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DiMarco holds on to claim
win
Another record crowd at
the Phoenix Open got the exciting finish they wanted. Chris DiMarco would have
rather put them to sleep.
Especially the rowdy fan
on No. 16.
DiMarco showed him up by
making his birdie, and he showed plenty of grit Sunday by recovering from his
stunning collapse for a one-stroke victory over hard-luck Kenny Perry and Japan's
Kaname Yokoo.
John Daly had a meltdown,
too, dropping five shots over seven holes, but he recovered with his second eagle
of the round and tied for fourth, two strokes behind.
In a tournament that no
one seemed to want to win, DiMarco got back in the game with an 8-iron from 171
yards that stopped not much more than 18 inches from the cup on the arena-like
par-3 16th.
A tap-in?
Not after what Perry did
on the 13th hole, a gimme that came back to haunt him. And not after the fan screamed
out, ``Noonan!'' as DiMarco stood over the putt.
That's a famous line in
the movie ``Caddyshack,'' when everyone is shouting at Danny Noonan while he tries
to make a 12-foot putt to win the caddie tournament.
``It gave me a little incentive
to make the putt,'' DiMarco said.
He did just that to draw
even with Perry, then made a gesture with his thumb and told tournament officials
to get the man off the TPC of Scottsdale.
``I think he missed the
ending,'' DiMarco said.
That was the fan's loss.
The Phoenix Open had a few more twists and turns.
DiMarco had to get up-and-down
for par on the 332-yard 17th and was figuring how in the world he was going to
hit the 18th fairway with his driver. He didn't have to, not after Perry three-putted
from 30 feet for bogey on the 17th to fall one stroke behind.
It finally ended with DiMarco
two-putting from about 50 feet on the 18th and Perry's birdie putt burning the
right edge of the cup.
DiMarco closed with a 2-under
69 and finished at 267 for this third victory in as many seasons, putting him
atop the PGA Tour money list and making him exempt for the U.S. Open.
Perry had a 70, while Yokoo
had a 7-under 64 to finish at 268.
``To be at the top, and
then all of a sudden your world falls ... it makes you dig deep and learn a lot
about yourself,'' DiMarco said. ``I've won by six strokes, I birdied the 18th
to force a playoff. This was one you had to hold on.''
This was a tournament that
kept slipping away.
First, it was DiMarco. He
led by four strokes after 10 holes before hitting behind a tree on No. 11 and
making double bogey, hitting into the bunker for bogey on the par-3 12th, then
driving into the water for bogey on No. 13.
``The next thing I know,
Kenny Perry has got an eagle put to go 3-up,'' DiMarco said.
Perry, coming off a birdie
on No. 12, lagged his eagle putt to 18 inches, then badly pulled the short birdie
putt and had to settle for only a one-stroke lead.
``That really killed me,''
Perry said. ``I missed a gimme.''
Perry has played in final
group three times this year without winning.
The short putt came back
to haunt him, and it gave DiMarco new life. He took advantage with a 15-foot birdie
putt on the 14th, then scratched out a two-putt par on the next hole despite driving
into a desert bush with a huge dirt clod in front of his ball.
Perry gave up the lead on
the 17th by driving too long and too far right -- level with the green, but at
such a bad angle that to pitch over the bunker toward the pin would likely send
the ball rolling over the green and into the water.
``I don't know what you're
supposed to do on that crazy hole,'' Perry said. ``I was looking for the miracle
shot, and it didn't happen.''
He chunked his chip, then
three-putted from 30 feet.
Daly had his chances, too.
Spurred on by a gallery
of 119,600, a 15-foot eagle putt on No. 3 put Daly at 17 under and tied for the
lead with DiMarco. But he turned back into the ``Wild Thing'' with his driver,
hitting in five trees over three holes, making bogeys on all of them. He also
double-bogeyed the 11th.
``I hung in there. I gave
it my best shot,'' Daly said. ``Hopefully, I'll get in contention more and maybe
one day I'll come out on top.''
Daly closed with a 70 and
was at 269, along with two-time U.S. Open champion Lee Janzen, whose 64 was his
best final-round score since the 1994 Texas Open.
Duffy Waldorf's one-stroke
lead to start the final round was gone after the first hole and he never recovered,
closing with a 73 to finish sixth.
The final round had a familiar
look to it for DiMarco. At the International last year in Colorado, he had a big
lead through eight holes until making two double bogeys and three bogeys to fall
into a tie for third.
``I've got give hats off
to my caddie because he kept me calm,'' DiMarco said. ``It happened at the International
where I kind of gave one away. And itwas, 'Hey, we're not going to give another
one away.' He kept me focused.''
Divots
The Phoenix Open was not
played opposite the Super Bowl this year, and it showed in the attendance figures
-- 119,600 on Sunday, up from 64,842 a year ago, when Tiger Woods was in the field.
The total for the week was 529,210. ... More evidence why galleries relate to
Daly because he's a regular guy: After hitting his tee shot on No. 2, he made
a detour into the trees to relieve himself. ... The Walrus had to wade into the
water on No. 17. Craig Stadler removed his shoes and stood calf-deep in the pond
to play his shot from the edge of the rough. He chunked the chip, but made full
contact when he smackedone of his shoes with his wedge.
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