The Daily Wrap-up, Round 4: Farmers Insurance Open

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Jan. 31, 2010
By Staff and Wire Reports

SAN DIEGO -- Ben Crane made news for all the right reasons on Sunday when he closed with a 2-under 70 for a one-shot victory in the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines.

Crane made two birdie putts longer than 45 feet to build a big lead, then struggled with short misses as he hung on to beat Michael Sim, Brandt Snedeker and Marc Leishman. Crane had to hole a 30-inch par putt on the final hole to secure the victory.

Crane knocked in a 30-inch par putt on the final hole for a 2-under 70 and a one-shot victory over Michael Sim, Brandt Snedeker and Marc Leishman. It was Crane's third career victory, and first in nearly five years, and this one earned him a trip back to the Masters.

With a reputation for slow play, perhaps it was only fitting that Crane was the last one to know he had won.

He made it a point not to look at a leaderboard throughout the final round, and didn't know the result until Ryuji Imada congratulated him on the 18th green. Even in post-round therapy for his back, Crane said he doesn't talk about results, only the process.

But for his first victory sine Milwaukee in 2005?

"I think it's OK to get out of the moment for tonight," he said, smiling.

FedExCup facts
With this win, Ben Crane:
• Earned 500 FedExCup points
• Moved into third in FedExCup standings
• Is 17 points ahead of Geoff Ogilvy and 10 points behind Ryan Palmer

The last time Crane made news, he was inadvertently swept up in the Tiger Woods scandal when a gossip magazine attributed quotes to him that he never made. Life & Style said it spoke to Crane at q-school, even though Crane was never there.

Crane handled that situation with the same even hand he displayed on a cool, breezy afternoon along the Pacific bluffs.

Starting the final round two shots behind, he opened with three birdies in five holes, including one from just over 45 feet on No. 3. He expanded his lead to three shots with another 45-foot birdie putt on the 11th.

He had plenty of challengers, although Phil Mickelson wasn't one of them. Making his season debut, and only four shots behind, Mickelson bogeyed his first three holes and was never a factor.

Robert Allenby made a charge only to fall back by losing five shots in four holes, including a tee shot that vanished into the canyon. Sim, the 25-year-old Australian, kept with Crane the entire round and had his chances to the very end.

Trailing by two, Sim was certain he had made a 15-foot birdie on the 17th hole and stopped in utter surprise when it ran over the right side of the cup. Crane then missed a par putt inside 3 feet to lose another shot off his lead.

Both laid up on the par-5 18th, and both put too much spin on their wedges that the shots rolled off the green -- Crane's against the collar, Sim's a yard off the front of the green, forcing him to chip. They settled for pars.

Sim had just under 250 yards to the hole, right on the edge of reaching the green with his 3-wood. Rather than cost himself the tournament with a shot he had to hit perfect, he did everything right except plan for the amount of spin.

"It was a perfect number (for the wedge), a perfect shot," he said. "It would have been nice to have a putt at it."

Crane finished at 13-under 275, a victory that changes the outlook on his season. He is going back to Augusta National for the first time in three years, and his victory should put him inside the top 60 and give him a good chance to qualify for the World Golf Championships-Accenture Match Play Championship.

"It's really cool to know I'm going in the right direction," Crane said.

Snedeker closed with a 69 after narrowly missing a 12-foot birdie on the last hole. Leishman had a 68, hitting into the bunker and the rough to take away chances of a good look for birdie on the 18th.

Michael Allen celebrated his 51st birthday with five straight birdies for a Sunday-best 65, moving him into a tie for fifth with Ernie Els (69), Rickie Fowler (70) and Alex Prugh (66), who earned a trip to Riviera next week for the Northern Trust Open.

Allenby was the first to make a move at Crane, pulling within two shots after his two-putt birdie at the 13th. But for the second straight tournament, he was a victim of the new V-groove regulation. His ball jumped out of the rough on the 14th with a 7-iron, well over the green and into the hazard. In Honolulu, another flier went through the back of the green on the last hole and he made par to lose by one.

Mickelson was four shots behind when he teed off to a hometown cheer. Within an hour, he was out of the tournament.

He pulled his bunker shot down a slope to the right of the first green, blocked by branches of a torrey pine from playing a flop shot. Using his Ping-Eye 2 wedge that has caused so much consternation this week, he flew it onto the green and it raced some 30 feet by the cup, leading to bogey.

Mickelson missed a 30-inch par putt on the second hole, then flew the green and went into the hazard for a third consecutive bogey. Just like that, he was seven shots behind and never made another threat.

"I didn't feel I played as bad as the score reflected," Mickelson said after his 73. "I feel my game is coming around. I was really excited about playing here. Maybe I was a little anxious. My timing was a little off this week."

Other notables at the Farmers Insurance Open
Name Score Position Comment FedExCup points
Ernie Els 11 under T5 The Big easy averaged more than 30 putts for the week, but a final-round 69 gave him a top-10. 96.25
Rickie Fowler 11 under T5 A costly double bogey on No. 17 on Sunday knocked Fowler from contention, but this was his best result of the year. 96.25
Phil Mickelson 8 under 19th Mickelson bogeyed each of his first three holes and was never able to recover, shooting a final-round 73. 52
Boo Weekley 4 under T33 After a promising 67 to open, Weekley shot three rounds in the 70s. He also averaged 30 putts per round. 36.5
Rocco Mediate 1 under T48 The 2008 U.S. Open runner-up couldn't conjure up another magical run, shooting three rounds of 71 or higher. 20.5

INSIDE THE ROPES WITH THE PGA TOUR NETWORK
PGA TOUR Network correspondent Mark Carnevale offers these observations from Sunday's action. Listen to PGA TOUR Live coverage on XM 146/SIRIUS 209 or right here at PGATOUR.COM.

xmcarnevale.jpg

We have now had four consecutive one-shot victories in 2010. That is some pretty exciting golf. There was also impressive play on Sunday by some of the 2010 rookie class. Alex Prugh and Rickie Fowler both finished inside the top 10. They did not allow themselves to get ahead of the moment and finished strong.

At 7:30 this morning, after calling Butch Harmon last night, Phil Mickelson and Butch had a practice session of almost 90 minutes. A bit surprising late in the tournament, but it undoubtedly shows how much Phil cares about this event.

Kudos to the Farmers Insurance Open. The 14th hole was the Military Appreciation hole sponsored by Donovan's Steakhouse. All Military got to spend some time there and eat some great food. Even a lowly broadcaster got to taste some of the fine fare as they handed some out as you walked by. Another distinguishing point: The 14th hole had the only flag on the flagstick that was an American flag. Well done Farmers, your first year as sponsor was a huge success.

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