Watson holds lead as Harrington's dream dies

British Open update: No Tiger Woods in sight, no Pádraig Harrington in contention — but what a last day is still in store at…

British Open update:No Tiger Woods in sight, no Pádraig Harrington in contention — but what a last day is still in store at the Open Championship. Twelve months after 53-year-old Greg Norman led by two at Birkdale, 59-year-old Tom Watson is 18 holes away from what would be a golfing miracle at Turnberry.

The five-time champion is an amazing 11 years older than the previous oldest major winner.

Yet after falling from two ahead to one behind with three holes of his third round to play Watson, back at the scene of his 1977 “Duel in the Sun” victory over Jack Nicklaus, produced more moments of inspiration — perhaps even divine intervention — to regain the lead.

In went a 30-footer on the 16th, the green where he had holed from 60 feet the previous day, and a kindly bounce at the par five next set up a two-putt birdie.

READ MORE

With a par on the last Watson, trying to equal Harry Vardon’s six Claret Jugs against a field that includes someone 43 years younger than him, signed for a 71 and on four-under-par leads by one.

His closest challengers now are Tasmanian Mathew Goggin and England’s Ross Fisher, for whom a first Major title may yet come on the day his wife Jo gives birth to their first child.

She was due on Tuesday and he has been saying all along he will pull out if she goes into labour — even if he has a six-shot lead.

As it is, birdies on the 16th and 17th like Watson meant a 70, while Goggin, who has not won a tournament anywhere since 1999 and was first reserve for the tournament until Wednesday of last week, moved up from joint ninth with a 69.

Joint fourth only two back are Fisher’s compatriot Lee Westwood and South African Retief Goosen, while American Ryder Cup pair Jim Furyk and Stewart Cink are the only other two players under par.

Westwood had joined Goggin and Watson out in front with a birdie on the long 17th, but from the centre of the last fairway he came up short in the bank of dense rough.

His first chip snagged in the grass and the ball hardly moved, but while a double bogey would have left a horrible taste in his mouth he then got up and down to drop only one stroke.

In June last year the Worksop golfer was one putt away from joining Woods and Rocco Mediate in a play-off at the US Open, but this week began with him beating the world number one by seven in their head-to-head battle over the first 36 holes.

Westwood, who has lost three play-offs since his last victory at the 2007 British Masters, said: “I’m just trying to play myself into position basically and managing to do that.

“I was confident coming into the week and I fed off that confidence. Even when it’s blowing 15-20 miles an hour this golf course has got teeth and they’ve been tough with the flags.

“The more experiences you have the more equipped you become to handle most situations.

“Having played that last round with Tiger and learnt a lot I can carry that on through to tomorrow.

“I think I’m ready to win an Open. I’ll be very patient and try not to make too many mistakes.”

Watson and Steve Marino took to the links one ahead of Mark Calcavecchia, the 1989 champion who at 49 was also trying to re-write the record books for oldest major winners.

With all due respect to the other two — even before they shot 76 and 77 respectively — most eyes were on how the oldest man in the 156-strong field would continue his amazing journey.

“I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t think I could win,” said Watson, who was on

offer at 2,500/1 before the tournament, and the opening holes gave him no reason to change his opinion.

He did pull his drive into sand on the 489-yard third, but saved par with a superb pitch to seven feet and then, in more sand on the demanding fifth, a 14-footer kept him five under.

When he failed to get up and down from another bunker at the short sixth he slipped into a tie with Goosen. But the South African, having birdied the second, was in deep trouble on the long seventh by then and after he double-bogeyed Watson was on in two there and two-putted for a birdie that took him two ahead.

Two holes later, however, he three-putted from the back of the green to turn in 36 and at four under one in front of Fisher, whose only deviations from par on the outward half were a curling 20-footer for birdie at the third and three-putt bogey at the fifth.

Westwood had bogeyed the third after driving into sand and had to wait until a brilliant approach to four feet on the 12th for his first birdie — but that was good enough to lift him only two behind.

And that became one when Watson three-putted again on the 12th to be joint leader with Goggin, who after being called into the field as first reserve last week had produced a 69 to set the clubhouse target.

The former Australian amateur champion earned a special cheer on the 16th green

- not for his approach shot, but for running all the way after it so he could mark the ball before a gust blew it into the ditch.

“I was knackered,” he said of his 200-yard dash, although to be honest Usain Bolt should not feel threatened.

Harrington’s chance of a third straight Claret jug disappeared after a six-over-par 76 left him on nine over for the tournament, while Rory McIlroy needed three birdies over the final three holes to record a second-straight 74 and seven over for the week.

Paul McGinley and Graeme McDowell will both need to shoot spectacular closing rounds to get into contention after they both finished on two over.

McGinley posted a level-par 70 that included three birdies and three bogeys, while McDowell’s six birdies were offset by three bogeys and two nasty double-bogeys on the back nine as he signed for a 71.

Darren Clarke had a day to forget with six bogeys and a double at the last as he came home in 41 blows in an eight-over 78 that left him on ten over for the tournament.

