British Open report

Luke Donald may be the best hope for an Englishman to win on English soil, but it’s not very likely. Donald, the top-ranked player in the world, is 10 shots off the lead after a 1-over-par 71 on Saturday.
Luke Donald may be the best hope for an Englishman to win on English soil, but it’s not very likely. Donald, the top-ranked player in the world, is 10 shots off the lead after a 1-over-par 71 on Saturday.

— No Brits in range of leader

The week began with hopes of the first English winner of a British Open in England since Tony Jacklin at Royal Lytham & St. Annes in 1969. Going into the final round, the best hope is the No. 1 player in the world.

That would be Luke Donald. He is 10 shots behind.

Donald felt like he didn’t miss a shot over the first hour Saturday and was 1 under par through five holes until he tried to blast out of a deep bunker on No. 6 to get it close enough to save par. The gamble failed, and he wound up with a double bogey. Donald didn’t make another birdie until the 17th hole, and by then it was too late. He had to settle for a 71 that left him too far behind Adam Scott.

There’s nothing left for him to do today but “go out there and enjoy it.”

“I’m probably too far back to have a chance, but as always, I’ll give a go out there, give it my all,” Donald said. “You never know when you’re going to learn something, even though you don’t have a chance to win. Try and see how good I control the ball in the wind.”

Donald had his caddie, John McLaren, back on the bag with him in the third round. McLaren left Friday because his wife, Helen, was due with their first child.

She had a girl they named Georgina. But there wasn’t a lot of chatter about babies.

“But he was certainly beaming when he walked in the door this morning,” Donald said.

Donald now has to wait three weeks until the final major of the year, the PGA Championship, at Kiawah Island on the South Carolina shore. The only positive to take out of the British Open is it’s the first major this year he will tee off after lunch. He wasn’t even around Sunday at the U.S. Open, where he missed the cut.

“I’m getting closer,” Donald said. “My record isn’t that great in this championship. But I’ll take some confidence from the last few days. Certainly after the disaster at the U.S. Open, this is much improvement.

And as I said, I’ll walk away from this week knowing that my game is good enough. It just needed to happen at the right time.”Reno bound

Padraig Harrington prefers to play the week before a major, and that usually means the Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone before the PGA Championship, which he has done since 2007.

One problem: Harrington isn’t eligible for the World Golf Championship because he is not in the top 50 in the world. The Irishman is at No. 59 and was hopeful of a strong week at Royal Lytham to crack the top 50 and get into Firestone. Those hopes took a big hit Saturday when Harrington never got anything going in a round of 70. He was at 2-over 212. He would need to finish alone in sixth - he’s seven shots behind that score - to have any chance.

The solution?

“It’s the biggest little city in America. Here I come, Reno-Tahoe,” Harrington said.

That would be the Reno-Tahoe Open in Nevada, an opposite-field event with only a $3 million purse and the lowest amount of world ranking points on the PGA Tour. But he wants to play, and it’s the only spot available in America, even though it’s on the other side of the country from Kiawah Island.

Els in chase

Ernie Els finds himself in a familiar position once again, chasing down a leader at Royal Lytham & St. Annes.

He gave it a shot but came up short in 1996 and 2001. If he’s going to do it this time, he will have to come from six shots behind Adam Scott in Sunday’s final round.

“I feel I’ve got a chance,” Els said. “I feel the way I’m playing, if those putts start dropping I can really shoot a low one. So that’s what I’m hoping for.”

Els shot a 2-under-par 68 Saturday to stay on the fringe of contention, tied for fifth with Zach Johnson. If he is to win the British Open for the second time he must not only beat Scott but leapfrog Tiger Woods and Graeme McDowell along the way.

It’s a tall order, but Els believes he has yet to get the most out of his golf so far this week.

“It’s amazing, absolutely amazing,” he said. “I felt like I’ve played really good golf but just can’t really get a really low score going.”

Els was eight shots back here in 1996 before rallying with a final-round 67 that left him two shots back of winner Tom Lehman. Five years later he was two shots back entering the final round and finished tied for third behind David Duval after a final-round 69.

He will go out today trying to win the Open for the first time since he won in a playoff at Muirfield in 2002. Open champs

Tom Watson and John Daly (Dardanelle, Arkansas Razorbacks) will be paired early today in the final round, two players with nothing in common except their names on the claret jug.

This won’t be the first time Watson and Daly are in the same group.

They were part of a threesome - with Paul Goydos - in the final round at Bay Hill in 1998 when Daly tried to reach the par-5 sixth green - again and again and again. He put six balls in the water and finally two-putted for an 18.

Watson referred to it that day as a tragedy and a comedy. Maybe he’ll get more of the same today.

Lawrie’s putting

Paul Lawrie missed a 4-foot par putt on the last hole, which summed up his day. Only his day wasn’t over. He missed the 2-foot comebacker and wound up four-putting the 18th green.

That gave him 37 putts in his round of 76 that took him out of contention in the British Open.

“I don’t know why,” Lawrie said. “I saw the line, just couldn’t get the pace. Just putted awful out there. I think that’s the worst I’ve ever putted in a tournament.”

Sports, Pages 30 on 07/22/2012

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