The return to tournament winning form of Ernie
Els may be the most welcome story of the entire golf season. Okay, there is the tiny matter of Tiger Woods return to the sport to think about. But while the majority of the chattering classes want to see Tiger hauled over the coals by a rabid press corps, I'm more concerned with who will be first in line to have a pop at him on the course.
Can Ernie and his lion take on Tiger next week?
Golf has never really found a full time rival for Tiger, a 'Larry Bird' to his, if you will, 'Magic Johnson' . Come to think of it, 'Tiger's Magic Johnson' could be the name of a tell all biography by any number of waitresses in the
Clearwater area, but I digress. Over the last decade and a half, golf writing has been split evenly between coverage of Tiger and discussion as to the likely identity of any potential and permanent nemesis. Numerous players have been voted most likely to knock Woods off his perch (who knew it would actually be a Perkins waitress?) and almost to a man, they have all failed to sustain any type of challenge to his dominance. - While were on that very issue, take a look at the latest
World Golf Rankings, Tiger is a country mile clear of Steve Striker despite everything that has happened to him since winning the US Open in 2008.
It is easy to forget that Ernie
Els was 'Tiger' before Tiger was. His intentions were signaled with a T7 at
Baltusrol in the 1993 US Open which was followed up by a quite astonishing performance at the Open Championship where he became the first golfer in Open history to have four rounds in the sixties on his way to T6. A year later, at the tender age of 24, he took his first major victory by winning the US Open at
Oakmont. In 1997, following Woods win at Augusta,
Els added a second US Open at Congressional and all of a sudden the golf world had two young exciting and ludicrously talented giants to admire. One could imagine the golfing version of the Treaty of
Tordesillas would be needed to allow a fair distribution of global titles between Woods and
Els.
But the balance of power shifted irrevocably the following year on a remarkable Sunday in
Phuket, Thailand. Tiger shot a sensational 65 (31 on the inward 9) on the final day of the Johnnie Walker Classic to overhaul
Els' 8 shot lead. Woods won the title, and arguably a significant presence inside
Els' head, on the second play off hole. Between 1997 and 2000,
Els would finish runner up to Tiger five times (twice in majors in 2000). By the end of the century the Majors count would read 'Woods 5 -
Els 2.'
For the next five years
Els built up a resume that almost every other professional golfer in the World would be happy with, but it only included one more Major, the 2002 Open Championship. In 2005, while taking a well earned break between the Open and the
USPGA,
Els ruptured the anterior cruciate ligament in his knee. Remarkably he won his second tournament back at the end of that season, but the injury was by no means fully healed. 2006 saw
Els pick up the winners cheque but once, on home soil, at the South African Airways Open.
In January of 2007
Els announced, in a fashion that was somewhat out of character, that he was instigating a '3 year plan' to regain his position as World's number 1. While
Els worked hard with swing coach, Butch Harmon, his putting touch eroded alarmingly. The South
African's commitment was also questioned by Woods who compared his comeback from the same injury.
"I feel pretty good with what I've done and I think Ernie could have worked a little bit harder"
- Tiger Woods, September 2009
In hindsight this statement seems even more crass than it sounded at the time, particularly considering Ernie's commitment to his family and particularly as his, then six-year old son, Ben had been diagnosed with autism.
Despite the apposite timing of
Els' re-emergence as a potential major winner, it may not be the culmination of his '3 year plan'. After a
disappointing T67 at the Honda Classic,
Els had a hard look at his game and found a flaw in his positioning at address. This, combined with a switch to a softer ball and a 35" Odyssey putter (which has altered his stance on the greens) has radically altered his results and in turn, the level of expectancy amongst the golf writers and public alike.
I simply can't imagine a more perfect way to enjoy the afternoon of Sunday, April 11
th, than sitting down to watch Ernie show Woods what hard work, dedication and commitment are all about.
right now.