Cape Times

Oosthuizen comes up short ... again

- STAFF REPORTER

IN the end, perhaps it was the pressure that was unrelentin­g throughout the four days that derailed Louis Oosthuizen's effort to break out of the cycle of falling agonisingl­y short in major championsh­ips.

Whatever it was, his final-round of one-over-par 71 left him four shots off the score of the champion golfer of the year in the 149th Open Championsh­ip at Royal St George's in Sandwich, Kent, as an impeccable Collin Morikawa of the US marched imperiousl­y to his second major title in his debut in the Open.

In truth, Oosthuizen's agonising miss started in the third round, after two days of precision off the tee, accuracy into the greens and some deadly putting. It all seemed a little tentative in the third round, and that uncertaint­y characteri­sed his play throughout the tense final round.

A bogey on the fourth was not a disaster as Morikawa seemed to be scrambling for par through that opening stretch. But a bogey on the easiest hole on the course, the par-five seventh – at the same time as Morikawa made a birdie – took the wind out of Oosthuizen's sails. There were moments after that for Oosthuizen, notable when he so nearly holed out in one on the long parthree 11th. Had that gone in, he would have been within two of the eventual champion, and that might have given his play down the stretch some conviction. But he had become visibly deflated, and that played out in a poor bogey-five on the 13th when he found one of the punitive fairway bunkers at Royal St George's. He regained the shot with a birdie on the par-five 14th, but there nothing he could do anymore to stop the march to the Claret Jug of Morikawa as he also made birdie there.

In the end, the thrilling charge by new world No 1 John Rahm, who couldn't buy a putt throughout the tournament.

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