Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Day survives the magic of Dubuisson in Match Play

Day survives the magic of Dubuisson in Match Play

AP - Sports
Day survives the magic of Dubuisson in Match Play
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MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- One shot came out of bottom of a cactus, the other from the base of a desert bush with rocks scattered around it.
Both times, Jason Day felt the Match Play Championship was his to win Sunday. And both times, he watched Victor Dubuisson turn the impossible into pars in the wildest conclusion ever to a tournament that is unpredictable even in normal circumstances.
''At that time, you're just thinking, 'Do I need to just hand him the trophy now after those two shots?''' Day said.
Dubuisson finally ran out of magic.
Day ended the madness at Dove Mountain on the fifth extra hole when he pitched over a mound to 4 feet and made birdie, a sigh of relief as much as it was cause for celebration at capturing his first World Golf Championship.
''I kept shaking my head because there was a couple of time there where I thought he was absolutely dead - the tournament was mine,'' Day said.
It was remarkable enough when the 23-year-old Frenchman stood in a fairway bunker on the 17th hole, 174 yards away and needing to win the last two holes to force overtime. He did just that with a 15-foot birdie and a par save from the bunker.
And then came back-to-back pars that defied belief.
Dubuisson sailed over the green on No. 1 and into the desert, the ball lodged at the base of a cholla. Day was in the bunker, a fairly simple shot, especially when CBS announcer David Feherty walked over and said the Frenchman would have to take a penalty drop.
With an all-or-nothing swing, Dubuisson whacked his 9-iron through the sharp needs and into a TV cable. The ball scooted up a hill covered by 3-inch rough and onto the green to 4 feet below the hole. He made par to keep going.
It was reminiscent of the shot Bill Haas pulled off at East Lake from shallow water on the 17th hole in a playoff.
Only this was even more improbable - and it came with an encore.
From the ninth fairway, Dubuisson pulled his approach left of the green, left of the bleacher and into the desert at the bottom of a bush.
''I walked over there and it was in a tree, a flower tree of some sort, in this little crevice. I mean, it looked absolutely dead,'' Day said. ''I'm like, 'Yes.' I hit 8-iron into 20 feet. There was so much pressure on him. And he does it again.''
After halving the next two holes with bogeys and pars, Day watched his opponent hit driver on the 333-yard 15th hole too far too the right. And he heard the Frenchman say under his breath, ''Dead.''
He was only in the grass, but Day knew better. The chip was nearly impossible to get close. Day was 20 feet closer, in shorter grass, and pitched to 4 feet. Dubuisson hit his flop shot 30 feet past the hole and missed the birdie putt.
''I'm disappointed because I made some terrible shots,'' Dubuisson said on the 15th green when it was over, ignoring the two that were as close to a miracle as golf allows.
But they were incredible. Even the great Seve Ballesteros would have saluted this performance.
''Those two shots were amazing,'' Dubuisson said. ''I just played it like I had nothing to lose.''
He gained plenty in defeat. This tournament will be remembered as much for two improbable shots out of the desert as Day winning a trophy he always believed would belong to him - even in the midst of shots that defied belief.
Day won for the second time on the PGA Tour and rose to a career-best No. 4 in the world.
It was the first time the championship match went overtime since the inaugural year in 1999 at La Costa, when Jeff Maggert chipped on the second extra hole of a 36-hole final. That was like watching paint dry compared with the show Dubuisson put on.
''Vic, man, he has a lot of guts,'' Day said. ''He has a great short game - straight out of the cactus twice. For a 23-year-old kid, he's got a lot of game. We're going to see a lot of him for years to come.''
Day won $1.53 million. Lost in all the theater was that he never trailed over the final 53 holes of this fickle tournament.
Dubuisson earned $906,000, all but assuring a PGA Tour card for next year. And he all but clinched a spot on the Ryder Cup team in September, moving to the top of the points table by the equivalent of about $1.5 million.
Dubuisson only reached the championship match by rallying from 3-down after six holes against Ernie Els in the morning semifinals. The Frenchman said he couldn't sleep Saturday night, perhaps because he realized he was playing a four-time major champion.
He wound up beating Els with a par on the 18th hole to meet Day, who beat Rickie Fowler 3 and 2.
Fowler beat Els in 19 holes in the third-place match.
For all the heroics by Dubuisson over the final hour of this amazing show, Day certainly had his moments. Perhaps his greatest feat was never losing faith he would win, even as it appeared the golfing gods were in Dubuisson's corner.
''The biggest thing was, 'How much do I want to win?'' I kept saying that to myself. Last night, I kept visualizing myself with the trophy,'' Day said. ''I'm glad I could finish it off. But it was a close one.''

