Monday, March 3, 2014

Tiger Woods rallies to win Memorial, ties Jack Nicklaus with 73 PGA Tour victories

Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus at the Memorial
Getty Images
Tiger Woods closed with a 5-under 67, matching the best score of the final round.
1
By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
DUBLIN, Ohio -- Tiger Woods was at his best Sunday at the Memorial. He hit nearly every shot just the way he wanted, worked the gallery into a frenzy with one last charge over the final hour and left everyone buzzing -- especially Jack Nicklaus -- with a shot they will talk about for years.
Better yet was the timing of his 73rd win.
Woods tied Nicklaus for career PGA Tour victories at the tournament that Jack built. And the 14-time major champion suddenly looks equipped to resume his chase of another Nicklaus mark that is more significant -- 18 major championships.
The U.S. Open starts in 11 days.
With a chip-in that even Woods called one of the toughest shots he ever made, he birdied three of his last four holes to close with a 5-under 67 and turn a two-shot deficit into a two-shot victory over Rory Sabbatini and fast-closing Andres Romero.
Coming off a two-putt birdie on the 15th, Woods hit 8-iron over the green at the par-3 16th and into an impossible lie. It was buried in deep rough, the pin 50 feet away along a ridge. Woods hit a full flop shot, hopeful to give himself a reasonable putt for par. Far more likely was the ball going short and down a slope away from the pin, or coming out too strong and rolling into the water.
No one was thinking birdie, not even Woods, until he took two steps and delivered an uppercut when the ball fell in the right side of the cup.
Nicklaus was gushing from the broadcast booth. "The most unbelievable, gutsy shot I've ever seen," he said.
"Under the circumstances -- the circumstances being Tiger has been struggling -- it was either fish or cut bait," Nicklaus said later. "He had one place to land the ball. He's playing a shot that if he leaves it short, he's going to leave himself again a very difficult shot. If he hits it long, he's going to probably lose the tournament. He lands the ball exactly where it has to land. Going in the hole was a bonus. But what a shot!
"I don't think under the circumstances I've ever seen a better shot."
Woods, who finished at 9-under 279, won the Memorial for the fifth time. At age 36, he is 10 years younger than Nicklaus when the Golden Bear won his 73rd tournament at the 1986 Masters. Sam Snead holds the PGA Tour record with 82 wins.
It was vintage Woods at Muirfield Village, the fifth course where he has won at least five times. And it was the perfect way for him to end his worst stretch as a pro. After winning at Bay Hill in March, he tied for 40th in the Masters, missed the cut at Quail Hollow and tied for 40th at The Players Championship.
Asked about the endless chatter about whether his game is back, Woods eventually sighed and said, "I'll let you guys figure that out."
Woods won for the second time this year and moved to No. 4 in the world.
This was more impressive than his five-shot win in the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill in March, when he had a one-shot lead going into the final round on a course where he could get by with par. The Memorial required much more work, especially when he had to go after birdies on the back nine.
