Justin Rose is in contention for the Race to Dubai title and will take part in the DP World Tour Championship later this month. Kin Cheung / AP Photo
Justin Rose is in contention for the Race to Dubai title and will take part in the DP World Tour Championship later this month. Kin Cheung / AP Photo
Justin Rose is in contention for the Race to Dubai title and will take part in the DP World Tour Championship later this month. Kin Cheung / AP Photo
Justin Rose is in contention for the Race to Dubai title and will take part in the DP World Tour Championship later this month. Kin Cheung / AP Photo

Justin Rose sets sights on Race to Dubai title after adjusting season’s ambition


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Shanghai // Three weeks ago, Justin Rose said last month’s Hong Kong Open would be his final event on the European Tour in 2015. Then he won, and everything changed.

The Englishman now finds himself looking for back-to-back wins on Chinese soil with one goal in mind, winning the Race to Dubai.

“Sometimes you make decisions based on what you know at the time, right? Winning in Hong Kong got me closer up the board and made it a realistic prospect to win the Race to Dubai,” Rose said at Lake Malaren, Shanghai, venue for the US$7 million (Dh25.7m) BMW Masters, which starts on Thursday.

There are two events remaining, this week’s event in Shanghai and next week’s season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai.

Rose is ranked No 6 in the world and is fifth in the European Tour Race to Dubai standings on 2,528,224 points, 865,699 behind leader Rory McIlroy.

But with 1,333,330 points up for grabs for the winner both this week and next, Rose knows the Race to Dubai is still in his hands.

“I’m going to have to win one of these last two tournaments, that’s all I know,” Rose said. “I think if I win one of them and play solid in the other then I’m hard to beat.

“If I go win-win then I’m unbeatable so it’s in my hands, which is the good thing.”

Rose won the old European Tour Order of Merit and the Harry Vardon Trophy in 2007, two years before it was reincarnated as the Race to Dubai.

It is clear that he is keen to add the newer version to a CV that includes the 2013 US Open and a combined 34-under-par score in this year’s majors, the lowest recorded by a player who did not win.

“Any time you have an opportunity to achieve something like winning the Race to Dubai or the Order of Merit, as it was when I last won it, you have to take it. I would love to win it in the ‘modern era’ as I call it,” Rose, 35, said.

He knows he faces the challenge of a high-class field containing the top five challengers to McIlroy, who is not playing this week.

Englishman Danny Willett, in second place, needs a top-25 finish to overhaul McIlroy after closing the gap to 74,213 points with third place across the city at the WGC-HSBC Champions last week.

Then come Ireland’s Shane Lowry (727,579 points behind McIlroy), South Africa’s Louis Oosthuizen (791,816 behind), Rose and another South African, Branden Grace (926,625 behind). All can hit the No 1 spot before the season’s climax next week with a win on Sunday. “I need to play well enough this week that if I win next week I don’t have to worry about who finishes second,” Rose said.

“That probably means finishing second at worst this week to control my own destiny.”

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