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Mediate snatches title on 72nd hole
Rocco Mediate is the Buick Open champion no one expected.
He could not afford any bogeys in the final round today, but made two. He failed to make birdie on the three easiest holes at Warwick Hills. In fact, he was never in the lead until a stunning turn of events on the 72nd hole.
And he is not Tiger Woods.
But with record crowds turning out to see Woods in his first
tournament since completing the career Grand Slam, Mediate provided
all the excitement. Trailing by one stroke on the 18th hole,
Mediate made a 12-foot birdie putt and won the Buick Open when
Chris Perry missed a 10-foot putt for his first bogey in 29 holes.
"I knew if I made birdie, I might get in a playoff,'' Mediate
said. "I didn't expect this.''
Neither did Perry, who was in control of his game for much of a
drizzling day and appeared to have the tournament wrapped up with
two crucial par saves on the closing holes. But he hit his drive
into the rough, hit his second shot short of the green, then pitched past the hole.
"We both played great,'' said Perry, who had a 68. "He just
made one more putt.''
Mediate birdied two of the last three holes for a 6-under-par 66 and
finished at 268. He earned $486,000 for his fourth career PGA Tour victory,
the last two with Woods in the field.
Given how much Woods has accomplished, that meant a little
extra.
"I'm not going to beat him for the next 10 to 15 years,''
Mediate said of Woods. "But I can beat him this week. And someone
else can beat him next week. But for a career? Forget it. Try
something else.''
Woods, meanwhile, was up to his old tricks. No, another amazing
comeback was not in the works, but he took a chance with his health
by trying to go for the green on the par-5 13th with his ball only
inches behind a tree root.
He lashed at the ball, dropped the club and flexed his left
hand, which was jolted when iron met wood.
"It actually hurt quite a bit for a while, then I shook it
off,'' Woods said. "I was trying to hit the ball on the upswing,
so I just chipped the top of the root. If I had been trying to
swing down on it, I would have really been in trouble.''
It was reminiscent of the Tour Championship last year, when Woods hit through a baseball-sized rock to get at his ball. Alas, Woods once again survived. The best player in the world is also one of the strongest -- and the most stubborn.
"It's the only way I could get it close to the flag,'' Woods said.
Not that it mattered. He was six back to start the last round
and finished with a 68, seven strokes out of the lead.
A birdie by Joe Ozaki on the 18th knocked Woods out of the top
10 for only the third time in his last 25 PGA Tour events. All
three came in his first tournament after winning a major
championship.
Hal Sutton, the only other player who had a serious chance of
winning, played the back nine in even par and wound up with a 68,
three strokes behind.
The victory was surprising even to Mediate, and not just because
the way it ended. He played so poorly last week in The
International that he said anyone watching would have been
surprised he even played golf for a living.
And not many watched him at Warwick Hills, at least not until
the end.
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Mediate after holing a birdie on the first hole of the final round. Allsport.
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Most of the crowd jostled around the course to get a glimpse of
Woods. What they missed was a brilliant display by Perry and
Mediate in the final group. They accounted for birdies on all but
two holes on the front nine, and were tied at 19-under going to the
12th.
"I knew it was going to be a battle,'' Mediate said. "It would
have been a lot more exciting if more people had seen the front
nine.''
Perry regained the lead with a 20-foot birdie putt on No. 12.
He extended it to two strokes when he chipped over a bunker and
saved par on No. 15, while Mediate three-putted from 12 feet.
While the 18th was the decisive hole, the tournament might have
turned on the par-5 16th. Desperate for a birdie or better, Mediate
hit a driver from the fairway from 278 yards out with a perfect
fade that allowed the ball to run up to the green 30 feet away.
Perry decided to hit a 3-wood, but pulled it badly in an awkward
spot left of a bunker that guarded the flag. He had to make a
5-footer just to save par, while Mediate two-putted for his birdie
to cut the lead to one.
"I thought that was the turning point,'' Perry said. "I felt
like if I could birdie 16, the tournament would be over. He pulled
off a great shot, and then I hit a really solid shot that just
didn't cut.''
While 17 players began the final round within six shots of the
lead, not many of them could make a run -- or their bid simply
started too late.
Such was the case of Woods, who made the turn in 35 as the guys
he was chasing were making all the birdies. Still, he said his game
was rounding into good shape for Valhalla, where he will try to
become the first player since Ben Hogan in 1953 to win three majors
in one season.
Phil Mickelson was four behind at the start of the round and
hopeful of duplicating his comeback victory in the Colonial. But
he, too, was stuck in neutral. By the time he got it together with
a birdie-eagle-birdie stretch on the back nine, he was too far
back.
Mickelson wound up with a 68 and tied for fourth with first- and
second-round leader Woody Austin at 273.
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