Tiger Woods
is the only golfer worthy of being considered the favorite at the
British Open, which will tee off on July 19 at Royal Lytham in
Lancashire, England.
Sure, he flopped and faded at the U.S. Open, but there is more promise in that tournament then there are signs of failure.
Woods
had a share of the lead after two days at the U.S., but he ended up
tied for 21st. He fired a 75 in the third round, and began his final
round by going six-over through six holes, and by then he was well out
of contention.
However, he was not playing terrible, he was just
slightly off, and that was a course where you could not afford to be
slightly off.
Should Tiger be the favorite for the British?
No. He can't play at a top level for 4 rounds at a major anymore.
Yes, he is so close and this will be his big breakthrough.
Yes, but only because there is not a better option.
This much was evident as he wrapped up his final round. After
his terrible start, Woods played the final 12 holes at three-under par,
and he certainly wasn't the only golfer to struggle mightily on the
opening six holes at the Olympic Club.
At the root of his
problems were struggles with distance. He hit a ton of shots and putts
that came up short. This is a fairly easy fix as he prepares for the
next major, and there is nothing at Royal Lytham that suggests Tiger
won't play well. His game adapts nicely to the links courses.
The Open was last held at the par 70 Royal Lytham in 2001. Tiger finished 25th, a full nine shots behind David Duval.
Despite this finish back in the pack, he did fire a second round 68, which was one of the better scores of the tournament.
He
will put himself in a position to win this tournament. Who knows if he
will be able to seize it this time, but what I do know, is that there
isn't another golfer I would bet on first.