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Sport Book Service | Danny Willett was a teenage caddie on his last trip to Royal Troon 12 years ago now the Masters champion is hungry to win The Open as a star in his own right

 Brit hope Danny Willett is in jovial mood as he practices for The Open this week

DANNY WILLETT can barely believe how much has happened to him since his last visit to Royal Troon.

That was when he was a 16-year-old wannabe, caddying for his local club professional.

Brit hope Danny Willett is in jovial mood as he practices for The Open this weekCredit: REUTERS

Fast forward 12 years and Willett is the Masters champion, a multi- millionaire and one of the favourites to lift the Claret Jug on Sunday.

The Sheffield star, 28, shook his head as he considered the whirlwind rise he has been through and admitted: I cannot believe how much my life has changed in such a short time.

Winning Majors and being in the top ten of the world rankings is what I dreamed about and aimed for.

But its only when you think back to your early years in the game that you realise how far youve come.

Willett looks back on his 2004 trip to Royal Troon with huge fondness although not as much as the man he was caddying for, Mike Ramsden, who still blames the world No9 for costing home a place in The Open.

Danny Willett was handed his Masters Green Jacket by Jordan Spieth in AprilCredit: Getty Images

Ramsden grinned: I was in a four-man play-off for two spots. On the first extra hole I had 120-odd yards to the pin and was torn between a normal wedge and my gap wedge.

Danny piped up and said youre bound to be pumped full of adrenaline, hit the gap wedge.

So I did. My ball just about made the front of the green, and span back into an awful spot.

I failed to get up and down for par and the two European Tour winners in the play-off Andrew Oldcorn and Sven Struver made birdies to take the two places in The Open.

Even worse, the other player in the group eventually got in as an alternate, and I got nothing.

I still tell Danny he cost me a place in The Open, but its just a bit of banter if you need to take advice from a 16-year-old, youve got no one to blame. I think that was the only time Ive ever cried on a golf course.

But I did spent a lot of that week crying tears of laughter.

Willett is confident he will be one of the main contenders at Royal Troon this weekCredit: Getty Images

There were three of us myself, Danny and another local pro Greg Hyde sharing a bedroom at a guest house in Troon, and we had a fantastic giggle.

Ramsden, the head pro at Renishaw Park Golf Club in Willetts home city, felt his stint as a caddie was an important part of the youngsters learning curve

He added: I wasnt coaching Danny, but we were playing practice rounds four or five nights a week.

He was just starting to get noticed by the England junior selectors, but he knew he still had a lot to learn about course management.

Ive made it through to final qualifying for The Open more than a dozen times, been in another play-off and missed by a shot three times. And I felt Danny would learn a lot from caddying for me at Irvine, just down the road from Troon.

Another European Tour pro I was friendly with Mark Foster joined us in the bar one night.

Willett reflects on his practice and his status as one of the top home contendersCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

Danny was not drinking, I should add, and he spent all night pumping him about life on the road, about playing in big tournaments, and stuff like that.

You could see how much drive and determination Danny had to make it to the top.

Even though I wouldnt say he was any more talented than Mark or Lee Westwood at that age, he had as much fire as anyone.

We stayed on and walked around Royal Troon, watched the first couple of rounds and I think Danny came away swearing hed be back there as a player one day.

Willett confirmed that impression and said his first taste of professional competition was a real eye-opener.

Ex-Troon caddie Willett gets into the swing three days before the start of The OpenCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

He said: Caddying for Michael at 16 was a big deal for me the whole week was full of new experiences, especially with three of us in a room at the B&B. I remember wanting to enter the qualifying tournament as well. But I was ruled out because I wasnt quite off scratch. I think I was off 0.7.

It was really interesting to go up there and caddie and see the guys.

That was probably my first experience of being at a Major.

I remember it as a great Open venue and a lot of the guys were saying the same thing.

Hopefully Ill leave with even happier memories this time.

Its the third Major of the year and Im looking forward to the backing of the British crowds.

Im hoping they can help pull me along to another good week.

The expectation levels will be high but they are purely from me.

Regardless of what people say, that is always the biggest pressure.

Willet fine tunes his practice as he prepares himself for a dream Open assaultCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

People talk about someone cracking under pressure, but that isnt because of what other people are doing. It is because of what you are thinking yourself.

As long as you can keep on top of your own thoughts and feel you have your golf in a good place, anything can happen as I proved at Augusta in April.

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