That's
the best I've played, says Aussie Leishman
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[July 21, 2015]
By Tony Jimenez
ST ANDREWS, Scotland (Reuters) -
Little-known Marc Leishman hailed the finest tournament display of his
career after finishing joint second with South African Louis Oosthuizen
at the 144th British Open on Monday.
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Leishman and Oosthuizen were eclipsed by American winner Zach
Johnson in a four-hole playoff but the Australian said he took a lot
of positives from his St Andrews campaign.
"I've never put four really good rounds together like that," the
31-year-old told reporters after landing a bumper cheque for 536,500
pounds ($834,954).
"I've probably putted better, I've probably driven it better, I've
hit my irons better but put all together, that's probably the best
week I've had."
Leishman led golf's oldest major with six holes of his final round
to play and, with victory in sight, an errant stroke at the par-four
16th proved costly.
He hit his second shot into a deep bunker and, despite splashing out
skillfully, a missed putt from five feet meant he signed for a five.
"That hole was disappointing," said Leishman who now lives in the
U.S. and has one PGA Tour win to his name. "I actually didn't hit
that bad a putt, it just didn't do what I thought it was going to
do.
"I hit a really good bunker shot and didn't finish it off."
A serious illness suffered by his wife Audrey earlier this year will
ensure Leishman's disappointment will not linger for long.
She was so ill three months ago with myopathy, a disease where the
muscles cease to function, that he feared he might lose her and
thoughts of quitting golf went through his mind.
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Leishman's wife is still weak but on the road to recovery and her
health scare has helped give the golfer a new perspective on day to
day matters.
"I feel like I've always had a pretty good outlook on life and now
it takes a lot more to worry me," he explained earlier this week.
"I don't get annoyed about little things that I cannot really help.
When you hit a bad shot there's no real point getting frustrated
about it.
"I feel like even if I do have a bad day I can still go home and
hopefully give my wife a hug and cuddle my two boys," said Leishman.
(Editing by Justin Palmer)
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