The Open Championship
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The Open
Woods could lose Word No.1 spot this week
5 Years since Tiger not the favourite to win
Garcia favourite for Major break through
Curtis out to show 2003 win was no fluke
R&A to review Open qualification again
Singh confident that it is his turn for Major
Andre Stolz latest Open withdrawal
Top contenders for the Open at Troon
Ernie Els still unhappy at US Open set up
Clarke taking advice from Nicklaus
Injury scare for Padraig Harrington
Goosen looking for back to back Majors
Draw and Tee Times
Woods full of confidence going into Open
Bennett out of Open with shoulder injury
Montgomerie will be home town favourite
Mickelson ready for Open challenge

Ernie Els still unhappy at US Open set up

Ernie Els, a man so relaxed on a golf course he has been nicknamed "the Big Easy", uncharacteristically became "the Big Angry" at Royal Troon on Tuesday.

The South African world number two, in Scotland to regain the British Open he won at Muirfield two years ago, is still fuming a month on from the U.S. Open.

He believes the U.S. Golf Association (USGA) allowed the world-renowned Shinnecock Hills course to be reduced to a lottery with waist-high rough and marble-fast, baked-dry greens by the final day.

Els's hopes of a third U.S. Open title were shattered by a last-round 80 and his countryman Retief Goosen instead kept his nerve to claim his second crown.

Just the memory of that June day left Els seething in a news conference at Troon but when he was told a USGA official had suggested he had "given up", the 34-year-old positively flushed with anger.

"I wish you hadn't said that," he told the reporter who related the remark to him. "That's just the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard in my life.

"I have never given up in any round in my life. If I'd given up I would have shot 100.

"Let me tell you something. They lost the plot that time -- end of story.

"To take one of the best courses in the entire world and make it a farce like that, they've got egg on their face.

"And I'd just like to meet the guy who said that I'd given up."

He finally cooled as talk returned to Troon, which he regards as tough but fair, and his chances of overhauling Tiger Woods at the top of the world rankings.

If the American finishes outside the top 20 and Els wins then Woods's long reign as world number one will be over.

Els is convinced, however, that Woods will "be a factor" at Troon as the American chases his second Open Claret Jug and a ninth major.

But Els suggested that it was almost through sheer willpower rather than Woods's current form that made him a serious contender.

Woods has not won a major since the 2002 U.S. Open, the longest run without success in one of golf's four blue riband events since turning professional eight years ago.

"He's hardly in a slump -- he's still finishing in the top five, top 10 in tournaments -- but I guess you could say his game is coming back to the field these days," said Els.

"It's his mind that is so strong still, though, and it helps him get the ball around and in the hole.

"But there's a few guys who now feel they can compete with him and I guess that shows how times have changed. Four or five years ago we wouldn't have been having this conversation."

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