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Jacobsen wins again after
8 years
Peter Jacobsen shot a 3-under-par 67 on Sunday for a two-stroke win at the
Greater Hartford Open, his first PGA Tour title in eight years.
Jacobsen, who also won the Tournament in 1984, had a share of the lead for all
four rounds and led by one stroke after 54-holes. He'll go down in the books as
the final winner of the GHO, which becomes the Buick Championship next year.
The thousands lining the hills along No. 18 cheered long and loud as Jacobsen
made his way up the fairway. The final round of the final GHO drew more than 70,000
fans to the Tournament Players Club at River Highlands.
The 49-year-old Jacobsen finished 14 under for the Tournament with a 266, two
strokes better than playing partner Chris Riley.
As Jacobsen's final putt dropped, his 21-year-old daughter Kristen ran onto
the green and into his arms.
She was a toddler the last time he won here. His $720,000 payday on Sunday
was 10 times bigger than it was 19 years ago.
Jacobsen's victory also gets him into next year's Mercedes Championships for
the PGA Tour winners in 2003.
"When I was 30 years old I thought I should have won every week,"
he said. "You think you're going to do it again and again. It doesn't happen
that way. I think it makes this victory that much sweeter. I think I'll appreciate
it a lot more."
Jacobsen was the sentimental favorite as the Tournament unfolded. It opened with
the much heralded appearance of Suzy Whaley, the local teaching pro who became
the first woman to qualify for a PGA Tour event since Babe Zaharias in 1945. When
Whaley bowed out Friday with a 13 over, she followed Jacobsen -- whose production
company handled her publicity the last seven months.
Todd Fischer (65) finished third with at 11 under. Craig Barlow and Kenny Perry
both shot 69 to finish four strokes back.
Jacobsen played a sure and steady round in windy conditions, scrambling to
save critical pars. His four-birdie round included one bogey when he missed a
3-footer for par on the par-3 No. 5.
Jovial and relaxed for 18 holes, Jacobsen bantered with the crowd, shaking
hands as he walked to the tees. He waited for a butterfly to flit off his line
on the No. 3, explaining to the crowd "I don't want to hurt the butterfly."
He was unflappable.
When a young boy sped by in a dirt bike along railroad tracks that lined the
No. 14 fairway, Jacobsen took it in stride, pumping his fist in the air as if
to say "way to go."
Riley was one stroke back at the start of the day but quickly got in trouble,
hitting his first tee shot out of bounds. He would hit another out of bounds later
in the round for two more penalty strokes.
"You just can't hit two balls out of bounds on Sunday and win an event,"
Riley said. "You know how the crowds are here in Hartford. They're just huge.
Maybe I got a little caught up in the moment."
Riley played himself back into contention with an eagle on the 296-yard No.
15 to pull within two strokes at 11 under.
Jacobsen calmly responded with a birdie on No. 17, the par-4 signature water
hole at the TPC at River Highlands. He then proceeded safely back to the winner's
circle for the first time since 1995.
His daughter had never seen Jacobsen win. A senior at New York University,
she arrived at the course Sunday morning.
"I came in by bus," she said. "but we're going home in a limo."
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