Friday, March 7, 2014

Lee Westwood cruising, Tiger Woods frustrated at halfway in WGC-HSBC Champions

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Tiger Woods knew his score could've been much better on Friday had he driven the ball more accurately.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
In his first tournament at No. 1 in the world and having played only one event in three months, Lee Westwood was not sure what to expect out of his game at the WGC-HSBC Champions.
Being one shot behind Francesco Molinari going into the weekend was a pleasant surprise.
Molinari built a big lead early before stumbling to a couple of bogeys, then held on for a 2-under 70 that gave him a one-shot lead over Westwood after two rounds of this World Golf Championship.
Sheshan International is not particularly suited to the Italian’s game because it’s long and he’s not. But he found his way around and finished 36 holes at 9-under 135.
Ernie Els got a small measure of redemption on the 18th hole and finished with a birdie for a 65, putting him among those two shots behind.
Tiger Woods remains in the mix, although not nearly as close as he would like. Woods struggled with his swing and on the greens, so frustrated at the end of his round that he kicked his driver after a poor shot on the 18th. He still managed a 72, and will go into the weekend five shots out of the lead.
“My score could have been worse,” Woods said. “But it also could have been a lot better.”
Defending champion Phil Mickelson had a 71 and was at 4-under 140, while PGA Champion Martin Kaymer had a 69 and was another shot behind.
With all the attention on the “Big Four” in Shanghai -- Westwood, Woods, Kaymer and Mickelson all have a chance to go to No. 1 this week -- Molinari keeps plodding along.
“I think it’s really exciting for everyone watching that one of the four guys could be No. 1 in the world at the end of the week,” Molinari said. “But for us, it doesn’t really make a difference. We play together with them, against them, pretty much week in and week out. So I think everyone is really just focusing on improving his ranking rather than seeing who is going to be on top.”
Westwood made sure he stayed plenty close.
He was rarely under much stress, except for one tee shot that bounded into the trees along the left side of the 11th fairway that led to his lone bogey. But he bounced back with birdies on the par-5 14th, and by hitting a driver onto and just over the 288-yard 16th for another simple birdie.
Westwood was poised to catch Molinari at the end, with a tee shot in the fairway on the par-5 18th and a decision to make. With the pin cut toward the front in a small collection area, caddie Billy Foster recommended that he lay up and have a full shot into the green. Westwood decided to go for the green with a 5-wood, and wound up left of the green and in an impossible spot.
His chip ran through the green, and he had to settle for par.
“That flag, when it’s on the front, is normally not as close to the slope as it was today,” Westwood said. “It’s normally further across on the right-hand side, so you’ve got a little bit more room to play. That’s why you shouldn’t play golf by memory.”
As for the rest of the game, there were few complaints.
“Everything is pretty competitive in my game,” Westwood said. “It’s a good performance the first two rounds to come back to. Like I said, I didn’t know what to expect, and I’m pleasantly surprised with how well I’ve played.”
Els was joined at 7-under 137 by Richie Ramsay of Scotland and Jaco Van Zyl of South Africa, who shot 29 on his back nine.
A year ago, Els had a chance to shoot 61 in the final round and win the tournament. He had a downhill lie in the 18th fairway and tried to cut a 5-wood into the green, only to catch it fat and watch it go into the water. He made bogey and finished one shot behind.
With an identical shot this year, Els went with a 4-iron. It barely cleared the water, ran through the back of the green and he hit a delicate putt down the slope to 3 feet for a birdie.
“Just after I hit that shot last year, I said, ‘I should have gone with a 4-iron instead of trying to cut a 5-wood.’ That was probably the shot I should have played last year,” Els said. “I would have shot 61 and I would have won the tournament. Yeah, I did think about it.”
Els also made another putter switch, using the one he tried for two rounds last week in Malaysia. He said it helped playing with Woods because of how the former No. 1 looks so comfortable over putts.
Maybe so, but Woods didn’t look terribly comfortable after so many putts caught the lip.
He was tied for second place early in the round, just three shots behind Molinari, when he made three bogeys in a four-hole stretch around the turn, his frustration growing. After a bogey on the 15th, and after watching Els hit driver onto the 16th green, Woods still opted with an iron and hit that into a bunker.
The real frustration came on the 18th with a snap hook off the tee. He let the club fall from his hands, then booted it about five yards. Worse yet was missing a 6-foot birdie that would have put him that much closer to Molinari.

