Why Rai winning his first major in Rocky’s backyard feels fitting

It feels fitting that an underdog who uses what some consider unorthodox methods was last man standing at a slugfest of a US PGA Championship held in Rocky Balboa’s backyard.

While Aaron Rai waited for his arm to be held aloft in Philadelphia as a first-time major champion, the 31-year-old Englishman could hear Eye of the Tiger – the unmistakeable theme tune written for Rocky III – playing in the background as he received congratulations in the Aronimink clubhouse.

Rai doesn’t punch hanging slabs of meat with his bare knuckles while training, like the iconic boxing character.

But he is rarely bare knuckled on the golf course. Unusually he wears two gloves instead of the one which virtually everyone else across the world – professional and amateurs alike – wears for enhanced grip.

“I just happened to be given two gloves and I got into the habit of wearing them,” Rai said of his early forays into the game.

“Then, a few weeks down the line, my dad forgot to put the two gloves in the bag so I had to play with one. It was terrible.

“I couldn’t play, I couldn’t feel the grip, so I’ve always stuck with the two gloves ever since.”

The quirky look is only one part of what makes Rai’s fascinating journey from Wolverhampton to the summit of the golfing world different.

In fact, it was only by accident – and literally because of one – that Rai took up golf at all.

Playing with his older brother’s hockey sticks as a toddler ended in Rai copping a nasty bruise on his head, leading to his mum Dalvir heading to the shops for plastic versions which she thought would be safer.

However, she came back with plastic golf clubs instead – and changed the course of her son’s life.

Rai harboured hopes of becoming a Formula One driver as a youngster, but it was an idea which was quickly overtaken.

“I used to love watching [seven-time Formula 1 champion] Michael Schumacher, and it ran so deep that in junior golf competitions I wore Ferrari T-shirts and jumpers,” Rai told BBC Sport in 2018.

“That was my thing even from a young age. But since eight or nine, it became very quickly just about golf.”

Rai’s ability became apparent as soon as he started regularly going to the 3 Hammers Golf Complex in Wolverhampton at the age of four.

Footage exists of a five-year-old Rai demonstrating his prodigious talent to local BBC television reporters after winning his first tournament.

Rai shot a five-under 65 on Sunday to finish nine-under overall and beat a star-studded leaderboard to the Wanamaker Trophy by three shots [Getty Images]

Rai’s dad Amrik used to take him to 3 Hammers for lessons with instructor Darren Prosser, with the youngster going out on the par-three course afterwards to put what had been taught into practice.

Rai already possessed a rare tunnel-visioned focus – a trait which set him apart from the rest at Aronimink – for a player so callow, says Prosser.

By the age of 10, Rai was coached by Andrew Proudman – who also worked in the 3 Hammers pro shop – in tandem with another Wolverhampton pro Piers Ward, and the pair still guide Rai to this day.

When Prosser’s path crossed with Rai again several years later – at a regional qualifier for the Open Championship in Coventry – he realised the teenager had rapidly developed into a potential tour prospect.

“I hardly recognised him,” Prosser told BBC Radio 5 Live. “In such a short time he’d shot up and he was a really strong guy.

“He was right on it physically and mentally and you thought he was he was ready to go professional then.”

Rai hailed the impact of his “mentors” Proudman and Ward in his post-victory news conference at Aronimink, but the most gratitude eternally goes to his parents for their sacrifices in helping him reach the pinnacle of his chosen career.

An emotional Rai said it was “hard to express everything they mean” to him.

His father Amrik quit his job to devote more time to Rai’s development on the course, with his mother Dalvir – who is of Kenyan-Indian descent – working long hours to support things financially.

“I can’t put into words how much they’ve done in terms of the support, in terms of the care, in terms of love. I wouldn’t be here without them at all,” said Rai.

Rai credited the technical and mental advice provided by his wife Gaurika Bishnoi, who is also a professional golfer, for helping him triumph in Aronimink [Getty Images]

As one of very few British Asians who have played professionally, Rai told BBC Sport in 2018 that pursuing golf professionally might not always have been met with encouragement from some parents of Indian descent.

Speaking then, he said his folks always encouraged him to pursue his dream – especially his father, who turned down a tennis scholarship in the United States at the age of 20.

“Being from an Indian family was different back in those days,” said Rai, who turned professional in 2012.

“It was more about getting an education and a proper job, and sport or tennis at that time was never really seen as a proper job.

“That pressure to have certain kinds of career was probably there from the previous generation and certain career paths in our culture are still more walked upon.”

Since that interview, Rai has developed into a strong role model – not just for British Asians but aspiring golfers from all backgrounds.

Rai had to graft on the developmental circuits before earning his European Tour and PGA Tour cards, but the success eventually arrived with tournament wins on both sides of the Atlantic.

Missing the cuts in his first two majors were also experiences from which he learned and, after never finishing in the top 10 at one of the sport’s four biggest tournaments, Rai’s hard graft has paid off spectacularly.

“You won’t find one person on the property who’s not happy for him,” said six-time major champion Rory McIlroy.

“Rarely do you feel like people work way harder than you,” two-time major champion Xander Schaffeule said about Rai.

“I feel like I’ve played a pretty good amount of time and Aaron is always there. He’s always in the gym. He’s always on the range.

“I think that’s what it’s about to be a major champion. You put the work in when nobody’s looking.”

Rai has finally been rewarded after a patient and precise performance at an attritional Aronimink.

Like the rest of the field, he had to take some punches from a course set-up which wanted to inflict pain with its devilish pins, severely-sloping greens and coarse rough.

Rai proved – as Rocky said – it ain’t about how hard you hit – it’s about how hard you get hit and can keep moving forward.

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