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"There has been a bit of focus on work I have been doing on my swing," he said. "In fairness, I've done that work all the time at different stages in my career. The difference is I'm a little bit more high-profile now, and the spotlight is on me."
It will shine even brighter in any weather Thursday. He will play the first two rounds with Masters champion Angel Cabrera and Woods, the defending champion at the U.S. Open.
In a search for answers, someone asked Woods why someone would change a swing that won a major or three.
"You're asking the wrong guy," Woods said. "After I won the Masters by 12 (shots), I changed my swing. People thought I was crazy for that. I said, 'Just wait. Just be patient with it. It will come around.'"
Did it ever.
He won 17 times over the next two seasons, and capped off that overhaul by winning four consecutive majors.
"Sometimes you have to take a step or two back before you can make a giant leap forward," Woods said. "And that's the hard part, sticking through those periods."
Geoff Ogilvy used to lose his temper, if not his mind, if his game deserted him for a couple of holes. He understands the frustration of hitting balls for hours on the range without feeling instant gratification.
Harrington is a different breed.
"Most of the guys would get depressed if they won two majors and started struggling," Ogilvy said. "But he seems to be to just say, 'It will be all right. I'm working it out. It's a project of mine. When I work it out, we'll get back to winning tournaments.' That's the way he seems to be approaching it. And not many people can do that.
"He seems to be the only one who doesn't get frustrated by it."
That will be the case Thursday, no matter how he plays. Harrington concedes his confidence level is not where it was at Oakland Hills last August, when he won the PGA Championship. How can it be after missing three straight cuts?
"As we say at home," Harrington said, "the lightning storm is too late to get up and patch the roof. So I've got to accept that I've got this week."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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