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Olazabal the last non-American
remaining
The only sure thing in the
Match Play Championship is that someone will get a check for $1 million at the
end of the week.
Paul Azinger looked like
a beaten man Friday, 2 down with four holes to play. After birdies on four of
the next five holes, he won in 20 holes over Niclas Fasth of Sweden.
``I dominated the match.
I deserved to win,'' Fasth said, and Azinger did not disagree.
David Toms looked like he
might fall 2-down to good friend Steve Flesch until the PGA champion holed a 60-foot
birdie putt from one side of the 14th green to the other. Toms finished off Flesch
with a 20-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 1-up victory.
``It was a tough match.
He didn't give my anything all day,'' Toms said.
When another wild and wacky
day at the Accenture Match Play Championship finally ended Friday, seven Americans
were in the quarterfinals.
The stars are gone, but
the Stars & Stripes are doing just fine.
``We have a strong tour,''
Toms said. ``I think the rest of the world knows that.''
The exception is a Spaniard,
just not the one everybody expected.
Sergio Garcia, the No. 4
seed, fell behind on the first hole against Scott McCarron and never caught up
in a match that was high on gamesmanship but lacked quality shots down the stretch,
both players halving the final four holes with two bogeys and two pars.
``I see gray hairs already
forming on my head,'' McCarron said after his 1-up victory.
Carrying the flag for the
rest of the world is Jose Maria Olazabal of Spain, who pulled away from Mark Calcavecchia
with birdies on two of the final four holes for a 2-up victory.
In other matches:
-- Bob Estes, 3-up with
eight holes to play, matched Nick Price shot-for-shot over the final three holes
and held on for a 1-up victory.
-- Tom Lehman birdied three
straight holes to stay close with Matt Gogel, then took advantage of his mistakes
for a 4 and 3 victory.
-- Brad Faxon is the hottest
player in the quarterfinals. He made five birdies for a 3 and 2 victory over John
Cook, and is the only player who has yet to play the 18th hole this week.
-- Kevin Sutherland is the
highest seed still alive at No. 62, having dispatched of Jim Furyk with a mistake-free
day at La Costa.
It was the third time in
four years of the Accenture Match Play Championship that only one top-10 seed
-- Toms at No. 6 -- was remaining after the first three rounds.
``The guys who are left
are playing the best in the world now,'' McCarron said. ``These are your marquee
players. I don't care who they are.''
McCarron got some advice
from Azinger to ignore the countless waggles of Garcia, which were about eight
in the early going and up to 32 by the end of the round.
Garcia hit a wedge into
a few inches for a birdie to close the deficit to 1-up on No. 13, and that's where
the fun began.
McCarron hit into the left
bunker on No. 14 and blasted out to 30 feet, slamming his club back into the sand
in disgust. But he holed the long par putt to keep his margin, a turning point
in the match.
``It looked like I would
win two holes in a row,'' Garcia said. ``That was a great putt. That changed the
momentum.''
The tension was obvious.
McCarron's drive on the 15th appeared perfect until it rolled into a bunker. He
bent over and touched his head to his knees, then punched his bag with his fist.
Garcia was behind a tree -- ``I've been here before,'' he cracked to the gallery
-- and both wound up in a greenside bunker, unable to make par.
Both had short par putts
on the 16th -- McCarron missed his from 6 feet and shouted, ``Nice greens,'' to
one in particular. With a chance to square the match, Garcia missed his 4-foot
putt to the left.
``I hooked it,'' he said,
shaking his head in disbelief at the poa annua greens that have not been friendly
to anyone this week.
Garcia also missed putts
of 12 and 25 feet on the final two holes, and McCarron matched him to advance
to the quarterfinals against Lehman.
McCarron generally is a
quick player, but slowed down so much that both players were put on the clock.
Three bad times results in a loss of a hole, only it never got that far. Plus,
Garcia twice had McCarron make par putts under 18 inches.
Azinger figured he would
be checking out of La Costa, especially when he was 2-down with four holes to
play. He never led until the 20th hole.
``All the time, I was thinking
I was beat,'' he said. ``I was not giving up, but I didn't see him making any
mistakes, and I couldn't get my wedges close.''
Fasth bogeyed the 15th,
Azinger birdied the 16th to tie the match, then stayed in the game by holing a
25-foot birdie putt on No. 17 after Fasth hit his approach to 5 feet for birdie.
Both made birides on the first extra hole, and Azinger closed him out with a two-putt
birdie on the second hole, while Fasth failed to get up-and-down from a bunker.
``The guys who are still
here are here for a reason,'' Azinger said. ``I could have easily been beaten
today by Niclas Fasth. I could have run into the wrong guy. But today, he ran
into the wrong guy.''
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