AAP

Greg Norman to miss Australian Open

AAP November 5, 2009, 3:52 pm

Next month's $1.5 million Australian Open lost some significant lustre on Thursday when Greg Norman withdrew from the event.

Norman has been advised by his doctors not to play again in 2009 after undergoing arthroscopic shoulder surgery in September, forcing him out of his highly-anticipated return to the NSW Golf Club at La Perouse.

At 54, the five-time winner would still have been the No.1 drawcard at the December 3-6 tournament and a handy riposte to Tiger Woods' appearance at next week's Australian Masters.

Golf Australia chief executive Stephen Pitt couldn't mask his disappointment at the announcement.

"He is a drawcard and it is a shame. A lot of people would've loved to have seen how he played the NSW Golf Club," Pitt told AAP by telephone.

"He's actually a member there and it's the sort of course that suits his game to a large extent.

"There's that disappointment that he won't be there and I'm sure Greg's disappointed as well.

"He loves the Australian Open and I'm sure he's disappointed that he can't take his place."

The slower than expected recovery from surgery will also force Norman to miss his own event, The Shark Shootout, to be held the week after the Open in Florida.

Thankfully for Open organisers, it doesn't spell the end of Norman's long association with the tournament, having signed a deal back in June to compete in the next three Australian Opens.

Following the Shark's announcement, Pitt was turning his attention to the quality field that will tee up in Sydney.

Adam Scott, who showed a promising return to form in his third-placing at last week's Singapore Open, will play after a knee injury kept him out of the 2008 Open.

Geoff Ogilvy, Aaron Baddeley, Stuart Appleby and John Senden are also competing along with John Daly and his fellow Americans Steve Marino and Kevin Stadler.

But it is two other Australians that are of particular interest to Pitt.

Marc Leishman and Michael Sim both had break-out seasons in the United States in 2009 and represent some of the next generation of Australian golfers and both will be at the NSW Golf Club.

"From our perspective we're still really excited about the event and it's still a great field," he said.

"The silver lining (of Norman's withdrawal) is some of the focus goes on some of the younger players coming through who probably haven't had as much attention as they deserve.

"A couple of examples would be Michael Sim and Marc Leishman, who have been in dominating form over the last year and look like they have a really bright future for Australian golf.

"Maybe more focus goes on them and people will be able to see them play for the first time."

Organisers were still looking into the possibility of enticing some other top-class international players to the event.

"If we can attract someone to the field that helps bring a little bit more drawing power we'll do it, but we're really happy with the field that we've got," Pitt said.

Today's Poll

Should Tom Moody remain coach of the WA cricket team?

Should Tom Moody remain coach of the WA cricket team?

Have your say
Related Sport Story:
NSW continue to give WA the blues

Tonight on 7 Perth and GWN

  • 8:30pm: Bones

    8:30pm: Bones

    When a notorious serial killer escapes from prison, everyone connected to Brennan becomes...

  • 9:30pm: Castle

    Castle learns that a real-world copycat killer has started staging murders from scenes depicted in his novels.

  • 10:30pm: Band of Brothers

    The amazing true story of a group of young strangers who became brothers in combat in an airborne unit during the second World War.

Opinion

  • John Townsend, Cricket Writer

    November 26, 2009, 7:40 am
    Blogging from Brisbane - the lead-up

    The first thing you notice about Brisbane is the heat. I hadn't been to the Queensland capital for two years but walking out of the airport - bags on the carousel by the time you get to it so it takes five minutes from unbuckling your seatbelt to...

  • Ross Lewis

    November 27, 2009, 2:01 pm
    The AFL mystery draft

    Everyone's a winner at the AFL national draft. Unless you're a fan.Watching the 2009 version of the league's annual player lottery was akin to sitting behind a concrete pillar while trying to view a match at Subiaco Oval.Heaven forbid a blink. A slight...

News Tip

Do you have a story for us to investigate?

The West News Preferences

Close

Select your state to see news for your area.