Paul Lawrie admits he has a fight on his hands if he wants to preserve a 20 year unbroken run of appearances in the Open Championship.

While David Dixon claimed the ultimate honours in the Aberdeen Standard Investments Scottish Par 3 Championship at Lawrie’s own golf centre in Aberdeen yesterday, the man himself admitted that a return to Carnoustie next month, where he famously won the Claret Jug in 1999, is under serious threat due to his long-standing foot injury.

Lawrie, who has played in every Open since 1998 and has missed only one since a debut in 1992, had entered next week’s Scottish Hydro Challenge on the second-tier Challenge Tour in an effort to bolster his fitness under tournament conditions. However, just as event promoters cheerily sent out a press release championing the news of the 49-year-old’s appearance in Aviemore, Lawrie had to inform officials of his withdrawal after hirpling his way to a painful five-over 59 on the final day of the par-3 contest.

With a rigorous run of links tests coming up on the main circuit – the Irish Open and the Scottish Open lead into the Open itself – a concerned Lawrie, who also has a niggling back problem, is well aware that his hopes of appearing in the major which has defined his career are hanging in the balance.

“Right now, I’ve honestly got no idea,” he said when asked about his prospects of being fit for the Open. “I’ve been pulling out of events week by week and hoping it would get better but that doesn’t seem to be happening unfortunately. I played here with next week in mind but there’s no way I can compete and I don’t want to take a place away from someone else who may have a chance of kicking on.

“I have entered the Irish Open, the Scottish Open and the Open but I’m not sure. Getting fit for the Open would be the goal but we’ll have to see how it goes.

“Some days I feel fine but there’s no way of knowing when it’s coming. These guys (on tour) are too good when you are fit so there’s no way I can compete when I’m not fit. And I’m certainly not fit at the minute.”