| Justin
Leonard sad, but sadder for Van de Velde Justin
Leonard wasn't happy about losing a three-way playoff in Sunday's British Open.
But he knew that Jean Van de
Velde, who blew the tournament with a triple bogey on the final hole, was even
more depressed. "As I bad as
I feel, he feels worse," said Leonard, who won the Open two years ago.
"That's tough to go through to have
a lead in the championship at the last hole and not be able to win. It has to
be a sick feeling for him and through the playoff as well. Leonard
thought he had blown his chance as Van de Velde stepped to the 18th tee three
shots ahead. "I thought I had
lost but I knew I had to stick around and went to one of the little trailers behind
the scorers' tent," Leonard said. "The first thing I saw was Jean hitting the
ball into the creek. "There's
not a whole lot you can learn from that other than he got himself in a position
to win the tournament." Leonard
and Van de Velde ending up losing in the playoff to Paul Lawrie of Scotland, who
had finished two hours earlier. If Leonard was dismayed by his performance, his
two-over-par finish in the four-hole playoff upset him more. "Basically,
I lost the British Open twice on one day which is twice as hard to take," said
Leonard, who triumphed at Troon in 1997. In
both regulation and the playoff, Leonard hit his second shot on 18 into the Barry's
Burn, the creek in front of the green. The
first time, he thought he needed a birdie to have any chance and hit a 3-wood
from the rough to the water. "Got
up and down for a bogey," he said. ``At the time I didn't think it mattered a
whole lot." As it turned out,
if he had made par, he would have won the title -- Van de Velde's horrendous 18th
only put Leonard in playoff. "It
was pretty much chaos," Leonard said of the playoff in which all three players
missed the fairway and the green on the first two holes as rain trickled down.
"We were all pretty embarrassed.
To get it up and down for a bogey and up and down for a bogey at 16 and I still
found myself in it. "I had a
good putt at 17 from 40-50 feet which could easily have gone in and then at 18
I hit a great tee shot and had a little bit of an uphill lie. "I
got a little bit behind it, hit is a hair fat, just enough to not get it over
the burn." Lawrie, already one
ahead after a birdie three at the third playoff hole, landed his second shot four
feet from the flag and it was all over. AP
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