Francesco Molinari has fallen to No. 235 in the Official World Golf Ranking as calendar-year 2021 is coming to a close.
The last time the now-39-year-old was this low in the world rankings was 15 years ago in the early part of 2006. That came two years after turning pro, in his second season on the European Tour, and nine years prior to his first full season on the PGA TOUR. The Italian reached a high of OWGR No. 5 in 2018, fueled by three worldwide wins in six starts, culminated by his maiden major title at the 147th Open at Carnoustie. Calendar-year 2019 brought another win at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, and three starts later, seemed destined for a second major victory at the 2019 Masters, where he was the 54-hole leader by two and still led by two before a disastrous double bogey-5 at 12 (and another double at 15), both in the company of eventual champion Tiger Woods, settling for a T5. Molinari, who’s since changed caddies, did not start in his 2020 API title defense (back), withdrew prior from the 2020 PGA and U.S. Open, the Tokyo Olympics (back), the 2021 PGA (back), and relocated his family from Italy to California (2020), has not recorded another top-5 finish since. His most recent action was a mid-tourney WD at this season’s Houston Open six weeks ago (did not return for R2 resumption on Saturday), and a quick look at his schedule on his personal website does not show any upcoming events listed.