| Singh
coasts to 6 shot victory Vijay
Singh didn't allow for much suspense in the final round of the Shell Houston Open.
Singh won his
first PGA Tour title since the 2000 Masters, closing with a 4-under 68 Sunday
for a six-stroke victory and tournament-record 22-under 266 total on the TPC at
The Woodlands. He
earned $720,000 for his 10th PGA Tour title. ``It's
been almost two years, I was wondering when the next one would come,'' said Singh,
who did win consecutive European tour events last year in Asia. ``It couldn't
be at a better time, two weeks before the Masters.'' He's
the 14th straight different winner on the PGA Tour, the longest such stretch since
1994 when the tour went 20 straight tournaments without a repeat champion. Northern
Ireland's Darren Clarke shot a 71 to finish second at 272, and Spain's Jose Maria
Olazabal was another stroke back after a 70. Jay Haas (69) and Shigeki Murayama
(70) followed at 275. ``I
knew I wasn't going to worry about anybody but Darren, I played really well and
kept him at bay,'' Singh said. ``I really didn't want to worry about him and concentrate
on what I was doing. ``Darren
really played well. It was closer than it looked. He really didn't make a bad
shot until his bogey on No. 17. That gave me a six-shot lead. I didn't have any
trouble with that.'' Singh's
22-under total shattered the tournament record of 18 under set by Curtis Strange
in 1980 at Woodlands Country Club. Singh's six-stroke margin of victory matched
the tournament record set by Jackie Burke in 1952. Singh
had played in 50 PGA Tour events without a victory. ``You
always get antsy when you don't win, it's just a matter of how you handle it,''
Singh said. ``Last year, I got a little antsy and this year I decided to just
concentrate on playing. Today, I wanted to play a solid round and that's what
I did.'' Singh,
who missed the cut last week in The Players Championship, birdied the first hole
of the day and tightened his hold on the lead on No. 13 when Clarke hit his tee
shot out of bounds. Singh
took his second shot over the water onto the green. Singh two-putted for a birdie
and Clark scrambled to save par. Singh
took a five-stroke lead when he narrowly missed an eagle putt and settled for
a birdie on No. 15 and Clarke bogeyed No. 17. Clarke
got his first birdie on No. 5 and reached 17 under par with another birdie on
No. 7 to make the turn the same way he started the day, three shots behind Singh.
Clarke missed
a 3-foot birdie putt on the No. 1 hole and he narrowly missed a birdie putt on
No. 12. Singh blasted out of a bunker on the hole and saved par to keep his three-shot
lead. ``That
was a good up and down,'' Singh said. ``I hit a good second shot and I was surprised
when it came up short. Those are the things that happen when you win a tournament.
You see it every week.'' Singh
was blowing away the field in Saturday's third round with a six-stroke lead. Then
he bogeyed No. 14 and Clarke birdied to start a rally that gave him a chance going
into the final round. Hal
Sutton, the defending champion, shot a 69 for a 282 total. Greg
Norman, playing the tournament for the first time since 1991, closed with a 76
to match Sutton at 282. The
tournament will be played at Redstone Golf Club beginning in 2003, ending a 27-year
association with The Woodlands. Email
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