Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Garcia's '07 missed putt big help to Harrington

Irishman nearly gave away last year's British Open with double bogey on 18

Padraig Harrington
Padraig Harrington, left, pats runner-up Sergio Garcia on the shoulder last year after beating the Spaniard in a playoff to win the British Open.
Matt Dunham / AP
Special feature
The 136th Open Championship
British Open champions
These golfers have conquered the field to claim top honors at the oldest major.

NBCSports.com

Special feature
The 136th Open Championship
The British Open
A look at the record performances — both good and bad — at golf's oldest major.

NBCSports.com

  Golf on NBC
Image: Johnny Miller (left) and Dan Hicks
Next broadcast

The Ryder Cup
Sept. 20: 8 a.m. - 6 p.m. ET
Sept. 21: 12 - 6 p.m. ET
Full Broadcast Schedule

  Special Section  
  
My Own Pursuit

Follow the top golfers and get exclusive content
Watch wrapup show replays


Presented by

Slide show
US Open tennis tournament
  Week in Sports Pictures
Soaring above the clouds, victorious Serena, UCLA rolls, and more

more photos

updated 7:09 p.m. ET July 22, 2008

SOUTHPORT, England - Padraig Harrington has two British Open titles, and it all started with a miss.

But it wasn’t his.

The morning after he defended his title at Royal Birkdale, the Irishman already was looking ahead. He now is in the same company as Greg Norman, Curtis Strange, Ben Crenshaw, Dave Stockton and others who have won the same major twice. Next on his list is winning a third major, perhaps one in America.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

But imagine where he would be if Sergio Garcia had made that 10-foot par putt last year at the British Open.

What everyone remembers from Carnoustie is Harrington draped in an Irish flag and carrying his son Patrick, who wanted to fill the silver claret jug with ladybirds. Forgotten after his playoff victory was a collapse that would have ranked with anything Norman ever did and, by Harrington’s admission, might have ruined his career.

Harrington had a one-shot lead on the 18th when he hit his tee shot into Barry Burn. Then he chunked a 5-iron for his third shot that tumbled into the burn again. His greatest shot was a 5-foot putt for double bogey.

All that spared him a crushing defeat was Garcia, whose par putt to win the British Open looked good until the final inch.

“If Sergio parred the last and I did lose, I think I would have struggled to come back out and be a competitive golfer,” Harrington said that day. “To take a 6 down the last, it would have hit me very hard. I think I would have struggled in the future.”

Harrington had an old friend at his side — the claret jug — when he was reminded Monday of his good fortunes.

It brought back memories not only of Carnoustie, but even the final round at Royal Birkdale. Harrington twice was on the verge of bogey until a beautiful pitch from 30 yards to within inches on the first hole, and a 15-foot putt to save par on the third.

Every shot he made, Norman missed.

“I’m realistic enough to believe that the twin impostors of success and failure are always a hair’s breath away,” Harrington said Monday. “The difference of that putt (by Garcia) going in and not going in — and the consequences of that — are amazing, and no more so than in that one second.”

He recognized that if Norman had saved par from a pot bunker on the opening hole and Harrington couldn’t get up-and-down from short the green, the Shark would have had a three-shot lead and loads of momentum.

No one will ever know.

“But in Sergio’s case,” Harrington continued, “we do have an answer. If his putt did drop, he would have won the Open. But the fact is it didn’t drop, and I ultimately won the Open.”

Perhaps it was only fitting that Harrington played the final round with Norman, who at 53 gave himself yet another chance to win a major and set himself up for more failure.

Of the majors Norman squandered, the most memorable were his 4-iron over the 18th green at the 1986 Masters for a bogey that paved the way for Jack Nicklaus to win a sixth green jacket; his 78 in the final round of the PGA Championship that same year at Inverness, where Bob Tway holed a bunker shot for birdie on the final hole; and the 1996 Masters, when he led by six and lost by five.

How might it have been different for Norman?

One of the most underrated players of his generation was Scott Hoch. How might his career have changed had he made that 30-inch par putt to beat Nick Faldo in a playoff at the 1989 Masters?

What about Doug Sanders blowing a 3-foot putt to win at St. Andrews in 1970?

Colin Montgomerie, the best player alive without a major, could have picked one up at Congressional in 1997 at the U.S. Open if not for freezing over that 5-foot par putt on the 17th hole. One can only imagine how that might have helped him at Winged Foot two years ago when he chunked a 7-iron from the 18th fairway.


Sponsored links