Expect the unexpected as focus switches to Open
by Golf guest 26/06/2009, 22:04
When it comes to the looking ahead to the Open Championship, the year's first two major golf championships have shown some trends - expect a long haul and prepare for an unlikely champion.
Lucas Glover, an American with only one prior victory in a
lackluster PGA career, captured the US Open title on Monday at
Bethpage Black, the top man from a week of heavy rain that softened
greens and forced an extra-day finish.
Argentina's Angel Cabrera captured the Masters, but only after
two holes of sudden death that began with the South American
landing his ball behind a tree only to ricochet a saving shot off
another tree and have his rivals stumble.
Golf's greatest will gather again in just three weeks at
Turnberry for the British Open, with the Scottish course playing
host to the event for the fourth time and first since 1994 when
Zimbabwe's Nick Price carried the day.
Phil Mickelson is unlikely to play at Turnberry because his wife
Amy begins breast cancer treatment next week and he is taking an
indefinite leave to be with his family, a comeback not expected
until August at the earliest.
The world number two owns two Masters titles and a PGA
Championship crown but suffered his record fifth US Open runner-up
showing and second at Bethpage.
"Certainly I'm disappointed, but I've got more important things
going on," said Mickelson, whose only top-10 finish in 16 British
Open starts was third at Royal Troon in 2004.
World number one Tiger Woods, who missed last year's British
Open with left knee surgery, has shared sixth in each of the first
two majors of the year and departed Bethpage in frustration that
key final-round putts would not fall.
Woods, seeking a 15th major title to move within three of the
career record 18 won by Jack Nicklaus, is now without a major title
for the first time in five years.
Ireland's Padraig Harrington, the two-time defending British
Open champion who also won last year's PGA Championship, has
struggled this year, missing the US Open cut and reaching the
weekend only once in his past five US starts.
"It's hard to take anything positive out of this," he said.
"I've had a bad run for the last four months but I've improved
elements of my game that have been annoying me."
Harrington could become just the fifth player to win the British
Open title three years in a row and only the second since 1882 and
that's before he seeks a PGA Championship repeat in August.
"I'm the only player walking around with two major trophies at
the moment so I can't feel too bad about it," Harrington said.
Harrington's back-to-back PGA bid will come at Hazeltine, the
Minnesota course that offered up a stunner in 2002 when unheralded
American Rich Beem held off fast-closing Tiger Woods by a stroke.
Beem's feat denied Woods a third major crown that year and
inflicting his first runner-up showing in a major.
No European player since Tony Jacklin in 1970 has won the US
Open but Ross Fisher gave it a strong run, the Englishman finishing
three strokes off the pace in fifth and pondering what might have
been.
"If I would have holed just a couple of putts, I think I could
have won this comfortably," Fisher said. "I hit the ball so good,
probably the best I've ever hit it in a tournament. I just couldn't
hole any putts."
The strong leaderboard effort does give Fisher's confidence a
boost.
"Saw my name up there. I was trying to get it right up top,"
Fisher said. "Didn't manage it, but hopefully this will be a sign
of things to come."
by Jim Slater, AFP