Skip leaps into halfway British Open lead
Skip Kendall tonight revealed his path from restaurant waiter to major leader after taking a surprise halfway lead in the British Open championship.
Kendall, still seeking a maiden victory in his 311th tournament, holed a bunker shot on the third and eagled the 16th to card a second round 66 for a one-shot lead over Franceâs Thomas Levet.
The 39-year-old from Milwaukee put himself in pole position to follow in the footsteps of last yearâs shock winner Ben Curtis and claim the first prize, a far cry from his days waiting tables in the Olive Garden restaurant in Orlando, Florida.
âI started out playing mini tours in Orlando and couldnât quite make it so was working as a waiter in the Olive Garden,â revealed Kendall, the world number 90.
âIn between shifts Iâd go to a field close to the restaurant to hit balls with my uniform on â bow tie, white shirt, black pants â because it was too hard to get the bow tie back on if I took it off.
âCan you imagine what people thought driving by?â
Kendall missed four weeks of last season after slicing off part of his left index finger while cutting a frozen bagel â âI didnât have a microwave!â he explained â but bounced back with a fourth place in the Buick Classic.
And he sees no reason why he cannot copy Curtis and make the 133rd British Open his first tournament victory on Sunday.
âI feel I can win on tour, I think itâs just a matter of time,â he added.
âHopefully this is mine. If I can stay relaxed and not get caught up in what we are really doing and just play golf I will be fine.
âI know there is a long way to go, this has only been one day. This is certainly the highest Iâve been in a major, Iâve not been in that many to begin with. Iâve just got to stay relaxed.â







