New Zealander Michael Campbell came out of the golfing wilderness with a
play-off win in the Nissan Irish Open at Portmarnock on Sunday.
After the 34-year-old had tied with Peter Hedblom and Thomas Bjorn on the
11-under-par mark of 277, Hedblom having made a dramatic 25-foot par putt on the
last which he said "felt like 50", the play-off was delayed because of a
thunderstorm.
It was the latest of a succession of downpours during the day, but easily the
heaviest and the sudden death shoot-out, which should have begun at 6.45pm, did
not kick off for another 40 minutes.
When it got under way at last Campbell quickly looked like the winner when his
second shot to the green came to rest within a couple of inches of the hole,
making a birdie on the par-four, 411-yard 18th with ease.
Both Open runner-up Bjorn and Hedblom played decent approach shots but had to
settle for par.
But Bjorn took his second runners-up spot in two weeks when his nine iron
missed by inches while Hedblom's long-ranger was way off.
After his win Campbell said: "It has been a long time and it was hard. Thomas
played great today and I managed to get lucky on the last hole.
"I felt very comfortable, even after 13 months or so, but it is quite
strange.
"I'd like to thank my coach, my family and my friends. Three years ago my
parents saw me win so it was nice for them to see me win again.
"Portmarnock is definitely one of the best tournaments I have played in. The
whole foundation, everything about it makes it a wonderful week."
Campbell has endured a miserable run in the United States and his win marks a well-deserved turnaround in fortunes.
Just to be in contention again was a massive step forward for Campbell after
what he went through in America. His record there this season almost defies
belief for a player who began the year as the world's 18th best player.
He missed nine out of nine halfway cuts and the only three cheques he earned
were merely for showing up - at the Accenture World Match Play, the Masters and
the US Open.
He quit the Bay Hill Invitational in March after taking 10 at the first hole
and at the Players Championship a week later slumped to an opening 89 and was
disqualified for signing for a wrong score.
"It's like an alien has taken over my body," he said then.
Eventually the decision was made to abort the mission and return to Europe.
"The hardest thing was spending 12 weeks on the road. Never again," he
states firmly. "The kids got really, really ratty and it was very unsettling to
be travelling that length of time with them, two nannies and my wife.
"Being a creature of comfort, coming back to Europe seemed to turn my whole
game around again. We kept our place in Brighton and coming back felt like
coming home.
"The US Tour is brutal, relentless. There's a nice feeling of more freedom in
Europe.
"There's more intensity in the States. The money they play for is just
ridiculous and it's definitely cut-throat.
"When I was struggling over there I didn't really notice people coming up to
me on the range and saying much. Nick Price did, but he's always been great to
me. I had to rely on my family and friends to come through it."
Every golf follower knows how good he can be. At 26 Campbell led the 1995 Open
at St Andrews by three with a round to play and missed the play-off between John
Daly and Costantino Rocca by one shot.
He was fifth on the Order of Merit that season, fourth in 2000 - after a
serious wrist injury which he feared would end his career - and eighth last
year, a campaign highlighted by his victory in the European Open at the K Club
west of Dublin.
Now, north of the city, he has re-ignited his career.
"I never doubted I would,'' he said. "I've been through it before and I
didn't like it. I knew I had the determination and the support I've had from my
close circle has been great."
Birdie putts of 15 and 10 feet on the ninth and 10th had put Campbell two
clear, but he bogeyed the next and was caught both by a charging Hedblom, who
had a hat-trick of birdies from the 14th, and by Bjorn's two-putt birdie at the
long 16th, where Campbell missed his chance by driving into a pot bunker.
After Hedblom holed a long-range putt at the 18th to draw level, Campbell had
a similar length effort for the title, but did not give it enough break and so
went into sudden death to try for his first win since the K Club 12 months ago.
Joint fourth on nine under were England's David Lynn and British Masters
champion Greg Owen, who scored 73 and 72 respectively.
