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Gossett
thrashes Kim to win US Amateur
After a nearly perfect
day of golf, David Gossett finally made a mistake -- as he hoisted the
U.S. Amateur Championship trophy, the top fell off and dropped to the 10th
green.
"Bogey," the Texas
sophomore muttered.
Gossett had just
defeated Korean high school junior Sung Yoon Kim 9 and 8, matching the
biggest margin of victory at the Amateur in 50 years.
Gossett, 20, took
control of the 36-hole final early. He opened a two-hole lead on No. 4,
then won holes 6 through 9 to grab a six-hole lead. He led by five holes
after a morning round that included a seven-minute fog delay.
"I was thinking,
'Man, this is not Memphis at all.' It was beautiful one moment and then
the fog rolled in," said Gossett, who was playing in just his second Amateur.
He missed the cut for match play in his earlier appearance.
When play resumed
in the afternoon, Gossett needed just 10 more holes to finish off the match.
He boosted his margin to nine holes with birdies on 7 and 8, holes Kim
bogeyed.
Kim, who had shown
no emotion all week while pulling off a series of upsets, had trouble getting
out of the sand on No. 7 and tossed his ball through the fog and into the
Pacific Ocean in disgust.
On No. 8, Kim's long
putt for par hit the cup and rolled out. Then Gossett made a 25-foot putt,
pumping his right fist in the air and high-fiving caddie Andy Martinez
-- who usually works for PGA player Tom Lehman -- as he went up by nine
holes.
A van carrying the
trophy and the table for the awards presentation trailed the golfers, knowing
Gossett could wrap up the match at any moment.
Both golfers bogeyed
No. 9 and headed back into the thick fog, which made the afternoon even
muggier than before. As people walked their dogs on the beach below and
waves crashed on the shore, Gossett wrapped up the match.
He made par on the
10th, which sits right in front of a house built by actor Gene Hackman.
Kim needed to make a 45-foot putt for a birdie and keep the match alive,
but did not come close.
"Whew," Gossett quietly
said to himself.
Then he hugged his
dad and finally showed some emotion, sticking his tongue out and smiling
while lifting the trophy. He had just made a "Hook 'em Horns" signal with
his hand -- not unexpected for a Texas Longhorn -- when the top of the
trophy fell off.
It was the biggest
margin of victory in the final of the Amateur since Charles Coe won 11
and 10 over Rufus King at Oak Hill Country Club in Rochester, N.Y., in
1949. Gossett matched the 9 and 8 win by Hal Sutton at Pinehurst, N.C.,
in 1980.
"It's pretty awesome.
It was a long week here at Pebble Beach," said Gossett, who received a
good luck fax from Texas alum Tom Kite before the final and a congratulatory
call from another Longhorn, Ben Crenshaw, after the victory. "I was focused
each day. It's been a lot of hard work and it's paid off."
The victory earned
Gossett exemptions into next year's U.S. Open and British Open. Both finalists
get an invitation to play in next year's Masters, as long as they remain
amateurs.
Kim, 17, came within
a victory of becoming the youngest champion in Amateur history and the
first non-North American to win the title since Harold Hilton of England
won it in 1911.
The youngest player
to win the U.S. Amateur was Tiger Woods, who captured the first of his
three consecutive titles in 1994 at 18.
"I don't know if
David Gossett always plays the way he did today. If he plays that way,
his best will be better than my best," Kim said through a translator. "David
Gossett's best day is better than my best day."
Kim now heads back
to high school, hoping for some time off the course.
"When I get back,
I want to stay away from golf a couple of weeks. Maybe go out with my friends
and sleep a little bit longer, and also I'd like to lose a little weight,"
said the 5-foot-10, 198-pound Kim. "I want to maybe go train a little bit
and study a little bit, a little English and some schoolwork."
AP
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