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on this tournament & other sports here Tataurangi
claims first PGA Tour win Phil
Tataurangi didn't think he had a chance to win his first PGA Tour title Sunday.
Even after shooting a 10-under 62 to come from five shots behind to win the Invensys
Classic at Las Vegas he had trouble believing it.
Tataurangi swept past
fourth-round leader David Duval with five birdies on the front nine, then added
the same number on the back to get to 29 under. Then
he waited nervously on the driving range as Stuart Appleby, Jeff Sluman and Jim
Furyk all missed birdie tries on the 18th hole that would have forced a playoff.
"I didn't
think for one moment I was going to win the golf tournament today," Tataurangi
said. The New
Zealander who has struggled both with his game and his health earned $900,000,
more than he had won his entire career before this year. He's the 15th first-time
winner this year, breaking the record set in 1991. Tataurangi
did it by making five birdies on the first seven holes of the back nine, then
adding routine pars on the last two holes. "I
worked hard to get in a situation like this and I wasn't going to throw it away,"
Tataurangi said. Tataurangi
said he was simply following a game plan to play aggressively and didn't even
know where he stood after finishing the 18th hole. He
didn't look at the leaderboard, and didn't know how much money he had made, even
after being presented an oversized check on the 18th green. His
win not only secures his tour card for two years, but will likely put him in the
Masters after he moved to 33rd on the money list. "I've
never played the game to make a lot of money,' Tataurangi said. Appleby
had the best chance to tie after nearly making a hole-in-one on the 17th hole.
But he missed badly a 10-footer for birdie on the last hole that would have gotten
him to 29 under. Appleby
finished with a 66, while Sluman shot a 67 but could not make a chip on 18 to
force a playoff. "I
really wanted that one on 18," Appleby said. "I just lost my momentum
on the front nine. You just can't stall and I got stuck on the front nine."
Duval, who had
a one-shot lead going into the final round and was trying to win for the first
time since last year's British Open, shot himself out of contention with a 1-over
37 on the front nine and finished four shots back after a 71. Duval's
chances basically ended when he hit a wedge into the front bunker on the par-5
ninth hole for a bogey. Furyk,
who had won three of the last seven Vegas tournaments, had a three-shot lead after
seven holes and had yet to make a bogey in the tournament. But he bogeyed the
eighth hole, missed a short birdie putt on the ninth and made two more bogeys
on the back nine. The
final one came on the 18th hole when, needing a birdie to tie, he hit his second
shot from 184 yards well left of the green and nearly in the water. Sluman
had predicted a day earlier that someone who was 18 or 19 under going into the
final round would have to shoot a 62 to have a chance to win. "I
said yesterday someone could come out and shoot 10 under and win the tournament,"
Sluman said. "That's exactly what happened." Sluman
missed the green with his 6-iron to the 18th hole and had two three-putts on the
front nine for bogey. But he shot a 67 that was good enough to secure his spot
in the Tour Championship and also the Masters. "I
really can't complain," Sluman said. "I did all the things you were
supposed to do. Phil just did one thing better. He won the shootout." Tataurangi
had to earn his tour card at qualifying school after a miserable year in 2001
that included an injury to his neck and a frightening collapse with a heart condition
at the Air Canada Championship. The
30-year-old had his best year even before the win, with two fifth-place finishes
and $743,686 in winnings. Email
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