| Parry
finally wins on US PGA Tour Winless
in 235 previous starts on the PGA Tour, Craig Parry played like a world champion
Sunday to win the NEC Invitational.
The stocky Australian birdied three
straight holes early in the final round at Sahalee Country Club and never gave
Tiger Woods, Robert Allenby or anyone else a chance in closing with a 6-under
65 for a four-stroke victory. "I'm
just very lucky at the moment," Parry said. "Hopefully, I'll have a
little more confidence with my golf game, knowing I can finishing the job off."
Parry finished
at 16-under 268, four strokes ahead of Allenby (69) and Fred Funk (68), and became
the only player besides Woods to capture the NEC Invitational. Woods
was trying to become the first player in 75 years to win the same tournament four
years in a row. Starting the final round two strokes behind, he couldn't keep
pace with the Australian and closed with a 68 to finish fourth. Woods
ended a three-week stretch with a victory at the Buick Open, a second-place finish
in the PGA Championship and fourth at Sahalee. "Any
time you win one, and you put yourself in contention to win two others, you're
doing all right," Woods said. It
wasn't enough to stop Rich Beem at Hazeltine, or Parry, another unlikely winner.
The 5-foot-6
Australian with powerful forearms - one of his nicknames is "Popeye"
- Parry became the second player this year to win his first PGA Tour event at
one of the $5 million World Golf Championships. Kevin
Sutherland won his first tour event at the Match Play Championship in February
with a 1-up victory at La Costa. Only
this final round wasn't even close. Parry,
a 19-time winner overseas, made sure of that with birdies on three straight holes,
starting at No. 2, that quickly gave him a three-stroke advantage. He made two
crucial par saves before rolling in a bending, 20-footer for birdie on No. 9.
Parry was so
dominant that he didn't make a bogey after the sixth hole of his second round
Friday, playing the final 48 holes at Sahalee with pars or better. Despite
playing in the final group, with the pressure of a $1 million prize and finally
proving he can win against the best, Parry matched the best score of the day.
David Duval also had a 65. Twelve
players were separated by four strokes going into the final round, and Allenby
said it would take a round of 5 under to win. He also figured Woods might be among
those poised to make a charge. Instead,
the best play came from the top. Parry
effectively ended the tournament with an 18-foot birdie putt on No. 14, and the
only other time he had to scramble was when he hit into the bunker on No. 17.
He blasted out to 6 feet and holed the par putt, as a smile crept over his face.
Parry first showed
his promise 10 years ago when he took a one-stroke lead over Fred Couples into
the final round of the Masters. He shot 78 on Sunday and tied for 13th. He had
another good chance at the '95 Colonial, but Tom Lehman birdied the last two holes.
There was no
stopping him Sunday on a gray, cool afternoon at Sahalee, an Indian word that
means, "High, Heavenly Ground." Parry
was walking on clouds when he ripped a 3-wood into the green on the par-5 18th
and tapped in for a birdie. Allenby
tried to stay with him, but made bogey on the 10th from the rough and took a double
bogey on No. 14 when he hit into the trees. Allenby finished with four straight
birdies, but they were of little consolation. Justin
Rose, the 22-year-old from England, closed with a 68 to finish fifth. The
irony of Parry's victory is that Woods was responsible for him even getting into
the NEC Invitational. The
field was expanded this year to include more than just Presidents Cup and Ryder
Cup players, adding the top 50 in the world and select tournaments around the
globe that had a minimum number of world ranking points. Parry
won the New Zealand Open, which became a qualifying event for the NEC Invitational
only because of Woods' presence as the No. 1 player in the world. Woods,
meanwhile, gets one more chance to win the same tournament four straight years
at the Bay Hill Invitational in March. Walter
Hagen won the PGA Championship in 1924-27 when it was match play. Email
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