Curtis soars with unlikely eagle at brutal Birkdale
By Norman Dabell
SOUTHPORT (Reuters) - A spectacular eagle two in gale-force conditions lifted Ben Curtis on his way to the clubhouse lead in Saturday's third round of the British Open at Royal Birkdale.
American Curtis, the surprise champion at Royal St. George's in 2003, carded a level-par 70 to post a seven-over total of 217 on a day when the entire field was battling for survival.
The 31-year-old holed out with a magical nine-iron approach from 165 yards on the par-four third to give himself a glimmer of a chance of lifting the Claret Jug for a second time.
"I heeled it (the ball) a little bit and thought it was going right, into the greenside bunker," Curtis told reporters after a round that also featured two birdies and four bogeys.
"Luckily it held its line and I thought it might be all right -- but when we walked forward they (the spectators) were going crazy."
His fortunate shot gave him one hole where he would not need a putter, an advantage on a wind-blown day when several balls were oscillating on the greens.
PUTTING PROBLEMS
"In those conditions, the putting gives you the most problems," Curtis said. "You've got to pull the trigger pretty quickly when you've decided your line because the ball can roll back and even hit your feet. Continued...



