Thursday, March 6, 2014

Graeme McDowell wins World Challenge by two, ending two-year winless drought

Graeme McDowell at the World Challenge
Getty Images
Graeme McDowell sealed his World Challenge victory on Sunday with a couple of key short-game shots on the back nine and finished with one last birdie he didn't need.
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By 
Doug Ferguson
Associated Press

Series: PGA Tour
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. -- Graeme McDowell could think of no better way to head home for a 10-week holiday that to win for the first time in two years.
And he couldn't have found a better place to end the drought than Sherwood Country Club.
Even with the course playing longer than ever in a light rain, McDowell closed with a 4-under 68 on Sunday and held off Keegan Bradley with a pair of superb short-game shots that carried him to a three-shot win in the World Challenge.
It was the 10th time in 12 rounds at Sherwood that McDowell has shot in the 60s, and he extended his dominance on the course that Jack Nicklaus carved out among the foothills of Conejo Valley. In three appearances, McDowell has won twice and was runner-up.
But this one was meaningful in its own right.
"This really caps off my season," McDowell said. "We try not to put winning on a pedestal, but this one feels very sweet because it's been a grind all year."
McDowell won for the first time since he beat Tiger Woods in a playoff right here at Sherwood to close out a dream season in 2010 that included his first major at the U.S. Open and the winning point for Europe at the Ryder Cup.
This win followed a year of frustration. He played in the final group of the U.S. Open and British Open but came up short, and he lost some enthusiasm going into tournaments late in the year. He talked all week about a 10-week break, some of it in Northern Ireland and the rest in Orlando, Fla., where he just built a new house and he's opening a tavern outside the gates of Lake Nona.
It was the perfect way to leave golf for the next few months.
Bradley, who was within one shot after a birdie on the fifth hole, closed with a 69. Bo Van Pelt had a 70 to finish third. Woods, the tournament host and five-time champion, was never in the picture. He didn't make birdie until the 13th hole and shot 71 to tie for fourth.
Bradley's birdie on the 13th hole for a two-shot swing brought him within two shots with five holes to play. McDowell never let him get any closer, however. He hit a beautiful lag putt from 75 feet just off the green at No. 14 for an easy par, then hit a chip from behind the 17th green that he was hopeful of getting within 6 feet of the cup. The ball was one turn from falling for birdie.
McDowell made a 6-foot birdie on the 18th that he didn't really need to finish on 17-under 271 and earn $1 million against the 18-man field.
And he felt as though he earned it.
A light rain fell for much of the round, as it has all week, making Sherwood play so long that McDowell had to hit a 5-wood into the par-4 fourth hole, and a 4-iron for his third shot in the par-5 fifth. His only bogey over the final 47 holes of the tournament came on the 13th hole.
"Certainly I will draw some confidence from this one," McDowell said. "The game hasn't given me a huge amount this year."
Woods needed a fast start and was stuck in neutral. He failed to birdie the par 5s on the front nine and dropped a shot on the seventh hole when his flop shot below the green came out heavy. He didn't make his first birdie until the par-5 13th.
"I struggled with my game a little bit this week," said Woods, playing for the first time in five weeks. "I just managed myself well to get around in these conditions."
Van Pelt opened with two birdies and tried to hang around in contention on the back nine.
But this was a duel from the start.
McDowell started with a two-shot lead and kept his distance until Bradley holed an 18-foot birdie putt on the fifth. Bradley made back-to-back bogeys at the turn to fall three shots behind, and McDowell stretched his lead to four shots by starting the back nine with two quick birdies.
The par-5 13th then set the stage for a nervous final hour.
McDowell laid up, hit a poor wedge and then three-putted for bogey, ending his streak of 41 consecutive holes at Sherwood at par or better. Bradley made a 6-foot birdie putt for a two-shot swing, and the game was on.
Thanks to some timely putts, McDowell was able to close out his first win of the year. The most important stroke might have been a putt he didn't make. From left of the 14th fairway, he had no choice but to punch it under a tree and run it up to right side of the green. From some 75 feet away, he used his putter to lag it up to inside a foot for a safe par to keep his two-shot lead.
McDowell made a 10-foot on the 16th to match Bradley's tap-in birdie, and then he effectively closed out the former PGA Champion with a deft chip from behind the 17th green, where the shot went from rough to the first cut, trickled onto the fringe and rolled out to the edge of the cup.
"My heart was in my mouth for a millisecond," McDowell said.