And that's what he did.
Woods reached the par-5 15th into the wind in two shots to set up a two-putt birdie and get within one shot of Sabbatini. But just like that, it looked as if his chances were over when his 8-iron bounded through the green and into a tough lie behind the green.
"I had to take a cut at it because the lie wasn't as great," he said. "I went for it. I pulled it off. And for it to land as soft as it did was kind of a surprise, because it was baked out and it was also running away from me. It just fell in. I didn't think it was going to get there at one point."
Sabbatini didn't need to see it. He was on the 15th green, scrambling for par, when Muirfield Village shook with the loudest roar of the day.
"I knew something was going on up in front," said Sabbatini, who shot 72. "I was really just trying to focus on my own game, and the only thing I could do was control what I was doing. I knew that I was going to have to put a good number up there."
The South African hit his tee shot into the right bunker on the 16th, the third-hardest hole Sunday that yielded only four birdies, and then blasted out to just inside 15 feet and took bogey to fall one behind.
That was all Woods needed.
From the middle of the 18th fairway, with Nicklaus watching from behind the green, Woods hit 9-iron to the perfect spot on the back of the green, where it caught the slope and rolled to just inside 10 feet for the final birdie of a masterful finish.
Fittingly, Woods raised the putter in his left hand before the fall disappeared into the cup. That was the pose Nicklaus struck so often in his career, and this win was all about Woods and Nicklaus.
It was a hard-luck finish for Sabbatini, who has a long history with Woods for brazen comments that always backfire on him. He didn't get many breaks, but kept his patience throughout the final round and still had a chance until he failed to take advantage of a big drive on the 17th, having to save par from a bunker.
Spencer Levin, who had a one-shot lead going into the final round, lost the lead to Sabbatini with a two-shot swing on the par-3 12th, then took double bogey on the next hole to fall from contention. He closed with a 75, the same score he shot in the final round at Phoenix when he had a six-shot lead.
That was nothing compared with Rickie Fowler, who played in the second-to-last group with Woods to help generate an enormous gallery. Fowler opened with a birdie, and his day fell apart after that. With a double bogey on the last hole, he closed with an 84. The only consolation for Fowler was getting a front-row seat to a comeback remarkable even by Woods' standards -- especially the chip-in on the 16th. Fowler said a good shot would have been anywhere around 10 feet.
"It came out perfect, landed right on the crown of that ridge there, and the rest is history," Fowler said. "I mean, he loves being in the moment, and that's where he kind of gets down, focuses and hits those shots. It was fun to see."
It was the second time this year Woods has won in his final tuneup before a major. He won Bay Hill, but then tied for 40th at the Masters. The U.S. Open at Olympic Club starts on June 14, and Woods would be quite happy to take the game he had Sunday to San Francisco.
"That was some good stuff out there," Woods said. "I never really missed a shot today."

