Lowry gets official EurAsia Cup call up
Shane Lowry has made his first European team after being named by captain Darren Clarke as one of the ten automatic qualifiers to take on Asia in the second edition of the EurAsia Cup presented by DRB-HICOM.
The Offaly man joins Race to Dubai runner up Danny Willett and Ryder Cup players Victor Dubuisson and Ross Fisher in the line-up
Clarke will add his two captain’s picks to the final line-up in two weeks’ time to compete against Jeev Milkha Singh’s Asia team at Glenmarie Golf and Country Club, in Kuala Lumpur, from January 15-17, 2016.
Set for his first run as a captain, Clarke said: “I am delighted with the make-up of the team. It may be a relatively young one, but it is extremely strong and packed with experience. All the players have tasted success and are very talented so there is every reason to go to Kuala Lumpur with confidence.
“The EurAsia Cup also offers many of our players the opportunity to enhance their prospects of making next September’s Ryder Cup team. It’s also a good chance for me to see how comfortable they are with and in a team environment.
“Team Europe have always had a very strong team ethos and I will expect nothing less this time. We know the strength of the Asian side and the difficulty of the task facing us, but I also know our team will be up to the challenge.”
Europe first 10 for the EurAsia Cup
- Kristoffer Broberg
- Victor Dubuisson
- Ross Fisher
- Matthew Fitzpatrick
- Søren Kjeldsen
- Shane Lowry
- Andy Sullivan
- Bernd Wiesberger
- Danny Willett
- Chris Wood
World Number 20 Willett, who pushed Rory McIlroy to the wire in season-long Race to Dubai after two victories in the 2015 campaign, is one of five Englishman to qualify as the leading ten available players from the final 2015 Race to Dubai rankings.
The 28 year old is joined by Fisher, who has plenty of match play pedigree after representing Europe in the 2010 Ryder Cup and playing in the Seve Trophy twice; alongside Dubuisson who was a revelation in his Ryder Cup debut at Gleneagles last year, notching two and a half points out of a possible three, after representing Europe in the inaugural EurAsia Cup earlier that year.
Joining them are two-time European Tour winner Chris Wood, who also featured in the Seve Trophy in 2009 and 2013; Andy Sullivan, a three-time winner in 2015 who pushed McIlroy all the way in last week’s DP World Tour Championship, Dubai, and 21 year old Matthew Fitzpatrick, who recorded ten top ten finishes in his rookie European Tour season, including a brilliant breakthrough win in the British Masters supported by Sky Sports.
The quintet is join by Lowry, who claimed the biggest win of his career to date with victory in the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational in August; Austrian Bernd Wiesberger, who captured his third European Tour title in July’s Alstom Open de France; four-time European Tour winner Søren Kjeldsen of Denmark, who lifted the Dubai Duty Free Irish Open Hosted by the Rory Foundation in May and who has featured in two Seve Trophy matches, and Sweden’s Kristoffer Broberg, who claimed his maiden European Tour title in the BMW Masters two weeks ago.
Clarke’s team will attempt to win the EurAsia Cup for the first time after the inaugural contest, also played at Glenmarie Golf and Country Club in March 2014, ended in a thrilling 10-10 draw.
With the teams increased from ten players to 12, the second edition will now feature 24 matches rather than 20, with day one consisting of six fourball matches, followed by six foursomes matches on day two and 12 singles matches on the final day.
The winning team will share prize money of US$3.6 million while the runners-up will share US$1.2 million.
Europe’s opposition in Malaysia will be finalised next month, with Singh’s team formed from the leading four available Asian players from the 2015 Asian Tour Order of Merit as of December 14, the leading four eligible and available Asian players from the Official World Golf Ranking as of December 14, and four captain’s picks.
Meanwhile, according to the Daily Telegraph, Clarke has chosen Denmark's Thomas Bjorn as his first Ryder Cup assistant captain.