Collated final totals in the Nissan Irish Open Portmarnock, Dublin (Gbr & Irl
unless stated, par 72):
(Campbell won sudden death play-off at first play-off hole)
277 Michael Campbell (Nzl) 66 69 71 71 (£212,498), Thomas Bjorn (Den) 64 74 68
71 (£110,739), Peter Hedblom (Swe) 70 71 68 68 (£110,739)
279 Greg Owen 68 71 68 72, David Lynn 69 65 72 73 (£58,904 each)
280 Sven Struver (Ger) 71 71 69 69 (£44,625)
272 Peter Lonard (Aus) 71 68 69 74, Robert Karlsson (Swe) 69 69 69 75
283 Raymond Russell 71 73 68 71, Greg Turner (Nzl) 71 71 69 72
284 John Bickerton 71 72 72 69, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 73 68 71 72, Paul
Broadhurst 67 74 71 72, Gary Murphy 74 68 70 72, Peter O'Malley (Aus) 70 69 72
73, Lee Westwood 70 72 69 73
285 Brett Rumford (Aus) 72 71 70 72, Charl Schwartzel (Rsa) 71 71 70 73, Mark
Pilkington 76 67 69 73, Gary Emerson 68 71 72 74, Simon Khan 68 73 70 74, Shaun
Webster 72 71 67 75
286 Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 70 73 72 71, Jarrod Moseley (Aus) 70 72 71 73,
Alvaro Salto (Spa) 70 72 71 73, James Kingston (Rsa) 73 69 71 73, Peter Fowler
(Aus) 70 73 70 73, Christian Cevaer (Fra) 72 71 70 73, Luke Donald 68 74 69 75,
Ian Poulter 70 71 69 76, Ben Mason 69 71 70 76, Peter Lawrie 70 68 71 77
287 Paul McGinley 74 66 76 71, Malcolm Mackenzie 70 72 73 72, Andrew Raitt 70
72 70 75
288 Nicolas Colsaerts (Bel) 72 72 73 71, Jean-Francois Remesy (Fra) 69 75 71
73, Jean Hugo (Rsa) 70 73 71 74, Arjun Atwal (Ind) 70 74 70 74, Ian Garbutt 72
70 71 75, Matthew Blackey 75 67 71 75, Maarten Lafeber (Ned) 72 69 71 76, Markus
Brier (Aut) 71 71 69 77, Jean-Francois Lucquin (Fra) 72 68 70 78
289 Mark Roe 69 74 72 74, Peter Baker 72 70 71 76
290 Damien McGrane 72 70 76 72, Fredrik Andersson (Swe) 71 73 73 73, Jesus
Maria Arruti (Spa) 73 71 72 74, Darren Clarke 75 68 72 75, Phillip Price 68 76
71 75
291 Terry Price (Aus) 73 70 77 71, David Gilford 70 74 75 72, Didier de Vooght
(Bel) 71 73 74 73, Patrik Sjoland (Swe) 73 70 73 75
292 Simon Wakefield 70 73 77 72, Damian Mooney 70 74 75 73, Stephen Gallacher
68 73 76 75, Carlos Rodiles (Spa) 69 75 72 76, Lee James 71 72 72 77, David Park
71 72 70 79
293 Henrik Bjornstad (Nor) 74 70 72 77, Soren Hansen (Den) 72 72 71 78
294 Klas Eriksson (Swe) 72 68 77 77, Euan Little 72 71 72 79
295 Jamie Spence 71 71 77 76, Nick Dougherty 71 71 77 76, Ian Woosnam 72 70 75
78, Steve Webster 71 73 72 79
296 Robert Coles 74 69 78 75
297 Jonathan Lomas 74 69 76 78, Sandy Lyle 72 71 75 79, Simon Dyson 69 72 74
82
298 Robert Rock 73 71 76 78
305 Pierre Fulke (Swe) 74 70 81 80