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Stabroek News



Norman on the brink of history
published: Sunday | July 20, 2008


Greg Norman of Australia plays on the 15th hole during the third round of the British Open Golf championship, at the Royal Birkdale golf course, Southport, yesterday. - AP

SOUTHPORT, England (AP):

This sounds familiar: Greg Norman goes to the final round of a major with the lead.

And, no, we're not talking about 1996.

The 53-year-old, part-time golfer reclaimed a spot he used to know all too well in his prime, putting the Shark one more solid round away from becoming golf's oldest major champion in its oldest of major championships, the British Open.

What a nice wedding gift that would be: the claret jug.

Norman celebrated the three-week anniversary of his marriage to tennis great Chris Evert by shooting a 2-over 72 yesterday, a brilliant round considering the fearsome, howling gusts that blew away a number of potential challengers and left everyone else hanging on for dear life at Royal Birkdale.

David Duval? Done in by an 83. Graeme McDowell? Finished off by an 80. Camilo Villegas? Mark him off the list after a 79.

Shook off a tough start

But Norman shook off a tough start - he drove his first shot into the rough and had three bogeys on his card after the sixth hole - to make a triumphant walk up the 18th hole, improbably poised to add to the pair of British Open titles he already has at a time in his life when he probably spends more time practising tennis with his new bride than he does hitting golf balls.

With Evert cheering him on, Norman nearly holed out a chip for birdie at the final hole, tapping in for a par that left him at 2-over 212 and two strokes ahead of defending champion Padraig Harrington and 36-hole leader K.J. Choi.

"I'm sure there are players probably saying, 'My God, what's he doing there?'" Norman quipped. "But I've played golf before. I've played successful golf before."

It's just been a while.

This is the first time since his epic collapse in the 1996 Masters that Norman has gone to the final round of a major with the lead. That day, he shot a dismal 78 to throw away a six-stroke lead on Nick Faldo, cementing his reputation as a great player who couldn't win the big one, someone with a staggering eight runner-up finishes in the majors.

Norman is trying to become the oldest major champion, a distinction currently held by the late Julius Boros, who was 48 when he won the 1968 PGA Championship.

Harrington also shot 72 in a breeze that gusted to 40 mph, sending balls off line and scores soaring. Choi, who started the day with a one-stroke lead on Villegas and two on Norman, slumped to a 75 but was still in the thick of things, tied with the last Open champion at 214.

Unheralded Englishman Simon Wakefield shot a 70 and was right in the mix at 215. He'll play in the next-to-last group Sunday with Choi, the final pairing reserved for Norman and Harrington.

"I might not sleep tonight," Wakefield said. "It's a very unfamiliar territory for me."

He's never won on the European Tour and had missed the cut in 10 of 22 events this year. But the 34-year-old birdied both par-3s on the back side, and made another at the par-5 17th to match the best round of the day.

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