INTERVIEW WITH CARLY BOOTH
CARLY BOOTH ... LPGA Tour bid next year?
NEWS RELEASE FROM THE LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
By BETHAN CUTLER
Interview
with Carly Booth ahead of the Raiffeisenbank Prague Golf Masters at The Albatross Golf Resort:
You are known as a long hitter. Do you feel this course will suit you?
CARLY: Yes, I think it’s definitely a driver’s
course. It’s pretty wide open and I think if you do hit it that little bit
further it brings the par fives into play for hitting the green in two so I
think it’s a good course that’s suited for me and I’m looking forward to this
week.
Can
you reach all the par fives in two shots?
CARLY: Playing it yesterday, I managed to hit them
all but it wasn’t that windy. I know from last year that the wind gets up here
and especially hole 10 can be out of reach.
What
do you think about this golf course and the condition?
CARLY: It’s beautiful. The conditions are awesome
and the greens are rolling just wonderfully. It’s in even better condition than
last year, so it’s looking great.
What are your goals for this season now that you’re leading the order of merit?
CARLY: It’s overwhelming to be honest! I think now
I’ve re-set my goals to try and stay there, so just keep playing the way I’m
playing and hopefully I can continue leading the money list.
I
read that you wanted to win two tournaments before you were 20. When did you
set this goal?
CARLY: I won the Scottish and it gave me that
boost of confidence that I could go out there and win another. I set my goal to
get another one before I turned 20 so I had four or five events to do that. I
did it in the last chance I had so it was pretty special.
Carly,
you didn’t make it through qualifying school but now you have won two
tournaments. What was the turning point?
CARLY: At the start of the year I went to play in
my first Access Series event because we had a month off after Morocco and there
were no tournaments. I decided to just go play two Access events and the first
one I played, I won it. I think that just gave me a boost of confidence.
I was
practising in Dubai for a month at the start of the year and my golf was coming
along very nicely. I was feeling pretty happy with my game so it was just about
taking it into the tournament rounds.
I then played the Scottish and it was
just like, yeah, my game is finally coming together. I just tried to enjoy it
more this year. I felt like last year I was maybe putting too much pressure on myself
to perform and my golf didn’t perform to where it should be. Again, I found new
love, so I think that’s helped too.
Do
you still sometimes practise on the Comrie course your father built for you when you
were small?
CARLY: When I’m home, I do but I haven’t been home since
the Sunday of the Scottish so it will be eight weeks but when I’m home it’s
nice to go out there and practise. Go out there at any time of the day,
wearing whatever I want. It’s so my own and I can play my music really loud.
It’s nice to have that.
I think that’s where I benefited a lot when I was
younger, being able to achieve what I did when I was that age, with having the
golf course in my garden.
When
did you father build the course?
CARLY: I was probably about five years old when he
started. We have 100 acres so we have sheep and cows. My older brother got into
golf when he was about nine years old. When Wallace started to like the game my
dad decided to make a hole for him to practise at outside the house. That one
hole became three holes and then became five and then nine and now 15, so,
again with me, I liked golf too when I was that age and it became a hobby for
my dad. I think he loved making the golf course.
How often do you play that course?
CARLY: Because I’m hardly home, hardly ever nowadays, if
I’m honest. I’m also attached to Gleneagles so when I’m home I tend to go
there. Even when I’m home I’m not there for very long so I tend to arrange
games with friends on different courses in Scotland so I’m always on the move.
You
were an international gymnast, so how does it help being so strong and
flexible?
CARLY: It’s definitely helped my golf game,
especially with my distance and with my dad being a sportsman he wanted all of
us to try every sport when we were young. I was a swimmer also and I nearly
swam for Scotland.
Sport was a very big thing in our family. I’m so happy that
I went to gymnastics and spent six years doing that. It was definitely not
going to be a career path but it was something that I’m so grateful for.
Why
golf?
CARLY: I think I was a little bit too tall for
gymnastics and I think with my brother wanting to take golf as a career path. I got my first handicap when I was eight and I started to achieve more. I was
standing out more at golf because there were very few girls that played it in
my area and there were so many good gymnasts.
As well, when you’re a gymnast,
your career ends at 25 and with golf it can last a lifetime and plus there’s
money in golf as well.
I
read some articles that you might be thinking about going to the LPGA?
CARLY: I’ve always said that I wanted to find my
feet first on the Ladies European Tour before going out there. I think it’s quite difficult to
juggle both but now that I have a few years' exemption on this tour it does give
me the chance to go out there and not feel the pressure to try and keep my card
on this tour. Maybe I’m going to go and try next year.
What
are you going to do for your (20th) birthday?
CARLY: I’ve no idea. I’m playing the Pro Am and
going to the Pro Am dinner so I’m going to celebrate when I go home I think,
because I haven’t even celebrated for winning in Scotland! Spend some time with
the family and maybe go out with some friends.
You won
in Switzerland last week. Your caddie (and boyfriend) was a European Tour player. What was the
biggest help from him?
CARLY: To be honest, it was such a crazy week.
We’ve only been together three or four months. We’ve only played golf together practising once, so it was the first time
he’d seen me in a tournament round. And it was his first experience ever of caddying.
Everything seemed to be my week
because I got my first hole in one. I finally got to play with Laura Davies. I’ve been dying to play with Laura since I turned pro and I won the
tournament, so I think he was definitely my lucky charm for the week.
How
did you celebrate your win in Switzerland?
CARLY: I jumped five feet in the air three times. No back flips. I think I’m getting too old for that now.
Do
the wins give you a boost financially?
CARLY: It’s opened some doors. Think about how expensive a tour caddie
would be for the year and all those little things. It’s definitely a huge
weight off my shoulders and I feel I can benefit more throughout the year now.
Labels: LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR
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