The Golf Blog (www.thegolfblog.com) says: We’re exhausted. Totally exhausted. So many different story lines. Where to begin?
1. Rory McIlroy implodes:
After Rory McIlroy brought a 4-shot lead into the final round, the lead
evaporated within just about 2 holes. Rory, who would eventually shoot
80, looked like a deer in headlights and could never get untracked.
We’ve seen this happen before to final round leaders–Dustin Johnson,
Nick Watney, Jason Gore–but it’s always painful to watch. The worst was
on the 10th hole, where Rory duck hooked the ball into a tree, causing a
ricochet of the ball in between 2 houses near the golf course. There’s
no out of bounds apparently, so Rory had to hit the ball from in between
the 2 houses. Rory couldn’t recover from behind the houses and ended
up triple bogeying. That was all she wrote for Rory–only he had to play
8 more excruciating holes on his way to a back nine 43.
Rory McIlroy between 2 houses after bad drive on 10th hole at Augusta
2. Tiger Woods charges with 31 front nine, but falters down the stretch:
While Rory McIlroy was imploding, Tiger Woods made a massive comeback
and actually was tied for the lead at -10 at one point. With the back
nine (which is supposed to be the easier nine) still ahead of him and
the most momentum of anyone on the course, Tiger seem poised for his
15th major victory. But Tiger three-putted the short par-3 12th for
bogey–which took some steam out of his round. His putter seemed to
sputter from there. Tiger clawed his way back with a decent eagle-look
from 8 feet away on the 15th, but Tiger’s putt lipped out. He had to
settle for birdie, the last he would make. That was it for Tiger.
3. Adam Scott and fellow Aussie Jason Day come close:
Then for a stretch it looked like Adam Scott would win. He had the
outright lead for a couple holes at -11 and then -12. (We should also
mention fellow Aussie Geoff Ogilvy who birdied 5 straight holes to tie
Tiger’s finish at -10.) Meanwhile, Adam Scott’s playing partner and
fellow Aussie Jason Day birdied the last 2 holes to tie Scott at -12.
But by then, Charl Schwartzel had taken the lead.
4. Charl Schwartzel birdies last 4 holes to win.
Back-to-back-to-back-to-back birdies–wow! Charl also holed out on the
third hole and chipped in at the first hole. So it was his day!!
Congrats, Charl!!
1 comment:
It does not matter to me if Tiger wins or lose... I am enjoying the fun and excitement Tiger's play put into the Masters. Can't wait for Sunday.
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