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Ian Poulter urges European Tour to retain membership rules

Ian Poulter during the first round of the Hong Kong Open
Image: Ian Poulter was forced to add the Hong Kong Open to his schedule

Ian Poulter has insisted the European Tour must adhere to a strict membership criteria despite the regulations almost costing him his card, and Ryder Cup eligibility, for next season.

Poulter was forced to make a frantic dash from his Florida home to compete in the UBS Hong Kong Open last week, ensuring he would play in the required 13 events to retain his Tour membership.

The Englishman dropped out of the world's top 50 on October 19 and was therefore ruled ineligible for his scheduled appearance in the upcoming WGC-HSBC Champions event in Shanghai.

Only members can be considered for Europe's Ryder Cup team, and Poulter managed to secure a last-ditch place in the field at Fanling when former US PGA champion Rich Beem generously agreed to give up his tournament invite.

Poulter needed to play in Hong Kong to retain his card and remain eligible for the Ryder Cup
Image: Poulter needed to play in Hong Kong to retain his card and remain eligible for the Ryder Cup

Discussions between top players and European Tour officials are ongoing amid speculation that the required number of events may be reduced from 13 to 11, but Poulter believes the Tour should not be expected to "roll over".

"It's a tour that's been very proud to hold the Ryder Cup trophy for so many years and produce great world-class European players," Poulter told a pre-tournament press conference ahead of this week's Turkish Airlines Open.

You can't expect the European Tour to roll over and allow all their guys to disappear. It really is the one thing that's kept the European Tour together, the Ryder Cup
Ian Poulter

"You can't expect the European Tour to roll over and allow all their guys to disappear. It really is the one thing that's kept the European Tour together, the Ryder Cup."

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Poulter, who remained 51st in the world rankings after finishing tied for 29th in Hong Kong, added: "It's an awkward situation and being outside of the top 50 makes it very difficult.

Rich Beem of the United States watches his tee shot on the fourth hole during the second round of the 2015 PGA Championship
Image: Rich Beem gave up his tournament invite to enable Poulter to compete at Fanling

"I know there have been discussions of how they can make things work better for everybody and those are going to continue. I am not going to sit here and turn around and say they need to be slashed to eight, nine or 10.

"Rules have had to be put in place to protect the Tour and it's difficult. You have guys that have been very committed to the Tour for a very long period of time, that are outside the top 50 at the minute (Jamie Donaldson is 56th, Luke Donald 70th and Graeme McDowell 80th). You'd expect them to get back inside the top 50, but if they don't then it's going to be very tough on those guys.

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"They are definitely looking into it and I'm sure they will make the right decision. (European Tour chief executive) Keith Pelley has his finger on the pulse. He's definitely a decision-maker, he's someone that likes to listen to the players and I think he's going to do a good job because of that.

"It's not corporate America where they can have such huge tax write-offs, the TV deal is not even comparable, so we need sponsors on the European Tour to make it work. That's the one thing that Keith is going to have to do a good job on, finding new ways to bring in tournaments, new sponsors, to raise the prize fund, to make sure the big guys want to play as many tournaments as they possibly can and look after the Tour."

Ian Poulter's frantic dash to Hong Kong caught up with him as he slipped 11 shots off the pace
Image: Poulter's frantic dash to Hong Kong caught up with him as he finished in a tie for 29th

Poulter insists he will make next year's Ryder Cup team as Europe look to claim a ninth win from the last 11 contests, but would not be surprised to see the new English generation of Danny Willett, Andy Sullivan and Matt Fitzpatrick alongside him at Hazeltine.

Sullivan is the only player to have won three times on the European Tour this season, while Willett is second behind Rory McIlroy in the Race to Dubai and British Masters winner Fitzpatrick is 11th and battling Anirban Lahiri to be named rookie of the year.

"It would be great," said Willett. "It's nice to win tournaments and to play certain events, but an Order of Merit means you've played great over a 12-month period, not just a one-off."

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