The Shark is circling with 2-shot lead in British
It only got harder after he finished another chapter in this incredible script at Royal Birkdale.
Norman played the perfect pitch shot over a pot bunker to within a foot of the cup for par, giving him a 2-over 72 and a two-shot lead over defending champion Padraig Harrington and K.J. Choi.
With so much baggage behind him in the majors, Norman did all he could late Saturday not to look too far ahead. He is 18 holes from becoming golf's oldest major champion, but wouldn't bite when asked what it would feel like to win.
"Ask me that question tomorrow night if that happens, OK?" he said.
Norman is 1-6 when he has at least a share of the 54-hole lead in the majors, his only victory coming at Turnberry in 1986. His career is defined as much by the majors he lost as the two British Open titles he won. How would he reply to those who said he couldn't possible win?
"I didn't hear any of that," Norman said.
All he would acknowledge was that he was at 2-over 212, in the lead at a major with an opportunity no one saw coming.
The facts in what seems like fiction are that Norman played the final eight holes without a bogey and emerged from a four-way logjam at the turn to leave himself one round away from a feat that might top Tiger Woods winning the U.S. Open on one leg.
The rest of the details are hard to believe.
This is no longer the thrill-seeking Great White Shark who used to routinely beat up on the best players in every major until it was time to award the trophy. This is a part-time golfer who had not played in a major for three years. The only reason he entered this British Open was to practice for a couple of senior majors in the coming weeks.
"It is different, no question," Norman said. "The players are probably saying, 'My God, what's he doing up there?"'
He will be in the last group Sunday with Harrington, who doesn't see Norman as anything but a two-time British Open champion.
"When he's interested, Greg Norman can really play," said Harrington, who overcame his wind-blown mistakes with four birdies for a 72. "He's well capable of putting it together, as he's shown in the first three rounds, and I don't think anybody should expect anything but good play from him tomorrow."
Norman and Harrington were the only two players among the final 11 groups to break 75.
No one broke par. Nine players failed to break 80, including David Duval, who was three shots behind until a triple bogey on the opening hole. His 83 matched his worst score in a British Open.



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