2009 Recap & Results

Dates

June 1 - 7

Purse

$6,000,000

Par

36-36=72

Yardage

7,366

2009: Woods Wins Again


DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) -- Two holes, two towering shots, two clutch birdies.

Just like that, Tiger Woods broke out of a four-way tie and won the Memorial Tournament on Sunday with a 7-under 65 to cap off a high-charged comeback. And just as suddenly, he silenced the skeptics who wondered if he was ready to defend his title in the U.S. Open in two weeks at Bethpage Black.

"I knew I could do this," Woods said after birdies on the final two holes gave him a one-shot victory. "I was close to winning, but the game wasn't quite there when I really needed it on Sunday. I rectified that."

First came a 9-iron at No. 17 that Woods launched as high as he could, allowing the ball to land softly on the top shelf of a rock-hard green for a 9-foot birdie putt. More brilliance followed on the 18th, when Woods hit a 7-iron from 183 yards that stopped a foot from the hole, wrapping up his fourth title at Muirfield Village and moving him to fourth in the FedExCup standings.

Then came a bold observation by tournament host Jack Nicklaus. He had said earlier in the week that Woods, with 14 career majors, would probably break his record of 18 majors in a couple of years.

"I suspect No. 15 will come for Tiger Woods in about two weeks," Nicklaus said at the trophy presentation. "If he drives the ball this way, and plays this way, I'm sure it will. And if not, it will surprise me greatly."

There were no surprises Sunday for Woods, the best sign of all.

He hit the ball where he was aiming and found every fairway in the final round, the first time he had done that on the PGA TOUR in more than five years. He missed only five fairways all week, his best performance off the tee since the 1998 Masters.

"It was nice to play this well going into the U.S. Open," Woods said. "This is how you have to hit it in order to win U.S. Opens."

He managed to work in some of Muirfield Village magic along the way, surging into contention by chipping in for eagle from a nasty lie in thick rough behind the 11th green.

"I don't even know how to describe it," said Michael Letzig, who played with Woods. "It was the best golf I'd ever seen."

Jim Furyk, part of the four-way tie on the back nine, made a 20-foot birdie putt on the final hole that gave him a 69 and allowed him to finish alone in second. Furyk is close friends with Woods, and had been hearing the speculation that Woods was not the same.

"I just wish you all would just quit (ticking) him off ... so he has to come back and keep proving stuff," Furyk said. "I think he answered a lot of questions today."

Woods finished at 12-under 276 and won for the 67th time in his career. The timing could not have been better. He was within one shot of the lead going in to the back nine at the Quail Hollow Championship and made nothing better than par for a 72. He played in the final group at THE PLAYERS Championship, couldn't find a fairway and closed with a 73.

On a firm, fast course under steamy sunshine at Muirfield Village, he was close to perfect.

"It wasn't just the last two holes, it was all week," Woods said. "I felt comfortable hitting it left-to-right, right-to-left. Didn't have a problem taking the ball up in the air or bringing it down. That's what I was looking for. That's what I was able to do at home in my practice sessions, and now it's just a matter of carrying it out here onto a tournament venue and doing it."

After a bogey from the bunker on the 16th, Woods was tied with Furyk, Jonathan Byrd and Davis Love III.

But not for long.

His two final birdies gave him a cushion, and no one could catch him.

Byrd had the best chance to catch Woods. Two shots behind, he hit his approach to 4 feet on the 17th, but missed the birdie putt. Byrd finished with a meaningless double bogey for a 72 and tied for third with Mark Wilson (73).

Love, who could have avoided a 36-hole U.S. Open qualifying Monday with a victory, got into contention with consecutive birdie putts of about 50 feet, only to miss an 8-foot birdie try on the 15th hole. He fell out of the hunt with a bogey from the fairway bunker on the 17th, then hit his tee shot into the water on the 18th hole and closed with a triple bogey.

