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Furyk wins after incredible
comeback
Jim Furyk can chalk up his
incredible comeback today to Tiger Woods.
Standing on the 12th tee,
six shots behind Franklin Langham with seven holes to play in the Doral-Ryder
Open, Furyk recalled the thrilling turnaround a month ago when he was paired
with Woods in the final round at Pebble Beach.
Woods was seven strokes
down with seven holes to play. Furyk had a ringside seat to an unimaginable victory
as Woods put on an eagle-birdie-par-birdie finish and Matt Gogel stumbled down
the stretch.
"If you had told me Tiger
would win that tournament, I would have laughed at you," he said.
today, it was Furyk who
had the last laugh.
With five birdies on his
last seven holes, he closed with a 7-under 65 to win Doral by two strokes over
Langham.
"I told myself he (Woods)
won that event because he believed that he could," Furyk said. "If I didn't believe
I could still win, then it definitely wouldn't have happened today. Maybe I learned
something from that."
Furyk didn't hole a wedge
from the fairway for eagle, or punch the air with a massive uppercut with every
birdie. He simply never counted himself out, telling caddie Mike Cowan he needed
a 30 on the back nine to have a chance.
That's just what he delivered
on the tame Blue Monster.
"Under that pressure, that's
the best nine holes I've played on tour," Furyk said.
Nick Price made a 10-foot
birdie putt on the 18th hole for a 67 that left him alone in third at 270, one
stroke ahead of David Duval (66) and Shigeki Maruyama (69), who secured his position
in the top 50 in the Official World Golf Ranking and an invitation to The Masters.
"I should feel fortunate
right now," said Furyk, who earned $540,000. His 23-under 265 tied the tournament
record set in 1993 by Greg Norman.
Langham staggered off the
course with a harsh lesson.
Starting the final round
with a three-stroke lead, Langham birdied the first three holes and looked as
though he might shatter Norman's 72-hole record at Doral. Instead, he resembled
the Shark at Augusta National, when Norman squandered a six-shot lead in the
final round of the 1996 Masters.
"My time will come," said
Langham, who closed with a 70 after making four pars and three bogeys over the
final seven holes. "That's golf. If you don't have a tough chin, you won't be
out here very long."
It was the second straight
year at Doral that a player going after his first victory stumbled down the stretch.
Last year it was Greg Kraft, who chunked his 5-iron into the water on the 18th
and had to scramble to make bogey for second place.
A lead that Langham had
held for 28 holes finally vanished on the 17th.
"No, no, no, no," Langham
moaned, after hitting a knuckleball out of a bad lie that skirted over the mounds
guarding a bunker right of the green and into the gallery. His third shot, a
pitch over a greenside bunker, came up short of the green in the rough, and he
wound up with a bogey.
"All of a sudden, I have
a 20-foot putt with a chance to take the lead," Furyk said. The putt dropped
into the center of the cup.
Langham's last chance for
a playoff ended when his 10-foot birdie putt ran past the hole, and he had to
make a 3-footer for par. Furyk finished off his fifth career PGA Tour victory
with a 5-foot birdie putt.
"I gave him a little bit
of light," Langham said. "He took advantage."
It was a shocking turnaround,
just like when Woods roared from behind to overtake a fast-fading Gogel at Pebble
Beach.
When Langham chipped in
for birdie on the 11th, his lead was back to six strokes for the third time in
the final round.
"At that point, it was
tough to think things were going to turn your way," Furyk said. "I just kept
plugging away."
Furyk made a 12-foot birdie
on No. 12, then picked up two more strokes with a 20-footer for birdie on No.
13 as Langham failed to save par from the bunker. Langham dropped another shot
on the 14th by missing the fairway and the green, then having his 5-foot par
putt catch the right lip but fail to fall. Furyk applied more heat by hitting
a 6-iron into 2 feet for birdie on the 175-yard 15th.
That Furyk managed to match
Norman's 72-hole record on the Blue Monster was no surprise. The course was toned
down after criticism of Raymond Floyd's redesign, and it was left vulnerable
by the absence of any semblance of wind most of the week.
Still, Langham was playing
like he could win on any course under any condition, and he had plenty of support.
A couple of guys in bright red shirts that said, "Lang's Gang" were whooping
and hollering as if they were at a Georgia-Florida football game.
Langham was giving them
reason to cheer, and when his chip fell for birdie on the 11th hole, the tournament
figured to be over.
And then suddenly, shades
of Pebble Beach.
DIVOTS: Greg Norman
says he will play two more seasons, and eight more majors, before significantly
cutting back his schedule. ... A poll by the PGA Tour's Web site before the final
round asked who would win Doral. Out of 2,155 votes, David Duval has the highest
percentage of any player -- 18.3 percent -- even though he was eight strokes
back. The most votes went to "Other." Jim Furyk, a four-time winner who was only
three out of the lead, was not among the choices. ... Heart-transplant recipient
Erik Compton birdied the 18th for a 71, putting him at 2-over 290 for the week.
... Mark Calcavecchia, who needed at least a fifth-place finish to avoid missing
The Masters for the first time since 1986, was out of the contention and closed
with a 79 to finish last.
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