The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Faldo’s stroll

Old Course fans expected another Duel in the Sun – but victory over Norman was just a walk in the park

- STEVE SCOTT

The Duel in the Sun is almost golf’s golden age now – the closest football comparison would be Mexico 1970.

For two glorious days in 1977, in vivid colour on TV and blazing sunshine at Turnberry, Tom Watson and Jack Nicklaus battled for 36 holes for a cumulative 19 under par with Watson prevailing at the end of it, two 65s beating Jack’s 65 and 66.

The two best players in the world at the time left the 18th green at the end with their arms around each other’s shoulders, and the Duel went into legend.

We should have had a second Duel 13 years later, in the 1990 Open on the game’s greatest stage, the Old Course, and again between the two best players in the world at the time.

Unfortunat­ely, one of them was Greg Norman, and it was a dispiritin­g flop.

What’s mostly remembered now about 1990 is Faldo’s coast to victory on Sunday with a record 20-under aggregate, the crowd around the Valley of Sin watching him hole out, the Red Arrows buzzing the R&A clubhouse in celebratio­n and the Englishman crowned as the best player in the world.

It should have been even better than that. Norman was the world No 1 coming into the championsh­ip – and was to remain so until September – even though he had won just one major, his Open victory at Turnberry in 1986.

The Australian’s domination of the PGA Tour was the reason he was No 1, but not for the first or last time the world rankings didn’t compute with widespread public opinion.

That had been best summarised by Jack Nicklaus a year before.

“Right now, he’s ‘the man’,” said Nicklaus, who had himself been ‘the man’ for a long time.

“He’s the guy, when he comes into the locker room, the others say, that’s the guy we have to beat.”

Nicklaus was referring to Faldo, and in the 18 months previously the relentless­ly driven Englishman had won back-toback Masters, an Open title in 1987, and had four top fives in the majors.

Faldo came to St Andrews in 1990 armed with that record and with a couple of secret weapons.

One was a two-wood, a club now obsoleted by modern technology, and not a regular in Faldo’s bag even then.

“A good links course club,” he said, the lower flight working the winds and the contours of the Old Course better off the tee than his driver.

Faldo’s other secret weapon was “the blueprint”, a sheaf of detailed notes on how to play the Old Course gifted to him by fellow Englishman Gerald Micklem, a former captain and champions committee chairman at the R&A who had played and set up the Old Course so often that he was probably the leading non-St Andrian authority on it.

Still, Norman was far from a novice at links golf and St Andrews. He’d learned the links from experience and from Peter Thomson, not far off Micklem as a “foreign” authority on the Old Course.

Norman’s win at Turnberry in 1986 included the 63 in the second round in a whirling storm, possibly the greatest single Open round in history.

He’d come agonisingl­y close to a second Claret Jug the previous year at Troon, losing a play-off to Mark Calcavecch­ia after a thrilling charge in the final round.

Aided by holing out from the 18th fairway for eagle in the first round, Faldo was one shot behind Norman’s peerless opening 66.

On the Friday, Faldo made up the deficit with a 65, as Norman’s 66 had the hole-out eagle – a 75-yard wedge third shot to the long 14th which spun back into the cup.

It was all set up perfectly. The pair were at 12-under – a record for 36 holes at the time – four shots ahead of Craig Parry and Payne Stewart.

Despite being in different pairings, they’d been duelling already, as Faldo said – “We seemed to be chasing one another. As soon as one birdie went up on the board, another went up.”

Norman concurred. “Faldo and I grew up together playing in Europe and have been matching shots since 1977,” he said. “This should be interestin­g, to say the least.”

The weather was perfect, like 1977, just a stiffer breeze in the late Saturday afternoon coming on with the tide.

This writer, covering only his second Open – I’d followed every shot of Norman’s final round 64 the year before – raced to the course early on Saturday in expectatio­n of witnessing a classic.

Little in the 30 years since has let me down so badly.

As soon as one birdie went up on the board, another went up. NICK FALDO

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