Brisbane(Australia)- Yes, Cameron Smith’s dad was kicking himself he didn’t make the journey to St. Andrews to see his son win the 150th British Open. In his championship winner’s news conference, Smith mentioned that his father, Des, made the late decision not to fly from Australia just for a week and “he’s kicking himself now. I wish he were here, too.”
Instead, Des Smith had to watch on TV from the other side of the world as his son started the final round four shots behind before completing the best closing round the Old Course had ever seen to win his first major title by one stroke.
Father and son spoke on the phone just after the new champion had signed his card.
“I just told him I was proud of him and what a great achievement it was for him,” Des Smith told 7 Network’s Sunrise program. “Then I broke down crying, so I couldn’t talk too much.
“We’ve been golfing buddies since he was about three.”
It all finished in the early hours of Monday morning local time in Australia’s east coast city of Brisbane, where the first Australian since 1993 to win the British Open finally got to be the most talked about Cameron Smith in his home state of Queensland. The Open winner in 1993 was Greg Norman; his victory came a month before Smith was born.
A TV anchor on Channel 9’s Today Show introduced news of Smith’s win by saying: “Now this is the golfer, Cameron Smith, winning golf’s biggest prize with a come-from-behind victory for the ages at the British Open.”
For over a decade, a rugby league player, the former captain of Queensland’s so-called State of Origin dynasty and of Australia’s national team, held the top rung among the Cameron Smiths worldwide.
Smith, the golfer with the flowing mullet and the so-called larrikin sense of humour, has credited the never-say-die spirit of those rugby league teams as his inspiration when he needs to return.
Des Smith said the pair had spoken after the third round, when his son didn’t have a great day with the putter, dropped out of the lead and was confident he was “very mentally strong.”
“Going into the last day, I still thought he was a big chance. He was four back. He always makes a lot of birdies,” Des Smith said. “We just needed to make them on the biggest day of all. He went ahead and done it.”
He certainly did, charging back into contention with a run of five birdies to start the back nine.
“The whole country is proud of him, to be honest,” the proud dad proclaimed. “It’s been a while since we got an Open championship.”
The Australian Broadcasting Corp. cast Smith’s story as one of a “fearless Queenslander whose humble beginnings made a champion.”
Des Smith started doing TV interviews from the Wantima Country Club, an understated, no-frills golf club on the green northern fringes of the 2032 Olympic city, as more than 100 veteran players started their regular Monday competition.
The club expected more than a few beers to be poured in celebration. So Cameron Smith, who wondered how many beers might fit into the silver claret jug handed to the British Open champion, won’t be the only one raising a toast.
Ken McKay, a member and the former junior program coordinator at the Wantima course, said the most challenging thing for him watching the final round was keeping quiet enough not to wake up everyone else in the house.
“I don’t know how he keeps his nerves of steel because I was pretty much on the edge of my seat the whole night,” McKay told ABC Australia.
McKay helped get the club’s Cameron Smith Junior Classic started in 2017 as a qualifying tournament for the Greg Norman Junior Masters event. Smith, who has travelled back from the U.S. to support the game, has a significant and loyal following at the club.
“He’s grounded. He’s such a nice bloke — always has been — very giving of his time to both the members and the juniors,” McKay said. “He doesn’t let things get to his head.”
Smith was just the fifth Australian to win the British Open — joining five-time champion Peter Thomson, Kel Nagle, two-time champion Greg Norman and Ian Baker-Finch on the list.
Thomson in 1955 and Nagle in 1960 were the only Australians to win it at St. Andrews.
Thomson’s son, Andrew, said the timing was perfect for another Australian winner, coming on the same day he’d paid tribute to his father, who died in 2018.