It Ain't Over 'til It's Over Hopes Haeggman
Saturday, 24 July 2010 20:55
One of the good guys in Swedish golf is Joakim Haeggman. You will be hard put to find anyone more enthusiastic about playing the game of golf. Swedish Golf Online is a little biased about Joakim, as we have had the pleasure of witnessing that passion first hand. We were in the same group with Haeggman at a casual scramble event. Not only was he sociable, but his patience with the amateurs he played with (like me) was greatly appreciated. He was as excited about a good shot as any of we golfers are. He was generous with his time and his stories and anecdotes of the Tour life. Knowing this man is a pleasure indeed.
He has played on the tour for over 20 years. He is as one of three Swedish players who have won the Scandinavian Masters. He has won on the Challenge Tour and the Asian Tour. But now, Joakim Haeggman, is reaching the back side of his career as he formulates plans for his future. His tour status has been uncertain for some time. Is it time to take a new road? He doesn't know, but he is clear about one objective: he will play full time on the European Tour again.
In 2008, Haeggman spent a year on the Challenge Tour, but that is something he will not go back to. The car travel to events on bad golf courses, with little prize money and no audience was not working for him. He felt no "buzz" so it is no longer an option. Now, it's all or nothing.
"I want to come back and play golf at the Tour level. Otherwise,for my part,this may be it," he says. When you go out on the driving range in the morning and realize that half of the players could be my kids. No, it's not for me.
The player from Kalmar, Sweden has just logged his third round at the Scandinavian Masters out on a windy Bro Hof and he is not very happy with his round. Still, he's happy to play the contest and is looking forward to Sunday's round. Although he is far down the leader board, Haeggman knows that as a former winner of the tournament, he has some allure to attract an audience even though he starts playing early in the morning. It is on the Big Tour that he needs to be.
"I'll play damn well in the qualifiers in the autumn, so I will be back on tour again. Maybe I should qualify for the U.S. tour this fall, as well.
What if the the qualifying route doesn't work out, what then?
"I don't know. I have still a number of competitions on the European Tour that I get to play. So, I must decide if I can let it go or not."
After suffering an injury, he is now in great physical shape. Or as great a shape one who is 40 plus can be after playing golf at the highest level for over 20 years. He laughed a bit at the position he and friends such as Jesper Parnevik and Per Ulrik Johansson are now in.
"We have been playing for some years now, and it is beginning to affect us. This spring, it was a broken vertebra in Jesper's back and the synovial fluid leaked into the buttocks and the sciatic nerve. I got so-called foot drop, and walked around like a pensioner. But I'm back to me, again.
The health is only temporary,he well knows. The question is how long can the body go?
"The problem is that it breaks down in the gym. It breaks when you practice. A drive bends the bones in the back. You jump wrong and there goes a calf muscle."
But right now he is feeling good about everything and now will pay some Challenge Tour Races this fall to tune-up the game before European Tour qualifying. And qualifying for the U.S. Tour?
We'll let you know.
Edited from the original story in Golf.se by Karin Klarström
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