US PGA: Pádraig Harrington sees good times ahead after strong finish

Three-time Major winner in line for top 10 position at Baltusrol

Pádraig Harrington  plays from a greenside bunker on the 18th hole  during the final round of the US  PGA Championship at Baltusrol Golf Club  in Springfield, New Jersey. Photograph: Andrew Redington/Getty Images
Pádraig Harrington plays from a greenside bunker on the 18th hole during the final round of the US PGA Championship at Baltusrol Golf Club in Springfield, New Jersey. Photograph: Andrew Redington/Getty Images

His last competitive action was a straightforward tap-in for par on the 18th green, then a removal of his cap which he raised towards the galleries. They like their past champions, and Pádraig Harrington – rekindling many of those quality shots of old – deserved whatever accolades came his way as a final round 68, for a total of six-under-par 274, earned him a top-10 finish in the season’s final Major.

This was vintage Harrington, a fact appreciated by his player partner Danny Willett who'd played with the 44-year-old Dubliner for the final two rounds of this 98th PGA Championship and witnessed the three-time Major champion show grit, quality shot-making and a capacity for rescue shots from unlikely places.

In the final round, Harrington’s approach to the sixth plugged in a greenside bunker and, undeterred, he committed to a wedge recovery, hit it to four feet and saved par. Typical, really. “Probably hit one of the best shots in my life, I didn’t back off,” he acknowledged.

Although a chance to actually contend for the Wanamaker Trophy proved beyond his reach, Harrington’s weekend rounds of 65-68 provided a throwback to his wonderful close-up to win this championship at Oakland Hills in Detroit back in 2008. And, if anything, provided confirmation that the road ahead isn’t quite so rocky as he sets about emulating new goals.

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Indeed, this finish from Harrington has effectively secured his place in the season-ending FedEx Cup series on the PGA Tour. He started the week in 140th position but has moved inside the critical 125 cut-off mark and he will play one of his favourite regular tour events The Travelers in Connecticut this week before moving on to represent Ireland at the Olympics in Rio.

Harrington suffered only one bogey in his final two rounds, on the 10th hole of his fourth round where a pulled tee shot into heavy rough proved his undoing. It was a round that had everything: on the fifth, his approach hit the flag pole, leaving a tap-in birdie; and, overall, there were birdies on the third, fifth and 17th in making for a very decent week’s work. “I’d take putting like this every day. I’d take playing like this every day.”

Indeed, it could have been better, if only the putts had rolled into the tin cup. Time and time again, he set up chances. On the 12th, he left it on the lip. On the 13th, it shaved the cup. On the 14th, 15th and 16th, there were birdie chances that refused to drop. “I look back I could have holed a few more putts, but I probably came out of the round neutral. That’s probably what I deserved,” he observed.

With the rain soaked into his own Dunnes Stores brand top, and the water dripping down his face, there was no rush anywhere afterwards. He soaked in the moments of again getting into the fringes of contention in a Major. This is what he wants, why he works so hard.

“I’m not walking away from this with any (questions). I’m not second guessing anything. I’m very comfortable with the way I played. If I continue to play like this every day, there’s (going to be) good days ahead for me,” said Harrington.

With the Olympics looming ever closer, an event he has embraced from the get-go, Harrington observed: “I’m happy with my swing, getting a lot better with my putting, getting a lot better with my mental side. The only thing I’m not comfortable with, kind of, is my short game . . . . then when I look at the PGA Tour (statistics), I’m No 1 in bunkers and No 4 in strokes gained around the greens, but I don’t see it so good. Maybe that’s just my own perception, maybe I need to change my attitude.”

Philip Reid

Philip Reid

Philip Reid is Golf Correspondent of The Irish Times