Rory McIlroy to retain Harry Diamond as caddie for 2018

McIlroy’s best friend to be on bag as he plays unprecedented eight pre-Masters events

Rory McIlroy is to retain the services of best friend Harry Diamond as his caddie for 2018. Photograph: Streeter Lecka/Getty
Rory McIlroy is to retain the services of best friend Harry Diamond as his caddie for 2018. Photograph: Streeter Lecka/Getty

Harry Diamond will remain Rory McIlroy's caddie into the 2018 season, the Guardian can reveal, closing the door on one of the most lucrative and courted positions in golf.

When the season begins, McIlroy’s latest tilt at a grand slam of major championships will include an unprecedented eight events for the Northern Irishman before he tees off at the Masters in April.

Diamond is McIlroy’s best friend and a decorated amateur golfer in his own right. He caddied for the four-time major champion for seven events in 2017, amid which there was widespread speculation as to where McIlroy would turn next following the ending of a long-time alliance with JP Fitzgerald.

McIlroy has decided a continued and positive connection with Diamond, who is also close to the former world No1's coach Michael Bannon, is preferable to trying to establish a new relationship with a caddie. McIlroy earlier admitted he had been "inundated" with offers from people looking to succeed Fitzgerald.

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McIlroy's build-up to the Masters, the one major thus far absent from his resumé, will mean appearances at the HSBC Championship in Abu Dhabi, the Dubai Desert Classic, the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-am, the Genesis Open, the Honda Classic, the Valspar Championship, the Arnold Palmer Invitational and the World Match Play Championship.

The worldwide commercial appeal of the 28-year-old, whose 2017 campaign was beset by injury, was endorsed this week as he agreed extension of a multi-year deal with Omega. TaylorMade and Nike have similarly long-term agreements with the former world No1.

Sources close to McIlroy report his core fitness and attitude as perfect, after a frustrating season during which a rib injury which caused recurring back pain stunted progress. The 2014 Open champion earlier expressed his desire to use this off-season to kick-start a fresh career chapter.

“I’m not getting any younger,” McIlroy said before embarking on an extended off-season. “These three months off could give me the foundation to have the next 10 years be even better than the 10 years I’ve just had. Hopefully that turns a great career into one of the greatest careers.”

(Guardian service)