| Tiger
Woods wins by four Tiger
Woods has won the PGA Championship two ways: by playing the previous week and
by practicing and resting.
Now he will attempt to win the year's final
major off a victory. Woods
shot a 2-under 70 Sunday to win the Buick Open by four shots at 17 under. It was
his 33rd PGA Tour victory and fourth in his last eight starts. "You
want to feel like you're playing well going into a championship," Woods said.
"And any time you win, you feel good." Although
he missed a chance to win the Grand Slam with his 28th-place tie at the British
Open three weeks ago, Woods has an opportunity to do something no other golfer
has, beginning Thursday at Hazeltine in Chaska, Minn. Woods,
who won this year's Masters and U.S. Open, will be the first to win three majors
in a year twice if he wins the PGA Championship. Ben Hogan did it in 1953 and
Woods, who has won seven of the last 12 majors, did it two years ago. "That
would rank right up there," said Woods, who was to fly Sunday night to Minnesota.
"Hopefully I can add that to my list. It's already been a successful year
and I would like to make it even more successful." Esteban
Toledo, who began the final round one stroke behind Woods, stayed with the world's
best golfer through 12 holes, but then collapsed with three straight bogeys. Toledo
shot a 1-over 73 to finish at 13 under, tied for second with Mark O'Meara (68),
Brian Gay (68) and Fred Funk (71). It matched Toledo's best finish and moved him
from 118 to 85 on the money list. "I
wasn't at nervous at all," Toledo said. "He's the best player and I
tried to put some pressure on him. It just didn't work." Woods
insisted he was at Warwick Hills this week to win and not just practice for the
PGA. He opened with a 67, shot a season-best 63 on Friday and had a 71 Saturday.
"I won this
tournament two ways. The first two days, I hit the ball great, and in the last
two rounds, I made every putt I looked at," he said. "If I can combine
those two things, I'll be in great shape for next week." He
won $594,000 to extend his tour-leading total to more than $4.5 million. If
Woods wins the PGA Championship, he would be the first player to win a major after
winning a tournament the previous week since Sandy Lyle won the Greater Greensboro
Open and the Masters in 1988. Woods
is 25-2 in PGA Tour events when leading or tied for the lead after 54 holes. Since
1958, just 16 of 38 players who have at least shared the lead after 54 holes have
won the Buick Open. Woods
and Toledo were essentially engaged in match play while the rest of the field
failed to threaten them, until the former professional boxer bogeyed Nos. 13-15.
On No. 1, a hole
he double-bogeyed on Saturday, Woods opened a two-stroke lead with a birdie. Toledo
got the stroke back with a 20-foot birdie putt on No. 4. Woods missed an 8-foot
putt to bogey 5 and fall into a tie at 15 under. Woods
went back ahead by a stroke on No. 6 with a 30-foot birdie putt. The crowd roared
when he punched the air - as he has done countless times - with his right fist.
Both players birdied No. 7. Toledo
allowed Woods to go ahead by two strokes when he missed a 5-foot putt at No. 9,
but got the shot back with a birdie on the next hole. Refusing
to let Toledo's confidence grow, Woods put his tee shot a foot from the pin at
the par-3 11th, and made the birdie for another two-stroke lead. Toledo
bounced back with a birdie on 12 to pull within a stroke, but then bogeyed the
next hole while Woods birdied. "I
had to birdie 13, but I pulled it," Toledo said. "That was the key to
the tournament." Toledo
also bogeyed 14 and 15 - as Woods parred - to fall five strokes back. Woods
double-bogeyed 17 to fall to 17 under, but was still three strokes ahead. Toledo
bogeyed 18 to fall into a four-way tie, which cost him $138,600. Woods
is playing the week before a major for the fourth time and all of those tournaments
have been the Buick Open, which he won for the first time. He
said poor health would be the only thing that would prevent him from returning
to Warwick Hills next year when the Buick Open moves two weeks before the PGA
Championship, switching weeks with The International. Phil
Mickelson, who will have another chance to win his first major at Hazeltine, had
an erratic week. He made 24 birdies, 10 bogeys and three double bogeys to finish
in a tie for 29th at 8 under. Defending
PGA Championship winner David Toms (71) finished tied for 10th at 11 under.
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