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Snail-pace victory has Harrington racing up the
table
Dubliner vows to fight all the way to be European No1
after 5½-hour round proves worth the wait
John Huggan, The Guardian, 9 October 2006
Ten members of the victorious European Ryder Cup team
pitched up in Fife for the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, no doubt tempted
by a prize fund that is the fourth biggest on the European Tour outside the
majors and the World Golf Championships. And, just to underline the inherent
unpredictability of the game Scotland gave to the world, the man who made off
with the £427,441 winner's cheque was the only one of the 10 who could
not muster as much as a point on behalf of the home team at the K Club.
For all that, and for the second time in four years,
Padraig Harrington is a fitting winner of the tour's biggest pro-am tournament.
As one of the slowest players in professional golf, it is more than apt that he
should prosper in what is surely the sport's most interminable event. Yesterday
Harrington and his playing companion Bradley Dredge - admittedly hampered by
the presence of two amateur partners including the all-conquering JP McManus -
took a snail-like five hours and 30 minutes to complete 18 holes over the Old
Course at St Andrews. So slow was their play that legendary local Tom Morris
would have had time to change his nickname from "Young" to "Old".
Not that it bothered Harrington, after a closing 68 took
him to 16 under par and left him five strokes ahead of Dredge, the American
Edward Loar and Anthony Wall of England. Not only was this his first victory on
the European Tour since 2004 (albeit he won twice on the United States PGA Tour
last year), the sizeable boost to his bank account also sent the 35-year-old
Dubliner up to second place on the Order of Merit table with two counting
events left, next week's Mallorca Classic and the season-ending Volvo
Masters.
Only Harrington's Ryder Cup team-mate Paul Casey - whose 68
yesterday hauled him up to a tie for sixth spot here - remains above him in the
race to be Europe's No1 player for 2006. The distance between the two is just
under £148,000, enough to prompt the Irishman into booking a flight to
Majorca.
"With that big a gap, I have to go," he felt. "I haven't
done that well in the Volvo Masters in the past, so I need to give myself the
best possible chance. For now though, I am delighted to come back here and win.
It's been 15 months or so since I managed to do that. I'm happy with the way I
did it too. I played great yesterday [on Saturday, when he shot 68 in
deteriorating weather at Carnoustie] and backed it up today."
The key moment in Harrington's eventual - and that is
certainly the right word - victory came at the short 11th. Having found the
fearsome fate that is the Strath bunker from the tee, Dredge was forced to play
his second shot back towards the tee and away from the flag. At that point the
Welshman's caddie began to smooth out the footprints his man had made, a move
that provoked Harrington to question whether such action constituted "improving
the line of one's shot" under the game's often arcane rules. Happily, there was
no penalty involved, even if the R&A rules official adjudicating got it
wrong by telling Dredge he would be docked a shot only if he knocked his ball
back into the sand.
Anyway, what came to pass was a three-shot swing in
Harrington's favour. As Dredge stumbled to a double bogey, the Irishman holed
from 10 feet for a crucial birdie. Thereafter, the gap between first and second
was never less than those three shots. "That was important," Harrington
observed. "That three-shot edge allowed me to play safely to the left off the
tee over the closing holes."
It was not all tears of joy, however. About one hour before
Harrington would stride up the game's most famous fairway with victory in the
bag, Mark Roe holed out for a closing 67 that gave him a tie for 15th place in
what was his final European Tour event after 21 years on the circuit. The
43-year-old Englishman, most famous for the horrible scorecard mix-up that saw
him disqualified from the 2003 Open at Royal St George's, was more than a
little tired and emotional afterwards.
"It doesn't get any better than that," he said. "I wanted
to finish on the Old Course and I played in a bit of a blur, to be honest. It
was just so nice to be out there. But this is the right time to retire, it
feels right. I have fallen out of love with the travelling. And although I have
had my ups and downs - the Open was not a down, just a hiccup along the way -
it has all been enormous fun."
Well, apart from the pace of play, of course.
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