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21st July 2020
06:07pm BST

Greg Norman and Padraig Harrington line up putts on the 14th green during the final round of the 137th Open Championship at Royal Birkdale Golf Club,in 2018. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)[/caption]
'The Great White' bogeyed his first three holes and Harrington hit the front, only to hand back the initiative to Norman and English amateur Chris Wood at the turn. Norman and Wood began to falter, coming in, and two birdies saw Harrington (on +5) lead Ian Poulter by two strokes with two holes to play.
After a decent drive on the par-five 17th, there were 272 yards were remaining to the hole. Harrington would have to use a fade to take his approach out left before running it up the apron of the 17th green.
"Perhaps he doesn't know where he is," commented Ken Brown of the BBC. "He's two ahead. Does he need this risk?" Wayne O'Grady agreed but Peter Alliss backed the Dubliner for taking on the shot. The 5-wood came off to perfection and gave Harrington a five-foot putt for eagle, which he duly rolled in.
Looking back on that tournament-clinching shot, 12 years on, Harrington told Watson:
"You know, it's a Bob Torrance quote - 'It's easy to hit a great shot when you're feeling good. It's difficult to hit a good shot when you're feeling bad'. So, I was feeling great at that stage. I was right on top and that was my favourite club in the bag. I'd hit a three-wood onto 15, I'd hit five-wood a couple of times. I loved the club, I loved the shot and I knew that if I hit a good shot, it took everything out of the equation. "It was my chance to win right there, whereas if I kicked the can down the road and laid up, which I could have done... I was distinctly afraid of Greg Norman, because I had bought into this story that this was the last hurrah for Greg. The media were all on it and it would have been the sentimental win. I think Greg was about [three] shots behind me but he'd been more aggressive and had hit driver off the tee. "I just really felt he was going to make an eagle and I said, 'Look, if I hit my shot, that's it'. Nobody else could do anything if I hit my shot. If I laid up it was difficult to get it on the back tier [of the green] with a pitch. It wasn't that simple a shot. But the fact is, I took a shot on when I was feeling good."Norman ended up making par and Harrington's eagle meant he was four shots clear (on +3) going up the 18th, affording him 'the greatest luxury in golf' of going up the last knowing that you are going to win a major tournament. Back in June, Ronan Flood, who was Harrington's caddy for that major win, gave his perspective on 'The 5-wood that won The Open': Harrington would go on to win the US PGA at Oakland Hills Golf Course in Detroit just three weeks after Royal Birkdale to claim his third major in a remarkable 13-month stretch. The full chat between Carter, Solomon, Watson and Harrington is definitely worth a listen.
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