Quantcast Padraig Harrington Defends 2008 British Open Title - Golf International Magazine Online
Tees2Greens Home Page
in

Navigate This Blog

Have You Seen This?

Have You Seen This?

Subscribe To This Blog

Golf International Magazine Online

Follow The World... with Golf International Magazine Subscribe Online

Subscribe To This Blog

Padraig Harrington Defends 2008 British Open Title
Written By: Golf International on Jul 21 2008
Rate This:
Padraig Harrington of Ireland poses with the Claret Jug after winning The Open golf tournament at Royal Birkdale in Southport in north-west England, on July 20, 2008. AFP PHOTO/ADRIAN DENNIS (Photo credit should read ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP/Getty Images)Padraig Harrington enjoys few moments more than the walk down 18th fairway of a century-old links course, especially with a four-shot lead in the British Open and the engraver putting the final touches on the oldest trophy in golf.

He stopped Sunday to share the moment with Greg Norman, who knows this path all too well.

Celebration for one, sympathy for the other.

“I did say to him coming down 18 that I was sorry it wasn’t his story that was going to be told,” Harrington said. “I did feel that, but I wanted to win myself. In this game, you have to take your chances when you get them.”

Harrington seized his opportunity by smashing a pair of fairway metals into the par 5s that carried him to a 32 on the back nine of blustery Royal Birkdale and made him Europe’s first player in more than a century to win the British Open two years in a row.

“Obviously, winning a major puts you in a special club,” Harrington said after closing with a 1-under 69 to win by four shots over Ian Poulter. “Winning two of them puts you in a new club altogether.”

Norman got a chance no one saw coming.

Still on his honeymoon with tennis great Chris Evert, at 53 only a part-time golfer with no expectations, the Shark found himself with a two-shot lead going into the final round and still one shot ahead with nine holes to play.

It ended like so many other majors for Norman—a quick succession of bogeys, the clutch shots belonging to someone else. He made eight bogeys in gusts that reached 40 mph, closed with a 77 and tied for third.

“Where does it rank in those? Probably not as high as some of the other ones,” Norman said of the six other times he lost a 54-hole lead in a major. “Quite honestly, I’m sure I surprised a lot of people.”

So did Harrington.

The 36-year-old Irishman injured his right wrist eight days ago, and it was so sore that he could only practice for nine holes on Tuesday and for three swings on the eve of his title defense.

He gave himself a 75 percent chance of starting, 50 percent of finishing.

Turns out that wrist was strong enough to hit all the right shots. Better yet, it was strong enough to lift the claret jug.

“It was a great distraction for me,” Harrington said. “It took a lot of pressure off me. It took a lot of stress off me. The fact that I didn’t play three practice rounds like normal for a major was a big bonus. I was very fresh going into the weekend, and this 36 holes was a real battle.”

Harrington first had to take the lead from Norman, which he did on the par-3 12th when Norman missed a 10-foot par putt. Then came a late charge from Poulter, who made a 15-foot birdie on the 16th and saved par with a 15-footer on the final hole for a 69 that looked like it might be good enough to win.

But the Irishman responded with clutch shots of his own. He hit a 3-wood into the wind to 40 feet on the par-5 15th and got down in two putts for birdie, giving him a two-shot lead. Standing in the 17th fairway, still aware that Norman could make eagle and stay in the game, Harrington hit a 5-wood that bounded onto the green and up the ridge, stopping 4 feet away for eagle.

That gave him a four-shot lead, and he knew it was over when his tee shot found the 18th fairway.

What a change from last year, when Harrington made double bogey on the 18th hole, got into a playoff only when Sergio Garcia couldn’t save par, and couldn’t celebrate at Carnoustie until a testy 3-footer for par on the last hole of overtime.

“I enjoyed the claret jug so much I didn’t want to give it back,” Harrington said.

He finished at 3-over 283, becoming the first European since James Braid in 1905-06 to win the Open in successive years.

It was his first victory since the British Open last year, and it could not have come at a better time. Harrington moved to the top of Europe’s Ryder Cup standings, and the victory moved him to No. 3 in the world ranking behind Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson.

“I’m quite enjoying this,” Harrington said, cradling the claret jug. “I don’t think I’ll get down off the stage.”

