Santa Fe New Mexican

Molinari is first Italian to win British Open

Italian pulled ahead of packed field of sport’s leading players to victory

- By Christophe­r Clarey

Francesco Molinari’s first taste of major championsh­ip golf was caddying for his older brother at the Masters. But 12 years on, he was the Molinari saving the pars and making the putts under duress, and he is no longer under the shadow of any Italian golfer after his pressure-proof performanc­e at this year’s British Open.

At age 35, Molinari gave Italy its first victory in a major Sunday by outplaying a tightly packed field that included defending champion Jordan Spieth, a resurgent Tiger Woods and the leading European players of Molinari’s generation: Justin Rose and Rory McIlroy.

While star after star fell back, Molinari maintained a steady course. And although a Woods victory, after all his health and personal challenges, would have been a comeback tale that transcende­d golf, that was not Molinari’s concern.

“I was competing against all the other guys as well, not only against him,” Molinari said.

His final-round score, 69, allowed him to finish with an 8-under-par total of 276: two strokes ahead of Rose, McIlroy, Kevin Kisner and Xander Schauffele, and three strokes ahead of Woods, Eddie Pepperell and Kevin Chappell.

Internally, the magnitude of the moment must have been difficult to navigate for Molinari at Carnoustie Golf Links, which has been the scene of some of the most extreme reversals of fortune in the game’s long championsh­ip history. It is also a course Molinari has even avoided in the past.

“I mean, there was everything to make someone nervous,” Molinari said.

But externally he displayed nothing but cool, going without a bogey over the final two rounds on what is widely considered the most difficult course on the British Open rotation.

“The course bit me a few times the first couple days,” Molinari said. “But to go bogey-free over the weekend on a track like this is incredible.”

Carnoustie was ripe for the attacking Saturday, with light winds and relatively soft conditions after Friday’s rain. But on Sunday it was full of its traditiona­l snarl. The wind returned, drying out the fairways and demanding constant adaptation from the combatants.

“I think Carnoustie showed its teeth today,” said Jean Van de Velde, the Frenchman who blew a three-shot lead on the 72nd hole of the 1999 Open at Carnoustie. “Hats off to Francesco, because he really played well. He made a couple of very good ups and downs, which is part of playing links golf. But he was also very consistent. He kept it all together remarkably well.”

Of the eight players in the final four groups Sunday, only Molinari finished under par.

He started the day three shots behind the American co-leaders: Spieth, Schauffele and Kisner, who were at 9 under. But as the leaders faltered, the focus soon shifted to Molinari’s pairing with Woods, who took the outright lead at 7 under as they

finished the front nine.

At 42, Woods remains golf ’s biggest star even without having won a major championsh­ip in 10 years, or any tournament in five. The buzz and gallery following Woods continued to grow as he made a scrambling par on the 10th hole after a full-force blast from a fairway bunker to the front edge of the green.

But a wayward drive on No. 11 and a flubbed flop shot led to a double bogey that dropped Woods out of the lead for good (he also bogeyed the 12th). Alongside him, Molinari maintained his composure and an unblemishe­d scorecard, with par after par after par.

“He’s always been self-contained,” Van de Velde said. “What is remarkable about Francesco is the way his putting has changed over the last year or so.”

His older brother Edoardo was once viewed as the family’s best putter, but Francesco has altered his putting technique, activating more of his upper body, while also attempting to upgrade his mental game.

He hired Dave Alred, a British performanc­e coach who worked with former rugby stars Rob Andrew and Jonny Wilkinson, and has also worked with golfers including Luke Donald and Padraig Harrington. One of Alred’s leitmotifs is creating practice settings that mirror the intensity and randomness of competitio­n.

Molinari credited Alred for his new sangfroid under pressure, and both men were on the putting green Sunday before Molinari headed to the first tee.

“He’s a personalit­y and a figure that I was missing,” Molinari said of Alred. “I think he pushed us all a little bit more.”

Molinari had nary a three-putt Sunday, but he did have to scramble on occasion. On the sixth hole, he put his drive into a bunker, blasted out, hit a 2-iron into another bunker, blasted out to 5 feet and sank the par putt.

“Saving the par on 6 was massive,” Molinari said.

Spieth’s putting, which has prevented him from winning since his British Open victory last year, was again a liability. But he also struggled with his ball-striking in the wind, making too many visits to the rough and even one visit to a gorse bush on No. 6 that forced him to take a penalty drop. He finished with a 76, tied for ninth place.

Schauffele had misadventu­res but was still in contention until his bogey at No. 17 gave Molinari a two-stroke cushion.

When Schauffele’s approach shot landed well short of the pin on the 18th green, Molinari began hugging the members of his team and his wife, Valentina, who was crying behind her dark sunglasses.

“It’s been a long journey really, and now obviously you see the end result,” Molinari said, cradling the claret jug awarded to the Open champion. “And when you are holding this, it changes a few things. I got a lot of help from all the team, and I think the last few weeks, the last month, it has just been confidence.”

After all the final-round, final-hole madness at Carnoustie in recent years, Molinari restored a sense of order and calm. It wasn’t irresistib­le theater like Van de Velde’s collapse in 1999 or Harrington’s playoff victory over Sergio García in 2007. Instead, it was Molinari who was irresistib­le.

“For the first time I felt I was ready for it,” Molinari said. “It could have happened. It could not have happened, but I knew I was going to do what I needed to do. Obviously playing with Tiger makes it even more special. I couldn’t have written it any better.”

 ??  ??
 ?? PETER MORRISON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Francesco Molinari of Italy plays a shot on the 12th hole during the final round of the British Open on Sunday in Carnoustie, Scotland. Molinari gave Italy its first victory in a major Sunday by outplaying a tightly packed field that included defending champion Jordan Spieth, a resurgent Tiger Woods, Justin Rose and Rory McIlroy.
PETER MORRISON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Francesco Molinari of Italy plays a shot on the 12th hole during the final round of the British Open on Sunday in Carnoustie, Scotland. Molinari gave Italy its first victory in a major Sunday by outplaying a tightly packed field that included defending champion Jordan Spieth, a resurgent Tiger Woods, Justin Rose and Rory McIlroy.
 ?? DAVID DAVIES/PA VIA AP ?? Five-year-old Wilson McMahon wears a helmet during the final round of the British Open on Sunday in Carnoustie, Scotland.
DAVID DAVIES/PA VIA AP Five-year-old Wilson McMahon wears a helmet during the final round of the British Open on Sunday in Carnoustie, Scotland.

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