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Tiger wins
Match Play for world sweep
MARANA—Not even the most unpredictable tournament in golf could keep
Tiger Woods from an inevitable victory. There seems to be no stopping
him.
Stewart Cink barely put up a fight Sunday in the Accenture Match Play
Championship, where Woods broke a scoring record for the fourth straight
tournament, collected his fifth straight victory worldwide and didn’t so
much as crack a smile when someone asked him if a perfect season was
within reach.
“That’s my intent,” he said. “That’s why you play. It you don’t believe
you can win an event, don’t show up.” Relentless as ever, Woods made 14
birdies in 29 holes in the high desert of Dove Mountain to overwhelm
Stewart Cink for an 8-and-7 victory, the largest margin in the final
match in the 10-year history of his fickle event.
Woods captured his 15th World Golf Championship, holding all three world
title for the first time. And his 63rd career victory moved him past
Arnold Palmer and into fourth place alone on the PGA Tour’s career list.
His next victory will tie him with Ben Hogan.
Golf is not a fair fight at the moment. “I think maybe we ought to slice
him open to see what’s inside,” Cink said. “Maybe nuts and bolts.” Cink
was only the latest victim in a winning streak that dates to Sept. 3,
2007, a date worth remembering. Woods won the BMW Championship the
following week at 262, breaking the tournament scoring record by five
shots. He won the Tour Championship by a record eight shots, and the
Buick Invitational by the same margin, another tournament record. This
is the third time Woods has won at least four straight PGA Tour events.
He also won in Dubai three weeks ago on the European tour by coming back
from a four-shot deficit. “I think this is the best stretch I’ve ever
played,” Woods said.
He has won six of his last seven PGA Tour events, 16 of his last 30 over
the last two years. The confidence in his game is so high that Woods
started this season by saying the Grand Slam was “easily within reason.”
For now, he has a Triple Crown of the World Golf Championships, a sweep
that included an eight-shot victory in the Bridgestone Invitational at
Firestone and a two-shot victory in the CA Championship at Doral. Woods’
tour winning streak was at seven last year when Nick O’Hern beat him in
the third round of the Match Play. Given the fickle nature of this
format, even Woods said it was the toughest tournament to win this side
of a major.
Turns out the hard part was just getting to the final match. Woods
rallied from three down with five holes to play in the opening round
against J.B. Holmes by winning four straight holes with three birdies
and a 35-foot eagle. He twice watched Aaron Baddeley putt from inside 12
feet to win a third-round match, beating the Australian in 20 holes. And
he was stretched to 18 holes in the semifinals against defending
champion Henrik Stenson.
“I played 117 holes this week,” Woods said. “I could have easily played
16 and then been home. That’s the fickleness of match play.” But the
final was no contest. He built a 4-up lead after the morning round of
66, and Cink never got any closer. Cink didn’t win a hole until No. 12,
and the only hole he won in the afternoon came at the par-5 10th when he
rolled in a 36-foot eagle putt. Woods had an eagle putt from 35 feet,
and the ball spun around the cup. “Even the minuscule amount that I
upstaged him there — him being 8 up — I still thought he was going to
make it,” Cink said. “He lipped it out, and I thought, ‘Hey, come
on.—Agencies |