Harrington Returning To Masters First Time In Seven-Years Seeking To Become Oldest Augusta Champion

Padraig Harrington will head to Augusta National next April eagerly looking to become the oldest winner of the Masters.

In sharing fourth place at the PGA Championship, Harrington qualified not only for next month’s US Open but the 2022 Masters and in what now be a first return to Augusta National in seven years since he last drove down Magnolia Lane.

Harrington and fellow Irishman Shane Lowry were together in the same group heading out sharing 24th place for last Sunday’s final round of the 103rd PGA Championship.

Padraig Harrington – Returning to the 2022 Masters for first time since 2015.

It could have been one of the hundreds of practice rounds the pair have played together either side of ‘The Pond’ except it was the final round of a major and the champion Irish pair tackled the closing 18 holes with zest and also as though it was their own ‘War along the Shore’, ala the 1991 Ryder Cup, Sunday singles showdown over the Ocean Course at South Carolina.

Their match was all-square as they headed to scorers’ hut, each shooting a round of 73 to be the then joint clubhouse leaders at two-under par but technically sharing sixth place.

As the afternoon progressed, Harrington and Lowry moved up to a share of fifth and finally sharing fourth spot and only four shots, after four of the hardest rounds in some years, behind Phil Mickelson.

Unbeknown to Harrington at the time, fourth place earned him a start in next month’s US Open at Torrey Pines along with an automatic invitation to compete in next April’s Masters.

So, at a time of his playing career when Harrington admitted he was already considering life of the senior tours, he’s now heading to a first US Open since 2013 and unbelievably a return to Augusta National since missing the cut in 2015.

“I know in walking away from this week, there’s nothing stopping me in my golf swing,” said Harrington post Sunday’s PGA Championship and a highest majors showing since also sharing fourth in the 2012 US Open.

“I’m swinging the club well enough and I hit the golf ball well enough and I hit it far enough to compete. Give me the right conditions, as probably needed the right conditions even back in my own heyday, and I will be competitive, no doubt about it.

“We all dream it can happen and we push for that, and it keeps me getting up in the morning. Keeps me practicing.

“So, this result does add a bit of confidence that, yeah, I’m not too far away, and — especially like when I won my majors, a lot of my major wins came after me seeing some good stuff and being able to build on that, and I do see some good stuff in this week.

“I also was much better focus-wise, much better, over the last couple of weeks. I changed my routine and I got a lot better since then.

“And going forward, I just need to find that one thing on the putting or whatever and yeah, I could be as physically good a player as I ever was, but there’s a lot more competition these days”.

Jack Nicklaus was aged 46 years, seven months and 23 days when in 1986 he became the oldest winner of the Masters.

On Sunday, 10th April, 2022 and the final day of the 86th hosting of the Masters Harrington will be aged 51 years, seven months and 10 days.

 

 



Comments are closed.