Danny Willett aiming to make the most of Rory McIlroy’s absence in China

In-form Englishman can claim top spot in Race to Dubai if he finishes 28th or better

Shane Lowry: will require a top-two finish in the BMW Masters at Lake Malaren if he is to overtake Rory McIlroy in the Race to Dubai standings. Photo: Jan Kruger/Getty Images
Shane Lowry: will require a top-two finish in the BMW Masters at Lake Malaren if he is to overtake Rory McIlroy in the Race to Dubai standings. Photo: Jan Kruger/Getty Images

World number three Rory McIlroy will be an interested spectator as the third event of the European Tour's Final Series gets under way in China today.

McIlroy leads Danny Willett by just 74,213 points as he looks to win the Race to Dubai for the third time in four years, but he is not playing in the BMW Masters at Lake Malaren.

Willett can claim top spot heading into the season-ending DP World Tour Championship in Dubai by finishing 28th or better in the 78-man field in Shanghai, while Shane Lowry, Louis Oosthuizen and Justin Rose need to finish second or better and Branden Grace requires a win.

“If we can go to Dubai somewhere close or in front, or hopefully in front by a good ways, it will make it really good,” said Willett, who carded a brilliant final round of 62 in the WGC-HSBC Champions last week to reduce his deficit to McIlroy by 320,000 points.

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“I’m just going to try and do the same as last week, knuckle down and work hard and hopefully I can have another good week this week.”

Willett won the Nedbank Golf Challenge at the start of the season and the Omega European Masters in July, a week after finishing in a tie for sixth in the Open at St Andrews.

The 28-year-old from Sheffield admits his form dipped slightly after finishing third in the Italian Open, but has bounced back with a share of 11th in the Turkish Airlines Open and a tie for third across the city at Sheshan International on Sunday.

“I had a bit of a lull before that,” the world number 22 said. “I was working on a few things and it took a little bit longer to bed in, but hopefully it’s on the way back up now to where we’ve been and I can keep moving forward.

”It would be great to win the Race to Dubai. It’s nice to win tournaments and to play certain events, but an Order of Merit means you’ve played great over a 12-month period, not just a one-off.”

Rose, who finished top of the money list in 2007 and third in each of the last two seasons, hasn’t given up hope of a last-titch effort to overtake McIlroy and Willett.

“If I win any of the last two events that puts me ahead of them, depending on what they do. For me it’s fairly simple – I need to play well for the next two weeks.”

Lowry and Paul McGinley are the only two Irishmen competing in the BMW Masters. McGinley, playing on a sponsor's invite, cannot use any prizemoney won to boost his Race to Dubai standings.