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The World Golf Championships are intended to be nearly on par with major
championships given that the fields include the top-ranked players in
the world. So you’ll have to excuse the TOUR Insider when he points out
that this week’s Bridgestone Invitational in Akron, Ohio, has major flavor.
A field that includes tournament winners and the top 50 in the Official
World Golf Rankings, plus Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup team members all vying for a monster purse of $7.5 million
are good credentials. Then you put the eighth Bridgestone Invitational
on a muscular and mighty stage, the South Course at Firestone Country
Club, and the picture is complete.
Trust us, Firestone South, hosting its seventh WGC event, is that good.
Or, don’t trust us. Listen to Stewart Cink, the 2004 champ, who said, “It’s a great event on a terrific golf course. It
has all the elements of a major tournament.” Or, listen to Retief Goosen, who said at last week’s PGA Championship at Medinah Country Club that, “Medinah and
Firestone are a lot alike.”
Except that, depending on the weather conditions, Firestone South, par
70 and 7,360 rolling, tree-lined yards, might be a more difficult test.
Let’s face it, there’s a reason the South Course is referred to as, “the
Monster.”
Let’s not forget that this is a monster week in golf with the Reno-Tahoe Open being held concurrently at Montreux Golf & Country
Club. While about 80 men hack up Akron, another 132 players invade
northern Nevada to vie for $3 million, which is nice work, if you can
get it.
Last year: With a 1-over-par 71 and 6-under 274 aggregate, Tiger Woods won his fourth title in Akron by turning back Chris DiMarco by one stroke. The difference was a 17-foot birdie putt
on the 16th hole that Woods converted for his fifth win of the season.
The victory represented his 10th individual win in the WGC series and
11th overall as well as his seventh win in Ohio.
How he did it: Woods, who has never finished worse than fourth at
Firestone, seized a share of the third-round lead with Kenny Perry, a position from which he was almost sure to win. He
ended up capturing his 33rd title in 36 events in which he held at least
a share of the 54-hole lead. Woods hit only 29 of 56 fairways on the
South Course, but his course management and short game came to the fore
again.
Strange but true: Only Notah Begay, the first winner of the Reno-Tahoe Open, has gone on to win more than one
other PGA TOUR title.
True but not so strange: Woods is 62 under par on Firestone’s
South Course.
If Firestone could talk: “Long? Yes. Boring? Well, if you get
bored, I’ll just hammer you.”
Worth Knowing:
• Charles Howell III
changed to a new prototype set of Callaway irons two days prior to the
PGA Championship, and he opened the tournament with a 2-under-par 70,
his first sub-par score since the Barclays Classic. He still missed weekend play, however, in his
sixth straight start (with one withdrawal).
• Now officially a member of the U.S. Ryder Cup team, Vaughn Taylor had a tough decision to make this week. He was
originally entered in the Reno-Tahoe Open as the two-time defending
champion. But his Ryder Cup berth earned him a spot in the
WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, which, of course, offers more than twice
the purse and no cut. So he decided to join his Ryder Cup teammates in
Ohio.
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