Sunday, February 23, 2014

Another stunning escape for McDowell at Match Play

Another stunning escape for McDowell at Match Play

AP - Sports
McDowell, Els lucky to be around at Match Play
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MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- Graeme McDowell figured his luck had run out Friday at the Match Play Championship.
After two remarkable rallies to even reach the third round, McDowell missed a pair of 8-foot putts to fall 2 down with two holes to play against Hunter Mahan, who had lost only four times in 18 matches at the Golf Club of Dove Mountain.
''My head went down as I walked off the 16th green. I really thought I blew it,'' McDowell said after yet another improbable comeback. ''I genuinely thought I was done this time. I really didn't think there was any way back from that.''
Even he couldn't believe what followed.
McDowell won the next two holes to extend the match. He made a 20-foot par putt on the 20th hole to stay alive, and then won the next hole with a 15-foot birdie putt.
''Nine lives have been used up - and then some,'' McDowell said.
Ernie Els is 5-over par in 57 holes over three matches and he reached the quarterfinals. Jim Furyk has been at least 2 down in every match and he advanced to the quarterfinals for the first time in 14 appearances. Rickie Fowler won a match that featured an 18-foot par putt conceded to him by Sergio Garcia, who felt bad because of a ruling that had taken too much time on the previous hole.
The Accenture Match Play Championship always has its share of wild tales.
McDowell tops them all.
How else to explain how a guy can play 58 holes over three matches without ever hitting a tee shot with the lead? Most players are relieved with every match they win. McDowell felt a tinge of guilt.
''Embarrassed is the wrong word. I'm not embarrassed,'' he said. ''But I just feel like I'm robbing these guys.''
Perhaps it's only fitting that his quarterfinal match is against Victor Dubuisson of France, who took out Bubba Watson. Dubuisson has never trailed at any point this week. He plays the guy who has never led a single hole while the match was going on.
In other matches:
- Furyk, getting plenty of support from his college days at Arizona, rallied from an early deficit to beat Harris English on the 18th hole. He next plays Fowler, who made birdie on the 18th for a 1-up win over Garcia.
- Jason Day, who played 40 holes over the opening two rounds, had a relatively easy time in beating George Coetzee, 3 and 1. Day will play the quarterfinals against Louis Oosthuizen, who was stellar in a 5-and-4 win over Webb Simpson.
- Els beat a reigning major champion for the second straight day - U.S. Open champion Justin Rose on Thursday, PGA champion Jason Dufner on Friday. Even though he was scrappy again, the Big Easy birdied the 18th for a 1-up victory over Dufner. Now it's time to play 20-year-old Jordan Spieth, who had 10 birdies on his card to take out defending champion Matt Kuchar. Els has made only nine birdies all week.
The only player who had a more unlikely run to the quarterfinals in the 16-year history of this Accenture Match Play Championship was Geoff Ogilvy at La Costa in 2006. In his opening four matches, he watched 10 times as his opponent had a putt to win the match. Ogilvy went extra holes in every match until the semifinals, and he went on to win the tournament. McDowell can only hope he gets the same outcomes.
''I'm playing with house money,'' he said.
McDowell was 3 down to Gary Woodland with three holes to play when he won the next three holes, and then beat him with a birdie on the 19th hole in the opening round. He was 2 down with four holes to play against Hideki Matsuyama when he won two holes, made a 10-foot par to halve another, and won the 18th with a par.
It bordered on ridiculous against Mahan, who had a 16-4 record on this golf course.
Unlike the opening two days, McDowell actually had a chance to take the lead with birdie chances on the eighth, ninth and 10th holes. Mahan went ahead with a birdie on the 11th, prompting McDowell to say, ''I'm allergic to 1 up.''
He's used to being down, especially late in the match.
Mahan pitched to 3 feet for birdie on the 15th, and he won the 16th when McDowell three-putted for bogey. Both players drove into the rough on the 17th, both came up short in the bunker. McDowell had 10 feet for par, Mahan was inside of that by a few feet.
McDowell's par putt just curled into the left side of the cup, and he slammed his putter into the bag. ''Where has that been all day?'' he said. His cap was removed when Mahan's putt slid by, and off they went to the 18th. McDowell's approach caught the ridge, and he made the 6-foot birdie for overtime.
Surely, his luck figured to run out on the 20th hole, the par-4 ninth, when his 3-wood caught a deep bunker and left him no shot at the green. McDowell hit 9-iron to get over the lip and barely cleared the desert, and his third shot settled 20 feet away. He made that for par and kept going until the next hole.
It was the second time McDowell has beaten Mahan in match play. The other was far more important - the decisive match at the Ryder Cup in Wales.
''I didn't really know what to say to him,'' McDowell said. ''I said everything but 'sorry,' you know? I didn't say, 'Sorry.' But I felt sorry for him. I didn't feel sorry for him, I felt sorry for what had happened.''

