| On the night of his 30th
birthday, July 18, 1987, Nick Faldo's career had
known its ups and downs. After winning 11 times
on the European tour, and once in the United
States, between 1977 and 1984, Faldo hadn't won
at all for three years, until the rot had been
halted at the Spanish Open two months previously.
Now, he was a shot out of the lead in the Open
Championship with 18 holes to play. The next day,
Faldo took the title, paring every hole of that
final round in the drizzle at Muirfield. The
overnight leader, Paul Azinger, bogeyed the last
two holes and Faldo had won by a stroke. Since
then, it seems he has hardly stopped accumulating
majors, even though he lost a US Open playoff in
1988. In 1989, he won the Masters and four
tournaments in Europe; in 1990 he won the Masters
and the Open; in 1992, he won the Open again and
five other tournament titles. What
brought about the transformation? Apart from
Faldo's natural athletic ability and
single-minded dedication to whatever task he sets
himself, the answer is David Leadbetter. Faldo
had certainly enjoyed quick success as an amateur
after taking up the game at the age of 13 (having
watched the 1971 Masters on television). In 1975
he won the British Youths' and the English
Amateur. Likewise the early years of his
professional career had been rewarding- in 1983,
he won five tournaments in Europe and had the
best stroke average in the world. By 1985,
however, Faldo had convinced himself that he
wouldn't win a major championship unless he
altered his swing. The swing looked pretty, but
at 6'3", he was prone to errors, errors
which he realized meant he did not have full
control of his game - a lesson he learned in the
harshest manner when his challenge for the 1984
Masters subsided while his playing partner, Ben
Crenshaw, went on to win. So Faldo entrusted
himself fully to Leadbetter, whose glowing
reputation as a teacher has been massively
assisted by Faldo's subsequent record.
They completely rebuilt Faldo's
game, a process that would have broken the heart
and resolve of a less resilient individual. For
two years, the sceptics had said he was mad, but
he has emphatically proved the doubters wrong.
The chief accusation against Faldo is that he has
almost made the game boring because he has made
it predictable. Certainly, at times he seems
flawless. Certainly, he is generally the man to
beat. And certainly, for Nick Faldo, a new life
began at 30.
|
 A young Bick Faldo shows off
the PGA Championship trophy after winning at
Royal Birkdale in 1928.

Faldo,
the totally dedicated world class champion.
|