Monday, February 24, 2014

Day, Dubuissson advance to finals at Match Play

Day, Dubuissson advance to finals at Match Play

AP - Sports
Day, Dubuissson advance to finals at Match Play
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Jason Day hits waves on the second hole in his match against Rickie Fowler during the fifth round of …
MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- Jason Day of Australian and Victor Dubuisson of France reached the 18-hole final of the Match Play Championship on Sunday.
Day, a semifinalist last year, led from the start in a 3-and-2 victory over Rickie Fowler.
Dubuisson became the fourth player to reach the championship match in his debut in the 15 years after this World Golf Championship began in 1999. He had to take down Ernie Els in the most compelling match of the morning on Dove Mountain.
Els, trying to reach the final for the first time, went 3 up through four holes and was on the verge of stretching his lead until the 23-year-old Frenchman halved the hole with a tough par putt at No. 7. Dubuisson won four of the next five holes to take the lead, only for the 44-year-old Els to battle back.
Els made a 20-foot birdie putt on the 16th to square the match, and they headed to the 18th hole. Dubuisson hit to the back fringe, while Els came up short with a 6-iron into the breeze and found a bunker. He blasted out to just outside 12 feet, and narrowly missed the par putt to extend the match.
Dubuisson said he didn't sleep well Saturday night and didn't feel well when he arrived at the golf course, perhaps because ''I realized I was in the semifinal of the World Golf Championship against Ernie Els.''
''I'm a big fan of Ernie, so I have always been watching him winning majors,'' he said. ''I knew I had to play my best golf. It's what I did.''
Dubuisson is the first player since Geoff Ogilvy in 2006 to reach the final match in his first time playing this event. Ogilvy went on to win the title.
It was a big blow to Els, who badly pulled an 8-iron far left of the flag on the 17th, losing a chance to put pressure on Dubuisson, and then came up short on the 18th.
''It's tough to take,'' said the four-time major champion.
Day won the opening hole with a birdie and never looked back, though Fowler didn't give in.
Day was 3 up through 11 holes when he missed a 6-foot par putt on the 12th and Fowler made birdie on the 13th to cut the deficit to one hole. The turning point came at the 15th, when Fowler missed far enough left with his drive that he had no shot at getting close. He hit a flop shot strong that went over the green, hit another strong pitch and missed the par putt.
Fowler had a chance to go 1 down on the 16th with a tee shot into 6 feet. But he missed the birdie putt, and then missed the 4-footer coming back for par to end the match.
''The start of the season, that's all I'm trying to do is win,'' said Day, with only one PGA Tour victory in his career. ''I felt like I had a really good chance at maybe having a shot at winning this week and I'm definitely in the final now and I'm really looking for to it.''

