Three of Britain's biggest guns flop

Three of Britain's biggest guns flop

Published Jul. 15, 2011 1:00 a.m. ET

Lee Westwood was full of bluster and confidence on the eve of the British Open, claiming he had the patience required to conquer Royal St. George's and capture that elusive first major.

They looked hollow words on Friday as a second-round 73 for 4 over sent a frustrated Westwood tumbling out of the tournament before the weekend.

With two other high-profile Britons — Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell and England's Luke Donald — also failing to make the cut, the major players from the home nations weren't having things all their own way on the southeast coast.

Much had been expected of the second-ranked Westwood at Royal St. George's. A top-three finisher in all the majors, he ended Tiger Woods' 281-week reign as No. 1 in October and has been one of the world's most consistent performers in 2011.

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However, he followed an opening-round 71, during which he had looked sullen and irritable, with another poor display.

Both of his rounds were played when the course conditions were at their most benign, making his performance at Sandwich even more disappointing. He was so unhappy with his second round that he refused to show up for scheduled interviews.

Attempting to shrug off the tag of best current player to not have won a major, Westwood started Friday like he meant business by making a birdie at the par-4 first.

But a dropped shot at No. 2 was soon backed up by a double-bogey 6 at No. 8, and he was even par after the turn.

Just to rub salt in his wounds, playing partner Charl Schwartzel of South Africa — one of the recent batch of major winners that Westwood is striving to emulate — shot a 3-under 67, leaving the Masters champion in a good position on 2 under.

McDowell also was on his way home early after finishing on 5 over, following an error-strewn second-round 77 where he failed to make a single birdie.

The 2010 US Open champion said he had come to the British Open in good form but with the wrong attitude.

''I just don't have that 'dig deep' in me at the minute — it's weird,'' McDowell said. ''I've had half a dozen rounds in the high 70s this year. It's not me. I need to have a look at my mental approach a little bit.

''I'm not in the right frame of mind right now. There's something going on. Maybe my expectation level is putting a little too much pressure on myself.''

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