Matt Bettencourt, the PGA TOUR rookie who started the final round tied with Wilson, held his own for seven holes until a three-putt bogey, followed by a chunked wedge into the water for a double bogey. He closed with a 75 and tied for fifth.

Letzig had never experienced such an environment as playing with Woods in the final round.

"I've never seen anyone hit irons like that," Letzig said. "I tried not to watch him, but some of those shots were unreal."

Woods' driving set up those iron shots. The fairways at Muirfield Village are among the most generous, but he wasn't close to missing them and often set himself up on the right side to attack the pins.

"I don't know why everyone talks about how bad he drives it," Letzig said. "Every drive I saw was perfect."

# Name R1 R2 R3 R4 Total Purse
John Mallinger 75 74 149
Bart Bryant 73 79 152
Padraig Harrington 75 77 152
Charles Howell III 75 77 152
Richard S. Johnson 76 76 152
Danny Lee 79 73 152
Greg Owen 74 78 152
Chris Stroud 77 75 152
Aaron Baddeley 79 74 153
Peter Lonard 77 76 153
Kevin Streelman 77 76 153
J.B. Holmes 82 72 154
Bo Van Pelt 81 70 151
Carl Pettersson 73 78 151
James Nitties 73 78 151
Billy Mayfair 74 75 149
Tim Petrovic 76 73 149
Thomas Aiken 67 83 150
Jason Dufner 77 73 150
Ken Duke 76 74 150
Jesper Parnevik 81 69 150
Vijay Singh 75 75 150
Mark Calcavecchia 72 79 151
Todd Hamilton 73 78 151
Cliff Kresge 79 72 151
Shaun Micheel 73 78 151
James Kamte 77 78 155
Ryan Moore 75 80 155
Justin Rose 80 75 155
Fredrik Jacobson 77 73 150
Sean O'Hair 76 76
Scott Piercy 79 79
Brian Davis 78 77 155
Billy Andrade 76 76
Brad Faxon 83 78 161
Kevin Chappell 86 75 161
Parker McLachlin 81 78 159
Adam Scott 77 81 158
John Rollins 80 77 157
James Driscoll 77 80 157
Chris Wilson 79 77 156
Ryan Palmer 80 76 156
Charles Warren 77 78 155
1 Tiger Woods 69 74 68 65 276 $1,080,000
2 Jim Furyk 67 70 71 69 277 $648,000
3 Jonathan Byrd 69 68 71 72 280 $348,000
Mark Wilson 68 70 69 73 280 $348,000
5 Matt Kuchar 73 67 71 71 282 $219,000
Davis Love III 72 68 69 73 282 $219,000
Matt Bettencourt 71 68 68 75 282 $219,000
8 Ernie Els 70 70 71 72 283 $180,000
Stewart Cink 68 72 72 71 283 $180,000
10 Geoff Ogilvy 72 74 63 75 284 $150,000
Mike Weir 69 69 75 71 284 $150,000
Will MacKenzie 70 73 73 68 284 $150,000
13 K.J. Choi 73 70 72 70 285 $126,000
14 Nick Watney 73 71 74 68 286 $90,133
Michael Letzig 72 70 69 75 286 $90,133
Daniel Chopra 72 69 73 72 286 $90,133
Hunter Mahan 74 69 70 73 286 $90,133
Dustin Johnson 73 68 72 73 286 $90,133
Ryuji Imada 70 69 74 73 286 $90,133
Luke Donald 64 76 72 74 286 $90,133
Chris DiMarco 73 67 73 73 286 $90,133
Jerry Kelly 72 72 75 67 286 $90,133
23 Bubba Watson 71 71 70 75 287 $55,200
