| Lehman
keeps coming back for more after four Open heartaches
No matter how short
the summers were in Minnesota, Tom Lehman always started them the same way. Camped
out on a couch, he watched Lee Trevino and Jack Nicklaus and Johnny Miller winning
the U.S. Open. "I
still have vivid memories of them playing the 'Love's Theme' as the intro and
Jim McKay's voice," Lehman said, his face getting serious as he tries to mimic
McKay. "Live, from Winged Foot Country Club in Mamaroneck, N.Y. ...' "I
can remember missing some Masters, and I can definitely remember missing some
PGA Championships and British Opens. But I don't recall ever missing the U.S.
Open." Lehman's
love for the U.S. Open is one reason the last four years are impossible to forget.
He can remember
virtually every shot in the final round, can pinpoint the most critical mistakes
since 1995. Four times, he played in the final group on Sunday in the U.S. Open.
Four times, he walked off the 18th green as someone else hoisted the trophy.
But then, Lehman's love
for the U.S. Open is also the reason he's not afraid to try it again. He will
arrive at Pinehurst No. 2 for the 99th Open encouraged by his close calls, not
buried by them. "I
played awfully well in each one of those Opens," he said. "I'm definitely not
going to hang my head. Most guys would give (anything) to be in the last group
four years in a row. I realise I made some mistakes that have cost me, but I realise
that I did some really good things to put me in position." Only
Bobby Jones in the 1920s has played in the final group four years in a row. The
difference is, Lehman has yet to win, although he certainly understands that U.S.
Opens are more often lost than won. And
it usually takes only one flinch. At
Shinnecock Hills, it was a drive into the fairway bunker on the par-5 16th, while
paired with the master of hard luck, Greg Norman. Unable to hit his second shot
down the fairway, Lehman had to aim left and play a fade or aim right and hook
it back toward the short grass. He
chose the latter, only it didn't hook. He had to chip out of the rough to the
fairway, then his wedge spun back off the green and he missed a 5-foot bogey putt.
"I hit a bad drive
and it cost me a double," Lehman said. "It cost me the tournament." A
year later in 1996, he stood on the 18th tee at Oakland Hills tied for the lead
with good friend Steve Jones. Driver or 3-wood? Lehman pulled his driver, his
confidence club, and belted it down the middle. His
face filled with horror, however, as the ball took one final hard, wicked hop
into the edge of the bunker and left him no shot at reaching the green.
"When I hit it, I was pretty
happy with it," Lehman said. "I hit it just the way I wanted to. If I had to do
it over again, I'd hit the same shot -- just aim farther right." The
most painful may have been 1997 at Congressional, when he was tied with Ernie
Els and Colin Montgomerie on the 16th hole and had 7-iron into the green. Lehman
decided to play a cut over the corner of the bunker, not his normal ball flight.
Four feet left or four feet farther and he is putting for birdie. Instead, the
ball disappeared into the rough, Lehman hacked out and took bogey. That
forced him to play catchup in a U.S. Open, which is asking for trouble.
"You make a mistake, and
you're simply going to pay," Els said. Needing
a birdie to catch Els, Lehman changed his target on the 17th from the middle of
the green to a little closer to the flag on the left. He caught his 7-iron a little
heavy and turned the ball over, then watched helplessly as it bounced off the
left bank and into the water. "That's
the shot I wish I had over," Lehman said. "You never know if you're going to make
birdie, but it sure would have been nice to have a chance." He
didn't have much of a chance last year at Olympic, starting the final round four
strokes back and making a bogey on the easy par-5 first hole. He finished six
strokes back of Lee Janzen in a tie for fifth. One
of these years, Lehman will get it right. He
is running out of time, even by his own count. A late bloomer who once played
smaller tours around the globe, Lehman turned 40 in March and figures the prime
of his career is slipping away faster than so many U.S. Opens have eluded him.
He has not won in
America since the 1996 Tour Championship, although the U.S. Open seems to bring
out the best in him. "I
love the tournament so much," Lehman said. "I'm always so excited to play, I have
a really good attitude and that's to my benefit. It's the tournament I'd like
to win more than any other in the world." AP |