16 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, July 24, 2006 SPORTS Woods captures third British Open, 11th major HOYLAKE (AP) - Tiger Woods bottled up his emotions when he buried his father in May. Even as he stalked the brown, baked links of the British Open on Sunday, his steely focus never wavered. Until he tapped in his final putt. That gave him his third claret jug, his 1lth major championship, but the first victory he couldn't share with Pops. And that was all too much for him. "I saw this coming last night," said Steve Wil- liams, the caddie and confidante who stood with him at Earl Woods's gravesite. "He played at the Masters, and it was the only time I saw him try too hard. Today, there was a calmness about him. No doubt he wanted to win this for him." Woods plucked the ball from the cup after a 5- under 67 gave him a two-shot victory over Chris DiMarco. With his face awash in sadness and satisfaction, he thrust both arms in the air and screamed, "Yes!" He buried his head in Williams's shoulder, sob- bing uncontrollably, chest heaving. Tears streamed down both cheeks as he hugged his wife, Elin, for the longest minute. The emotions that poured out of him on the 18th green were as inevitable as his victory at Royal Liverpool. "I've never done that," Woods said. "But at that moment, it just came pouring out. I was pretty bummed out after not winning the Masters, becauseI knew that was the last major he was ever going to see. That one hurt a little bit. Andto getthis one ... it's just unfortunate he wasn't here to see it." It sure would have looked familiar. Woods was ruthless as ever, running his record to 11-0 in the major when he has the lead going into the final round. And when DiMarco closed to within one shot with a mixture of birdies and a 50- foot par save, Woods fired off three straight birdies to put him away. "He's got an uncanny ability, when somebody gets close to him, to just turn it up another level," DiMarco said. Woods became the first player since Tom Wat- son in 1982-83 to win golf's oldest championship in consecutive years. He captured his 11th major at age 30, tied with Walter Hagen for second on the career list, one step closer to the 18 professional majors won by Jack Nicklaus, the benchmark that drives Woods. "He knows how to win these things," said Ernie Els, who shot 71 and finished third. "And it's going to be tough to beat him now." It was only the third time Woods has played since his father died May 3 after a brutal bout with cancer. Some questioned whether he could regain his focus after taking nine weeks off, especially after his 76-76 at the U.S. Open to miss the cut for the first time in a major. Some took issue with his strategy for Hoylake, hosting a British Open for the first time in 39 years. Woods hit driver only once - on the 16th hole of the first round - instead staying well short of the bunkers and relying on iron play so impeccable that his caddie kept a list of all the shots his boss missed during the week. It was a short list, indeed. There was that 6-iron that missed the 14th green on Thursday, a 7-iron into the bunker at No. 7 on Saturday, and the 4-iron that went long and left at No. 12 on Sunday, leading to his only bogey of the final round. It was his 49th career victory, and the $1.3 mil- lion for first place put him atop the money list and pushed him over $60 million for his career. The next stop for Woods is the PGA Cham- pionship at Medinah, near Chicago, where he won in 1999. Woods now has three British Open titles, the same as Nicklaus, and his victory at Hoylake carried another comparison. The first major Nicklaus won after his father died in 1970 also was the British Open. What would Earl Woods have thought of this victory? "He would have been very proud," Woods said. "He was always on my case about thinking my way around the golf course and not letting emotions get the better of you." He didh't. Not until he had the claret jug firmly in his grasp. LANDIS Continued from Page 15 the Champs-Elysees. "He proved he was the strongest, everybody wrote him off." Landis becomes the third American to win the world's most prestigious bike race, behind Armstrong and three-time winner Greg LeMond. Landis learned discipline at an early age. His devout Mennonite parents, Paul and Arlene, shunned organized sports and were all about hard work. That, in turn, was passed onto their six chil- with The Associated Press last week. dren. Landis didn't have much idle "I don't blame them for thinking that it time, helping his dad at the car wash, was absurd that you want to ride your fixing washing machines and mowing bike that much." the lawn. Though he learned key lessons from Though the family had a car and Armstrong - for example, how to electricity in the house, they adhered build a team around a single rider - to a simple life with no television or he insists his drive was different from m radio. ' Armstrong, a cancer survivor. Fewer As he grew up, Landis wanted some- U.S. flags lined the famed Paris avenue thing more - and biking provided the for the finish this time, perhaps an escape. indication that Americans didn't think "Riding my bike wasn't the problem, there was much of a chance for victory it was just that I got obsessed with it," without Armstrong. HP PH Landis recalled during an interview Landis showed them. Floyd Landis proudly displays the American flag after winning the Tour de France. 0