SOUTHPORT, England(AP)
With Tiger Woods on the couch back in the States, is there any
reason to pay attention to the British Open? Well, let's see
...
_ There's 53-year-old Greg Norman, still on his honeymoon
and just one shot off the lead as he tries to become the oldest
player to win a major championship.
_ There's David Duval, his life in order and his golf game
coming around, back on the leaderboard seven years after his lone
major title at Lytham.
_ There's Padraig Harrington, who hurt his wrist a week ago
and thought he might just withdraw. Instead, he's got a chance
to become the first European to repeat in a century.
_ There's Camilo Villegas, the Colombian heartthrob
who's finally showing a game worthy of all the hype over his
buff looks, stylish clothing and unique way of reading putts that
earned him his nickname, "Spider-Man."
_ And, oh yeah, there's K.J. Choi, leading a major for the
first time, the only player under par at Royal Birkdale heading to
the weekend.
Yep, there were plenty of story lines heading to a third round
that began in strong, gusting winds along England's western
coast, prompting organizers to move the tees forward at three
holes. The gray skies threatened to unleash torrents of rain at any
moment.
The early starters, hoping to get back in contention, found it
tough to make any progress in the challenging conditions. Paul
Casey and Lee Westwood each took a double-bogey 6 at the opening
hole. Ernie Els, the 2002 Open champion, took bogeys at the first
and fourth holes to slip to 11 over.
Norman barely touched a club in the month leading up to his 26th
appearance in golf's oldest championship, most of his attention
devoted to his wedding to tennis great Chris Evert three weeks
ago.
He wound up renewing his love affair with links golf, delivering
great escapes over his final three holes for an even-par 70 that
put his name atop the leaderboard for most of Friday until Choi
birdied the final two holes.
Choi was at 1-under 139, one shot ahead of Norman.
"My expectations were almost nil coming in, to tell you the
truth," Norman said. "My expectations are still
realistically low, and I have to be that way. I can't sit here
and say, 'OK, it's great. I'm playing well and I'm
doing it.' I am playing well. I am doing it. But I still
haven't been there for a long time."
Duval knows that feeling.
His last victory was the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan at the end of
2001, the year he won his only major at Royal Lytham & St.
Annes. What followed was a mysterious slump that included a
half-dozen coaches, precious few rounds under par and an aloof
player who found happiness in marriage and children.
For those waiting for another collapse, he never showed a hint
of it.
"I've been working toward greatness, not just getting
back to making cuts and managing to play halfway decent," said
Duval, who had made only one cut in 11 starts this year before
arriving at Royal Birkdale. "That story is yet to be told as
to whether I can get back to that point or not. But that's what
I strive for."
This wonderful story unfolding at Birkdale still has a long way
to go.
It starts with Choi, a 37-year-old from South Korea who
didn't think much of golf until a high school teacher handed
him an instructional book by Jack Nicklaus. A seven-time winner on
the PGA Tour _ the most of any Asian player _ he overcame a bogey
on the first hole to play flawlessly Friday.
"Probably my best round I've ever played at the British
Open," said Choi, who trailed Sergio Garcia by two shots going
into the third round at Carnoustie last year before fading to a tie
for eighth.
The best finish of the second round belonged to Villegas, a
26-year-old Colombian known for splaying his body horizontally to
read putts at surface level. He made everything over the final five
holes _ all birdies _ for a tournament-best 65 that left him two
shots behind.
"Let me tell you, when you get on the first tee, you never
think about a score," said Villegas, who got into the British
Open as an alternate when Kenny Perry decided not to come.
"You're just trying to grind every single shot. And
that's what I did."
Villegas was at 141.
Duval and a half-dozen others were at 2-over 142, Harrington
among them. The defending champion injured his right wrist and
wasn't sure he could even tee it up this week. Then he goes out
Friday and plays the final four holes in 4 under for a 68.
"As long as I could play, I was happy," Harrington
said. "The wrist injury took some of the pressure off
me."
He's trying to become the first European to win consecutive
British Opens since James Braid in 1905-06.
Others at 142 included former U.S. Open champion Jim Furyk,
Robert Allenby, Graeme McDowell and Alexander Noren, a Swede who
attended wind-blown Oklahoma State.
Twenty players were within five shots of the lead, a group that
includes Jean Van de Velde, the Frenchman made famous by his
follies on the final hole at Carnoustie that led to triple bogey
and cost him a claret jug. He was at 4-over 144.
"This whole tournament is likely to be sorted out in the
last nine holes," Harrington said, "and you just want to
be in that hunt."
Tiger who?
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