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Tom
Watson and Andy North hold on to claim wire to wire
win
Tom Watson and Andy North got what they wanted, but had
to work for it, edging Greg Stadler and Jeff Sluman by
a stroke Sunday in the Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf.
Watson and North teamed for a better-ball 64 at The Club
at Savannah Harbor for a 31-under 185 total. Stadler and
Sluman shot a 61 on the island course in the middle of
the Savannah River. Sandy Lyle and Ian Woosnam (60) finished
two strokes back.
“To hit quality shots when it counts, that’s
what makes me tingle,” said Watson, who won the Outback
Steakhouse Pro-Am last week in Florida.
They started the day with a four-stroke lead, but in a
format that produces tons of birdies, it wasn’t surprising
that others finally made a run at Watson and North.
“I birdied No. 11,” Sluman said. “But,
I had eagled it the previous two days, so Craig was a little
disappointed there.”
Stadler and Sluman, playing one hole ahead of Watson and
North, had consecutive birdies on Nos. 11-14. During that
run, Sluman’s chip within 4 feet on the 13th pulled
them into a tie with the leaders at 28 under.
But North broke the tie with a 15-footer a few minutes
later on the 13th. Stadler got his team to 29 under with
a chip to 2 feet at No. 14, but Watson matched it from
6 feet when he got to the 14th, regaining the lead.
Stadler birdied No. 16, but Watson, after first backing
off to let a bug crawl out of his line to the cup, sealed
it with a birdie on No. 17.
“I hit a chip to about 18 feet on 17 and rattled
that one right in there,” Watson said.
Watson and North, who have played 162 consecutive holes
together without a bogey, had campaigned loud and long
for the Legends to return to a team format. They paired
up to win the Raphael Division the last three years, but
it was always unofficial money. Only the Legends Division
was official money, and it was individual play.
“We worked so hard to get this format,” said
North, who earned $225,000 for his share of this win. “We
felt it was really important to play well.”
This was North’s first win—or share of a win—since
the 1985 U.S. Open at Oakland Hills.
To get into the Legends Division, North was one of four
who needed a sponsor exemption. North, who has had 11 operations
for various injuries, spends most of his time doing television
work for ABC and ESPN. Being part of the winning team now
makes North exempt, but he doesn’t expect to use
his new playing privileges.
“My schedule,” North said. “I’m
solid. The events I’d really like to play, I’m
working. The Senior Open, Senior British Open, I work.”
Woosnam, Wayne Grady and Bill Rogers also needed sponsor
exemptions to get into the tournament, a move that was
popular with most Champions Tour players. But not all.
Hale Irwin, for one, stayed away this week.
“That’s his decision,” Sluman said.
“Oh, well,” Stadler said. “Hope he enjoyed
his time off.”
The Legends was first played in 1978 in Austin, Texas,
and is considered the event that launched the 50-and-over
tour. It was all team play until 2002, but always unofficial
money. The tournament was played in four cities and on
eight courses before coming to Savannah in 2003. |