Repeat win has Harrington in select company
No asterisks were necessary even though Tiger was out following knee surgery.
SOUTHPORT, England (AP) — Padraig Harrington never tires of reading the fine print on the silver claret jug, and as he stood up from a table Monday morning at Royal Birkdale, he slowly turned golf’s oldest trophy to see his name on consecutive rows.
There were 126 names. It’s also worth noting what wasn’t on the jug.
“I don’t think this champion has anything to worry about with asterisks etched next to his name,” Royal Ancient chief executive Peter Dawson said. “He proved that last year.”
The bluster at the start of this British Open was whether the winner should get full credit because Tiger Woods couldn’t play. That was long forgotten after Harrington shot a 32 over his final nine holes in 30 mph wind to follow Woods as a back-to-back champion.
The only question is how much more the Irishman can achieve.
“Winning the first major last year ... the reflection on that was, ‘Guys have won one major. Let’s try to set yourself apart and win two,’ ” Harrington said Monday after his four-shot victory moved him up to No. 3 in the world. “Now that I’ve got two, I’m in a different club now. What’s the next club? I will have time to reflect and reset some new goals. You’ve got to keep pushing.”
The next target presumably is winning a major other than the British Open, and his next chance is coming quickly. The PGA Championship starts in only three weeks at Oakland Hills outside Detroit.
But that can wait.
This wasn’t as exhilarating as his playoff victory at Carnoustie last year over Sergio Garcia, perhaps because that was his first major and the engraver had to wait until the final putt before going to work.
“This time around was a more determined effort. It was more satisfying and in many ways more rewarding,” Harrington said. “To have done it back-to-back is very special. To have two majors is very special. But I think what I take most from it is going out in the last group and performing when I needed to.
“Playing golf in the final round of a major when it’s put up to you is a nice feeling.”
The presence of 53-year-old Greg Norman with a one-shot lead going to the back nine and Ian Poulter making a late charge in his pink pants made it difficult to appreciate what Harrington did late Sunday afternoon.
Of the last 10 players on the course, nine of them averaged a 40 on the back nine. Harrington shot 32.
Woods won the U.S. Open on one good leg, and to a much lesser extent, it can be said that Harrington won the British Open with only one good hand. He injured his right wrist the Saturday before the British Open by swinging a club into a bean bag.
“I can hit one-handed — this is going to sound ridiculous — farther than I hit it two-handed,” Harrington said. “There is a little practicality. It is working on strengthening my right side and left side, working on speed on the right side and left side. The only time I practice, silly as it may look, is to improve my golf. I never waste any time.”
Harrington had a hard time returning the claret jug at the start of the week, which all defending champions do. He mainly kept it on his breakfast table, which is where it was Monday morning as he ate his porridge and looked at the Ryder Cup standings on the Internet, his name atop the list for Europe.
“It was tough giving it back,” he said. “I’m going to enjoy it even more.”
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