
FARMINGDALE, N.Y. -- When it was over, they stood together at the ceremony, Lucas Glover, Phil Mickelson, David Duval and Ricky Barnes.
And then someone handed the cup to the wrong guy.
Glover. Yes, he won the U.S. Open Monday, and he deserved it. But this tournament is going to be remembered for the other three guys, and maybe for Tiger Woods, too.
This U.S. Open will forever be defined by the guys who didn't win.
Glover will be an answer to a trivia question.
And the name on the cup, too. Don't forget that. This is his title, and a great personal victory for a journeyman whose name goes on that cup with many of the game's all-time greats.
"I hope I don't downgrade it or anything," he said with the cup seemingly glued to his hand after posting a 4-under for the tournament, "with my name on there."
Woods, Mickelson, Duval and Barnes take away different things, success and failure, arrival and return.
For Woods, it was sheer failure. For Barnes, glass half-full. For Mickelson, well, he choked again at an Open, but this week was just too much for him.
Of all of them, I feel best for Duval. He had fallen into the dark for so long. Just like that, he went from golf's mountaintop. But he insisted that David Duval is not a quitter, and he kept talking all week about his kids, how quitting would send them the wrong message.
Years ago, when Duval was king, he just seemed like a weird guy, talking in a quiet whine, and acting as if he were a little uncomfortable for his own brain. And he hid behind those wraparound glasses.
But he talked all week about his kids, that he wanted them to know that he really could be a good golfer. Well, you think about all that, and realize a guy who has a lot of money spent six years of hell so that his kids would be proud of him.
And then Father's Day comes during his re-emergence, and he finishes tied for second at 2-under, after briefly being tied for the lead. He comes to the ceremony holding his youngest son, Brayden, and well, it was hard not to feel something.
"It may be arrogance," he said, "but it's where I feel like I belong."
He hadn't had a top-10 finish in seven years. And his confidence was shot.
And now he was back, and his kids could know.
"I was in the middle of a golf tournament trying to make birdies," he said. "And I was just having a blast."
Latest US Open Images
FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: David Duval smiles while holding his two year old son Brayden during the trophy presentation after the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** David Duval;Brayden Duval
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: David Duval smiles while holding his two year old son Brayden during the trophy presentation while Ricky Barnes looks on after the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** David Duval;Brayden Duval;Ricky Barnes
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: Lucas Glover celebrates with the winner's trophy alongside Jimmy Roberts of NBC Sports after his two-stroke victory at the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Lucas Glover;Jimmy Roberts
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: Nick Taylor of Canada is awarded the low amateur medal during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Nick Taylor
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: David Duval plays a shot from the ninth fairway during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** David Duval
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: David Duval's wife Susie and coach Puggy Blackmon watch the play during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Susie Duval;Puggy Blackmon
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: Lucas Glover celebrates by waving his ball on the tenth hole during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Lucas Glover
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: David Duval's wife Susie and coach Puggy Blackmon watch the play during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Andrew Redington/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Susie Duval;Puggy Blackmon
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: Ross Fisher of England reacts to his missed putt on the 12th hole during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Ross Fisher
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FARMINGDALE, NY - JUNE 22: (L-R) Ross Fisher of England and David Duval shake hands on the 18th hole during the continuation of the final round of the 109th U.S. Open on the Black Course at Bethpage State Park on June 22, 2009 in Farmingdale, New York. (Photo by Sam Greenwood/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Ross Fisher;David Duval
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For Woods, the picture is only cloudier. He finished in sixth place, at even-par, and was the biggest disappointment on the course. There has been some dispute these past few months about whether his multiple top-10 finishes have been a sign that he's back, following knee surgery, or that he's not.
I'll go with the second one. Tiger Woods has never been about top-10 finishes.
And it was clear at the TPC a few weeks ago that he had lost his swing, and didn't know how or why. But when he won the Memorial, everything had clicked back. He was supposed to take it from there.
Instead, he was never in the tournament. Not from the end of the first day.
"I striped it this week," he said. "I hit it just like I did at Memorial, and unfortunately I didn't make anything."
I don't know. Maybe he's just still recovering, but he has had plenty of time to find his groove now.
