Haeggman hungry for competitive return

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Set to make his over-50s debut at tomorrow, just two days after turning 50.
Posted on
August 29, 2019
by
The Editorial Team in
Estimated reading time: 3 minutes

Joakim Haeggman has wasted no time in embarking on his Staysure Tour career and is set to make his over-50s debut at The Sinclair Invitational at Hanbury Manor Marriott Hotel and Country Club tomorrow, just two days after turning 50.

The Sinclair Invitational - Haeggman hungry for return to competition
Credit: Getty Images

The Swede has not played in a European Tour-operated event since the 2014 Nordea Masters but has returned to professional golf at the earliest possible opportunity since becoming eligible to tee it up on the Staysure Tour.

The Sinclair Invitational โ€“ renamed this year after founders Corrine and Duncan Sinclair โ€“ offers a ยฃ400,000 prize fund which places it in the top tier of tournaments with 4,500 Order of Merit points on offer.

Haeggman, who became the first Swede to compete in The Ryder Cup when he formed part of Bernard Gallacherโ€™s team at The Belfry Resort in 1993, admits he has been counting down the days to this moment and feels that despite a long break from competitive golf, his game is in good shape.


โ€œIโ€™ve been waiting for this moment for quite a long time now,โ€ he said. โ€œI suppose most guys who are golfers want to do this when they turn 50 so for me, it was an easy choice to come here.

โ€œThe gameโ€™s not bad. Weโ€™ll find out because I think the shots are there and the game is pretty close to what it used to be, which is good for me, but the short game needs to be there, the putting needs to be there and the scoring shots need to be there.

โ€œTo have the scorecard in the back pocket is going to be a bit different from running around at your home club.โ€

After turning professional in 1989, Haeggman won three times on the European Tour and twice on the Challenge Tour before leaving the world of professional golf behind in 2014 and moving to a different sector within the game.

โ€œI have actually been a Sales Representative for John Deere where I was responsible for a third of Sweden,โ€ he said. โ€œIโ€™ve been doing that, selling golf machinery, and also done a bit of travelling and thatโ€™s it really but when it came down to it, I thought โ€˜Iโ€™d like to go and play againโ€™.

โ€œIt really started for me back in November of last year. I left my daily job and I got back into the gym and took a few months trying to get myself back into shape, well, some kind of shape anyway!

โ€œIโ€™m sure weโ€™ve all got our own aches and pains out here and Iโ€™m just trying to limit mine and get on with it. Itโ€™s obviously one of the reasons why I halted and stopped playing on the European Tour.โ€

As Haegmann took time to hone his touch on the practice green at Hanbury Manor early on Thursday morning, the Swede was interrupted by a number of friendly faces who he had not seen for many years.

โ€œItโ€™s great to see everyone again,โ€ he said. โ€œI had dinner with Mark James last night and itโ€™s nice to sit down and see everybody and have a chat again.

โ€œI think the Staysure Tour will offer me a lot of enjoyment, a chance to play golf and hopefully Iโ€™ll be able to make a living out of doing this. Iโ€™ve said to myself Iโ€™ll play this year and then at least a couple more years, so weโ€™ll see where I get to.โ€ The action at Hanbury Manor will begin at 9.30am local time, with Haeggman playing alongside Americaโ€™s Bob May at 10.00am.

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