Goosen wins French Open after playoff
Retief Goosen, a South African who
broke his arm in a skiing accident in January, won the French Open on Sunday by
beating New Zealand's Greg Turner on the second playoff hole.
Goosen
lost a three-stroke lead in the last four holes, with Turner making three consecutive
birdies starting at No. 14. Turner could have won in regulation but was short
on a 25-foot birdie putt on No. 18.
"I
struggled when I came back," said Goosen, who was sidelined for two months after
the mishap in Switzerland. "So it's nice when you prove you can pull out a close
win like this one."
This
was the second French Open title for Goosen.
"There's
no way I can compare this with my 1997 win," he said. ``Then I had a five-shot
lead on the last hole."
Goosen
and Turner were tied at 12-under 272 after regulation on the Medoc course. Goosen
saved par on the first playoff hole with a great sand save and blasted out close
to the flag on the next hole.
On
the second extra hole, Turner drove into rough and missed from 8 feet for a bogey.
"I was lucky to close it
out in the playoff," Goosen said.
His
$148,750 victory check pulled him into fourth place on the European money
list. Turner earned $99,000.
Spain's
Santiago Luna (69) shared third with Argentina's Jose Coceres (71) at 275. Ian
Woosnam shot 71 to finish in a threeway tie for fifth at 276.
France's
Marc Farry, who shared the third-round lead, closed with a 75. He had a quadruple-bogey
7 on the fifth hole and finished at 277.