| Goosen
gains four shot victory Retief
Goosen has been struck by lightning. He has missed a gimme putt to win the U.S.
Open. He certainly
wasn't going to let a dismal start Sunday get him down. Goosen
began the final round of the BellSouth Classic with a bogey and a double-bogey,
actually falling two shots behind Phil Mickelson. The South African bounced back
for a four-stroke victory over Jesper Parnevik, with Mickelson another shot back.
``I knew if I
won or lost today, I was still going to wake up tomorrow morning and have to do
it all over again,'' said Goosen, who closed with a 2-under-par 70 despite treacherous
conditions on the TPC at Sugarloaf. He's
so laid-back that countryman Ernie Els (The Big Easy) seems hyper by comparison.
That attitude is understandable considering Goosen was struck by lightning as
an amateur, damaging his heart and costing him some hearing in his left ear. Goosen
was tested again at last year's U.S. Open, where he missed an 18-inch putt that
would have given him the victory in regulation. He bounced back the following
day to beat Mark Brooks in a playoff. ``I
take it a little bit easier out there on the golf course now than I used to in
the past,'' Goosen said. ``I'm not so hard on myself. I just try and enjoy the
game a little bit more.'' He's
sure had plenty to enjoy since winning his first major. Already this year, the
33-year-old Goosen has won tournaments on three continents, adding the BellSouth
to victories on the European and South African tours. ``It's
been a great nine or 10 months for me,'' he said. ``I don't really know how to
explain it.'' Goosen
pulled away from the field with a 16-under 272. Parnevik, who posted 65 early
in the day for a 276, wasn't even around when the winner finished. Mickelson
appeared to be Goosen's main challenger, starting the final round two strokes
back. The left-hander briefly claimed the lead, only to fade to a 73 and 277.
``I actually
hit a lot of good shots,'' Mickelson said. ``I just had a hard time getting it
close. It is hard to really describe. You just have to see it.'' Goosen
headed off to the Masters -- about a two-hour drive away -- with the kind of short
game that makes him a contender for his second major championship. ``It's
similar greens, and similar shots into the greens,'' he said. ``There's some great
lessons learned here for next week.'' Goosen
already knows how to shake off disappointment. He started with a three-putt from
25 feet. At the par-3 second hole, he needed two shots to escape a bunker and
missed a 4-foot putt. Suddenly,
his two-shot advantage over Mickelson was a two-shot deficit. ``I
just concentrated on staying focused,'' Goosen said. ``I knew there were still
16 holes to play.'' Mickelson
birdied the second hole, but struggled the rest of the way. Errant iron play --
he hit only five of 18 greens in regulation -- and shaky putting negated the impact
of his booming drives. Not
exactly a confidence boost going to Augusta.
``I will practice quite a bit on and around the greens because you never really
get accustomed to Augusta's greens,'' Mickelson said. The
Sugarloaf greens were Masters-like after drying out in four days of sun and steady
breezes. Parnevik was one of only three players who broke 70. Some
of the scores were downright ugly: Steve Elkington, who was tied for the lead
midway through the tournament, signed for an 81 that included five bogeys and
three double-bogeys. Goosen
turned things around at the par-5 fourth hole. After knocking his second shot
to the right of the green, he chipped in from 100 feet away for an eagle. Mickelson,
meanwhile, was having all sorts of trouble at the same hole. He yanked his tee
shot into a bunker on the right side, then banged his second shot into the creek
that meanders left of the fairway. The
ball ricocheted off a rock and came to rest in tall grass on the other side. That
fortunate bounce didn't prevent Mickelson from taking bogey. Goosen
did a better job of scrambling, using his short irons time and time again to escape
trouble. At No. 7, his second shot sailed into the gallery. After workers removed
a sign that blocked his view of the flag, Goosen pitched off the pine straw and
over some television wires, the ball rolling to a stop about 5 feet from the hole.
He made that to save par. Mickelson
needed par on the last hole to finish tied for second, but he went for the green
from 267 yards and wound up in the lake after a wild, one-handed swing. He
settled for a bogey, bumping him to third and reducing his paycheck by $76,000.
``I thought about
laying up,'' Mickelson said. ``I hit just an awful shot.'' Parnevik
appeared to shoot himself out of contention with a 76 on Saturday. He played 11
strokes better in the final round and finished brilliantly at 18: a 249-yard 5-wood
over the water, followed by a putt that went in from nearly 60 feet away. ``That
was like shooting 60,'' Goosen said. ``It was an unbelievable round.'' Divots Defending
champion Scott McCarron made a charge on the back nine, putting together four
straight birdies to finish at 68. He was six strokes back, alone in fourth. ...
Zach Johnson, a regular on the Hooters Tour, three-putted from 3 1/2 feet on the
final hole, costing him a top-10 finish. If Johnson had made the first putt, he
would have tied for eighth, good enough for an exemption into the Greater Greensboro
Chrysler Classic in three weeks.Instead, he tied for 17th. Email
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