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Tom
Watson scrambles to victory
Tom Watson successfully defended his Outback Steakhouse
Pro-Am title Sunday, saving bogey after hitting into the
water on No. 18 for a 1-under 70 and a one-stroke victory
over Jay Haas and Scott Hoch.
A year after ending an 0-for-93 Florida drought at the
TPC Tampa Bay, Watson finished at 9 under for his 50th
title on the Champions and PGA tours.
“I’m on a streak,” Watson said. “I’ve
got to buy a house down here.”
Hoch (71) had a chance to force a playoff, but his short
par putt on 18 lipped out.
“I just hit a terrible putt,” Hoch said. “I
had not been putting all that good, but I haven’t
missed anything like that.”
Watson’s 7-iron approach on the 456-yard 18th missed
the green to the right and trickled into the water. After
dropping, he pitched with a sand wedge to 5 feet, made
the bogey putt, then waited inside the scorer’s trailer
well behind the stands surrounding the green as Hoch played
the final hole.
Like Watson before him, Hoch, who also started the day
at 8 under, hit his approach right of the green, yet he
appeared to catch a break when the ball settled just off
the putting surface. His chip stopped 4 feet, 3 inches
from the hole. But Hoch’s putt squirted away after
falling partly into the hole.
Watson started the day three back of second-round leader
Mark Wiebe, and for much of the afternoon it appeared as
if Wiebe would win for the second consecutive start and
third time in 13 Champions Tour events since turning 50
last September. But after moving to 12 under with a birdie
on 14, Wiebe drove into the water on the par-4 15th and
a subsequent triple bogey dropped him to 9 under.
He was still only one shot behind Watson when he doubled
the par-3 17th after missing the green left. Wiebe’s
second shot on the hole, a putt, failed to reach the putting
service, further adding to his troubles. He shot a 5-over
41 on the back nine to tie for fifth at 6 under.
“You know, I came pretty close,” Wiebe said. “My
driver is my favorite club and if something let me down
today, it was my driver.”
Haas shot a 7-under 64, the low round of the day. He was
4 under on the back nine.
The victory was Watson’s first on the Champions
Tour this year and 11th overall. He won 39 times, including
eight majors, on the PGA Tour.
The 58-year-old Watson, the event’s first back-to-back
champion, began the tournament with an 8-under 63 on Thursday,
a round that included birdies on seven of his final nine
holes. He followed with an even-par 71. Sunday’s
round included four birdies, but ultimately it was his
bogey save on the final hole that won it.
“I backed in through the back door,” Watson
said. |