(Reuters) - World number three Justin
Rose is planning to adopt a bunker
mentality in this week's British Open as
he goes in search of a rare third victory
in successive tournaments.
The 33-year-old Englishman followed
up his triumph at the Quicken Loans
National in Maryland last month by
capturing the Scottish Open title at
Royal Aberdeen on Sunday.
Rose believes the key to making it
three wins in a row at Hoylake will be
to keep away from the sand traps.
"It's important in links golf to keep the
ball out of the bunkers," he told
reporters on Tuesday. "They are true
penalties.
"Typically if you take on the first set of
bunkers you're not always rewarded
because very often they are so well
designed that there's the next set of
bunkers at 280, 290, 300 yards so your
decision is to take all of the bunkers
out normally."
Ryder Cup team mate Rory McIlroy said earlier in the day that
the par-fives would be the most important holes at Royal
Liverpool this week and Rose agreed.
"Some of the par-fives are going to play relatively easily," said
the 2013 U.S. Open winner at Merion. "If you don't make four
you're actually dropping a shot.
"It's a very fair golf course. The fairways are relatively flat, the
greens are relatively flat yet the trouble is there - the rough is
relatively thick but nothing is extreme.
"It offers shot-making, something for everybody."
Rose, who has only once finished in the top-10 in 12 previous
appearances at the British Open, said his victory at Merion
taught him the virtues of staying patient in a major
championship.
"The important thing for me this week is not to let expectation
or anything like that get in my way," he explained.
"It's basically about building a game plan and going out and
committing to it, just let the rounds and the week develop.
"That's what happened at Merion. I sort of grew into the week
and felt like I got better every day and last week I did the same,"
said Rose.
"In the past I was maybe less experienced and maybe not quite
as good. Now I just build my strategy around what I'm good at
and I don't force things as much as I used to."
It is not often that professionals win back-to-back tournaments,
let alone three in a row, but Rose feels his chances of landing
the coveted Claret Jug have increased as a result of his victory
at Aberdeen.
"I don't feel it any less realistic because I won last week," he
said. "I think the odds go more in my favour just through
confidence."
Popular Posts
-
Joleon Lescott is unlikely to be fit for West Brom’s Premier League opener against Sunderland at The Hawthorns next weekend. The former M...
-
Serena Williams stared at the court, took a deep breath and seemed to clear her head after falling behind in the first set. She dominated t...
-
Manchester United defender Phil Jones was left red-faced on his side’s tour of the USA after fitness coach Tony Strudwick was forced to cov...
-
Ivory Coast striker Didier Drogba announced his international retirement on Friday after scoring 61 goals in 103 appearances for his countr...
Tuesday, 15 July 2014
Bunker mentality the key as Rose aims for third straight win
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment