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Arthur Sullivan

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Arthur will be providing regular comment and analysis on GAA and golf in 2009.

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Lowry victory is astonishing

It's hard to put Shane Lowry's win in the Irish Open on Sunday into perspective without seeming like you're going overboard. But it has to be said, it's one of the most incredible debut displays in the history of golf.

Many excellent golfers go through their entire careers without winning a tournament, or perhaps only one or two. Many truly great golfers take years before they register their first victory. Pádraig Harrington won in his second year as a professional, but after taking the 1996 Spanish Open, he took four more years before he registered another win on the European Tour. It's not easy, this winning business.

Players have won on their professional debuts, but it has hardly ever happened that an amateur has won on his first outing at a professional event. Rory McIlroy didn't win as an amateur and after turning professional, he had a few choky misses before his spectacular debut triumph in Dubai.

And yes, Tiger Woods has accumulated a fairly mind-blowing list of achievements and feats in his record-breaking career, but even he didn't do what a 22-year-old Offaly man did at Baltray on Sunday.

Yet even those acknowledgements do not do justice to what the Clara native did. It was his home Open, where Irish winners are famously scarce. The fact that it was on his native island meant that his first professional event and - as it turned out, his first chance at victory - would be conducted in front of massive, roaring galleries with all the attention and pressure that comes with it.

LATEST BLOGS

League chancers miss the point

13 May 2009

The recent National Leagues took me back to my school days. I remember exam years particularly well and the parallels with the Winter and Spring GAA fare were uncanny. Christmas exams came and the results were given out. The fellas who always did well did well as always. The fellas who always did middling did middling as always and the fellas who always did badly did badly as always.

Perry and Cabrera dwell with the Angels

13 April 2009

“You know, I don’t root against anybody. I’m not gonna root against him, I’m gonna congratulate him because I know how hard it is as a professional and as a competitor. I know how the momentum swings here and there. If they execute and beat you, I’m going to shake the man’s hand.”

The sublime and the ridiculous

11 April 2009

Friday’s second round at Augusta went from the sublime to the ridiculous in the space of a few holes.

Masters off to a great start

10 April 2009

If day one was anything to go by, it's shaping up to be an outstanding US Masters.

Loughnane and Spillane will make us sit up

06 April 2009

Rightly or wrongly, they’re two of the most reviled men in GAA. But not too many find them boring. The news that Ger Loughnane and Pat Spillane are resuming work as pundits on The Sunday Game is hardly an earth-shattering news story but it will certainly take some of the saccharine sweetness out of summer Sunday nights on the Montrose sofas.

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