It took 20 years for Darren Clarke to win The Open. Now he hopes to end an even longer wait by capturing the Irish Open.
Sandwich hero hoping for dream double by winning Irish Open
It took 20 years for Darren Clarke to win The Open. Now he hopes to end an even longer wait by capturing this week's Irish Open.
Clarke first appeared in the Irish Open as a 21-year-old amateur in 1990 when finishing 50th at Portmarnock - 18 shots behind winner Jose Maria Olazabal.
That was his first European Tour start and he's since gone to claim 14 wins, culminating in his superb three-stroke victory at Royal St George's.
But still the Irish Open title eludes him.
"I've been close on a number of occasions and never quite got the job done - a bit like in The Open you could say," Clarke told the Tour website.
"It would be a hell of an achievement - a dream come true - to have The Open and Irish Open trophies on display back at home.
"It has already been an amazing month for me and to do the double would be unbelievable."
Positive history
He does have some positive history on his side though.
At Killarney in 1992 Nick Faldo had the second of three successive victories in the Irish Open and a month later captured his third Open title in six years, while four years ago at Adare Manor Padraig Harrington ended a 25-year wait for a home winner and two months later triumphed at Carnoustie for the first of his three major titles.
Clarke does already have a victory on Irish soil, though. That was the European Open at The K Club near Dublin 10 years ago.
Back then the only Irishman to win a major was Fred Daly in the 1947 Open, but in between Harrington's hat-trick and Clarke's success were, of course, the back-to-back US Open victories of Graeme McDowell and Rory McIlroy.
All four compete this week, prompting Clarke to say that the scenes "could be like nothing we've seen before".
Despite Irish golf being on an unprecedented high, however, the prize money has been cut in half to £1.32million following the withdrawal of telecommunications company 3, title sponsors for the previous three years.