Harrington and Furyk doing everything right but winning
By Doug Ferguson, APSaturday, March 20, 2010
Harrington looking to end a drought
PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Padraig Harrington and Jim Furyk have played a lot of good golf over the last couple of years, which explains why they are among the top 10 in the world rankings.
They just haven’t won.
Harrington was the toast of golf in 2008 when he became the first European to win consecutive majors in the same year, the second coming at Oakland Hills when he made that 15-foot par putt on the final hole to secure victory in the PGA Championship. His only victory since then was the Irish PGA, which is not a recognized event on any tour.
The Irishman is 0 for 41 since then, although six times he has finished among the top three.
His next chance comes this weekend in the Transitions Championship, where Harrington picked up two bonus birdies over the final five holes — a beautiful chip-and-run to 10 feet on the par-5 fifth and a putt he thought was short that fell on the ninth — for a 6-under 65 that gave him a one-shot lead over Furyk, defending champion Retief Goosen and two others.
“I’m capable of winning in the form I’m in,” said Harrington, who was at 8-under 134. “Am I in my best form? No. Am I getting there? Yes. I’m kind of in the form that I was in at the end of last year. I’m right in the midst of it.”
Furyk’s drought is a little longer.
It’s the longest of his PGA Tour career, and he doesn’t have any answers. He has gone 58 events since his last PGA Tour victory, the 2007 Canadian Open, although that comes with an asterisk. Furyk won the Chevron World Challenge last December. It came against a world-class field, even though there were only 18 players, and he received enough world ranking points to get back into the top 10.
Furyk now is at No. 9. Harrington is No. 10.
“I do want to win the golf tournament, and just like everyone else, tomorrow I’ll go out there and try to jockey for position and play a good, solid round,” Furyk said after his 68. “But I’ll approach it the same way. I don’t have a desperation or wouldn’t do anything differently. You all know me really well. I’ve done things methodically in order to try to give myself the best opportunities to win.
“It works out some weeks, and it doesn’t others.”
This is hardly a two-man show on the Copperhead course. It’s more like a shootout.
Goosen is a two-time winner at Innisbrook, and playing Friday afternoon, he surged into a share of the lead with four birdies in a stretch of six holes, only to drop a shot on the seventh when he drove into the trees and had to pitch out. He shot a 68.
Carl Pettersson also is a past champion at this tournament, winless since Greensboro in 2008, part of that because of a decision to get into shape. He lost 30 pounds so quickly that it affected his swing, and he found the only way to get it back was to return his girth.
Pettersson needed a few rounds like this — 67-68 — to start believing in his game, for he believes it’s far easier to regain his swing than to restore his confidence.
Bubba Watson shot a 65 and joined the group one shot behind. His drought is even longer than Furyk’s, for Watson has never won on the PGA Tour, or even the Nationwide Tour. He very easily could be in the lead going into the third round if not for missing three putts under 4 feet on Thursday, and missing a 4-foot birdie putt on his final hole Friday that would have given him a share of the lead.
In the group two shots behind was Steve Stricker, who had a 66.
Stricker, the No. 2 player in the world, had a chance to win the Transitions Championship last year until he finished bogey-bogey. He had a similar finish last year at Riviera, when he failed to make birdie on the par-5 17th and made bogey on the last hole. Stricker got his redemption this year by winning the Northern Trust Open, so maybe he’s on to something.
The next two weeks could be key for Stricker going into the Masters.
After getting knocked in the first round of the Match Play Championship, he went home to Wisconsin for two weeks and worked on his game, then headed to Doral and got knocked around in the wind.
When he arrived at Innisbrook, Stricker felt that a week in the wind and knocked his swing out of alignment, and he has been grinding on the practice range to restore the plane of his swing and his grip pressure. He found something Friday, and he knocked in a few important putts — never a surprise with him — to get into the picture.
Ten players were separated by three shots going into the weekend, and 16 players were within four shots of the lead.