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Oliver Wilson is doing very nicely,
thank you. At the age of 28 he has
already won more than £2million
on the golf course, certainly enough
to become a Weybridge resident, has
made a sensational debut in the Ryder
Cup, and last month qualified for
his first Masters at Augusta National.
In the five seasons since turning
pro Wilson has twice returned cards
of 64 and set course records in Ireland
and China. He now sits comfortably
at 42nd in the world rankings.
Such is Wilson's stock that this week
the sponsors of the BMW PGA Championship,
the European Tour's flagship tournament
which gets under way over the West
Course at Wentworth tomorrow, invited
him and defending title holder Miguel
Angel Jimenez for a boy's day out
at Brands Hatch.
"They even flew us down by helicopter,
can you imagine that," he said.
"Then I got driven round the
circuit by the world touring car champion,
Andy Priaulx. That was, like, awesome."
Yes, everything in Wilson's world
is coming up roses. Almost everything.
"Yeah, I know," he said,
anticipating the reminder of what
he doesn't have. "There is just
that one thing missing from my resume.
My first win."
Eight times he has endured the frustration
of finishing runner-up, including
at Wentworth this time last year when
he held a one-shot lead with two holes,
both par fives, to go.
European golf's most prestigious title,
and the first prize of almost £600,000
that went with it, were within Wilson's
grasp. Then he let it all go by firing
into the trees off the 17th tee for
a bogey six.
Jimenez pounced to force a play-off,
which the veteran Spaniard won at
the second extra hole.
That kind of defeat would have knocked
the stuffing out of many of his peers.
But Wilson is philosophical about
past setbacks and optimistic about
what the future holds.
He said: "At a tournament like
the PGA, with the quality of field,
you simply can't afford to make mistakes
like I did coming down the stretch.
At the time it was frustrating but
I quickly got over it. Overall, it
was a great week for me and I learned
a lot.
"To be honest, I'm very happy
with the way things are going for
me. I feel like I'm getting closer
all the time to where I want to be
technically."
There is nothing wrong with Wilson's
temperament, as he proved at Valhalla
last September when he became the
first player to make a European team
without a title to his name.
Competing in the second day foursomes
alongside Henrik Stenson, he battled
back from four down to beat home heroes
Phil Mickelson and Anthony Kim two
and one.
"I know I can win majors,"
said Wilson. "I know I can win
big tournaments like the PGA. But
even if I was to win this week, just
one title wouldn't be enough for me.
I feel like I want to look back on
my career and have at least double
digits in the winning column.
"I really believe that when it
does finally happen for me, a lot
will follow. I've just got to keep
doing the same things I've always
done and the door will open. I know
it will."
Wilson has an early start in tomorrow's
first round, joining Dane Soren Kjeldsen
and Richard Sterne, of South Africa,
on the first tee at 7.50am.
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