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Sports

David caps comeback with final day rally

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FARMINGDALE, New York – David Duval walked off the 18th green Monday afternoon waving his white cap.

A show of surrender?

Not from Duval. Not this week, when his improbable US Open quest often seemed doomed, only to see him rally every time and nearly get his name etched on the trophy.

“It may be arrogance,” Duval said, “but this is where I feel like I belong.”

Once the world’s No. 1 player and someone who entered Monday as the planet’s 882nd-best golfer — he leapfrogged 740 players by day’s end, up to No. 142 — Duval was beaten by only one player this week at Bethpage Black, finishing two shots behind Lucas Glover and in a tie for second with Phil Mickelson and Ricky Barnes.

It was his first top 10 since 2002, netting a check for $559,830 that nearly matched what he’s made in the last five years combined.

“It’s very difficult to sit here and say second place is a failure,” said Duval, who led the field with 19 birdies. “It is very much a success. It’s not quite the success I had looked forward to this week and had hoped for, and in some way expected. But success, nonetheless.”

Success borne from his resilience, which was on display throughout the season’s second major.

When Duval got to the 17th tee Monday afternoon, he was tied for the lead.

He took the circuitous route, for certain.

Duval made four bogeys in a five-hole span in the second round, atoning for each one over the next 12 holes and making up all the lost ground. In the third round, two early bogeys hurt him again, knocking him far from the first page of the leaderboard. It looked like last year’s British Open, when he was three shots back after 36 holes and shot a third-round 83.

Except this was Bethpage, not Royal Birkdale.

Duval kept it together this time.

“He’s back to Old David,” said his coach, Puggy Blackmon. “He’s very, very close to what he used to be.”

Duval came to Bethpage tied for third Monday morning. In a flash, he was 14th — making triple bogey at the par-3 third, after a tee ball buried against the lip of a bunker and left him with no shot, then another chip airmailed the flag and rolled off the opposite side of the green.

Duval swears he didn’t think he was out of it, even then.

“I don’t quit,” Duval said.

He’s proven that before. (AP)

vuukle comment

BETHPAGE

BETHPAGE BLACK

BRITISH OPEN

DAVID DUVAL

DUVAL

LUCAS GLOVER

NEW YORK

OLD DAVID

PHIL MICKELSON AND RICKY BARNES

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