Jean van de Velde's Open disaster at Carnoustie showed how hard winning can be

Jean van de Velde's last-hole
disaster at the 1999 Open at Carnoustie was the costliest in the history of the
game
How difficult is it to win a golf
tournament?
It is a good question with a
Carnoustie Open Championship on the horizon - especially when you consider Jean
van de Velde's 1999 capitulation.
All the Frenchman required was a
double bogey at the last to claim a maiden major title yet, infamously, he
contrived to take seven on that closing par four.
Remarkably, Van de Velde insists he
did not do much wrong on that final hole. His one mistake, he contends, came
with the third shot from the rough when he went directly for the green
The next time the Open went to this
fearsome Scottish links, in 2007, Padraig Harrington needed a play-off to beat
Sergio Garcia after taking a messy six on that final hole. Anything less would
have given him victory.
And it is not only that beastly 18th
at Carnoustie that illustrates the difficulty of crossing the winning line.
Only on Sunday it took four extra
holes for Ariya Jutanugarn to close out the Women's US Open
despite the Thai carrying a seven-stroke advantage into the back nine at Shoal
Creek.
At any level, strength of mind is a
vital commodity and the unique pressure of the mental game is our big talking
point on The Cut BBC Golf Podcast this week.
Jutanugarn had to dig much deeper
than she ever expected to become a two-time major champion and Harrington
needed a brilliant up-and-down to make the play-off against Garcia.
Jutanugarn had six birdies in the
final round but needed a sublime bunker shot in the play-off to win the Women's
US Open
At least those two emerged with
titles to their name. Van de Velde was runner-up to Paul Lawrie after the most
costly final hole foul-up in the history of the game.
Yet the genial Frenchman is
remarkably unscarred by what most players would surely consider a career-ending
collapse.
"We all fight to have our name
on the trophy but the journey is sometimes more important than the
destination," Van de Velde told The Cut.
"I've always felt that I was
very lucky to have made a living out of my passion, to have the world as my
playground and lucky enough to play in the best golf tournaments in the world.
"As a kid who likes the sport,
who doesn't want to do that? Sometimes we have to have perspective and not only
cry over what we didn't get."
Van de Velde was speaking during a
recent visit to the Angus Links, which stages this year's Championship from
19-22 July. He vividly remembers that week 19 years ago when he tamed a brutal
Carnoustie for 71 of the 72 holes.
"I was playing extremely well
and I was putting very well, more importantly," the now 52-year-old
recalled. "I felt comfortable, I won the qualifying at Monifieth down the
road, shooting two 67s to qualify.
"I came here and the set-up was
extremely tough, the conditions were horrendous, it was so windy. All you could
hear were the biggest names in golf saying how difficult the course was.
"I guess everybody was a bit
shaken and discouraged with what was happening because if you missed a shot you
could do a double or triple bogey very, very quickly. It was just a matter of
trying to survive the test and survive the week."
Rounds of 75-68-70 put Van de Velde
level par with one round to go, five shots clear of the American Justin Leonard
and Australia's Craig Parry and 10 clear of eventual champion Lawrie.
By the time the Frenchman arrived at
the final tee, he was three ahead knowing a double bogey would be enough for
him to claim golf's most historic and prestigious title.
Despite his sizable advantage, Van
de Velde chose to use his driver off the tee, and was lucky to find dry land to
the right of the Barry Burn. "I got away with it - I was on the fairway
and I had a terrific angle," he admitted.
"People say I should have
played left but the fact of the matter is that I was the one playing the golf
in accordance with my DNA. I felt hitting a two iron was not too much of a problem.
Jean van de Velde suffered a number
of blunders and misfortunes on his way to blowing a three-shot lead on the 18th
hole at Carnoustie in 1999
"All I had to do was hit it
towards the flag, finish in the bunker and the game was over. Now, I hit a
piece of metal the size of a golf ball on the grandstand and the ball came back
after ricocheting off the wall on the side of the burn and went back another 30
yards.
"If it had stayed by the
grandstand I would have had a drop and would have probably made a six. But
things happen, whether it is for a reason or not."
Remarkably, Van de Velde insists he
did not do much wrong on that final hole. His one mistake, he contends, came
with the third shot from the rough when he went directly for the green.
"I could have hit it sideways
but the ball was lying so bad I wasn't sure that I could have left it on the
fairway," he said.
"Hitting it forward from that
lie was bringing the water into play; it was bringing everything into play. I
could have shut the clubface and hit it out of bounds so the third, going
forward, was definitely a mistake there."
His ball ended up in the burn in
front of the green. Amid scenes of French farce, Van de Velde rolled up his
trouser legs and paddled into the water to size up playing from the hazard.
"The tide was going up
otherwise I could have played that ball without any problem from down there -
it is like a bunker shot," he added.
Instead he took a penalty drop in
the rough, found the greenside bunker and bravely got up and down to earn a
place in a three-way play-off with Lawrie and Leonard.
"There's no doubt I knew where
I stood, you know what you have to do," he said. "But I did not panic
at any time, I did not lose my composure.
"I made a bad choice on the
third one, the rest I maximised it. I was fine, I was really OK. There was no
negative emotion, there was no 'oh my god, it is slipping away'.
"People forget I could have won
the play-off. At least I gave myself a chance to win despite all the trauma."
It is clear Van de Velde is
completely at peace with what happened. "I'm just saying the course -
sooner or later - was going to take a few prisoners and it just happened for me
to be on the last hole," he said.
"At the end of the day, how
many people can say that they went through those emotions; they walked down the
fairway with that crowd on 18, leading the tournament. I mean, come on, you
gotta be real here."
It might be easier to be so sanguine
nearly two decades on but Van de Velde rationalised the experience almost
instantaneously.
What did he do that night when
Lawrie was celebrating a brilliant closing 67, play-off victory and a first
major title?
"I actually invited all my
friends, we had dinner here in the hotel and I had 15 people around the table
and we celebrated the week," Van de Velde said.
"We had something to eat and we
drank a lot of red wine." Alas, for him, it was not poured from the famous
Claret Jug.
Van de Velde will be back at
Carnoustie next month commentating for French television. "I will be
walking in the middle of the fairway and you probably won't see me in the burn
this year," he laughed.
More seriously, he is living proof
that winning is not everything. He also knows better than anyone the trophy
will not be securely in the hands of the next Open champion until he completes
all 72 holes.
Winning is never easy, especially at
Carnoustie.
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