RORY McILROY NAMED EUROPEAN TOUR GOLFER OF THE YEAR
NEWS RELEASE FROM THE EUROPEAN TOUR
Rory McIlroy has been named The
2012 Race to Dubai European Tour Golfer of the Year, capping a
sensational year for the World Number One.
The 23 year old Northern Irishman
succeeds Luke Donald as winner of the coveted award, having also
replicated the Englishman’s previously unprecedented achievement of
winning both The Race to Dubai and the US PGA Tour Money List in the
same season.
In August, McIlroy captured his
second Major Championship, claiming the US PGA Championship at Kiawah
Island by eight strokes and in doing so set a new record for the largest
winning margin in the Championship, beating the seven-stroke
triumph of Jack Nicklaus at Oak Hill in 1980. It also matched the winning margin he achieved during his maiden Major triumph in the 2011 US Open Championship at Congressional.
He also won three times on the US
PGA Tour – in The Honda Classic, the Deutsche Bank Championship and the
BMW Championship – and played a vital role in Europe’s victorious Ryder
Cup winning team, before ending a magnificent personal
year by winning The European Tour’s season finalé, The DP World Tour
Championship, Dubai, in style, birdieing the final five holes on the
Earth course to triumph by two strokes.
That fifth title worldwide in 2012
also meant McIlroy finished The European Tour season with record
earnings of €5,519,118, beating the previous mark of €5,323,400 set by
Donald last year, as he became the youngest player to win the
Harry Vardon Trophy since Scotland’s Sandy Lyle in 1980 and the fourth
youngest in total behind Seve Ballesteros, Dale Hayes and Lyle.
McIlroy can now add The Race to
Dubai European Tour Golfer of the Year award to his list of
accomplishments in 2012, which includes winning the Golf Writers’ Trophy
on this side of the Atlantic as well as the PGA Tour Player of the Year
honours in the United States.
The judging panel, which featured
golf journalists from newspapers and magazines as well as commentators
from radio and television, also reserved praise for several other worthy
candidates, specifically Englishman Ian Poulter, who won
four points out of four in Europe’s Ryder Cup victory as well as
claiming his second World Golf Championship title in China in November,
and South African Branden Grace, who won four times on The European Tour
in 2012 after securing his card at Qualifying
School the previous November.
But McIlroy, who was announced as
the winner at the annual Golfer of the Year Luncheon at the Lancaster
Hotel in London, received the unanimous vote from the panel to become
only the second Northern Irishman, following his friend Graeme
McDowell (who shared the award with Germany’s Martin Kaymer in 2010),
to receive the accolade.
“Everyone who knows me knows how
special the 2012 season was,” said McIlroy. “A couple of wins, including
a Major, and consistent performances in big events all helped me win
The Race to Dubai for the first time. To win that was a massive
highlight of an amazing season, and I hope it will be the first of
many. Now, to have been named as The European Tour Golfer of the Year
puts the icing on the cake.
“It is a very special honour indeed
and you only need to look down the list of players who have preceded me
as the winner of this award to see precisely why – quite simply, it is a
Who’s Who of golf and I’m delighted to now be a part
of that in the history books.
“We play golf because we relish the
opportunity to win Major Championships and world-class tournaments
around the globe. But when we do that, to be recognised for these
achievements is a great thrill and I thank all the members of the
panel who voted for me.”
McIlroy is no stranger to the
record books and this latest honour saw him add another to the annals as
he became the youngest player to win Golfer of the Year since the
award’s inauguration in 1985.
Bill Elliott, Golf Monthly
contributor and Chairman of the Association of Golf Writers, said: “At
times, selecting the winner of such a prestigious award such as this can
be difficult, as was the case in 2010 when Graeme and Martin shared
the accolade. But this year, our decision was straightforward.
“Rory’s performances on the golf
course were spectacular but not only that, it was also the way he
conducted himself on and off the golf course – with ourselves in the
media and everyone else connected with this great old game – that
made him a thoroughly deserved winner.”
Derek Lawrenson, Golf Correspondent
of The Daily Mail, added: “The 2012 season was a remarkable one for
European Tour golf with outstanding exploits from players such as Ian
Poulter, who produced the greatest performance in the history
of The Ryder Cup at Medinah, and Branden Grace who surpassed all
expectations by winning four times the season after coming through the
Qualifying School.
“Rory, however, capped all that by
what he achieved across the year, but specifically at Kiawah Island and
in Dubai. Both were immense performances that took not only his game,
but golf as a whole to a new level.”
Iain Carter, Golf Correspondent for
BBC Radio Five Live, concluded: “Rory’s win in the US PGA Championship
in August was stunning and had already ensured his place in golfing
history, before his win in Dubai simply put an exclamation
mark on a truly remarkable season. There is no question that he is the
undisputed Golfer of the Year.”
Labels: EUROPEAN TOUR
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