Victor Dubuisson announces retirement at 33: ‘I feel like I’ve reached my limits and I know I can find pleasure elsewhere’

“I started from nothing, so I’m extremely satisfied with what I’ve done.”

France’s Victor Dubuisson, a former DP World Tour champion and 2014 European Ryder Cup star, not only withdrew from competing in this week’s LIV Golf Promotions on Monday but announced he was retiring from golf at age 33.

“I feel like I’ve reached my limits and I know I can find pleasure elsewhere, I’m convinced of that,” the enigmatic Dubuisson said during an interview with France’s L’Equipe. “I spent 15 years alone on the Tour, curled up on myself. I missed contact with people. So it’s just simple human relationships around golf that I want to have.”

Dubuisson won the 2009 European Amateur and was the No. 1-ranked amateur for eight weeks in late 2009. He turned pro in 2010, and would leave an indelible mark on the game, setting the course record at St. Andrews (62) while competing on the DP World Tour. He won the Turkish Airlines Open in 2013 and 2015, and made a name for himself in 2014 when he lost the finals of the WGC Accenture Match Play Championship in 23 holes to Jason Day despite two all-world up-and-downs from the desert that earned him the nickname “Cactus Kid.” Later that year, he earned a spot on the European Ryder Cup team and successfully paired with Graeme McDowell in two foursomes victories and halved his singles match with Zach Johnson as Team Europe rolled to victory at Gleneagles in Scotland. This proved to be the peak of his artistry.

But Dubuisson never felt comfortable playing on the PGA Tour and spent most of his career on the European circuit. In his book “Slaying the Tiger,” author Shane Ryan described Dubuisson as “distant, detached and nearly sullen,” and “a sphinx,” for whom “arranging the puzzle pieces of his life would prove to be a huge challenge.”

Dubuisson, who told reporters he dropped out of school at a young age, was considered a natural talent by his peers but he was painfully shy and didn’t enjoy the spotlight and failed to reach his potential.

“Victor is a genius. I’ve seen people more talented, but he’s in the top 5,” fellow French golfer Jean Van de Velde told Golfweek in July. “He has his own way of doing the practice and play. You can have a lot of talent. His approach to the way he practices and trains needs to be reconsidered, but that’s just my opinion. The talent is still there. He hits it so far and has every shot in the bag but he’s his own worst enemy. He could’ve been a major winner and not just one time. Because his game is so complete.”

Dubuisson climbed to a career-best of 15th in the world rankings in 2015, the highest ranking by a French golfer, but he missed most of the 2018 season after having an operation on his sinuses in late 2017, and reportedly perforated an eardrum while flying back from the Spanish Open in 2019. He competed in just 12 majors and recorded two top-10 finishes. Dubuisson only played eight events on the DP World Tour last season, withdrawing three times and posting a highest finish of 69th, and lost his card following his 287th place finish in the Race to Dubai. His name attracted some attention when he signed up for the LIV Golf Promotions this week in Abu Dhabi, where three spots for next season are up for grabs. Dubuisson pulled out on Monday and then surprised the golf world when he announced his retirement at such a young age.

“It’s life, for me it’s not an end,” he told L’Equipe. “I started from nothing, so I’m extremely satisfied with what I’ve done. I still see myself as a little kid with my little bag and my Decathlon clubs. I was not predestined to have this career at all.”

He added: “Many people will say that I could have done more and that I could have been world No. 1. But I’m more than happy with it (his career). I don’t live in regret all the time. When I look behind me, where I started and where I am, I can tell you that I am very happy.”

Q&A: Why is France’s Jean Van de Velde, who nearly won the 1999 British Open, teaching golf in Mexico?

Who can forget the way he squandered a three-stroke lead on the last hole of the 1999 British Open at Carnoustie?

I flew to Mexico for a golf lesson from a Frenchman.

That’s where Jean Van de Velde, the affable golfer who once nearly had both hands on the Claret Jug but let it slip away in dramatic fashion is living and working these days, heading up the Jean Van de Velde Golf Academy at Punta Minta, located on the southernmost point of the Riviera Nayarit, 30 miles northwest of the resort city of Puerto Vallarta.

Who can forget the way he squandered a three-stroke lead on the last hole of the 1999 British Open at Carnoustie and lost to Scotland’s Paul Lawrie in a three-man playoff?

Van de Velde kept his chin up and dealt with defeat with class and a smile on his face. In October, we met for a golf lesson and a talk about the game he loves. It could’ve continued for hours, especially if we started drinking a good bottle of his wine, but unfortunately he had pick up duty and had to run off to fetch his son. Suffice it to say, he’s still active in the game as an instructor, television broadcaster, tournament operator and wine merchant among other things. One of the more fascinating parts of our talk occurred when we talked about the golf swing as he tried to straighten out my penchant to hook it and more recent struggles with a block to the right — “That’s when you load too much on the left on the backswing,” he said.

