Down deeper and down - what's up, Tom?

Tue, Oct 9, 2012, 01:00

   

CADDIE'S ROLE:Despite winning on only his third start as a professional last year, Tom Lewis has struggled badly since. As he prepares to defend his Portuguese Masters title, a good final round at the Alfred Dunhill has raised much needed hope. Does the comeback start here, asks COLIN BYRNE

WHAT CAN you say to a young professional golfer who reached the heady heights in his profession almost instantly but since then has suffered nothing but disappointment?

It is the grey area of caddying where there are no guidelines or yardage books redirecting you back to winning ways. You need to be a sympathetic psychologist while carrying out the more fundamental, labour intensive duties of carrying the bag.

It seems like we have been carrying the weight of a successful introduction to professional golf on our shoulders for exactly a year now.

I started caddying for Tom Lewis 12 months ago. He had enjoyed a high profile British Open in St Georges in July of last year, shooting the lowest opening round. Being easy on the eye and an attractive new English hope, there was lots of goodwill for the aspiring Lewis and an enormous amount of aspiration.

Carrying other people’s hopes for you in the world is arduous enough for a hardened campaigner. To live with huge expectation at the tender age of 21 is understandably stressful. This, of course, is coupled with your own expectation as an instantly proven winner. Where do you go after such a perfect start to a new career? Well, on hindsight the answer is down.

This is a new and dark space for a hopeful youngster to inhabit at a stage of life when the only concern should be having fun. I understand why those looking from the outside assume travelling the world in relative luxury to play the game you love (sometimes) and earn a good living to be a dream existence. It is a good life on tour, but to finely tuned performers, missing cuts is like forgetting your lines during your dramatic soliloquy on stage, every night you perform.

The last time Tom made a cut was at the start of June this year. We have had four months of floundering with only a couple of rounds under par and the rest way off the mark. This is hard to take for any new player, least of all an ambitious 21-year-old who won his third event as a professional.

It was mooted after his astonishing victory at the Portugal Masters last year that perhaps young Tom had “won too early”. I saw it only as a positive with his playing rights secured for two years and a chance to plan his initiation to top international golf. He had given himself breathing space in which to learn the intricacies of his difficult profession.

I recall asking him almost exactly a year ago on a wet, windy and generally unpleasant day at St Andrews after a bad final round if he was sure he wanted to be a professional golfer.

As the rain dripped from his peaked cap he looked at me unconvincingly and said he thought so. I replied that days like we had just endured, although not the norm, were a common occurrence when you play golf for a living.

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