| Singh
coasts to victory in Atlanta Annoyed
by his two previous failures at East Lake, Vijay Singh left nothing to chance
Sunday in the Tour Championship.
After working overtime on a swing he
could trust, and rehearsing a 3-iron shot to the 18th in case it came down to
the final hole, Singh finally got his revenge on East Lake by closing with a 3-under
67 to win the final PGA Tour event of the year. "The
last two times I came over here, I thought I was going to win it," Singh
said after a two-stroke victory over Charles Howell III. "I've finally done
it, and it's really something I'm going to cherish." It
was the third straight Tour Championship at East Lake that Singh held at least
a share of the 54-hole lead. He
lost in a playoff to Hal Sutton in 1998 after making bogey on the 72nd hole. Two
years ago, he was tied with Tiger Woods and closed with a 73 as both were defeated
by Phil Mickelson. Singh
finally figured out how to close the deal. He struck the ball beautifully all
day, kept out of trouble and dared everyone else to catch him. They
certainly tried. "Every
time I hit a good shot, he was right there to answer," Howell said after
closing with a 66 in his Tour Championship debut. First
it was Jerry Kelly, who made an ace on No. 11 to trim the lead to one stroke.
Singh responded with three straight birdies starting on the par-5 ninth. Then
came Howell, who holed a wedge from the 13th fairway for an eagle and birdied
the 17th to cut the margin to two shots. That
was a small enough margin for Singh to remember his first failure at East Lake
- a bogey on the par-3 18th that allowed Sutton to get into a playoff and beat
him. "I
had the same club in my hand," Singh said. "I was practicing that this
morning. I said if it comes down to 18, I need to hit a solid 3-iron. And that
was the best one I hit. When I struck the ball, I didn't have to look to know
it was going straight for the green." A
two-putt par gave him a 12-under 268 and a check for $900,000. David
Toms had a 67 to finish third. The former PGA champion failed to win a tournament
for the first time since 1998, although he still finished fourth on the money
list. Tiger Woods
was never a factor after taking a double bogey on the opening hole. Woods grimaced
on his approach to the par-5 15th, and later attributed that to a sore knee that
has bothered him all year. "You
just have to play through it," Woods said. Woods
hit only four fairways, hanging his head as each drive sailed into the trees.
He wound up with a 70 and a tie for seventh, the first time he has finished out
of the top five since the British Open in July. Singh
was never worried about Woods or anyone else. "The
key was my golf," he said. "I focused on hitting the fairways, which
I did. If you hit the fairways, the hole becomes so much easier." Unlike
the previous two Tour Championships at East Lake, Singh had a little more breathing
room - a three-stroke lead over Howell, and an easy day for scoring with hardly
any wind and overcast conditions. Only
nothing came easily for Singh at the start of the final round. He
made bogey from the bunker on the opening hole and had to settle for pars over
the next seven holes, which slowly allowed a group of other players to sneak into
contention. Davis
Love III made six birdies over a span of eight holes to get within two strokes
of the lead until he missed the 13th green and faded. Love had a 65 and tied for
fifth at 275 with Mickelson (69). Toms
got within two shots of Singh with a short birdie putt on No. 9, then added another
birdie on No. 12. He was never a factor after that, finishing with all pars. The
real scare came from Kelly, whose ace on No. 11 was only the fourth in the 16-year
history of the Tour Championship, and the first since Steve Lowery and Greg Norman
in 1994 at The Olympic Club. His
4-iron from 205 yards landed about 25 feet short of the hole and broke about 4
feet before curling in the back edge. That put Kelly only one stroke out of the
lead, and the cheer must have awoken Singh from his slumber. After
missing three birdie chances inside 8 feet, the Fijian holed a birdie putt from
7 feet on No. 9, then poured it on. He made a 12-footer on No. 10, then his tee
shot on the par-3 11th came about 16 inches from matching Kelly's ace. He
settled for a tap-in birdie, a four-shot lead and was on his way. Howell
tried to make it interesting by holing out with a wedge from 13th fairway, the
ball flying straight into the hole for an eagle that brought him within three
shots. All he
needed was a few mistakes from Singh, who made none on a day when he could finally
leave East Lake with a big check and a crystal trophy.
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