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Kyle Reifers leads Nationwide's Panama Claro Championship after two delayed days

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By 
PGA.com news services 

Series:
Kyle Reifers could barely walk on Monday, but four days later finds himself atop the leaderboard at the Panama Claro Championship, the first stop on the 2011 Nationwide Tour schedule. Reifers has posted scores of 65-66 during the first two weather-delayed rounds at the Panama Golf Club, and his 9-under 131 total is two strokes better than South Carolina’s Kyle Thompson, who carded a 5-under 65 Friday morning.
Australians Mathew Goggin (66), Gavin Coles (70) and Alistair Presnell (65) share third place at 6-under 134. Major Manning (67) of Florida is four strokes off the pace.
A clear picture of the leaderboard won’t come until around noon Saturday, when the second round is completed. Area storms produced proximity lightning and forced officials to suspend play for 2 hours and 45 minutes Friday afternoon, this on the heels of a two-hour delay Thursday that kept 51 players from finishing Round 1. The net result is that 66 players will have to return in the morning, some with as many as 17 holes to go.
First-round, co-leader Rich Barcelo is at 7 under par through three holes. Erik Compton, who shot 6-under 64 to share the first-round lead with Barcelo and Coles, is 5 under through three holes. Also at minus-5 are Colombia native Camilo Benedetti and Roberto Castro.
Reifers tweaked his back on Monday and wasn’t even sure he’d make the trip from Atlanta to Panama.
“I was working out before I was going to catch a flight and felt something snap,” he said. “I couldn’t get up and thought I better take it easy.”
Reifers, 27, got some treatment and arrived in Central America Wednesday night ready to try and right the wrong of the 2010 season, which saw him make only nine cuts in 26 starts.
“I felt like at the end of last year I started making strides,” said the Wake Forest grad, who tied for second in his final start, the Winn-Dixie Jacksonville Open. “It was a little frustrating to have that much time off, but I tried to stay positive and just get back to playing instead of putting so much pressure on myself.”
To gain some confidence, Reifers has gone back to an older driver and set of irons. He also ventured west in January, attempting to Monday qualify for a trio of PGA Tour events.
“It was good to see where I stood,” he said. “Last week I played a tournament in Hilton Head that was four rounds. That was nice to get back into the competitive mode and get my walking legs, too. We’ve had so much time off and it’s so hot here, I think that was a big help.”
So is making a lot of birdies, which he has done. He has 12 birdies thus far to lead the tournament, including a stretch of four straight in both the first and second rounds.
“I grinded it out a little more today. I had some putts I thought I could have made and some putts that I did make, so it all evened out,” he said. “I hit it well and made some putts and the next thing you know you birdie four, five in a row.”
Second-Round Notes:
--The second round was suspended at 2:25 p.m. due to lightning in the area. The first five groups on each side from the morning wave were able to complete their rounds (30 players total). The afternoon tee times began at 1:40 p.m. Second-round play resumed at 5:10 p.m. Play was suspended due to darkness at 6:25 p.m.
--Half the field, a total of 66 players did not complete Round 2. They will return on Saturday and resume play at 8:00 a.m. Following completion of the round, the field will be cut to the low 60 players and ties. Third-round tee times will run from approximately 1:00-3:00 p.m. with play in threesomes off both the first and 10th tees.
--Kyle Reifers ran off a string of four consecutive birdies for the second straight day, with those birdies on No. 2-5. He birdied Nos. 12-15 in Thursday’s opening round.
--South Carolina’s Kyle Thompson had five straight birdies on Nos. 4-8.
--Florida’s Major Manning birdied the first four holes to open the second round.
--Ryan Armour set a course record with his 9-under 61, breaking the mark of 62 set by 2010 champion Fran Quinn in the third round a year ago. Armour had just approached the 18th green when play was halted. He waited out a 2:45 delay before cashing in a 9-foot birdie putt.
--Ryan Armour’s two scores (76-61) look more like a basketball score of his alma mater, Ohio State University. His 15-stroke improvement is the second-best in tournament history, topped only by Bob May’s 81-65 effort in the third and fourth rounds in 2009. Armour was tied for 121st place after the first round and is currently tied for 15th.
--Ryan Armour had a hole-in-one. He aced the 138-yard eighth hole using a 9-iron. It was the fourth hole-in-one on that hole in the tournament’s eight-year history and the ninth in Armour’s career (fifth in competition).

