American Jim Furyk won his first major title in record-equalling fashion in
Chicago - as Justin Rose served notice that his first victory in golf's four
biggest championships might not be far away.
Furyk, who has previously had 12 top-10 finishes in majors without ever being
higher than fourth, won the United States Open at Olympia Fields by three
strokes from Australian Stephen Leaney, his eight-under-par total of 272
matching the mark set by Jack Nicklaus in 1980 and equalled since then by Lee
Janzen and Tiger Woods.
Rose, meanwhile, climbed all the way from joint 24th at the start of the day
into a tie for fifth with a closing 69, most of those above him folding like a
pack of cards as the sun-baked course at last turned into the traditional US
Open terror track.
At halfway 26 players were under par, but come the end of the championship
there were only four, European tour regular Leaney finishing four clear of
third-placed duo Kenny Perry and Masters champion Mike Weir.
Possessor of one of the most unorthodox swings in golf - likened by television
commentator and former European tour star David Feherty to an octopus trying to
escape from a telephone booth - Furyk also set 36-hole and 54-hole records en
route to his triumph.
Joint fourth with Rose at the 1998 Open at Birkdale - Rose was a 17-year-old
amateur at the time - Furyk has been a money-making machine since then. But this
takes his career to a new level.
Not even the intervention of a blonde streaker on the 14th hole could stop
him. Having just seen a five-stroke lead with seven to play become three with
five it was not a done deal.
But just before the streaker came offering roses - he declined and she was
escorted away - he had hit a superb approach to two feet and when he holed the
putt he had only to play sensibly and win.
His only mistakes were to bogey the short 17th and then three-putt the last,
but he could easily afford those with Leaney having also dropped a shot at the
17th. They both scored 72.
Twenty-two-year-old Rose, given a stern talking to by coach David Leadbetter
before the start as he struggled to get motivated for his debut in the event
because he was swinging the club poorly, commented: ``I am delighted.
``This is another good learning experience for me and I will take level par in
this for the next 20 years every time.
``My game is at a major level now and without saying I feel I am ready to win
one I think I am capable of it in the not too distant future.''
Like Rose, defending champion Woods had resumed on one over and when he
birdied the two par fives in the first six holes he could not be totally written
off.
But then he four-putted for one of the few times in his life - and with it
said goodbye to the great closing round he was hoping for.
It came on the 496-yard par-four ninth and took the wind out of his sails. He
bogeyed the next and finished with a 72 for three over and joint 20th.
Woods said: ``I was very close. I hit the ball pretty good the last three days
and got absolutely nothing out of it. That's very frustrating.
``If I play like I know I can things will take care of themselves. All I
needed was a little bit of momentum.''
As for what happened on the ninth he commented: ``I thought I had holed the
first putt, but the second and third were terrible. Luckily I hit the fourth
right in the middle!''
The world number one was letting go of his one remaining major two years after
holding all four and by his own high standards the first two majors had gone
badly wrong.
First there was his worst score as a professional in the Masters, where he
finished 15th. Then on Saturday his worst score as a professional in the US
Open.
But do not expect to hear Woods using the word ``slump'' in the build-up to
next month's Open championship at Royal St George's in Kent.
``I have won three tournaments out of seven I have played this year (on the US
Tour) and you are trying to tell me I am in a slump?'' he said when questioned
after his 75.
His game was not firing on all cylinders, but he had not been helped either by
an incident on the first hole of his third round.
Handily placed only three shots off top spot Woods was hitting his second shot
to the par five when a spectator whistled.
``Yeah, right on my downswing,'' he said. ``If it was my backswing I would
have stopped it, but on the downswing I couldn't. It was a frustrating way to
start a round.''
As the club came out of his hands and he turned to stare long and hard into
the crowd the ball flew into a bunker 110 yards short of the flag. He saved par,
but as it was one of only two par fives on the course it was a chance gone.
Padraig Harrington came in with a 68, but he had started at three over and so
it lifted him `only' to joint 10th.
``I could have been better. I missed six or seven more opportunities,'' he
said.
``At least I holed a few, but at the end of the day I have not played well
enough.''
Darren Clarke turned in 35, but then matched Woods' bogeys at the 10th and
11th and triple-bogeyed the next. He finished with a 75 for six over, the same
as Colin Montgomerie (72) and six better than Brian Davis (75).