ONWARDS & UPWARDS
Golf Digest Middle East|January 2020
SHANE LOWRY WILL PROUDLY DEFEND ABU DHABI’S FALCON TROPHY AND THE OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP’S CLARET JUG IN 2020 BUT IT’S A GOLD CUP COMMISSIONED BY SAMUEL RYDER IN 1927 THAT HAS THE IRISHMAN FIZZING FOR THE NEW SEASON
KENT GRAY
ONWARDS & UPWARDS

Like legions of juniors before him and doubtless countless more plotting future fame and fortune, Shane Lowry vividly recalls standing on practice greens thinking “this one for The Open”. Unlike most, the Esker Hills Golf Club prodigy was already hinting at the rare talent required to turn such fanciful dreams into reality, raw potential that turned to irrefutable proof when he won the 2009 Irish Open to become just the third amateur to win on the European Tour. Fast forward a topsy-turvy decade on from that unforgettable Baltray breakthrough and, as it transpires, the Irishman didn’t have “this one for the Open”, rather five putts up his sleeve courtesy after a dream weekend at Royal Portrush.

It also turns out the relative ease with which he claimed the claret jug wasn’t the only part of the “dream come true” that wasn’t exactly how he’d imagined it all those years earlier as a junior. Yes, becoming the ‘Champion Golfer of the Year’ changed Lowry’s life but five months on he feels, strangely, kind of normal.

“The incredible thing is, since The Open, I actually don’t feel any different. If you had asked me before, were things going to change and would you feel different, I would have said yes,” Lowry said.

“But honestly, I don’t feel like it’s changed me in any way. It’s obviously changed my career path a little bit, but as a person, I don’t feel any different.”

This story is from the January 2020 edition of Golf Digest Middle East.

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This story is from the January 2020 edition of Golf Digest Middle East.

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