Poulter to keep the passion despite fine

Ian Poulter has no intention taking the passion out of his game even though it has brought him another European Tour fine.

Ian Poulter has no intention taking the passion out of his game even though it has brought him another European Tour fine.

Poulter damaged a tee marker during last week's Mercedes-Benz Championship in Cologne, just as he did at the British Open in July, and said yesterday at The Belfry: "At the end of the day I am not going to accept hitting a bad shot. If anyone gets angry and you do something silly the Tour has got every right to do whatever they do.

"Occasionally, a couple of times a year, you do whatever you do to let it (the frustration) out and unfortunately it will penalise you in the pocket. I am not going to stand and laugh. It's just in my make-up - part and parcel of me. I'm not going to be 'Mr Nice' and smile at every bad shot I hit.

"That's not in my DNA. Hopefully I can control myself, but occasionally I get caught with my guard down. But it's not like I took a Samurai sword out and chopped heads off. I tapped a tee marker a bit harder than they would like."

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The size of the fine has not been announced, but it is not thought to approach the £5,000 amount he handed over last year after a verbal assault on a marshal at the Irish Open. On that occasion, Tour executive director George O'Grady allowed Poulter to name his sum.

Meanwhile, Stephen Browne hopes to repeat his 2005 victory in the €330,000 Kazakhstan Open this weekend at the Nurtau Golf Club.

In what was the first professional golf event held in the Central Asian republic, the then 31-year-old Dubliner squeaked past his room-mate Colm Moriarty by a shot to earn his European Tour card by bounding into the top 10 on the Challenge Tour rankings.

"The course is way tougher than I remember. They have lengthened it a lot and the rough is deeper and more consistent," said Browne yesterday.