
PUNE, Oct 24: Amish Jaitha has come a long way. From the disappointment of being a reserve in the 1998 Asian Games and Eisenhower Cup to the thrill of winning the Hong Kong Amateur event and being short-listed for the Numura Cup in Pakistan, Amish has plumbed the depths and scaled the heights of amateur golf in his five-year long career.
On Sunday, Amish8217;s career touched a new high, and it couldn8217;t be at a better location than his home8217; course 8212; the Poona Club 8212; where the 23-year-old swung his golfing irons with aplomb to canter to the title.
The triumph was his third-straight success on the Indian Golf Union Tour and although it did not guarantee him a place at Pusan where the next Asiad will be held in 2002, the accomplishment has formed the perfect launchpad for a switch to the professional circuit.
Amish made no secret of his plans to turn pro as he divulged his big plan to make golf his bread and butter.
Amish spoke at length with Pune Newsline, spelling out reasons for abandoning the amateur rat race while revealing his immediate aim of making it through the tough Asian PGA qualifying school scheduled for January in Malaysia.
How is the amateur scene in India?
Till the last season it was a very competitive field. Consider this: When I began playing senior amateur golf in 1995-96 winners could be singled out from four regulars. This continued for two years, then suddenly shot up to ten. Today the field is in a transitory phase after five of those ten turned pros. Currently, quite a few juniors show promise. Like Shiv Kapoor, Ashok Kumar, Manav Das and Sandeep Sayal. Incidentally Shiv was short-listed alongside me for the Numura Cup.
Are eight tourneys on the Indian Golf Union IGU calendar enough for the amateurs?
Not bad at all, but the events 8212; along with the tours abroad 8212; should be spread over six to seven months to bring out the best in them.
Is the IGU doing a good job?
Certainly. Earlier there were just two trips abroad with four players per tourney, but with the new setup under Dilip Thomas, the secretary, tours for both juniors and seniors have increased and coaching camps are held regularly.
What was your biggest disappointment in amateur golf?
Being on the Indian squad is every amateur golfer8217;s dream, so I suppose, missing out on the Bangkok-bound Asian Games squad was a bad experience. The disappointment was even greater as the second selection meet was scheduled in my hometown Pune.
What went wrong? Did you learn from that experience?
I was going through a lean patch that lasted six months. Every golfer has one sometime or other. I tried too hard and things fell through. In fact, later that month, I won the Hong Kong Amateur and finished second in the inaugural SAARC tourney in Chennai. I learned that one8217;s mental approach should be firm and carrying pressure into a tournament is not the right approach.
Tell us about your plans for the future?
This is my last amateur tourney. The season still has three more tourneys but I have decided that this is it. What8217;s left in amateur golf? Let me ask you something. Does anyone even know about Jeev Milkha Singh8217;s amateur background? All one talks of are his achievements on the pro circuit. Amateur golf is and should be a nursery, but there comes a point when one needs to break free and forge ahead.
Are you content with your achievements?
I have met my goals: Being No 1 in India, making the Numura Cup, winning an international tourney Hong Kong Open and dominating the amateur circuit. This tells me that the time is ripe for a switch.