|
He was four shots behind when he finished, and sensed a chance.
"At the moment, I've made up a few shots," Scott said. "Hopefully, it
will stay where it is right now, and you never know. There might be a
chance to run him down tomorrow."
A short time later, the lead looked daunting.
Scott won his first tournament of the year three weeks ago at the
Singapore Open, beating Ernie Els in a
playoff after the final round was cut short to nine holes.
"It was a bit of a thrill for me to beat Ernie, who's a good friend and
a guy I've looked up to for a lot of years," Scott said. "But to beat
Tiger down the stretch at a World Golf Championship is a whole different
story. Anyone who beats Tiger coming from behind is obviously a bit of a
legend."
That might be stretching it -- Ed Fiori
is on that list -- but it is rare.
Woods is 37-3 on the PGA TOUR (43-5 worldwide) when he has at least a
share of the lead going into the final round. He has never lost when the
lead has been more than one shot. The odds are so much in his favor that
one of the British bookmakers listed him at 1-125 to take home his
eighth PGA TOUR victory of the year on Sunday.
For the longest time, it appeared as though this tournament might get
interesting.
Woods had gone 53 consecutive holes on the PGA TOUR without missing a
putt inside 10 feet, a streak that ended on the first hole Saturday when
he badly missed a 6-foot birdie. He missed a birdie putt from the same
distance on the par-5 second, and an 8-foot attempt on the sixth also
slid by on the right.
Someone suggested that Williams, who fumbled Woods' 9-iron into the
water on the last day of the Ryder Cup, would have been better off
losing the putter to the River Liffey at The K Club.
"I wanted to do a lot of things to that putter today after about six
holes," Woods said. "I was hitting the ball so well. I just had to keep
giving myself chances. I can't miss them all. I almost did, but I can't
miss them all."
David Howell was the first player to make a move, closing
within two shots as he made the turn. But he failed to keep pace, and
his birdie at No. 10 was his last of the day. Howell played the final
eight holes with five pars and three bogeys to tumble out of contention
with a 71, leaving him nine shots behind.
"He's stretched away from us again," Howell said.
Coming off a three-putt bogey from 35 feet at No. 8, Woods belted a tee
shot, hit wedge to 10 feet and made the birdie putt on the ninth hole.
Then he missed another 6-footer for birdie, tossing momentum aside.
But it all changed on the final four holes, with a pitch to 2 feet for
birdie on the par-5 16th, and the 35-foot eagle on the 18th, the third
straight round he has made eagle on that hole.
Woods' winning streak ended two weeks ago at Wentworth when he lost in
the first round to Shaun Micheel at the
World Match Play Championship, but the PGA TOUR streak is alive.
So is his dominance in the World Golf Championships. A victory Sunday
would make him 12-of-22 in the official WGC events.
©The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.
|