News

Bernhard Langer: The Waiting Game

Photo by Michael Cohen/Getty Images

WITH THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC, MANY ASPECTS OF EVERYDAY LIFE ARE AT AN EERIE STANDSTILL, INCLUDING TOUR GOLF. GERMAN LEGEND BERNHARD LANGER SPOKE TO ROBIN BARWICK ABOUT PUTTING HIS PROLIFIC CAREER ON PAUSE

There are far more important things in life than playing golf,” starts Bernhard Langer, talking from his home in Boca Raton, Florida, “even though golf is my profession.”

Since the end of March, social distancing has taken hold throughout much of Florida. The 62-year-old and his wife Vikki have just become grandparents for the first time. Their oldest daughter Jackie had given birth to a son at the start of April; both mother and baby are well.

Langer is elated but he is yet to meet his first grandchild in person. “Only Jackie’s husband is allowed to be in the hospital with her,” says Langer. Rules are rules, and even a double Masters champion cannot head to the hospital in this era of mass grounding.

Langer has not played tournament golf on the PGA Tour Champions since the first week of March. Mileage on his Mercedes-Benz has dropped considerably and it currently sits in a garage that has become, in recent weeks, particularly well-ordered and uncluttered. “A total overhaul would be a good thing,” admits Langer.

Langer is not fazed too much by the unscheduled break to his season, brought on by the Covid-19 pandemic, but not knowing what the future holds is unsettling.

“I have had breaks of several weeks without competitive golf before and when I go skiing, I might not touch a golf club for a week or 10 days. So far this does not feel unusual in terms of playing golf but if it goes on for another month or two then it will be very unusual,” says the two-times Masters champion.

In his Mercedes-Benz GLE

With the Masters now slated for November, Langer will certainly be there. He has not missed the event since a thumb injury left him side-lined in 2011, when Germany’s greatest golfer still made the journey to Georgia for Augusta National’s annual Champions Dinner on the Tuesday evening. Before 2011, the last Masters Langer missed was in 1983.

“I have never played Augusta in the fall,” says Langer who picked up Green Jackets in 1985 and 1993. “I hear the conditions will be very similar to April, just with not so many flowers in bloom but that’s okay – hopefully I can keep my golf ball out of the flowerbeds anyway!”

Even at 62, it was business as usual for Langer on the PGA Tour Champions before Covid-19 struck, on a tour which he has largely dominated for the past 13 years. In five starts in 2020, Langer posted three top-10s and a victory in the Cologuard Classic in Tucson, Arizona.  In the final round at Tucson, Langer made nine birdies and shot 65 to convert a four-shot deficit into a two-shot victory. The win keeps alive Langer’s record of having won at least once each season on the PGA Tour Champions since turning 50 in 2007, which now extends through 14 seasons.

“I was thrilled with my start to the season,” says Langer. “I actually had a chance to win the first four tournaments. I ended up winning one and finishing in the top six in the other three. I am excited about where my game was and hopefully I won’t be too rusty when we go back out.”

By nature, the PGA Tour Champions – with a minimum age of 50 – should get tougher for a golfer each year, as age takes its inevitable toll and with younger players qualifying each season. But Langer is age defying. He is on top of the tour’s money list at the time of the enforced break in the season, looking down the ranking upon some younger Major-winning names including Ernie Els (aged 50), Fred Couples (60), Retief Goosen (51) and Jose Maria Olazabal (54). Langer’s win in Tucson gives him a PGA Tour Champions total of 41, just four shy of Hale Irwin’s career record of 45 set back in 2007, and which looked utterly insurmountable for more than a decade. But Langer just doesn’t know when to stop.

“I don’t contemplate Hale’s record too much,” reflects Langer. “My goal is to get better and improve my game and I know that if I can do that and play close to my best, then I can win tournaments and I can win Majors and reach 45 Champions Tour wins.

“But my focus is just to be the best Bernhard Langer I can.”

Keeping the rust off Langer’s game could be easier said than done this spring. The family home for 25 years has been at the idyllic Woodfield Country Club, a community defined by carefully mown edges, elegant water fountains and orderly rows of palm trees, but the golf course that winds its way through the neighborhood is deserted – the entire course and practice facilities are ‘OB’.

“We have a wonderful fitness centre about 300 yards from our house which I usually use every day when I am at home, but they have had to close that down for social distancing, so I have had to be a little creative,” says Langer, who plans his own fitness routines without a personal trainer. “I can swing a club a little bit because I have a heavy club – a seven iron with lead down the shaft – and I swing that in my fitness room. I also have a treadmill and exercise bike.

“I have mats to stretch on and do body-weight exercises and I am learning to do some workouts in the pool which is actually better for my knees and my shoulders.

“You need to be creative and use what you have and everyone has that opportunity. You can do sit-ups, push-ups and pull-ups and benching just using your body weight. You don’t need a lot of other stuff. I also have a little putting green in our backyard and I can chip around that too.”

Here’s a little reminder to Langer’s rivals on the PGA Tour Champions: don’t rest on your laurels for long during this break from competition, because you know your money leader will be fresh and as ready as he can be when tour golf resumes. Langer gets asked all the time what the secret is to his enduring success, but this is not a fairy-tale.

“There are a lot of things that need to come together to win out there,” says Langer. “You need to be fit and healthy to swing the club how you want to swing it, you have to be determined and you have to practice every aspect of the game.

“You also need to control your emotions. There is so much that contributes to being successful.”

It will be fascinating to see what happens next on tour and no one wants to wait long to find out but, as Langer says, for the time being, “There are far more important things in life than playing golf.”

Bernhard Langer is a brand ambassador for Mercedes-Benz


Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

To Top