“Kept making mistake after mistake,’’ said Woods, the No. 1 player in the world.
Watson played his best golf on the toughest stretch at Turnberry, then finished with a pair of birdie putts that were nearly as long as his odds of winning another claret jug. The last one was a 45-footer on the 18th that gave him a par 70, putting him in the lead with British Open rookie Steve Marino, who had a 68.
Woods came through an hour later, and was at his worst.
He hit one tee shot that was never found in the high grass along the dunes right of the 10th fairway. He hit into a fairway bunker for the first time all week. It took him two shots to get up a bank and onto the green.
Woods dropped seven shots during that wretched six-hole stretch, and not even two late birdies could spare him the indignation of missing the cut in a major for only the second time in his professional career, and the first time in any tournament in more than three years. Needing to chip in for birdie on the 18th hole, he came up a few feet short and tapped in for a 74.
“I kept compounding my problems out there,’’ he said.
Forget about Woods’s pursuit of Jack Nicklaus’s 18 majors.
Now it’s about Watson going after Harry Vardon and his six British Opens.
“I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t think I could win,’’ Watson said.
He was at 5-under 135 with Marino, a 29-year-old American who didn’t know until last weekend that he had gotten into the British Open.
“I wasn’t even expecting to play in this tournament,’’ Marino said.
One year after Greg Norman made a stunning bid to win the British Open at 53, the prospects of Watson winning at 59 are staggering. The oldest major champion was Julius Boros, who was 48 when he captured the 1968 PGA Championship.
One shot behind Watson is 49-year-old Mark Calcavecchia, who won 20 years ago up the coast at Royal Troon. He, too, survived the stretch of holes along the Firth of Clyde in a stiff wind that demanded so much of every shot. Calcavecchia made a 40-foot birdie putt on the 10th that sent him to a 69.
Two-time US Open champion Retief Goosen twice saved par from 35 feet and had a 70, putting him in the group at 3-under 137 that included three-time major champion Vijay Singh.
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