
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland — Scan down the leaderboard after three rounds at the British Open, golf’s most ancient major championship, held at golf’s most ancient course — the Old Course at St. Andrews. Look for a player who has won a major championship. Come on. Keep looking.
There is two-time U.S. Open champion Retief Goosen, whose even-par 72 Saturday included a double bogey at 17, leaving him tied for eighth — 10 strokes off the lead. Peruse some more. Get down to Tiger Woods, the man who won the last two Opens on this course, the man with 14 major titles to his credit. He is tied for 18th place and battling a disagreeable putter. Lucas Glover, the 2009 U.S. Open champion, is muddling back there with Woods, a dozen shots behind.
So unless Goosen strides forward, Glover catches fire or Woods does something he has never before done in a major — come from behind on the final day to win — it is quite likely that, for the fifth time in the last six majors, a newbie will be champion.
The most likely candidate, it appeared as the sun sank low over St. Andrews Bay, is matter-of-fact South African Louis Oosthuizen. He was widely regarded as a first-round fluke after his opening 65, became the leader after a favorable tee time helped him to a second-round 67, and clearly stands as the tournament’s best player after his third-round 69 left him at 15-under 201, four shots clear of the field.
“It’s great being up there,” Oosthuizen said. “I just want to enjoy everything about it. I loved it out there. It was great fun for me, and hopefully tomorrow will be the same.”
But how could he know? He’s never been there. His advantage is over England’s Paul Casey, an accomplished international player who was once No. 3 in the world but has never finished among the top five in a major. Three more strokes back, at 8-under 208, is Martin Kaymer, a German who was leading the race for the European Tour’s Order of Merit a year ago when he injured himself in a go-kart accident.
Another shot back of Kaymer are Sweden’s Henrik Stenson, who was third in the 2008 Open at Royal Birkdale; Spain’s Alejandro Canizares, playing in his first major anywhere; and England’s Lee Westwood, the third-ranked player in the world.
Throw in a token American, Dustin Johnson, at 6-under 210, and the top seven players headed into today’s final round of the British Open are a combined 0-for-116 in majors. That includes, of course, Johnson’s experience at this year’s U.S. Open, when he took a three-shot lead into Sunday and imploded with an 82.
“It was just one of those funny days in golf,” Johnson said. “We all have them. . . . You can learn from things that happen and move on.”
Some of these guys, though, haven’t had these experiences. The others could offer advice on what not to do.
“I’ve made the mistake of chasing in majors before,” Westwood said. “Got off to a bad start, and then looked at it afterwards and realized I did not need to be that aggressive.” But that leaves the matter of what to do.
Saturday morning, Oosthuizen got a call from countryman Ernie Els, the 2002 Open champion.
“Just have fun,” Els told Oosthuizen. “Enjoy it.”
Easy for a three-time major winner to say. After an interminable wait for a 4:40 p.m. tee time — pushed back because the second round had to be completed Saturday morning — Oosthuizen found himself nervous on the first tee. He had, after all, made the cut just once in eight previous majors. When he reached the green, his putt ran some 10 feet by the hole, and he missed the next for an opening bogey.
“I knew you could so easily just lose it,” he said.
He steadied himself by getting up-and-down for two pars early and then birdied the seventh and the ninth to build his advantage to three over Casey, the only golfer within range.
Even when he hit what looked to be his only bad shot of the day — dropping his 5-iron in the middle of the 16th fairway — he stepped up and drained a 50-footer for birdie.
A look back
Winners at St. Andrews since 1946 (year, player, country, score):
1946: Sam Snead, U.S., 290
1955: P. Thomson, Australia, 281
1957: Bobby Locke, S. Africa, 279
1960: Kel Nagle, Australia, 278
1964: Tony Lema, U.S., 279
1970: Jack Nicklaus, U.S., 283
1978: Jack Nicklaus, U.S., 281
1984: Seve Ballesteros, Spain, 276
1990: Nick Faldo, England, 270
1995: John Daly, U.S., 282
2000: Tiger Woods, U.S., 269
2005: Tiger Woods, U.S., 274
BESTS
Sergio surges.
Sergio Garcia, right, is hanging tough. Admitting that his game is not what it should be, he still managed to get his three-round total to 4-under-par (71-71-70).
Weathering the weather.
Luke Donald has been unlucky, playing when conditions were possibly at their worst all three days, and still he has managed to lower his score each day (73-72-69).
American pie.
No-name Americans have made it a respectable showing for the Yanks this year — Dustin Johnson (6-under), Ricky Barnes (5-under), Sean O’Hair (5-under), Nick Watney (5-under) and J.B. Holmes (4-under). Where have you gone, Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson?
The Denver Post
WORSTS
Blowin’ in the wind.
Vijay Singh has gone from good to bad with declining rounds of 68-73-76 to fall to 1-over-par.
More Tiger trouble.
Tiger Woods opened with a 5-under 67, but it’s been downhill from there with back-to-back 73s. He’s putted 99 times in the first three rounds.
Paisley pants aren’t everything.
People were wondering if John Daly could hold it together after an opening-round 66. The answer is no. He shot himself out of the tournament with a 76 Friday and 74 Saturday to drop to even par.
Open overload?
Too much of a good thing. That could be said of ESPN’s coverage of “The Open Championship,” as the network calls it. Nine to 11 hours live each day and then, believe it or not, they replay it.
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