Louis Oosthuizen holds the Claret Jug on the Swilken Bridge at St Andrews yesterday.
Louis Oosthuizen holds the Claret Jug on the Swilken Bridge at St Andrews yesterday.

Claret Jug whets winner Oosthuizen's appetite



'I want a few more of these,' Oosthuizen says as he wakes up in St Andrews with the trophy at his bedside. Doug Ferguson reports Louis Oosthuizen never let the silver Claret Jug out of his sight as he celebrated into the morning hours at the Jigger Inn across from the 17th fairway at St Andrews. If his seven-shot victory in the British Open felt like a dream, reality arrived when he awoke yesterday.

"I put it next to my bed last night, and I woke up this morning and I looked at it, and I immediately grabbed the phone and texted Chubby Chandler, my agent, saying, 'I've got this funny old jug next to my bed'," Oosthuizen said. "Man, oh, man. That was special, waking up next to it." Equally special was his victory at the Home of Golf, a performance so pure that he never trailed over the final 48 holes and hit into only one bunker on the Old Course, on the 14th hole on Sunday, when the championship was all but decided in his favour.

Oosthuizen became the fifth player in the past six grand slam events to win his first major, and the question sure to follow is whether he is capable of winning more or if he happened to play his best golf during an important week. The margin of victory is what makes this stand out. Until his conservative play on the 17th to make bogey, Oosthuizen was poised to tie the Open record over 72 holes with an eight-shot victory, last achieved by Tiger Woods a decade ago.

Seven shots is no less impressive. In the 150 years of major championships, only 14 players have won by seven shots or more (Woods has done three times, Jack Nicklaus twice). Of those players, only two of them - Fred Herd in the 1898 US Open and Willie Smith in the 1899 US Open - never won another major. Where does Oosthuizen fit in? "I think based on the margin of victory, his demeanour on the golf course, the quality of his game and steady progress that he's been making in the world rankings and in tour events, I think very much mark him as a player on the rise," Peter Dawson, the Royal and Ancient chief executive, said yesterday. "Every great Open champion has to win for the first time. And I for one would not be surprised to see him win again."

That would be the plan for the 27-year-old South African. In an age of players turning pro earlier and winning tour events immediately, from Ryo Ishikawa to Rory McIlroy to Anthony Kim, Oosthuizen might be a late bloomer. Ernie Els noticed his potential immediately when he invited Oosthuizen to be part of his foundation, which helps promising juniors who need financial assistance. Oosthuizen wears "57" on his sleeve, the name of his own foundation, as a tribute to the score he shot on his home course of Mossel Bay along the Garden Route in South Africa.

"The wind blows so hard there that the seagulls walk," said Chandler, the winner's agent. Yet the self-belief was lacking until Oosthuizen won the Andalucia Open in Spain earlier this year, his first European Tour victory. And while he would not have predicted a victory in the British Open, he knew he was capable. The key to his victory came in the second round. Oosthuizen began in the wind and rain, and he has never liked playing in wet weather. He managed to get through the rough part without dropping a shot, and wound up with a 67 just as the wind turned fierce.

He figures the seven years he spent on the European Tour toughened him up, and winning in Spain did nothing but boost his confidence. "I want a few more of these," he said, his eyes rarely wandering from the jug. "I think winning one just wants you to get to the second one, and winning a second one and then get to the third. Yeah, I'm going to work a bit harder probably from now on and just try and get up there with as many majors as I can."

During a night of celebration at the Jigger Inn, he stepped outside into a garden and looked over the stone wall toward an empty Old Course, wanting to walk the links and soak in all he had accomplished. Gary Player, South Africa's greatest golf champion, called Oosthuizen on Sunday morning for a pep talk. Player does not know as much about Oosthuizen as he does other South African players, yet he will not forget his last time playing the US Masters, how Oosthuizen came out to the 18th green to watch him finish.

"He is so respectful," Player said. "It's very nice when you get a young man like this that has no sense of entitlement." Oosthuizen took that respect to a new level when it comes to golf's oldest trophy. British Open champions keep the Claret Jug for a year, and usually return with stories of what was poured out of it. Stewart Cink, the 2009 champion, confessed to using it as a container for soda and barbecue sauce. For now, the jug is as clean as when Cink returned it. "There was nothing in this," Oosthuizen said. "To me, it's too special. I just looked at it and held it in my arms all night." * AP

World rankings on Monday, July 19, 2010 (last week's positions in brackets): 1. (1) T Woods (US) 10.14 2. (2) P Mickelson (US) 9.38 3. (3) L Westwood (Britain) 9.15 4. (4) S Stricker (US) 7.47 5. (5) J Furyk (US) 6.61 6. (6) E Els (South Africa) 5.79 7. (9) R McIlroy (Britain) 5.72 8. (10) P Casey (Britain) 5.69 9. (7) L Donald (Britain) 5.55 10. (8) I Poulter (Britain) 5.38 11. (11) G McDowell (Britain) 4.95 12. (13) M Kaymer (Germany) 4.94 13. (12) A Kim (US) 4.83 14. (14) R Allenby (Australia) 4.37 15. (54) L Oosthuizen (S Africa) 4.12

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