article details

Waston Leads At Turnberry

07/18/2009

Waston Leads At Turnberry

 

 

Waston got the leading, but Woods wasn't good enough in performance.

Birdies at the 16th and 17th were too little and too late to save Woods from missing only his second halfway cut in 49 majors as a professional and his first in the Open Championship.

But just before the three-time winner made his shock exit - a horror run of seven dropped shots in six holes around the turn for a four-over 74 did the damage - the 59-year-old five-time champion, Watson, unbelievably sank 60-foot birdie putts on both the feared 16th green and again on the 18th to draw level with little-known fellow American Steve Marino on top of the leaderboard at the halfway stage.

In the wind and rain Watson, back on the course where he won his 'Duel in the Sun' with Jack Nicklaus in 1977, added a level-par 70 to his opening 65 and is thought to be the oldest player ever to lead a major.

Sam Snead was 54 when he held top spot halfway through the 1966 US PGA Championship.

Watson is playing his 32nd Open. Marino is playing his first - but playing his first did not stop Ben Curtis winning at Sandwich six years ago or Watson at Carnoustie in 1975.

The 29-year-old Marino is on his first-ever trip to Britain and a week ago he was not even in the field.

He has never won a US Tour title and is only 77th in the world, but he reached a play-off a week or two ago and is a star in the making according to 1989 Open winner Mark Calcavecchia, who lies just a stroke behind.

Just getting to Scotland was an adventure for Marino, whose 20-foot eagle putt on the long 17th helped him to a two-under 68 - as, of course, did holing a 116-yard wedge at the third and sinking a bunker shot three holes later.

Originally third reserve, Marino was playing in Illinois last week when he moved up two spots on the Open reserves list.

He did not have his passport with him and so asked his father - a missile defence engineer - to fly from Virginia to Florida to pick it up and send it to him.

Then, just before crossing the Atlantic, he was told that Japan's Shingo Katayama had pulled out with a back injury and he would be playing his first Open.

Padraig Harrington, after early exits from his last five Tour events, was facing the possibility of another when he stood four over with five to play, but the Dubliner parred the next three, birdied the 17th and made his four on the last to make sure he survived.

He may be eight back, but the first hat-trick of Claret Jugs since Peter Thomson in 1956 cannot yet be ruled out.

First-round leader Miguel Angel Jimenez could add only a 73 to his 64, but England's Ross Fisher, whose wife could go into labour at any time, improved to the same three-under total with a 68.

In the clubhouse alongside them are major winners Retief Goosen and Vijay Singh and Japan's Kenichi Kuboya.

Meanwhile, 16-year-old Italian Matteo Manassero, as well as having the thrill of watching Watson, guaranteed himself the silver medal as leading amateur.

Only two were in the 156-strong field and while German Stephan Gross, the European champion, could do no better than nine over, British champion Manassero shot a superb 70 to be just one over and safely through to the weekend rounds.

 

 

| Golf News |         | Golf Pros |


Purchase more golf equipment and discount golf clubs on golfbargainoffers.com

Item Reviews
(Total0Items Reviews for this item)
  • No comment
Total 0 Items Reviews for this item
Email Address:
Rating:
Content:
Article categories
Top 10 Sellers
Recommended articles
Recently Viewed