Tiger
Wins US Open
(Video)
(AP) - With a throbbing knee
and a
pounding heart, Tiger Woods made one last improbable escape Monday and
won the U.S. Open in a 19-hole playoff over Rocco Mediate, his 14th
career major and maybe the most amazing of them all. One shot behind
after a collapse no one saw coming, Woods birdied the 18th hole to
force sudden death at Torrey Pines against a journeyman with a creaky
back who simply wouldn't go away.
But that one extra hole was enough to doom Mediate, trying to become
the oldest U.S. Open champion at 45 years, 6 months.
He put his tee shot in the bunker at No. 7, knocked his approach off a
cart path and against the bleachers, chipped some 18 feet past the hole
and missed the par putt.
On the verge of one of golf's greatest upsets, Mediate instead became
another victim.
"Great fight," Woods told him as they embraced on the seventh green.
Woods, who delivered so many spectacular moments over four days along
the Pacific bluffs, only needed a two-putt par to win the U.S. Open for
the third time, and the first since it last was held on a public course
at Bethpage Black in 2002.
It capped a remarkable week for the world's No. 1 player, who had not
played since April 15 surgery on his left knee and looked as though
every step was a burden. But the knee held up for 91 holes, and the
payoff was worth the pain, even if doctors had warned him that he
risked further injury by playing the Open.
"I'm glad I'm done," Woods said. "I really don't feel like playing
anymore. It's sore."
Woods joins Jack Nicklaus as the only players to capture the career
Grand Slam three times over.
Mediate's odyssey began two weeks ago when he had to survive a
sudden-death playoff simply to qualify for this U.S. Open. Even more
unlikely was going toe-to-toe with Woods - whom Mediate referred to as
a "monster" - and nearly slaying him.
He had a 20-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole to win, but it slid by on
the left.
Mediate struggled to keep his emotions after taking bogey on the first
extra hole, but he walked off Torrey Pines with 12,000 new friends who
crammed both sides of every fairway for a playoff that was tighter than
anyone imagined.
"Obviously, I would have loved to win," he said. "I don't know what
else to say. They wanted a show, they got one."
Did they ever.
From the opening tee shot Thursday in a light fog known as "June
Gloom," this U.S. Open simply shined.
"This is probably the greatest tournament I've ever had," Woods said.
It was filled with some of his greatest moments - a 30 on the back nine
Friday to get into the mix, two eagles from a combined 100 feet and a
chip-in birdie on Saturday to take the lead, and one of the biggest
putts of his career when he holed a 12-foot birdie with the final
stroke of regulation to force the playoff.
Then came a playoff in which he built a three-shot lead with eight
holes to play, only to find himself trailing four holes later.
Next up for Woods? Even he isn't sure after hobbling around on a knee
that clearly hasn't healed.
"I'm going to shut it down for a while," Woods said. He answered
"maybe" when asked if he thought he made it worse by playing the Open,
and he said he didn't know if he would play the British Open at Royal
Birkdale next month.
He nearly shut down too early. Woods seized control when Mediate
bogeyed consecutive holes around the turn, but Woods bogeyed the next
two from the bunker and Mediate tied him by nearly driving the 267-yard
14th hole and chipping to a foot for birdie. Then the playoff took yet
another surprising turn on the 15th.
Woods hit his tee shot so far to the right that it landed in a fairway
bunker along the adjoining ninth fairway. But he carved a sand shot
around the trees to 12 feet, one of those defining shots that turns a
tournament in his favor.
But that didn't happen.
Mediate dropped in a 25-foot birdie putt, while Woods missed and spent
the next three holes in a desperate chase to make up ground. Woods
finally caught him on the last hole, reaching the green in two and
two-putting from 45 feet.
"I never quit. I never quit," Mediate said. "I've been beaten down a
few times and came back, and I got what I wanted. I got a chance to
beat the best player in the world. And I came up just a touch short."
Woods moved within four of the record 18 professional majors that
Nicklaus won. And it was the second time he has won a PGA Tour event
and a U.S. Open on the same course - Pebble Beach (2000) and Torrey
Pines.
He won the Buick Invitational by a tournament-record eight shots in
January, but that was before he had surgery to clean out cartilage in
his left knee, before he wasn't sure if pain would shoot down his leg
with every swing.
Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of this victory? Woods had four
three-putts and four double bogeys, and he still won.
It was his 65th career victory, passing Ben Hogan for third all-time,
raised his playoff record to 15-2 and made it 14-of-14 in majors when
he had at least a share of the lead going into the final round.
He now has won every major in a playoff except for the British Open.
Just like the last U.S. Open playoff seven years ago, both players
arrived wearing the same outfit - khaki trousers and a white shirt at
Southern Hills, black slacks and a red shirt with a black vest at
Torrey Pines.
That's typical for Woods, and when he saw Mediate, Woods removed his
vest.
It felt like a prize fight the way both players marched through a wall
of fans and onto the first tee, posing before the silver U.S. Open
trophy. And it finished that way, too.
"With everybody in the world all looking in, and everyone expecting me
to get my (behind) handed to me, and I didn't," Mediate said. "And I
almost got it done. I almost got it done."
Woods raised his arms like a heavyweight champion walking off the first
tee, but only because he found the fairway for the first time all week.
Mediate flipped his club to the front of the tee box when he came
within inches of an ace on the par-3 third.
Back and forth they went, Woods building an early lead with consecutive
birdies, Mediate refusing to go away. But when Mediate three-putted
from 15 feet for bogey on the ninth, and Woods holed a 20-foot par putt
from the fringe on the next hole to go three shots ahead, it looked as
though this playoff would turn into another snoozer.
Then it was Woods who faltered, and Mediate caught a second wind. It
set up a fabulous finish, just like everything else this week on the
public course in the tony hamlet of La Jolla that translates to "The
Jewel."
"It was just unreal," Woods said. "It was back and forth, back and
forth. And 90 holes wasn't enough."
Rate
this Article:
Tell
Us What You Think.
|