Hometown hero Kirk takes over top spot at Nationwide’s Knoxville stop

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By 
PGA.com 

Series:
Knoxville native Chris Kirk matched the course record Saturday and moved into sole possession of the lead after 54 holes of the Nationwide Tour’s Knoxville News Sentinel Open. Kirk posted a 9-under 63 and stands at 15-under 201 following three rounds at the Fox Den Country Club. He leads by one shot over 48-year-old Kirk Triplett (67) and by two over Australian Gavin Coles (64) and California rookie Travis Bertoni (65).
Rookie Keegan Bradley of Vermont posted a 63 earlier in the day to get to 13 under and shares fifth place with Canada’s David Hearn (66) and 49-year old Ben Bates (67).
“I think the golf course sets up well for me and I’ve had a good year,” said Kirk, who lost a playoff here to Jarrod Lyle in 2008 and came into the week No. 4 on the Nationwide Tour money list. “If you combine those with coming to a place where I’ve played well in the past then I guess I’m not surprised to be playing well but happy to be.”
Kirk ran the spectrum of emotions Saturday. Normally calm and quiet, the 25-year old got rattled on the par-5 10th when he was told his group was lagging behind.
“They came up to me and told me I had a bad time and told me I was going to get a one-shot penalty if I got another bad time,” said Kirk, who promptly knocked his 50-foot eagle putt 10 feet past the cup and onto the fringe. He missed the birdie coming back but settled down enough to focus on the game at hand.
Birdies at Nos. 13 and 16, both par 3s, got him to 12 under par but an errant tee shot at the par-4 16th wound up in some trees down the right side. From there Kirk turned a negative into a positive from 160 yards.
“I didn’t have a great lie and was kind of behind a tree. I tried to hit a flop shot-flyer, 9-iron over the trees and cut it a little bit,” he said. “It came out perfect and landed just short of the green. I hit a really good shot but when a shot like that goes in it’s just blind luck. I was definitely in position off the tee where you’re trying to find a way to make par. To have it go in is just crazy.”
It’s been that kind of year for the Georgia grad. He lost a playoff in the second event of the year but broke through for his first career win in June, capturing the Fort Smith Classic.
“You always have the belief that you can win and you have the game to win,” he said. “You wouldn’t be out here if you didn’t totally believe you could (win) but believing and doing are two different things.”
Triplett, a three-time PGA Tour winner, hasn’t been in contention in a while but was able to draw on 21 years of Tour experience to settle his nerves down the stretch.
“To me it’s not about who you’re playing or where you’re playing, it’s what can you do when you get a little ginchy or get a little nervy and all of a sudden the fairways seem a little narrower,” he said. “I had a couple of wayward tee shots on the last two holes and hadn’t really battled it all day. I had to shift gears and had to battle to make pars and not make a big mistake at the end. You catch that leaderboard and you know where you stand and you don’t want to ruin a good day’s work.”
Triplett admitted he couldn’t help but laugh late in the day when he spotted an electronic leaderboard.
“I looked over on 16 green and saw the leader’s name is Kirk and so it’s Kirk, Triplett as the top two guys,” he said. “I’ve never seen that before so I got a chuckle out of that.”
Third-Round Notes: Saturday’s scoring average was 69.288. … Officials moved the tee up 85 yards on the par-5 18th, turning it from a 597-yard monster into a 512-yard pussycat. The hole played over par in Round 1 (5.032) and close to par in Round 2 (4.922). Today’s scoring average was 4.591. Despite the inviting second shot over water, there was only one eagle recorded at the hole today, from Fernando Mechereffe. There were 30 birdies, 31 pars, three bogeys and one double bogey. Officials have indicated the tee will remain forward for Sunday’s final round.
Rookie Keegan Bradley, No. 25 on the money list, tied the Fox Den CC course record with a 9-under 63. Bradley had no bogeys, seven birdies and an eagle. Bradley made the 36-hole cut on the number (-3) and started today tied for 49th. His 63 is the best score this week and vaulted him to 12-under 204, where he is tied for fifth. Bradley was 5 over par through his first 12 holes on Thursday and is 17 under since then (41 holes). … Keegan Bradley tied the course record with his 63, but the Tour rookie has already set two course records this season. Bradley’s 10-under 61 in Round 2 of BMW Charity Pro-Am was a new mark at the Thornblade Club. He also shot a 10-under 61 in the second round of the Fort Wayne Gretzky Classic at the Georgian Bay Club.
Monday qualifier Peter Malnati of Dandridge, Tenn. (about 50 miles from Knoxville), had back-to-back eagles today. Malnati made an eagle-2 at the par-4 ninth hole and then backed it up with an eagle-3 at the par-5 10th hole. Malnati played the last six holes in 3 over par and wound up with a round of 70. He is 7 under and tied for 34th place. … Andrew Svoboda aced the par-3 16th hole. Svoboda used a 7-iron from 178 yards for his hole-in-one, the first of the week. The “1” on the scorecard helped him shoot a score of 70. He is at 10 under and tied for 10th place.
Second-round leader Gary Woodland started the day at 11 under par and up by two strokes. He eagled the opening par-5 first hole to reach 13 under and made the turn with the lead at 14 under. Woodland was done in by double bogeys at Nos. 12, 13 and 15, the last of which dropped him to 8 under for the tournament. He rallied with a birdie at No. 16 but wound up with a 2-over 74, dropping him to 9 under and tied for 14th. … John Daly, playing on a sponsor’s invitation, shot a 1-over 73 and stands at 3-under 213 after 54 holes. Daly is tied for 63rd in the 66-man field and will be in the second group off the first tee Sunday morning (8:06 a.m.).