THIRD ROUND SCOREBOARD

(Gbr & Irl unless stated, (x) denotes amateurs, Par 70)

206Tom Watson (USA) 65 70 71

207Mathew Goggin (Aus) 66 72 69, Ross Fisher 69 68 70

208Retief Goosen (Rsa) 67 70 71, Lee Westwood 68 70 70

209Jim Furyk (USA) 67 72 70, Stewart Cink (USA) 66 72 71

210Bryce Molder (USA) 70 73 67, Thongchai Jaidee (Tha) 69 72 69

211Richard S Johnson (Swe) 70 72 69, Boo Weekley (USA) 67 72 72, Angel Cabrera (Arg) 69 70 72, Steve Marino (USA) 67 68 76

212Francesco Molinari (Ita) 71 70 71, Chris Wood 70 70 72, Thomas Aiken (Rsa) 71 72 69, James Kingston (Rsa) 67 71 74, Graeme McDowell 68 73 71, Branden Grace (Rsa) 67 72 73, Kenichi Kuboya (Jpn) 65 72 75, John Daly (USA) 68 72 72, Vijay Singh (Fij) 67 70 75, Justin Rose 69 72 71, Camilo Villegas (Col) 66 73 73, Paul McGinley 71 71 70, Henrik Stenson (Swe) 71 70 71

213Steve Stricker (USA) 66 77 70, David Howell 68 73 72, Oliver Wilson 72 70 71, Nick Dougherty 70 70 73, Metteo Manassero (Ita) 71 70 72, Martin Kaymer (Ger) 69 70 74, Peter Hanson (Swe) 70 71 72, J.B. Holmes (USA) 68 70 75, Justin Leonard (USA) 70 70 73, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 64 73 76, Ernie Els (Rsa) 69 72 72, Luke Donald 71 72 70, Mark Calcavecchia (USA) 67 69 77

214Nick Watney (USA) 71 72 71, Soren Hansen (Den) 68 72 74, Gonzalo Fdez-Castano (Spa) 69 72 73

215Soren Kjeldsen (Den) 68 76 71, Jeff Overton (USA) 70 69 76, Sergio Garcia (Spa) 70 69 76, Davis Love III (USA) 69 73 73, Billy Mayfair (USA) 69 73 73, Kevin Sutherland (USA) 69 73 73, Anthony Wall 68 72 75, Andres Romero (Arg) 68 74 73, Thomas Levet (Fra) 71 73 71, Richard Sterne (Rsa) 67 73 75

216Tom Lehman (USA) 68 74 74, Paul Broadhurst 70 72 74, Johan Edfors (Swe) 71 73 72

217David Drysdale 69 73 75, Rory McIlroy 69 74 74, Robert Allenby (Aus) 70 74 73

218Kenny Perry (USA) 71 72 75, Zach Johnson (USA) 70 71 77, Sean O'Hair (USA) 68 75 75, Paul Casey 68 76 74, Graeme Storm 72 72 74

219Fredrik Jacobson (Swe) 70 72 77, Fredrik Andersson Hed (Swe) 71 70 78, Pádraig Harrington 69 74 76, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 71 72 76

220Paul Lawrie 71 73 76, Darren Clarke 71 71 78

221Paul Goydos (USA) 72 72 77, Mark O'Meara (USA) 67 77 77

222Daniel Gaunt (Aus) 76 67 79, Ryuji Imada (Jpn) 74 69 79

FINAL ROUND TEE-TIMES
8:0Daniel Gaunt
8:10Ryuji Imada, Paul Goydos
8:20Mark O'Meara, Darren Clarke
8:30
Paul Lawrie, Fredrik Andersson Hed
8:40Fredrik Jacobson, Pádraig Harrington
8:50Stuart Appleby, Zach Johnson

9:0Kenny Perry, Sean O'Hair
9:15Paul Casey Graeme Storm
9:25David Drysdale, Rory McIlroy
9:35
Robert Allenby, Tom Lehman
9:45Paul Broadhurst, Johan Edfors
9:55Jeff Overton, Sergio Garcia

10:05Richard Sterne, Anthony Wall
10:15Andres Romero, Davis Love III
10:25Kevin Sutherland, Billy Mayfair
10:40Soren Kjeldsen, Thomas Levet
10:50Soren Hansen, Gonzalo Fernandez-Castano

11:0Nick Watney, Mark Calcavecchia
11:10Miguel Angel Jimenez, JB Holmes
11:20Martin Kaymer, Nick Dougherty
11:30Justin Leonard, Ernie Els
11:40Matteo Manassero, Peter Hanson
11:55David Howell, Oliver Wilson

12:05Steve Stricker, Luke Donald
12:15Kenichi Kuboya, Vijay Singh
12:25James Kingston, Camilo Villegas
12:35Branden Grace, John Daly
12:45Chris Wood, Justin Rose
12:55Francesco Molinari, Henrik Stenson

13:05 Graeme McDowell, Paul McGinley
13:20
Thomas Aiken, Steve Marino
13:30Angel Cabrera, Boo Weekley
13:40Richard S Johnson, Thongchai Jaidee
13:50Bryce Molder, Stewart Cink
14:00Jim Furyk, Retief Goosen

14:10Lee Westwood, Ross Fisher
14:20Mathew Goggin, Tom Watson