McDowell outlasts Mahan in Ryder rematch

McDowell outlasts Mahan in Ryder rematch

AFP 
Graeme McDowell of Northern Ireland plays a shot on the first hole during the third round of the World Golf Championships - Accenture Match Play Championship, at The Golf Club at Dove Mountain in Marana, Arizona, on February 21, 2014
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Marana (United States) (AFP) - Graeme McDowell made a stunning comeback for the third day in a row, beating Hunter Mahan in 21 holes to reach the World Golf Championships Match Play Championship quarter-finals.
McDowell, the 2010 US Open champion from Northern Ireland, on Friday won the 17th and 18th holes to square the match, sank a 19-foot par putt on the 20th hole and then sank a 14-foot birdie putt on the last hole to advance.
"I genuinely thought I was done this time. I didn't think there was any way back," McDowell said.
"Nine lives have been used up and then some."
McDowell has played 58 holes and never led in any match until the final hole.
"I'm not embarrassed, but I just feel like I'm robbing these guys," McDowell said.
Mahan, the 2012 Match Play winner and 2013 runner-up, staged a rematch of his epic 2010 Ryder Cup singles showdown with McDowell, who beat the American 3 and 1 at Celtic Manor to clinch the trophy for Europe.
McDowell advanced to a quarter-final matchup against France's Victor Dubuisson who upset 2012 Masters winner Bubba Watson 1 up, downing him five days after the American's triumph at Riviera, his first since taking the green jacket at Augusta National.
"We didn't play very well, both of us, but I managed to save some great pars to win," the Frenchman said.
South African Ernie Els hit a wedge shot two feet from the cup at the 18th and made the putt to defeat 2013 PGA Championship winner Jason Dufner 1 up and book a last-eight match against rising US star Jordan Spieth, a 2 and 1 winner over countryman Matt Kuchar.
"I'm glad to go through," Els said. "The first couple of holes I made some mistakes and then he made a couple of mistakes on five and six to give me two holes. And then we played a little bit better."
South African Louis Oosthuizen beat American Webb Simpson 5 and 4 in a third-round matchup of major winners to book his quarter-final spot.
"I made quite a few birdies coming in," said Oosthuizen. "He put himself in a few tough spots to make bogeys and pars and I just for some reason made a few putts and hit a lot of birdies."
Next up for Oosthuizen will be Australian Jason Day, who ousted South African George Coetzee 3 and 1.
The Aussie, who finished third at last year's Match Play, never trailed and birdied four of the last seven holes to advance.
Americans Jim Furyk and Rickie Fowler booked a quarter-final matchup with 1-up triumphs, 2003 US Open winner Furyk dispatching countryman Harris English and Fowler ousting Spanish star Sergio Garcia.
After Garcia felt guilty about the long pause before a putt dropped at the sixth hole, he conceded Fowler a difficult 17-foot par putt at the seventh.
"I don't regret it at all," Garcia said. "This is a gentleman's game and lately it hasn't felt like it has been that. This is the way I was brought up."
Garcia led all the way until the 16th as Fowler birdied that and sank a four-foot birdie at 18 for the victory.
Furyk, who at 43 is 18 years older than Fowler, was 3-down after six holes but squared his match with a nine-foot birdie putt at 12 and took his first lead with English made bogey at 14. English leveled with a birdie at 15 but Furyk chipped in from 30 feet at 16 and held on for his first trip to the Match Play last eight.
"I had been in this position before," Furyk said. "I was able to dig my way out."