Kevin Kisner rallies past faltering Geoffrey Sisk to capture Nationwide's Mylan Classic

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By 
PGA.com 

Series:
Kevin Kisner didn’t know.
Kisner rolled in a four-foot par putt on the final hole of the Nationwide Tour’s Mylan Classic on Sunday to close out a bogey-free 67, and didn’t know he was suddenly leading the tournament.
Kisner finished at 13-under 271 and didn’t know that 54-leader Geoffrey Sisk had stumbled to a double bogey on the 17th right behind him to flip-flop the lead. Sisk fell from 14 under to 12 and lost his grip on an elusive first career title.
When the 45-year old New England native failed to birdie the 72nd hole at Southpoint Golf Club, Kisner stepped into the winner’s circle for the first time in his short career.
“I didn’t know I was going to win even when I made that last putt,” he said. “I was kind of in shock. I thought I might have been one short or maybe could get into a playoff. My whole world turned upside down there in a minute.”
Kisner’s Georgia Bulldog determination had him focused during Sunday’s finale, which was essentially a three-man race that included local favorite Steve Wheatcroft, who also suffered a late double bogey to ruin any chances for his victory.
“I played solid all day. I made a lot of the 4- and 5-footers that you need to make,” said Kisner after hitting 15 of 18 greens. “I just stayed in my own game. I was as calm as I’ve ever been in that situation, which is odd considering this was probably the biggest stage I’ve ever been on. I didn’t look at a board all day.”
If he had looked, he would have seen Sisk’s name holding steady at the top with Wheatcroft in hot pursuit.
“I thought I had to get to 15 under today to have a chance,” said Kisner. “That was my goal.”
After three straight 3-under 68s, Kisner’s four-birdie effort Sunday was all he needed to collect the $108,000 winner’s check that vaulted him from No. 50 to No. 14 on the money list. The 25 leading money winners at the end of the season will earn their PGA Tour cards for the 2011 season.
“This game is so much about winning and you have to beat 155 great players in order to have a chance,” said Kisner, who is in his first full season on Tour. “This is pretty special.”
The day and week appeared to belong to Sisk, who shared the first-day lead and held two-stroke advantages after the second and third days. Sisk temporarily lost possession of the lead when Kisner birdied the short, par-3 14th hole, but regained a share of the lead with a birdie of his own.
Two holes later, Sisk took back the outright lead with a birdie at No. 16. Then, disaster struck at the 367-yard 17th when Sisk yanked a pitching wedge from the middle of the fairway into a back bunker.
“I overcooked it on 17,” he said. “I was trying to hit it right and I shut it down and pulled it left. I was dead.”
Facing a perilous downhill bunker shot on a slick green, Sisk blasted it back across the green for his third. His chip shot for par came up 18 feet short and two putts later, the lead was gone.
“I played well. I have no complaints,” said Sisk, who was solo second for his best career finish.
Chris Nallen closed with a 5-under 66 and wound up at 10-under 274, tied for third place with Wheatcroft, who closed with a birdie for an even-par 71 to match his career-best effort.
Patrick Sheehan (67) finished fifth, four back of Kisner and Dicky Pride (68) was alone in sixth, five shots behind the winning total.
Fourth-Round Notes: Kevin Kisner’s win gives the University of Georgia Bulldogs back-to-back wins on the Nationwide Tour. Chris Kirk, a college teammate of Kisner, won last week’s Knoxville News Sentinel Open. The two played together for three years at Georgia and were both members of the Dawgs’ 2005 NCAA Championship team. … The last time two players from the same university won in consecutive weeks on the Nationwide Tour was in 2004 when three Georgia players captured tournaments in successive weeks: Franklin Langham at the Fort Smith Classic, Ryuji Imada at the BMW Charity Pro-Am and Justin Bolli at the Chattanooga Classic.
Jeff Curl set the tournament-course record with an 8-under 63. Curl opened with four straight birdies and finished with 10 on the day, including three on his final four holes. The 63 also matches his career-low round, a second-round 63 at the 2008 Northeast Pennsylvania Classic. Curl’s rally got him to 5 under for the tournament and a tie for 14th place. … Chris Nallen shot a back-nine 31 for a 5-under 66 and a 10-under 274 total. Nallen’s fourth top-10 and seventh top-25 finish was worth $34,800 and helped him move up from No. 20 to No. 16 on the money list. Nallen has made the cut in 15 of his 18 starts and the last eight in a row. … Geoffrey Sisk’s runner-up finish moved him from No. 87 to No. 37 on the money list with eight events left. … Dicky Pride was solo sixth this week and earned enough money to jump from No. 28 to No. 22 on the money list.