* DeLaet pulls out after four holes
* Says he 'didn't have any kind of golf game out there'
(Adds DeLaet quotes, detail)
By Tim Wharnsby
OAKVILLE, Ontario, July 24 (Reuters) - Graham DeLaet, the
highest-ranked Canadian in the field at this week's RBC Canadian
Open, withdrew from his national championship during the second
round on Friday because of a left thumb injury.
The 33-year-old from Weyburn in Saskatchewan jammed his
thumb when he hit a tee shot on the 12th hole during Thursday's
opening round at Glen Abbey.
DeLaet managed to finish with an even-par 72 and said he was
hopeful that he could play through discomfort in the second
round, despite experiencing pain on his takeaway.
However, the world number 84 lasted just four holes on
Friday before deciding to quit.
"It's an important tournament to me, obviously," DeLaet said
in a statement. "I guess when it all came down to it, if I felt
I could compete and still hit the ball well, probably I would
have kept going.
"But I just didn't have any kind of golf game out there
today and then it was hurting."
Fellow Canadian David Hearn, who rocketed up the leaderboard
with an eight-under-par 64 in the second round, is well aware of
the importance of the Canadian Open to DeLaet.
"That's got to be tearing at his heart strings not being
able to finish his round," Hearn told reporters.
"I know how much this tournament means to every Canadian in
this field and how much it means to Graham. I just hope he gets
healthy again, soon."
The Canadian Open has not been won by a home player since
Pat Fletcher triumphed in 1954.
As DeLaet recovers from his thumb injury, he has his sights
set on several big events before the end of his 2015 campaign.
"I've still got the PGA (Championship) coming up here in a
few weeks and a couple (of) playoff events before the decisions
on the Presidents Cup," he said. "I want to try to be healthy
and make a good run with that team."
The PGA Championship, the final major of the year, will be
played at Whistling Straits in Kohler, Wisconsin from Aug.
13-16.
The Presidents Cup, which pits a 12-man team from the United
States against a line-up of international players from outside
Europe, will be staged for the first time in South Korea, from
Oct. 8-11.
DeLaet made his Presidents Cup debut for the Internationals
in 2013 at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio where he finished
with an impressive 3-1-1 record.
(Editing by Mark Lamport-Stokes)