Hero Open hopeful Eddie Pepperell turns to old putter after ditching cursed club

Home > News > Hero Open hopeful Eddie Pepperell turns to old putter after ditching cursed club
World no. 89 blamed new putter as he laboured to a closing 77 at the British Masters
Posted on
July 29, 2020
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The Editorial Team in
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Hero Open hopeful Eddie Pepperell turns to old putter after ditching cursed club
Eddie Pepperell has been forced into an equipment change for the Hero Open (Mike Egerton/PA)


Eddie Pepperell has reverted to an old putter for this weekโ€™s Hero Open after his most recent club found a watery grave at the end of the British Masters.


Pepperell struggled on the greens at Close House and his brother Joe, who is head professional at Oxford Golf Club, offered to let him trade in the putter he had recently bought from him after the second round.

The club survived until the final day but then took the blame for a closing round of 77 โ€“ which featured three double bogeys in a back nine of 42 โ€“ and was unceremoniously deposited in the pond in front of the 18th green.



โ€œI didnโ€™t take my brother up on his offer so that was a waste of ยฃ100,โ€ Pepperell joked. โ€œThe putter is very wet and I think it has been since I walked off the 18th green on Saturday evening.

โ€œI wasnโ€™t going to jump in (after it) โ€“ bit soon for that on the first week back.


โ€œIโ€™ve got my putter back that I used at the start of the year which I donโ€™t really know why I changed from it because I putted quite well with it. Itโ€™s back in the bag and will hopefully have some more luck with it this week.โ€

Pepperell has turned down the chance to make a late trip to San Francisco for next weekโ€™s US PGA Championship despite the lifting of quarantine requirements for players, caddies and essential personnel, but does now plan to take up his place Septemberโ€™s US Open at Winged Foot.

โ€œIf it was in New York I probably would have considered it more because itโ€™s half the distance,โ€ the world number 89 added. โ€œHaving not basically left my house for four months, to get on a plane to travel 12 hours across the world feels a little bit daunting actually.

Hero Open hopeful Eddie Pepperell turns to old putter after ditching cursed club
Eddie Pepperell (right) would have been without caddie Mick Doran at the US PGA Championship (Mike Egerton/PA)


โ€œAlso I spoke to my caddie Mick, who wasnโ€™t prepared to travel because his partner suffers a bit with her health sometimes and he didnโ€™t want to take that risk, so I would be going out there for one week with a different caddie, having not played a lot of golf and trying to do well in a major against guys who are clearly better prepared than I am at the moment.โ€

The Hero Open โ€“ formally the English Open โ€“ is making its return to the European Tour this week for the first time since 2002 and sees two players achieve significant personal milestones at the Forest of Arden.





Scotlandโ€™s David Drysdale will make his 500th start, while Miguel Angel Jimenez will become the outright record holder for appearances with his 707th, having matched Sam Torrance on 706 last week.

Drysdale is still seeking a first European Tour title after agonisingly losing out in a five-hole play-off to Jimenezโ€™s fellow Spaniard Jorge Campillo in Marchโ€™s Qatar Masters.

โ€œIf I was to pack up tomorrow, that is the one regret or one niggle that I would have, not winning on the European Tour,โ€ Drysdale said.

Hero Open hopeful Eddie Pepperell turns to old putter after ditching cursed club
Scotlandโ€™s David Drysdale will make his 500th European Tour start in the Hero Open (Mike Egerton/PA)


โ€œItโ€™s amazing how a couple of young lads came out on tour and then won in their first five or six starts this season already, and I have been at it for 20 years and havenโ€™t won, so the win is the thing that I am after.

โ€œI am proof that it isnโ€™t easy, but I certainly wouldnโ€™t feel fulfilled as a golf professional if I didnโ€™t win on the European Tour. The shots I hit down the stretch in Qatar, I know I can hit these shots under pressure, so I just need to get myself in a position sooner rather than later and see what happens.

โ€œIt was a fantastic opportunity for me, but Iโ€™ve had five months to get over it now. Hopefully I can put myself in that position again ASAP.โ€

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