Jazz eyes International team place

Jazz eyes International team place

New skipper says Thai doing some great stuff

Jazz Janewattananond plays a shot during a tournament this year. afp GIUSEPPE CACACE
Jazz Janewattananond plays a shot during a tournament this year. afp GIUSEPPE CACACE

Thailand's Jazz Janewattananond intends to fight his way into the 2021 Presidents Cup after former Masters champion Trevor Immelman was named the new International Team captain this week.

Jazz, the reigning Asian Tour No.1 following a four-win season last year, missed qualifying automatically for the International Team by two rungs on the team ranking and was subsequently overlooked as Ernie Els selected PGA Tour rookie of the year Im Sung-Jae, Joaquin Nieman, Adam Hadwin and Jason Day as his captain's picks.

Day later withdrew with injury and was replaced by An Byeong-Hun.

With five Asians -- South Korea's Im and An, China's Li Haotong, Taiwan's CT Pan and Japan's Hideki Matsuyama -- featuring prominently, the International Team narrowly lost 16-14 to a Tiger Woods-led US Team in December.

The next encounter will take place in Charlotte, North Carolina next year.

"I was supporting the team. Everyone was telling me that I should have been there playing but I said no," said the 24-year-old Jazz.

"I didn't feel bad at all. Ernie has been in this game for a long time and he knows what's best for the team. He saw that I was not ready yet. The International Team played really good and I was rooting for them. Yeah, I want to try to get into the 2021 team... there's a long road ahead but I'll be trying. I want to contribute to the International Team."

Jazz, who is ranked 39th in the world, has caught Immelman's attention.

The South African spoke highly of the young Thai as well as the impact made by Asian golfers over the years in the prestigious team competition.

"You've got Jazz Janewattananond playing over there on the Asian Tour doing some great stuff and he's starting to get opportunities now in the biggest tournaments here in the States," said Immelman, who served as one of the four assistants of Els last year.

"You look at the history of our team going back to [Shigeki] Maruyama and [Joe] Ozaki and so many other great Asian players, KJ [Choi] included. We had a number of Asian players on our team and they performed brilliantly.

"I thought they [Asians] responded fantastically to the team environment, and it really was a close-knit team, and to see how they went out on the golf course, accepted the challenge of playing against the best players in the world, accepted the challenge of learning on a brand new golf course in Royal Melbourne that is very intricate and very difficult, I really was impressed.

"The Asian players have always been a very, very important part of our team make-up. They will continue to be so. You look at a guy like Jazz, who's climbed his way into the top-50 in the world rankings and playing some beautiful golf in his own right, him and a number of other guys, you look at Li, Pan and An, we can go down the list of great Asian players who really are starting to make their mark in the world of golf."

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