Norman played a familiar role as the tragic figure.

He lost his two-shot lead after the third hole and wound up in a tie for third with Henrik Stenson, who shot 71. The 77 was one shot better than the last time Norman led a major, closing with a 78 in the 1996 Masters.

“I walk away from here disappointed, but with my head held high, because I hung in there,” Norman said.

Poulter thought he could bring England its first British Open since Nick Faldo in 1992, playing bogey-free over his final 15 holes. He went to the practice range in case of a playoff, but put his clubs away when he saw that Harrington made eagle on the 17th hole.

“I can only do what I can do,” Poulter said. “And I done my best.”

Norman tried to keep alive his hopes with a 35-foot par putt on the 14th, and a shot from a pot bunker that made him spin backward, turning to see the ball land 4 feet away at the 15th for his only birdie of the day. Harrington, however, didn’t back down.

“Padraig played brilliantly today, even though he tried to let it get away in the middle of the round,” Norman said. “He came back and performed brilliantly, and he finished like a true champion.”

The leaderboard featured a familiar name, missing an “s.”

Chris Wood, a 20-year-old amateur from England, closed in on the lead until three straight bogeys on the back nine. He finished with a 72 and tied for fifth at 10-over 290 with Jim Furyk (71).

“It’s been the best week of my life,” Wood said.

Norman felt much the same, except for the final day.

What an amazing week for the Shark—spending his honeymoon in Skibo Castle, showing up at Royal Birkdale to tune up for the Senior British Open and Senior U.S. Open, then feeling those old competitive juices.

Fans perched themselves atop every sand dune to see if Norman could pull off a victory that would have ranked among the most stunning in golf, from Jack Nicklaus winning the Masters at age 46 to Ben Hogan returning from a life-threatening car crash to win the U.S. Open.

But instead of a fairy-tale ending, he delivered a rerun of opportunities lost in the majors.

Norman hit into a pot bunker on the first hole and made bogey. He missed the green left on the second hole and made bogey. His tee shot buried in the right rough on the third hole for another bogey. And he had to make an 8-foot putt to save bogey on the sixth.

Just like that, a two-shot lead over Harrington turned into a two-shot deficit.

Harrington gave him one last chance with three straight bogeys to close out the front nine. That was the last bogey he made.

“This year is more satisfying,” Harrington said.


The Open Scores

283 Padraig Harrington 74 68 72 69

287 Ian Poulter 72 71 75 69

289 Greg Norman (Aus) 70 70 72 77, Henrik Stenson (Swe) 76 72 70 71

290 Chris Wood 75 70 73 72, Jim Furyk (USA) 71 71 77 71

292 Steve Stricker (USA) 77 71 71 73, Paul Casey 78 71 73 70, Robert Karlsson (Swe) 75 73 75 69, Anthony Kim (USA) 72 74 71 75, Robert Allenby (Aus) 69 73 76 74, Ernie Els (Rsa) 80 69 74 69, David Howell 76 71 78 67, Ben Curtis (USA) 78 69 70 75, Stephen Ames (Can) 73 70 78 71

293 Justin Leonard (USA) 77 70 73 73, Adam Scott (Aus) 70 74 77 72, K.J. Choi (Kor) 72 67 75 79

294 Anders Hansen (Den) 78 68 74 74, Graeme McDowell 69 73 80 72, Davis Love III (USA) 75 74 70 75, Paul Waring 73 74 76 71, Simon Wakefield 71 74 70 79, Phil Mickelson (USA) 79 68 76 71, Thomas Sherreard 77 69 76 72, Alexander Noren (Swe) 72 70 75 77, Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 71 72 79 72, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 74 74 73 73, Jean Van de velde (Fra) 73 71 80 70, Rocco Mediate (USA) 69 73 76 76, Gregory Havret (Fra) 71 75 77 71

295 Retief Goosen (Rsa) 71 75 73 76, Andres Romero (Arg) 77 72 74 72, Richard Green (Aus) 76 72 76 71, Todd Hamilton (USA) 74 74 72 75, Tom Lehman (USA) 74 73 73 75, Heath Slocum (USA) 73 76 74 72, Nick O'Hern (Aus) 74 75 74 72

