Harrington looks to improve further

Pádraig Harrington said there was still room for improvement in his game after securing his third victory in the last six majors…

Pádraig Harrington said there was still room for improvement in his game after securing his third victory in the last six majors.

"Do I believe I can improve as a player? Yes," said the 36-year-old Dubliner today after winning the US PGA Championship by two strokes at Oakland Hills on Sunday.
   
"There's plenty of my game to improve."
   
Harrington putted superbly down the stretch to seal his second successive major title on one of the toughest layouts in the game, doing so in the manner of world number one Tiger Woods as he almost willed the ball into the hole.
   
Harrington has joined Phil Mickelson, Ernie Els and Vijay Singh as a triple major champion and is perhaps the likeliest of that quartet to accumulate more.
   
"I have probably been the leading player in Europe for close to six years," said Harrington after becoming the first European to win the PGA Championship since Scottish-born Tommy Armour 1930.
   
"It's a big step to move up now and start competing on a different level. I'm world number three and I've got Phil and Tiger ahead of me.
   
"I don't necessarily pay attention to what they're doing. I pay attention more to what I'm doing."
   
Renowned for his workaholic approach, Harrington has always been a keen student with a yearning desire to improve under the tutelage of coach Bob Torrance.
   
"I am maturing as a player," said the winner of the last two British Opens. "Throughout my career I've always applied myself, looked for what would improve my game, found that and worked on it to improve.

"But it's always taken some time. I've had lulls where I've been in between things and come out stronger.
   
"It is a long way to catch Tiger at the top but I know the only way of focusing on doing that is focusing on me, what I'm doing, controlling what I can do. I can't control Tiger or Phil."
   
Woods has missed the last two majors after being sidelined for the rest of the year following reconstructive knee surgery in June.
   
Harrington, a 14-times champion on the European Tour, said he first knew he was capable of winning a major after slipping to fifth in the 2006 US Open at Winged Foot.
   
He was one of several players who squandered victory chances over the brutal closing stretch, bogeying the last three holes to finish two strokes behind winner Geoff Ogilvy of Australia.
   
"I probably pushed too hard on the 17th hole, thinking I needed to get back after making my first bogey of the day on the 16th," said Harrington.
   
"But I walked away from that tournament knowing I could win a major. Sometimes you've got to lose them to know you can win them.
   
"I've always been that sort of guy that I've got to put myself in the position and learn from it and understand it before I actually go and do it...and that's what I did."

-Reuters