Jean Van de Velde gives Golfweek senior writer Adam Schupak a lesson at his golf academy in Punta Mita in Mexico. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

“I’m a guy who looks at what the golf ball does to identify what system you’re in. Whether it is a draw or a fade, as long as you control that shot it’s OK. What matters is repetition,” he said. “Then you decide, OK, this is what you do, and maybe with a little effort this is where you can be. Do you want to embark on that journey or learn to control the system you’re already in? I’m not the guy who is going to try to transform you just for the sake of it just because I have one swing thought in my head. Do I have a few preferences? It’s like the salt and the pepper in a recipe. At the end of the day, you need to have the ingredients.”

During his playing career, Van de Velde worked with legends in the teaching world from John Jacobs to David Leadbetter to Butch Harmon.

“David tried to re-make a few things,” Van de Velde said. “We tried to work on my takeaway. I was bringing the club a little too inside, I was crossing the line, my body had completed the turn and my arms were still moving. It’s all fine as long as you have the right timing, but when things go wrong again, where do you start? How do you get back on track as fast as you can? He said, ‘This is what I think,’ but at the end of the day it was my decision. He didn’t burn me with an iron and you’re going to do it. I implemented a few changes so I could swing in a way that was going to be more reliable. I did believe and I still do that he and Butch and John Jacobs and a few others were a big influence on me and they were right in their analysis.”

He continued: “Technique and teaching, I’ve always been very interested and read a lot of things and been lucky to be around some great thinkers on the swing. I believe the swing is made up of little imperfections. If you look at me swinging, I always had my hands behind at address, but I always started with a forward press. Do you want to change that or look at what goes together and make it happen? In 1999, I had control of my system and I putted pretty well. That year you see what I did at the Open but the best golf I played was in 2000 — by a mile. I played 18-20 times in America and finished 60th on the money list. I played I think 10 times in Europe and was 20 or 30th. In my life, I tried not to reinvent things. I used what others had done and adapted to myself. I told Bernhard Langer that I was going to try to play both tours and he said, ‘Just be careful. I tried that and it was complicated.’ I knew playing in the U.S. was going to have an expiration date. My kids were already in school in Geneva. It was hard to say, you know what, I’m going to play in America. Who’s around me? Who do I rely on? It wasn’t easy. It’s different now. The guys start playing in college golf and they make their lives straight away in the U.S. They are already structured whether it is Viktor Hovland or Jon Rahm.”

Jean Van de Velde attempts to fix the ball flight of Golfweek senior writer Adam Schupak, saying, “It ain’t going left, Sunshine,” after he straightened him out. (Adam Schupak/Golfweek)

Van de Velde suggested I do a drill where I held the club with the face a few degrees open at address. In his disarming style, he said, “you’re on the range. It doesn’t matter. Let’s see what happens.”

I swung and the ball flew right at the flag where I was aiming.

“It ain’t going to go left, Sunshine,” he said. “Not possible.”

In that moment, Jean Van de Velde became my latest golf guru. Here’s more from Van de Velde on the Ryder Cup, what went wrong with budding French star Victor Dubuisson and the time he stuck Jose-Maria Olazabal with the tab for a dozen or so bottles of fine wine from the Augusta National wine cellar.

Former Ryder Cup partners Graeme McDowell, Victor Dubuisson lead at Saudi International

Former Ryder Cup partners Graeme McDowell and Victor Dubuisson will be reunited in the final pairing on Sunday at the Saudi International.

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Graeme McDowell has another chance at his first European Tour in nearly six years.

The 40-year-old from Northern Ireland has a one-shot lead over former Ryder Cup partner Victor Dubuisson after 54 holes at the 2020 Saudi International powered by SoftBank Investment Advisers.

“I always tell my kids we live in a nice house because daddy can putt, that’s about the heart of it, really,” McDowell said after his round. “The putter’s been a little ice cold the last sort of two rounds but I got it heated back up on the back nine today and I’m going to have to putt well to have a chance tomorrow.”

Leaderboard: Saudi International

McDowell shot a 4-under 66 to sit at 12 under after Saturday’s third round action at Royal Greens Golf and Country Club in Saudi Arabia. Dubuisson carded a bogey-free 5-under 65 to reach 11 under, followed by Gavin Green in third at 9 under.

The two haven’t played together since the 2014 Ryder Cup at Gleneagles, where they earned two points for the Europeans who claimed a third consecutive victory over the Americans.

“We shared a car up to the course this morning and I was chatting with him and I always look out for him, great experiences with him in 2014 at Gleneagles,” McDowell said of his time with Dubuisson. “He’s such a great guy, he hasn’t had the best form the last few years and I’m really, really happy to see him at the top of the leaderboard and looking forward to being with him tomorrow. It’s going to be tough to try and play tough against him but we’re both competitors and we’ll go out there and try and do our job.”

Defending champion Dustin Johnson, Victor Perez and Renato Paratore are T-4 at 7 under, with World No. 1 Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson and Thomas Detry T-7 at 6 under. Ross Fisher rounds out the top 10 at 5 under.

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