England`s Oliver Wilson is looking forward to testing himself against the best golfers from the Asian Tour when the third edition of the USD 300,000 Indian Open begins at the Delhi Golf Club on Thursday.
|Last Updated: Apr 03, 2013, 05:52 PM IST|Source: Bureau
New Delhi: England`s Oliver Wilson is looking forward to testing himself against the best golfers from the Asian Tour when the third edition of the USD 300,000 Indian Open begins at the Delhi Golf Club on Thursday.
The 32-year-old Englishman has not won a title in his professional career but has finished second nine times on the European Tour and represented Europe at the 2008 Ryder Cup.
Wilson also came close to winning in Asia when he finished second behind Spain`s Sergio Garcia at the WGC-HSBC Champions in Shanghai in 2009. He is hopeful that his fortunes will change when he steps up to the tee this week.
"Indian golf as with the Asian Tour is improving each year and the players are getting better and better each year. It`s going to be a tough week and hopefully I`ll be up for it. This is a course which makes you think as you plot your way around. There`s no room for bad shots off the tee and you`ve got to keep the ball in play," said Wilson.
Wilson knows he will be up against a strong field led by favourite Jeev Milkha Singh of India and a host of other local hopes including Anirban Lahiri, Gaganjeet Bhullar and defending champion Digvijay Singh.
"Jeev along with the other guys are all good players. They`ve won all over the world and it`s not going to be easy. I just want to get into contention and hopefully be up there on the leaderboard on Sunday," said Wilson.
Having won four times in Europe and six times on the region`s premier Tour, Singh is arguably India`s most decorated golfer. However, it is a win at the Delhi Golf Club that has long eluded him and the 41-year-old hopes to end his barren spell at the venerable course this week.
"I haven`t won on this golf course as a professional yet. I hope to do well this week and get that monkey off my back," said Singh.
While a win at the Indian Open is a target, Singh also wants to follow the footsteps of fellow honorary member Y.E. Yang in winning a Major.
"Every player who plays golf wants to win a Major championship before his career is over. My goal is to get back into the top-50 this year and if I can do that I`ll have a good chance of winning the Major," said Singh.
The top-three players at the Indian Open will be extended invitations to the Asia-Pacific Open in Osaka, Japan in September.
IANS
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