Gutted Padraig Harrington saw
his Smurfit European Open dream sink without trace in the waters
of the K Club yesterday and vowed: I'll be back.
The 30-year-old Dubliner failed
to take advantage of Michael Campbell's comedy of errors over
the closing stretch, finishing in four way tie for second with
Retief Goosen, Paul Lawrie and Bradley Dredge.
But he promised that his disappointment
would be quickly forgotten despite his 18th hole failure.
"I'm gutted obviously.
Michael got so much ahead that he saw the winning post and started
to bleed. It was a good chance for me to win at the 18th but
it will all be forgotten tomorrow when I get out there and start
practising."
Harrington hit the water TWICE
over the final three holes, missed a THREE foot par putt and
still missed out on a play-off by just ONE shot in an epic finale.
And he singled out his failure
to pick the right club all day long as the main reason for his
downfall.
Said Harrington: "To make
six bogeys is just bad news, but I struggled big time clubbing
today. I was hitting the ball too far and the 18th was the only
time I felt I had the right club in my hand."
Campbell looked to be cruising
to victory when he opened up a five shot lead over Harrington
with four holes to play.
But although the Kiwi finished
with four bogeys in a row Harrington dumped his second shots
in the water at both the par five 16th and 18th holes.
After a two shot swing at the
15th where Harrington made a birdie three, the first dramatic
moment came at the par five 16th where Harrington 225 yard five-wood
approach finished in the Liffey.
He scrambled a par five to
Campbell's bogey but a chance had been lost to strike a vital
blow.
Confessed Harrington: "I
couldn't believe it. I hit a perfect five wood to the middle
of the green and the wind hit it and moved it right. Obviously
that was the worst outcome of any shot today."
When Campbell bogeyed the tough
17th, Harrington had three-foot par putt to close the gap to
a shot going down the last but missed instead to give Campbell
a lifeline.
Then at the 537 yard 18th Campbell
splashed down in the lake in two but Harrington made the fatal
mistake of trying to win the tournament with a dramatic eagle.
"I kept being given chances
and at 18 I was trying to win it there and then. I didn't aim
at the middle green. It was my opportunity to win the tournament
there rather than seeing if I could win it in a play-off. I was
trying to hit it as close as I could with a six iron down the
shaft from 216 yards.
"I couldn't bring myself
to hit at the middle of the green and I had one eye on the flag.
But I pulled it a little bit and it went on the wind and kept
going."
Harrington was able to drop
the ball on the green, some 20 feet from the hole but his birdie
putt slipped by and Campbell two-putted from 18 feet for a bogey
six and a one-shot win.
"I was preparing my acceptance
speech," said Campbell of his late collapse. "I made
a couple of awful swings but that's the way it goes. I feel for
Padraig. It's his home crowd and he missed short putt on 17 and
then went in the water at 18. He's a great player who has all
the shots and a great short game so one day he will do wonderful
things."
Harrington refused to blame
the adrenalin rush he got from the 28,000-strong crowd as the
reason for his over-clubbing on several holes.
"The wind was a light
breeze but I couldn't get on top of it early on and I wasn't
buzzing straight away. A couple of shots went awry and I wasn't
too confident after that," he said.
Harrington bogeyed the first
but recovered with a birdie at the long fourth before setting
off on a roller coaster run to the turn.
He bogeyed the fifth and seventh
but recovered each time with birdies at the sixth - where he
chipped in from 40 feet - and eighth to be just two behind Campbell
at the turn.
A birdie-bogey start to the
back nine was a bad omen and when Campbell birdied the 12th and
13th to go four clear to looked all over.
Harrington bogeyed the 213
yard 14th to go five behind and virtually hand the tournament
to the New Zealander before that dramatic finish.
Said Harrington: "I didn't
get down with the way I was playing. I was devastated with the
on going in on 16th. I hit a perfect shot but obviously anyone
taking it on is taking a big risk. Michael had only made one
bogey at that stage all day and I had to go for it. This is the
best golf course in the world to be behind going down the last
three holes. You can finish birdie-birdie-eagle or double bogey
or bogey any of the last three.
"The biggest mistake I
made was the 11th where I made a bogey. It just wasn't to be
and I had a few putts that didn't go in."
It was a fine tournament for
Challenge Tour struggler Gary Murphy as he holed a 20-footer
for birdie at the last.
The Kilkenny man took advantage
of a late invitation to finish with a two under par 70 and a
four round total of 289, one over par.
Murphy, 29, had four birdies
and just two bogeys in his round for a timely boost before he
heads to Finland for the Challenge Tour event this week.
Said Murphy: "I was pretty
solid all round. It could have been a lot better but I hit the
ball really well. It was fabulous to get in to the tournament
and I took advantage."
Ashbourne club pro John Dwyer finished on a low note with a final
round 78.
The Meath man finished on 11
over par alongside former Ryder Cup star Andrew Coltart.
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© Brian Keogh 2002
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