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Harrington makes most of unlikely second chance

 
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The groans could be heard all the way to Dublin. Then he pitched to within four feet and knocked in the putt, which meant Garcia had to par the hole to win. Garcia didn't. It was unbelievable theater, even for those with a vested interest.

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"We had visions of Van de Velde there, didn't we?" Harrington's wife, Caroline, said as she awaited Garcia's fate on the 72nd hole.

Stewart Cink, who played alongside Harrington, almost covered his eyes as he watched Harrington seemingly trash a beautiful round.

"The 18th just has so much danger," Cink said. "It's everywhere. It hurts a little bit to even see that happening. It's almost numbing."

Harrington watched Garcia finish the 72nd from the scorer's trailer, the sound turned off.

"Obviously, I didn't want to hear analysis of my 6," he cracked.

Harrington quickly took control in the playoff with a birdie on No. 1, the first extra hole, making a birdie to take a two-shot lead. Garcia shaved the edge of the cup on the second and third holes but couldn't catch up. Harrington finally sealed the deal with a nervous 3-footer for a bogey on the dreaded 18th.

"The emotions of it? I couldn't believe it," he said. "'Am I the Open champion?' I was thinking. There was so much going through my head and a huge amount of it was genuine shock."

Given the way Harrington had played, that's a bit hard to believe. He had four birdies, an eagle and zero bogeys on the card before he fanned his tee ball into the drink on the 18th.

"He didn't miss a shot for 17 holes," said Mike Davis, the USGA rules official assigned to referee the group. "Then, can you imagine, he hits two in the water and has to get up and down just to have any chance?"

Yep, hard to imagine, and harder to watch it come to fruition. Garcia, who shot a 2-over 73 after starting the day with a three-shot lead, knew he needed a par on the 18th and hit a safe 2-iron off the tee but found a bunker with his 3-iron approach and failed to get up and down.

Garcia sputtered as players started piling up birdies behind him and fell out of the lead for the first time all week midway through the round. But this time he fought back with birdies on Nos. 13 and 14 when it looked like he was starting his seemingly inevitable Sunday wobble.

Down the stretch, Garcia shaved the lip of the cup on Nos. 15, 17 and 18, plus all four holes of the playoff. Early in the round, he hit a drive into a divot. His best shot of the day, an approach on the second playoff hole, hit the flagstick and bounced 15 feet away. He missed from there.

Not surprisingly, Garcia was left to wonder whether the gods have conspired against him. His only solace was found in sarcasm when asked if he was disappointed.

"No, I'm thrilled," said Garcia, who finished in the top five for the third straight year at the Open, but is still winless in the majors. "Happiest man in the world."

No, that would be the other guy, obviously. Harrington, one of the most genuinely likeable pros on tour, turned pro after college at 21 and hoped merely to eke out a nice life. Visions of victories were for the more accomplished players. Now the 35-year-old Irishman, who walks with a jaunty gait and an easy smile, has done the ultimate.

Europe, and Ireland in particular, has been waiting years to throw a party like this for a native son.

"I don't know if I ever believed I was going to do it," he said, "but this week, I tried to convince myself I could do it."

As Harrington spoke to a packed room of writers afterward, his son was seated nearby and attempting to get his mitts around the Claret Jug, which was stationed on the table fronting Harrington. Not so fast, son. Dad whispered something in his son's ear, and the fidgeting soon stopped.

After all, dad had hoisted his son twice already.

Now it was time to raise the Jug.

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