He still stands at 14 major titles, four behind Jack Nicklaus' record.
And he's 33 and has had knee troubles.
He's still likely to pass Nicklaus, but it's not a no-brainer anymore, especially after the way he fell apart at the end of the Masters.
Barnes was always a choke waiting to happen. But he nearly emerged with cult-figure status, with good looks, cool language and the goofy painter's cap.
"I was bummed because I had the lead," he said. "Some people could say I gagged it on the front, but I finished strong."
He kept coming back to those last six holes, and it meant something to him. Six years ago, Barnes was supposed to be the great rival for Woods. He got big endorsement bucks and was put on a Woods video game.
But he never made it. So he and Duval emerged from nowhere at the Open.
Barnes had the lead at the start of the day, but by the fifth hole, the pressure was too much.
He started hooking shots and taking chances when he shouldn't, then getting too tentative. It was four straight bogeys. It was total meltdown.
But on the final six holes, he made a birdie and then a few pars and realized he was still in this thing. It wasn't until his missed putt on 18 that he was done. He finished tied for second.
"Bridesmaid," he said, "isn't too bad."
And Mickelson? Well, the New York crowd already loved him, and that only increased with sympathy for what he was going through with his wife, Amy, recently diagnosed with breast cancer.
At one point, the crowd was roughly 15 deep for him, chanting his name and doing the rhythmic-clapping thing. When he walked across the street from the 14th green to the 15th tee, people were running down a hill to get a view, funneling into an area held off by security. One father was pointing out Phil to his son.
This was the potential for history, and it was the moment of Mickelson's career. He was that close to superstardom.
He tied for the lead before missing two short putts, also finishing 2-under, tied for second.
"Kind of an emotional four or five days," he said. "Certainly I'm disappointed. But now that it's over, I've got more important things going on and, oh well."
When Mickelson was done, and out of hope, he walked to the clubhouse, passing the official holding the cup. Fans poured out.
Glover didn't have it won yet. But the story was over.














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-22-2009 @ 7:05PM
aomf said...
duval has always been a puke. i'm so glad he fell short
Reply
6-22-2009 @ 7:47PM
ronhanthorn said...
Tiger needs a new putter.... one with the bubble of a level on it, a camera that reads the topography of the green and then the tiny computer to give him the direction & speed of the putt. Or maybe just needs to throw away his driver for a three wood. He knows that his mental preparedness cost him and easy win at this years U.S. Open. He'll solve it. He is a great player. However, it is good to see some one else win for a change, but, I love to watch "Tiger's" game...
Reply
6-22-2009 @ 8:47PM
jalenknowsbest said...
whats going on with this beef b/t Tiger, Jim Brown and MJ?
Anyone know anything about this?
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 2:08PM
ZaZapper said...
Yep, Jim Brown stated he wasn't too happy that Tiger and MJ haven't followed his and others lead fighting for civil rights.
6-22-2009 @ 9:50PM
Cameron Wells said...
Yea Tiger has lost it - has won the Memorial and Bay Hill this year...only player in the 60's for three days this week...only player with the bad draw anywhere near the lead...when he wins the British you will be writing about his greatness -stop the overreacting...
Reply
6-22-2009 @ 9:53PM
Bob said...
It's a shame we'll never know what crazy twist might have happened with a Mickelson win. Think about it--would the golf world suddenly have embraced Phil as its favorite son, as the New York crowd did? Would Tiger suddenly start getting heckled at other venues? People might've seen this as a chance to get off the Woods-wagon for a while, and get behind the eternal underdog, the guy known better for his implosions than his titles. Unfortunately, we'll never know, because Phil is likely to take off now and be with his family, and the golf world will continue to revolve around Tiger--a truly worthy centerpiece, but it never hurts to put someone else on that pedestal for a little while every now and then.
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6-23-2009 @ 12:44AM
hardmba said...
A most satisfying US Open. Congratulations to Lucas Glover. Well played. Too bad about the rest of the field, but I have a hard time feeling too bad about it. After all, $533K for maid-of-honor slot ain't nothing to sneeze at.
