Harrison Crowe, the Australian amateur player, is not short of inspiration as he prepares to tee it up in two of golf’s biggest and most prestigious championships.
This month, he is looking forward to The Amateur Championship, being held at Hillside for the first time since 2011, when fellow Australian Bryden Macpherson from Melbourne, claimed the trophy.
Next month, he will play in The Open at Royal Liverpool, courtesy of his victory in the Asia-Pacific Amateur Championship last October. Up for grabs is the Claret Jug that another Australian, Cameron Smith from Brisbane, lifted last summer.
Over the years, Australia has had many successes on the links of the UK, from Peter Thomson and Kel Nagle to Greg Norman and Ian Baker-Finch, but it is the current Champion Golfer of the Year that Crowe, a 21-year-old from Sydney, is most keen to emulate.
Major inspiration
In another perk of that victory in Thailand last autumn, Crowe was invited to this year’s Masters Tournament, where he played a practice round with Smith. He sees a little of himself in his fellow Australian and looks up to him.
“Even apart from the mullet that we’ve both got, I can see some similarities,” smiled Crowe. “Hearing how he came through the amateur system in Australia, the way he played and the results he got, I can relate to him. People close to him at that time say he was a real competitor and that he hated losing. He’s got that grit and he has shown it multiple times on tour.
“I am a bit like him, but I would love to be more so. What he did at The Open last year was incredible. And having that practice round with him at Augusta National enabled me to see just how well he chips and putts. It’s amazing. He’s got the best short game I’ve ever seen.”
Nor was Smith the only big name with whom Crowe rubbed shoulders at Augusta. In his first two rounds, he played with former champion Larry Mize and fellow Australian Min Woo Lee. In practice, he was joined by compatriots Adam Scott and Jason Day.