| David Toms still
the unknown man Before
he won the PGA Championship last year, any mention of David Toms' name usually
generated the same reaction. Who's
he? Funny, but
Toms might be greeted the same way Thursday as he begins defense of his PGA title,
despite winning last August with two of golf's most-remembered shots in years. Seems
his playing partners for the first two rounds at Hazeltine National Golf Club
will be Tiger Woods and Ernie Els. ``I
don't even know if my wife knows who I'm playing with,'' Toms said following his
final tuneup round Wednesday. ``She's supposed to come and watch, but it might
be better served watching it on TV.'' Success
has partly lifted the cloak of anonymity Toms long played under before his breakthrough
victory in suburban Atlanta a year ago. He is occasionally approached off the
course for autographs or a pat on the back, something that rarely occurred until
the PGA. But,
unlike a Woods or a Sergio Garcia, the 35-year-old Toms can take his wife to a
movie or dinner without being hounded incessantly by autograph-seekers or celebrity-hunters. ``I
still have a life,'' said Toms, a former Louisiana State University star who lives
in Shreveport. ``I can come and go as I please, certain things that he (Woods)
can't do. I really don't see how he can get in a car and go see a movie. I don't
see that happening without it being just a huge spectacle.'' Or,
just as their first two rounds at Hazeltine are certain to be, with thousands
following the group to get a glimpse of Tiger, Ernie and ... oh, who's that other
guy? But even
if they might not necessarily remember Toms' face, they remember his shots. Toms
took the PGA lead a year ago by pulling out his 5-wood for a hole-in-one at No.
15 Saturday at the Atlanta Athletic Club, then kept the lead by putting the same
club back in his bag Sunday. With
a one-shot lead over Phil Mickelson on No. 18 -- a difficult 490-yarder that was
the longest par-4 in PGA Championship history -- Toms decided not to play a potentially
risky 5-wood to the green on his second shot. Instead,
he chose to lay up, then chipped to within 12 feet and made the par putt to win
his first major -- preventing Mickelson from winning his first. Toms
likes watching basketball, so it's appropriate he won with a couple of shots imported
from the sport: a slam dunk and a layup. ``It's
been well received, whether people agree with me ... or they were second-guessing
me at the time,'' Toms said. ``I think that's why I've been recognized more for
winning, because of the way it all happened. I think it really hit home with a
lot of people and they will remember that for a long time.'' Unlike
some first-time major winners who can't deal with the changes that success brings
to their professional and private lives, Toms has adjusted well. He
hasn't won a Tour event this year, but has been in the top three twice and the
top five six times in 20 events. He's fifth on the money list at $2,238,631 and
sixth in the world rankings. ``You
work hard, you prepare the best you can for every tournament, but to actually
win a major championship and to come from where I started my career, it's been
great,'' Toms said. Even
if it might seem on Thursday that he's right back where he started. ``With
that pairing, I'm sure that all eyes will be on those two guys,'' Toms said. ``Maybe
I can sneak up on them in the end.''
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