when he failed to make it to the Masters. There was little sign of the cyclical nature of his career taking its upward turn as he languished only just inside the world's top 100.

In the meantime he was being eclipsed by the surge of UK players. His old mucker Ian Poulter, who had never been regarded as being nearly as talented had become the and had beaten Rose to a first title Stateside.

So had Paul Casey and Rory McIlroy and so the Orlando-based Rose was being completely overshadowed.

But his game was coming back and better than before. At 29 years old he was finding a new level of maturity.

"In the past I've worried about where I fit in," he admitted after this latest win, "how I stack up, what people think, where do they rate me, do they or don't they and I've got to tell you I'm less worried about that now. It's great to be and probably climbing back into the .

"Sure, that's all nice, but right now that's not what's driving me. It's how good can I get at this game and that's a personal challenge," he added.

Naturally the next move, as it is for most of his contemporaries, is to step up in the majors and match the deeds of Northern Ireland's .

Rose is now assured of his place at . Five years ago he suffered the agony of being first alternate and waiting all day on the Thursday in the vain hope that someone would go lame before stepping on the most famous first tee in golf. No one did and he also missed the 2000 Open there.

This is where he had won the prestigious St Andrews Links Trophy as a 16-year-old, clinching a place in the 1997 Walker Cup team. It's where he has been runner-up in the
Alfred Dunhill Links Championship. He likes the Old Course.

Rose has flown overnight from the United States to this week's star-studded JP McManus pro-am. Then he'll head to St Andrews to spend the rest of the week working out his strategy for the 150th anniversary Open, while other of his rivals compete in the at Loch Lomond.

It appears a wise move. Who will be truly ready for the demands of a major after two days of pro-am in Ireland, another in Scotland on Wednesday and then four days of competition on a layout bearing no relation to a links course?

Rose doesn't care about the others though. For him it's all about harnessing his current self-belief for his quest to land the Claret Jug.

"I think winning on the PGA Tour is a stepping stone to winning major championships," he said.

"This is the progression I would have expected. I established myself in Europe and then it took me a while over here, but then I established myself by winning PGA Tour events. Then to the next level, which would be the major championships."

For someone who a little over a month ago had only distant hopes of being in the St Andrews field it is a remarkable switch in fortune. But it's been achieved through endeavour and talent and Rose rightly stands alongside the other home hopes for the next major of the year.

This period is turning into an astonishing time for UK golf. How appropriate it would be for that to be confirmed at the home of the game next week and in Rose and McDowell we have two candidates who could not be blessed with more confidence.

What is more, it has been well and truly earned.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    Watching Justin play his final round yesterday reminded me of Sir Nick when he was winning often - great tempo, focus...if he takes this game to St Andrews he will do very well.

  • Comment number 2.

    Onwards and upwards Justin. Don't look back just keep going. You can be the best.

  • Comment number 3.

    It is interesting, Iain, that Justin Rose has produced his best golf when he wasn't really "chasing" anything, a Major, a Ryder Cup place, desirable though both surely are to him.
    I'd never been convinced about Rose, certainly his ability to go from good to, potentially, great in the US. But now it seems he can relax and take the next step. His schedule for the next 2 years is pretty well set, he is exempt now on the PGA Tour through 2013, and (how ironic is this?) his two wins qualify him automatically for Congressional in 2011.
    PS: How is Graeme McDowell not "the form player of the moment"? Perhaps Rose is "the English form player"??
    PPS: Justin Rose certainly missed some tiddlers at Hartford but it was off the tee that he lost the tournament, water balls on 13 (Saturday), and 15 on Sunday that turned an almost automatic 3 into a 6.
    8 of the past 10 PGA Tournaments won by "International" players.

  • Comment number 4.

    DrPg, I agree; after the 1st, hitting 16 of 17 GIR (only landing short with a mis-club) was Faldo-esque - it was a contrast to his scrambling on Saturday evening. Having previously fallen over the finishing line (think Valderama) or just fallen over (just look at Connecticut), he has been accused of being fragile, hence why it was so satisfying to watch him standing up to the pressure last night.

    Success couldn't be coming to a more likeable bloke.
    St Andrews? Fingers crossed.

  • Comment number 5.

    Another great read Iain and as always generous with your praise WHEN it is merited. Justin comes across as well educated and well adjusted and is a credit to his family.
    To win tournaments on the PGA Tour proves he has the bottle to win a Major in my eyes. Yes, the pressures are different but winning is winning and knowing how to win is a big step forward.
    Whether he wins a Major or not, he will get and deserves to get a huge amount of support from the British public.

  • Comment number 6.

    Justin is a quality golfer and the way he conducts himself embodies everything about what makes this sport so great.
    He's probably proven himself more than any of his peers to be a worthy contender to a major title, with wins on the European tour, in Asia, Order of Merit and now PGA titles and I'd expect him to bag a major within the next 18 months.
    His interview on Wednesday's 91Èȱ¬ 5Live golf programme summed the guy up. Confident, modest, grateful for the position he's in and confirmed how strong his mind-set is at the moment.
    A credit to the game.

  • Comment number 7.


    So who is the best British player now?

    1. Westwood (most consistent acc to world ranking)
    2. McIlroy (brightest, rawest talent)
    3. Rose (hottest right now)
    4. McDowell (the only one of them with a major)

    It is an interesting choice, and then there is Poulter, Casey, Donald as well...

    Wouldnt it be great if you had two or three of these guys fighting it out for the Claret Jug

  • Comment number 8.

    I said a little while back that most of the British players seemed to affected by 'bottle' issues when trying to close the deal in US Tour events and although a number of different players have won several events recently they've usually just scraped over the line. However delighted to have been proved sort of wrong.

    I also said that I felt that Justin Rose was the one player who if he did break his duck on the US tour to go on to win regularly as he had shown that he could compete well at top level having led several times at Majors. Notwithstanding his choke 2 weeks ago there is ample evidence of that already so hope to be proved right on that front. If it wasn't for a dodgy 9 holes he would have been celebrating his 3rd victory in 3 events which is Tigeresque. Well done Justin, now go out and close out a major.

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