Wednesday 1 December 2010

Quietly, Martin Kaymer becomes best young talent since Tiger

In four weeks, Martin Kaymer will turn 26. Young for any sport not named women's tennis, Kaymer has put together a pretty respectable resume for himself since turning pro in 2005.

Kaymer has shot 59 in a professional event, won seven European Tour events, been a member of a winning Ryder Cup team, moved up to third in the world rankings, won a major championship and, on Sunday, took home the Race to Dubai, the award given to the top European Tour member.

Along with that, Kaymer became the first European to win three successive tournaments since Nick Faldo did so in 1989, and just this season, went from "solid golfer that is on a short-list to win big events" to "greatest young player since Tiger Woods."

Yep, as us golf writers spent months and months rambling on about Rory McIlroy, Ryo Ishikawa, Anthony Kim and Rickie Fowler, Kaymer was going about his business. He finished in the top-eight in the last three majors in 2010 after missing the cut at the Masters, and his win at the PGA Championship really solidified his position.

Could Kaymer get to number one in the world at some point next season? Absolutely, he has all the tools to move there, and has played well enough in the past to keep the momentum going. He led the European Tour in stroke average this year, along with finishing in the top-35 in all the major statistical categories.

So why is it so easy to forget about Kaymer? Maybe it's because a lot of these other young players have a bit more appeal. While Martin appears to be a genuinely nice guy, you can't help but root for the McIlroys and Kims of the world.

Kaymer is just another quiet, solid player that could win six or seven majors before this is all said and done. Like I've written before, at this point, for a young player to win a major, they're probably going to have to fall into it. There is so much pressure on the leaders as they head into the final day, that without the experience of a win at one of the big four, it is really tough to control your emotions.

Kaymer got lucky at the PGA Championship, but if not for his solid play to end, he wouldn't have been there to land in a playoff to begin with. His win just means he's a step up on all the other young players, and he's now a force in golf that won't be going away anytime soon.

Related: Martin Kaymer, Rory McIlroy, Anthony Kim, Ryo Ishikawa, Rickie Fowler, Nick Faldo, Tiger Woods

Email Devil Ball Golf Buzz up! digg add to facebook delicious Twitter

« Prev With Presidents Cup invite, are Michael Jordan's priorities right?

Next » The European Tour will have 50 -- yes, 50 -- events in 2011

Golf Woods gets last chance for win this year Law & Order plot similar to Woods saga Couples: Woods will improve, revive Tour Manassero wins Euro PGA Rookie of Year Poulter's gaffe may lead to rule tweaks Sony Open to be aired live in 3-D World ranking award criteria may change More Golf News 10 Comments Post a Comment

1 - 10 of 10