Raymie remembers: Burns on Challenge Tour Order of Merit win 30 years later

Raymie remembers: Burns on Challenge Tour Order of Merit win 30 years later

Ronan MacNamara
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Raymond Burns (Photo by Caroline Norris/Getty Images)

Shuffling through lists of Irish golfing accolades over the last three decades you will do well to find anyone who has achieved something that Pádraig Harrington, Darren Clarke, Graeme McDowell, Rory McIlroy and Shane Lowry have not. Step forward Raymond Burns.

It’s 30-years this season since the Banbridge native became the first Irish player to win the Challenge Tour Order of Merit and he remains the only Irishman to achieve such a feat.

Burns did it his own way too, playing 16 events in the 1994 season, compared to the 27 Marco Penge played last term. Burns earned a comfortable €44,000 while Penge walked away with €190,000. A sign of the times.

The new Head PGA Professional at Malahide Golf Club can still proudly boast to be among some big names like Tommy Fleetwood, Edoardo Molinari, Henrik Stenson and Thomas Bjorn to have won the season title on Europe’s second-tier.

“It’s a huge feat and I remember it like it was yesterday,” reflects Burns who put fierce dedication into his practice off the course and preparing for events.

“I turned professional and went for my card in 1993 and just missed out and went on the Challenge Tour. I decided to take a caddie with me, nobody had ever taken a caddie onto the Challenge Tour. I decided to play less events, because I wanted to practice and bring my game with me. If you don’t bring your game with you, you won’t find it there.

“You need self belief and the only way you get that is if you put the practice in you can bring that to an event. If you hit enough 8-irons to eight feet you’ll hit enough 8-irons to eight feet under pressure, if you hole enough putts from four feet in practice you’ll get them because you’ve prepared for them.

“I practiced and practiced and practiced. I just kept practicing, I was obsessed. I do find the amount of guys did years ago was an awful lot more than what I see some of the kids do now. The main reason maybe for that is we didn’t have the internet, iPhones, Netflix and all these different things.

“I enjoyed practicing. I hit an outrageous amount of golf balls, that’s what I enjoyed doing. Growing up it was non-stop sport for me whether it was soccer, Gaelic football, or hurling.”

The County Down man enjoyed a glittering junior career picking up the 1987 World Schools Championship before progressing on to win all four provincial Boys Championships in 1989 just one of two boys to ever achieve such a feat. In 1990 (aged 15) Burns added the Irish Boys Championship to his already trophy-laden CV.

Burns also performed well outside of Ireland, reaching the Quarter-Final of the British Amateur Championship and he began to enjoy his travels across the world, rubbing shoulders with the games top amateur golfers which gave him a taste for competing at the top level.

In 1992 he represented Great Britain and Ireland in the Eisenhower Trophy in Vancouver where he played alongside Welshman Bradley Dredge and it was this week that gave him the belief that he could shoot the scores to rub shoulders with the best.

During the event Burns came up against 2005 US Open champion Michael Campbell, former world number one David Duval, 1997 Open champion Justin Leonard, Ignacio Garrido, Niclas Fasth and the late Fredrik Andersson Hed.

Burns turned professional shortly after playing in the 1993 Walker Cup for GB&I, a team that included Pádraig Harrington. He enjoyed great success on the Challenge Tour, winning two events on his way to graduating to the European Tour as the 1994 Order of Merit winner.

‘Raymie’ registered four top-10s on the European Tour including an 8th place finish on his debut at the Dubai Desert Classic and he maintained his place on Tour through to the end of the 1998 season.

After four solid years on the European Tour, Burns began to look towards the future and completed his PGA qualifications in 2002. During his later years on Tour, he bounced between competitive golf and working at Newlands Golf Club before eventually stepping away to focus on a career as a PGA Professional.

Life on Tour can be lonely, just read Chris Kirk’s story on how he combats loneliness on the road when travelling on the PGA Tour. But Burns never felt lonely and his labour of love never became a chore even during the days when he struggled.

“For me, golf was never boring I enjoyed it, I enjoyed the craic we had going to the golf club, in the clubhouse,” the 50-year-old explains.

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