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Allenby oulasts Stadler
in playoff
Robert Allenby got his first
PGA Tour victory the hard way.
In a four-hole playoff,
Allenby went in the water once and behind a grandstand another time before finally
making a 10-foot par putt to beat Craig Stadler and his erratic putter in the
Shell Houston Open today.
"I putted first on that
last hole and I hoped it would put some pressure on Craig," Allenby said. "It
was a shame we can't have two winners. Both of us played good golf all week.
I would have been glad to share it."
Stadler, trying to win
his first tournament since 1996, missed makeable putts on all four playoff holes,
giving Allenby an emotional victory with his family and fellow Australian Stuart
Appleby, the 1999 Houston Open champion, looking on.
"Last year was pretty emotional
to see Stuart win and this year he came up and it was pretty emotional," Allenby
said. "With two great mates like that, we got kind of teary-eyed. My wife and
baby got to see it too."
Allenby survived going
into the water on the first playoff hole and won it despite hitting into the
stands behind the green on the last extra hole.
"I must say I'm very relieved
in more ways than one to get my first U.S. Tour victory," Allenby said. "I haven't
won anything since 1996. It's been a long time between drinks."
Allenby started the final
round with a one-shot lead over Stadler but the two ended regulation tied at
13-under 275.
Stadler had a final-round
71 at the 7,108-yard TPC at The Woodlands. His putter did him in the playoff
as he missed opportunities for the win on each of the first three holes.
"I hit a lot of good shots,
but I hit a lot of poor putts," he said. "It's not like I didn't have enough
chances, that's for sure.
"I was short all day long,"
Stadler said. "I don't get it. I made a lot of 4- and 5-footers today."
But not in the playoff.
On the final playoff hole,
the 421-yard 10th, Allenby hooked his tee shot into a bunker and his second shot
went into the grandstands. He took a drop, chipped within 10 feet and made the
putt. Stadler, whose second shot was over the green, then missed a putt from
about the same distance.
Allenby, a four-time winner
on the European Tour, earned $504,000. His best previous PGA Tour finish was
a tie for second in this year's Phoenix Open. Stadler, who hasn't won since the
1996 Nissan Open, took home $302,400.
Loren Roberts, with a final-round
69, and Joel Edwards, with a 70, tied for third at 276, one stroke in front of
Mark Brooks and Brad Fabel.
The playoff started at
the par-4 18th and it looked bad for Allenby when his second shot was short and
went into the water, while Stadler was on the green, thinking two putts would
win the tournament.
But Allenby's third shot
got him close and he ran in the bogey-saving putt while Stadler 3-putted from
about 40 feet, leaving his second putt on the lip.
Stadler got his second
chance at victory on No. 10 when he hit his second shot within five feet of the
hole and this time he pulled it to the left. Allenby held with a par and they
returned to No. 18 for the third playoff hole.
This time, Allenby went
over the green with his second shot but saved par and Stadler missed a 5-foot
birdie putt that would have wrapped it up once again.
In regulation, Allenby
had a one-stroke lead until he bogeyed No. 17 when his chip shot from just off
the green went well past the hole.
Stadler settled for a par
and a share of the lead.
That brought the co-leaders
to the final regulation hole where both players recovered with par-saving putts
to force the playoff.
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