OAKMONT, Pa. (AP) _ Jack Nicklaus figures at least one of his
major championship records is safe.
Tiger Woods left Oakmont having squandered another chance to win
a major while playing in the last group, unable to make but one
birdie in the final round of the U.S. Open despite having a short
iron for his approach to the green on a half-dozen occasions.
The next opportunity _ maybe _ will be at Carnoustie for the
British Open, where he is the two-time defending champion. And if he
does show up, it will be his first major as a father. His wife is
due sometime between now and then.
Nicklaus had his first child when he was an amateur, so he won
all 18 majors with children.
``I think that (record) is probably in pretty good shape,''
Nicklaus said earlier this year.
The magic number has always been 18 for Woods, who effectively
launched his assault on the Nicklaus benchmark when he won four
straight majors ending with the 2001 Masters, giving him six at age
25, and he hasn't hit too many dry spells since then.
This is not one of them.
Sunday at Oakmont was his fourth straight major in the final
group, an incredible statistic that gets forgotten because the U.S.
Open was his second straight major as a runner-up.
Almost as impressive as the 18 majors for Nicklaus are the 19
times he finished second.
Is it possible Woods can reach that record before the other?
It seems preposterous now, because Woods has 12 trophies and only
four consolation prizes. What the last year has shown, however, is
that winning starts with putting yourself in position, and no one
has done that better, not even close.
``My last four majors,'' Woods said, ticking off his record, ``1,
1, 2, 2. Not terrible, but it could have been a little better.''
In an age of instant gratification, it can be difficult to see
the big picture.
What made Nicklaus such a dominant force in the majors was that
he was usually around the top of the leaderboard on the final round,
finishing second by making a mistake ('63 British Open), getting
outplayed (Lee Trevino, Tom Watson), or simply having too much
ground to make up in the final round ('64 Masters).
During a quarter-century of contending in majors, he has
experienced just about everything.
And maybe that's what awaits Woods.
The shocker was not that he missed the cut at Winged Foot last
year for the first time in a major, but that it took 10 years for it
to happen. Woods is 12-0 in the majors with at least a share of the
54-hole lead; one of these times, he won't win. It happened to
Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer, even Ben Hogan.
There have been 29 majors when Woods trailed going into the final
round, and he still hasn't won from behind.
``I haven't gotten it done,'' he said. ``Put myself there, and
haven't gotten it done.''
That will change, too.
What separates Woods from everyone else in the game is the number
of times he gives himself a chance, and those are starting to pile
up in alarming fashion. In the last 10 majors, Woods has been atop
the leaderboard or within two shots seven times.
He has lost the last two majors to guys who hardly fit the
profile of Tiger slayers. One was Zach Johnson at the Masters, who
made all the birdie putts that Woods didn't. The other was Angel
Cabrera at Oakmont, who hit all the iron shots that turned out badly
for Woods.
Cabrera, playing four groups ahead of Woods, was in the fairway
on the par-4 11th and stuffed his shot into two feet for birdie.
Woods was in the bunker and fanned a shot that found the bunker,
leading to his only bogey on the back nine.
From the first cut of rough on the 15th, Cabrera cut a shot
toward the flag that stopped three feet behind the flag for a birdie
that ultimately was the difference. Woods had a similar lie and put
it over the flag, into a shaggy collar around the green, and he had
to make an eight-foot par putt just to stay in the game.
Even without trophies, Woods hasn't lost his mystique.
He had to hole a shot from the 18th fairway at Augusta National
to force a playoff with Johnson, and the normal guy from Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, started having abnormal thoughts watching from the
locker-room.
``Before he hit it, I'm like, `He's done stranger things,'''
Johnson said. ``The guy is a phenom.''
Woods only needed a single birdie over his final three holes at
Oakmont to force a playoff, and as Cabrera watched from the
clubhouse, he was making plans for one more round of Oakmont in a
playoff.
But it didn't happen.
Woods did well to two-putt for par on the 244-yard 16th hole. His
best chance came at the 17th, a par 4 where the tee box was moved to
the front and hole played 306 yards. Woods chose three-wood and
found the right bunker, where it looked as though he would at least
give himself a decent look at birdie. He said the ball caught a tiny
rock in the bunker, taking off just enough spin that it rolled past
the flag, down the bank and off the green.
Even as Woods faced a tricky lie between the first cut of rough
and the deeper stuff along the 18th fairway, he had only a wedge in
his hand. Cabrera was asked if he thought Woods would make birdie,
and his answer needed no interpretation.''
``Si,'' the 37-year-old Argentine said.
``Tiger can birdie any hole. He's the No. 1,'' Cabrera later said
through a translator.
But not at this major. And not at the last major.
``Finishing second is never fun,'' Woods said.
But it's not all bad, either. And over the course of his career,
it's bound to happen more often.