296 Ross Fisher 72 74 71 79, Bart Bryant (USA) 70 78 74 74, Woody Austin (USA) 76 72 74 74, David Duval (USA) 73 69 83 71, Graeme Storm 76 70 72 78, Simon Khan 77 72 71 76, Mike Weir (Can) 71 76 74 75, Jay Williamson (USA) 73 72 77 74, Ariel Canete (Arg) 78 71 76 71, Gregory Bourdy (Fra) 74 74 75 73, Camilo Villegas (Col) 76 65 79 76, Thomas Aiken (Rsa) 75 71 82 68

297 Anthony Wall 71 73 81 72, Sergio Garcia (Spa) 72 73 74 78, Zach Johnson (USA) 73 72 76 76, Michael Campbell (Nzl) 75 74 74 74, David Frost (Rsa) 75 73 73 76, Douglas Labelle (USA) 78 70 74 75, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 72 71 79 75

298 Peter Hanson (Swe) 71 72 78 77, Kevin Stadler (USA) 72 75 78 73, Colin Montgomerie 73 75 74 76, Richard Finch 75 73 78 72, Tom Gillis (USA) 74 72 79 73, Scott Verplank (USA) 77 67 78 76

299 Soren Hansen (Den) 75 69 77 78, Wen-chong Liang (Chn) 77 71 77 74, Jonathan Lomas 75 73 76 75

300 Jean-Baptiste Gonnet (Fra) 75 72 73 80, Lee Westwood 75 74 78 73, Dave Horsey 74 70 79 77

301 Jose-Filipe Lima (Por) 73 76 75 77, Martin Wiegele (Aut) 75 74 78 74, John Rollins (USA) 73 75 77 76, Jeff Overton (USA) 72 75 75 79, Justin Rose 74 72 82 73, Craig Parry (Aus) 77 70 77 77, Brendan Jones (Aus) 74 73 83 71, Pablo Larrazabal (Spa) 75 74 73 79

302 Lucas Glover (USA) 78 71 77 76, Nick Dougherty 75 71 79 77

303 Martin Kaymer (Ger) 75 72 79 77

304 Phillip Archer 75 74 78 77

306 Sean O'Hair (USA) 75 73 80 78

311 Chih-bing Lam (Sin) 72 75 83 81



Add to Technorati Favorites

Comments

No comments have been made.
So it's up to you to get the ball rolling...

About Golf International

Follow The World... with Golf International Magazine

Subscribe Online

Since its launch in 1997, Golf International has forged a reputation as the standout quality title in golf publishing. The caliber of columnists, writers, players and coaches is unrivalled, while the design and layout of the magazine separates it still further from the competition. In a congested market wrought with mediocrity, Golf International appeals to committed golfers who are as serious about their game as we are about ours.

The ethos behind Golf International is simple: our aim is to entertain, inform and educate our readers with a wide range of fresh and original editorial. Peter Alliss, Ian Wooldridge, Colin Callander, Tom Cox, Paul Mahoney, Clive Agran and John Huggan are listed among our regular columnists. Other notable contributors include Paul Trow and David Davies. We are particularly proud of our association with the teaching staff of the DLGA, who, under the guidance of the world’s No.1 coach – David Leadbetter – provide some of the finest instruction you will find anywhere. Monty’s coach, Denis Pugh, is another regular contributor, as is leading European Tour coach, Peter Cowen, and one of the world’s most innovative instructors, Robert Baker. The popular Senior Tour player, Tony Johnstone, has also made Golf International his literary home.

With the generous and on-going support of Volvo Car UK, we are committed to developing our Amateur pages, featuring regular profiles, interviews and tournament news from both the men’s and women’s amateur game. Another innovation has been our Business pages, which provide the magazine with a unique angle on business-related stories, along with regular features from our resident experts on golfing memorabilia (Kevin McGimpsey), betting (Jeremy Chapman) and motoring (Anthony ffrench-Constant). We hope you enjoy the magazine and invite you to be a part of our continued success.

With a new distribution partner – Comag – in place from the August ’06 issue (and already delivering a significant increase in newsstand sales), we will be raising our game in the retail sector while at the same time consolidating our position as the premium title in the air and selected-sponsorship sectors.

Privacy Policy | Legal Statement | Advertise
© 2006-2009 Tees2Greens, Inc.