Bunker save on final hole gives Jim Furyk Tour Championship, FedExCup crowns

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Jim Furyk's third victory of the 2010 season earned him two big trophies.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series:
The biggest shot of his career gave Jim Furyk the biggest payoff in golf.
Clinging to a one-shot lead, with a $10 million bonus riding on the outcome, Furyk nearly holed a bunker shot and knocked in the 2-foot par putt he had left to win the Tour Championship and capture a FedExCup title that came down to the very last hole Sunday.
Furyk closed with an even-par 70 for a one-shot victory over Luke Donald in a steady rain at East Lake.
Donald, who chipped in from 100 feet for birdie on the 17th hole to keep his hopes alive, was waiting in the scoring trailer when Furyk hit his hybrid on the 230-yard closing hole into the bunker. A bogey would mean a sudden-death playoff to decide the FedExCup.
It was the 16th career victory for Furyk, but none that ended like this.
When he rapped in his short par putt with his cap turned backward, he plucked the ball out of the cup, just like always. Then, he dropped his putter and turned toward the grandstand with a powerful thrust of his fist and screamed with delight.
Furyk earned $1.35 million for winning the tournament, and $10 million from the FedExCup. He moves to No. 5 in the world ranking.
In its fourth year, it was by far the most riveting finale of the FedExCup. With an hour to go, the five players who had a chance to win the cup included Nick Watney, who started the week as the No. 28 seed in a 30-man field.
It was all in Furyk's hands when he birdied the 15th to build a three-shot lead, and Paul Casey bogeyed the 17th hole ahead of him. But Furyk had to scramble for bogey on the 16th, couldn't reach the green on the 17th and made another bogey as he watched his lead slip to a single shot playing one of the toughest holes at East Lake.
The sand shot could pay off in more ways than a big bonus. It was the third victory of the year for Furyk, which could be enough for him to be voted PGA Tour Player of the Year. No one else has won more than twice.
The $10 million should at least help buy the greatest alarm clock ever made.
Furyk was the No. 3 seed when the playoffs began, but was disqualified from the opener when he missed his pro-am time at The Barclays because the battery died in his cell phone, which he used for an alarm.
In the end, Furyk joined Tiger Woods as the only FedExCup champions to miss the first playoff event -- Woods in 2007 because he didn't want to play, Furyk this year because he couldn't.
Furyk finished at 8 under to become the first player to be outside the top 10 in the standings at the Tour Championship to win. Matt Kuchar, the No. 1 seed, shot a 71 and tied for 25th. This Sunday was so bizarre that Kuchar still had a chance to win the FedExCup.
Kuchar wound up second in the FedExCup and earns a $3 million bonus. Donald, who closed with a 70, moved up to third in the standings and picked up an extra $2 million.
Retief Goosen also had a chance at East Lake until a bogey on the 17th. He shot a 71 and finished alone in third at the Tour Championship. Watney (67) and Casey (69) tied for fourth.
The celebration was dampened by a two-hour rain delay that sent most of the fans home from East Lake. For those who stayed, it was tough to applaud with one hand on the umbrella as the rain pounded the players over the final hour of competition.
Even so, a FedExCup finale has never had so many possibilities, so much movement.
Watney wasn't even a remote candidate when he went into the weekend tied for 25th in the 30-man field, 13 shots out of the lead. Then came a 63 in the third round, and he kept right on going. Watney shot a 28 on the back nine Saturday, then had a 30 on the front nine Sunday to pull within one shot of the lead.
Even as the 28th seed, Watney could have won the FedExCup with a victory at East Lake, provided top-seeded Matt Kuchar did not finish alone in 25th. Kuchar missed a 7-foot par putt on the final hole. He wound up in a two-way for 25th.
That became irrelevant when Watney failed to birdie the par-5 15th and made his first bogey of the round on the 16th.
Furyk took the lead for good on the fourth hole, and really showed his mettle at the start of the back nine. He saved par with a 6-foot putt on the 10th hole, made a 15-foot birdie on the 11th and escaped big trouble on the 12th when he pulled his tee shot into the trees. He got his next shot into the front bunker, blasted out to 4 feet and walked off with a par.
With the rain at its heaviest, he drilled a hybrid onto the green at the 15th and two-putted for birdie, giving him a three-shot lead. Then came the back-to-back bogeys, turning the final hole of the tournament -- and the FedExCup -- into a nail-biter.
Winning the Tour Championship was important in its own right -- it's the first time Furyk has won three tournaments in a year.
But even with a three-shot lead, the FedExCup remained in doubt.
Casey, who has not won a tournament all year, could have claimed the $10 million bonus by finishing alone in second place. Casey was at 6 under -- one shot behind Goosen in second -- when he hit his approach toward the corporate tents on the 17th. After a free drop, he hit a wedge to just outside 5 feet and badly missed the putt.
Furyk has no time to celebrate. He was to join his teammates on a charter flight to Wales on Sunday night with another cup to try to win -- the Ryder Cup -- this one worth no money at all.