I love performance surprises in sports, but what I love even more is seeing all the winner predictions from so-called professional sports pundits left in complete shambles at the end of the 72nd hole. Just confirms for me that they have no more idea than I do about whose going to win or lose and that they wasted their spleen on trying to get it right. Who knew the key to success at Beth Page this year would be what Lucas Glover does best....drive the hell out of the ball. Homer goes, "Dooh!" Where were all the smart pickers on that one? In fact, why does anyone waste their time trying to predict the outcome of these things? I know, I know; money, ego and notoriety.
I prefer my low-key approach to sports. Don't ruin it by worrying about who is going to win. No sports pools. No bookies. No brag. No coat-tail grabbing. Just sit back, relax & watch some amazingly good and amazingly bad stuff happen when the money and reputation stakes are high. Reality theater!
It's a show with no plot, just rules, so by definition, anything can happen. That's why we don't risk our own ass by getting in the mix ourselves, but just watch it instead. It is just entertainment, folks, and these guys are all particularly talented actors on a stage.
One thing you can be sure of is that all these guys on this stage will change places at the next performance, so chill out about Phil and Tiger and Duval and, all the other guys that didn't win this one, including people who the sports writers have been ignoring for months, like Sergio and Rory and Rosco and Vjay, to name just a few.
They'll all get lots of other chances another day and they will either make it or they won't then, too. In any case those of us who are not good enough to play with them, should just shut up about it and watch guys with more talent than us for this sport perform. I would also ask that we show a little more respect for winners and losers, because, let's be honest, even the least of them losers are better than we are at this game. And even if they aren't better than you, they at least have a hell of a lot more guts, going out every week chasing the brass ring on such mediocre talent.
So, 'til the next time some sports pundit writes some drivel about the next tournament that I can blog to.... Relax and Enjoy.
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 6:26AM
obamaizadope said...
Face it, without Tiger and Phil, golf is dead. Duval is still a prick, Ricky Bobby Barnes is a football player impersonating a golfer, and watching Lucas Glover is slightly more exciting than watching paint dry, or watching Steve Stricker..
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 7:50AM
lilypietyb said...
I found a great site --- RichRomances.com ---- It 's where you have the opportunity dreaming about dating a millionaire and make it true!
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 7:52AM
Bob said...
Dear obamaizadope, having you call someone else a prick is a classic example of the pot calling the kettle black. After having read many of your posts, every single one dripping with hate, bigotry, and plain old nastiness, I'll bet you're VERY well acquainted with what it's like being a prick. Why don't you give it a rest--Archie Bunker's already been done. Besides, you're just jealous, anyway, because all those you keep running down actually had the "stones" to go and make something of their lives, while people like you just sit around in your pathetic little world wondering what it's like to have a pair.
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 9:14AM
furrsher said...
Tom Lehman and Fred Funk should be ashamed of themselves for taking the places of two deserving golfers that had a chance of winning or at least making some money. Old timers should be barred!!!
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 11:36AM
nickcherryl said...
The way Tiger was running his mouth with the mother f this and mother f that when he made bad shots, if that would have been a white person you would have seen slime media outlet NBC all over that, they suck. Makes me wonder if the fix wasx in on the two events he won this year, that one at BAY HILL really looked like some of the races I've been and the jockey pulled his horse up????
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 12:09PM
Steve Miles said...
TIGER IS A HOT HEAD DICK HEAD CRY BABY YOU CAN TAKE THAT TO THE BANK.........................
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 12:33PM
bikinginor said...
There are some miserable idiots on this site. I can't believe what some of you write. Can you be that full of hate and misery??? I'm glad I have my life and not yours! I feel sorry for you idiots! The golf at the open was golf, never predictable and never easy! Full of good play and bad and some good story lines.
Reply
6-23-2009 @ 10:00PM
Bob said...
Dear obamaizadope, thanks for graciously proving everything I just said. What a miserable wretch you must be--do you have any friends at all(other than Nazis, KKK members, and mass murderers)? Hey bikinginor, here's the head of the class you spoke of--wonderful personality.
Reply
6-24-2009 @ 10:54AM
bikinginor said...
Bob, you got that right! Makes you happy to be you and live the life you live, I wouldn't want to be that miserable! Good example of what is wrong with the world!