Day to face Dubuisson in Match Play final

Day to face Dubuisson in Match Play final

Reuters 
PGA: WGC - Accenture Match Play Championship
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Feb 23, 2014; Marana, AZ, USA; Jason Day with his approach shot on the 14th during the semifinal round …
(Reuters) - Australian Jason Day held off a late fightback by American Rickie Fowler to book his place in the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship final with a 3&2 victory in a battle of the young guns at Dove Mountain on Sunday
On a crisp and clear morning in Arizona's high desert, Day sealed the win when fellow 25-year-old Fowler surprisingly three-putted from just five feet at the par-three 16th.
Day, who recorded six birdies in 16 holes to reach the final for the first time, will face Frenchman Victor Dubuisson in the title match later on Sunday at Dove Mountain's Ritz-Carlton Golf Club.
Dubuisson, who had never previously played matchplay golf until his debut this week in a World Golf Championships (WGC) event, came from three down after seven holes to beat veteran South African Ernie Els one up.
"It was a tough day," Day, who was beaten by eventual champion Matt Kuchar of the United States in last year's semi-finals, told Golf Channel.
"Rickie is playing great golf right now and I just thought if I gave that little bit of an inch for him to move in, he was going to knock the door down.
"So I was just trying to hang tough and my game was solid today. Hopefully I can take it into the final."
Day birdied four of the first eight holes to go three up before Fowler twice trimmed the lead to two, first with a concession at the ninth and again at the short 12th, where Day missed a seven-foot par putt.
The Australian also bogeyed the 13th for his advantage to be cut to one before getting back to two-up with a birdie at the driveable par-four 15th, where he chipped to three feet.
Fowler responded with a brilliant tee shot to five feet at the 16th but squandered the chance to level when he pushed his birdie attempt to the right of the cup, then missed the par putt coming back to lose the match.
EARLY ELS LEAD
In the second semi-final, four-times major winner Els raced into a three-up lead after just four holes against a slow-starting Dubuisson before the Frenchman got into his stride with birdies at the eighth and ninth to trail by one.
Dubuisson leveled the match with another birdie at the par-five 11th, where he chipped to within three feet, and went one ahead when his 44-year-old opponent bogeyed the 12th.
It looked likely that Els would get back to all square after he hit a stunning approach to a foot for a conceded birdie at the par-five 13th, but Dubuisson coolly matched him by sinking a clutch putt there from 18 feet.
However, the Frenchman stumbled at the par-four 14th where he failed to reach the green in two, executed a poor chip and ran his par putt well past the cup before conceding the hole.
Dubuisson got back to one up with a birdie at the 15th where his tee shot ended up just short of the green but Els immediately leveled when he stunningly drained a curling downhill birdie putt from 32 feet at the 16th.
Both players parred the 17th but the South African lost the match on the 18th green when he missed his par putt from 13 feet after the Frenchman had lagged his birdie putt to within two feet of the cup.
Dubuisson, who burst into the limelight by winning his maiden European Tour title at the Turkish Airlines Open in November, admitted he had been very nervous competing against one of his golfing idols.
"I didn't sleep very well last night, I slept like one hour, and this morning I woke up and I realized that I was playing against Ernie Els, one of my favorite players," the 23-year-old said.
"On the first tee. I shake the hand of Ernie and I wasn't feeling comfortable. I was watching him and I was very impressed to be next to him. I was thinking of all the matches he won and the (two British) Opens."
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by Larry Fine)

Day outlasts Dubuisson for WGC Match Play crown

Day outlasts Dubuisson for WGC Match Play crown

AFP 
Australia's Jason Day on the first hole during the World Golf Championships Match Play in Arizona on February 23, 2014
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Marana (United States) (AFP) - Australia's Jason Daywithstood the determined challenge of France's Victor Dubuisson to win the World Golf Championships Match Play crown with a birdie at the 23rd hole of the final.
Dubuisson had erased a three-hole deficit to extend the title match scheduled for 18 holes, and kept it going with two miraculous shots out of the desert cactus before Day finally sealed the win on Sunday.
Day, 26, never trailed in the match after taking the lead with a birdie at the opening hole. But that fact hardly reflected the drama of the latter stages, when Dubuisson birdied the 17th and got up and down for par from a bunker at 18 to square the match as Day bogeyed 18.
The 23-year-old from Cannes, who won his first European Tour title at the Turkish Open in November, was in serious trouble at the 19th hole, where his approach shot bounced into the desert scrub and nestled in a clump of cactus.
He stepped up and took an unceremonious swing at it, sticking it six feet from the pin and making the putt to stay alive.
He hacked out of the scrub again at the 20th hole en route to a par that matched Day's.
At the 23rd, Dove Mountain's drivable par-four 15th, Dubuisson ran out of steam.
His drive bounced into thick rough and his chip out ran almost 30 feet past the pin.
Day was in the first cut of rough and chipped out to three feet.
Dubuisson's long birdie attempt was short and his par conceded before Day rolled in his winning putt -- it was the first hole Day had won since the ninth.
Day captured his second US PGA Tour title and his first in an elite World Golf Championships event. This week's $9 million tournament started with 64 players on Wednesday and as the last man standing Day collected $1.53 million.
Dubuisson earned $906,000 for his runner-up finish in his first WGC event.
In the consolation match, Rickie Fowler needed 19 holes to beat four-time major champion Ernie Els and claim third place.
The long day in the Arizona desert started with the semi-finals, in which Dubuisson defeated his onetime idol Els 1 up and Day downed Fowler 3 and 2.