Kevin Sutherland 69 75 73 70 287 $55,200
Steve Marino 68 72 73 74 287 $55,200
Alex Cejka 73 68 73 73 287 $55,200
27 Charl Schwartzel 72 68 77 71 288 $40,800
Steve Stricker 70 74 73 71 288 $40,800
Mathew Goggin 73 73 70 72 288 $40,800
Kenny Perry 72 73 75 68 288 $40,800
Rod Pampling 69 71 74 74 288 $40,800
Jason Day 67 73 75 73 288 $40,800
Woody Austin 75 70 73 70 288 $40,800
34 Kevin Na 71 72 73 73 289 $33,150
Camilo Villegas 71 74 73 71 289 $33,150
36 Richard Sterne 74 71 74 71 290 $28,260
Jeff Overton 76 69 71 74 290 $28,260
Ted Purdy 67 79 75 69 290 $28,260
Jose Maria Olazabal 74 74 68 74 290 $28,260
Troy Matteson 69 73 71 77 290 $28,260
41 Robert Allenby 72 76 68 75 291 $22,800
Ben Curtis 71 71 72 77 291 $22,800
Steve Flesch 73 75 74 69 291 $22,800
Y.E. Yang 73 72 74 72 291 $22,800
45 Lucas Glover 75 69 72 76 292 $18,600
Tom Lehman 71 74 74 73 292 $18,600
Johnson Wagner 69 74 76 73 292 $18,600
48 Charley Hoffman 71 72 76 74 293 $15,264
Lee Janzen 72 73 75 73 293 $15,264
Jeff Quinney 75 72 74 72 293 $15,264
Webb Simpson 73 71 73 76 293 $15,264
D.J. Trahan 73 74 69 77 293 $15,264
53 Reinier Saxton 69 75 72 78 294
John Senden 71 74 74 75 294 $13,890
Ian Poulter 75 71 74 74 294 $13,890
Tom Pernice, Jr. 71 74 73 76 294 $13,890
Martin Kaymer 71 76 72 75 294 $13,890
58 Zach Johnson 71 73 75 76 295 $13,320
Marc Leishman 74 74 70 77 295 $13,320
Nicholas Thompson 69 75 78 73 295 $13,320
Steve Lowery 76 71 71 77 295 $13,320
David Duval 71 74 74 76 295 $13,320
63 Paul Casey 73 70 75 78 296 $12,660
Tim Herron 75 73 76 72 296 $12,660
George McNeill 76 69 75 76 296 $12,660
Nick O'Hern 73 73 76 74 296 $12,660
Brett Quigley 74 73 78 71 296 $12,660
Chez Reavie 71 74 72 79 296 $12,660
69 Mark Brooks 75 73 76 75 299 $12,120
Bill Haas 74 72 77 76 299 $12,120
Jeff Klauk 76 71 79 73 299 $12,120
72 D.A. Points 75 70 75 80 300 $11,820
Stuart Appleby 72 74 76 78 300 $11,820
74 Marc Turnesa 72 73 78 78 301 $11,580
Scott McCarron 74 74 82 71 301 $11,580
76 Erik Compton 72 75 74 81 302 $11,340
Rocco Mediate 73 70 81 78 302 $11,340

Leaders

First Round
Luke Donald 64 (-8)

Second Round
Jonathan Byrd 137 (-7)
Jim Furyk 137 (-7)

Third Round
Matt Bettencourt 207 (-9)
Mark Wilson 207 (-9)

Notes

Cut Notes:

77 players at 4-over 148 from a field of 120 professionals.

Missed Cut:

Tim Petrovic (76-73-MC), Billy Mayfair (74-75-MC), John Mallinger (75-74-MC), Thomas Aiken (67-83-MC), Ken Duke (76-74-MC), Jason Dufner (77-73-MC), Jesper Parnevik (81-69-MC), Vijay Singh (75-75-MC), Fredrik Jacobson (77-73-MC), Bo Van Pelt (81-70-MC), Mark Calcavecchia (72-79-MC), Shaun Micheel (73-78-MC), Cliff Kresge (79-72-MC), Todd Hamilton (73-78-MC), Carl Pettersson (73-78-MC), James Nitties (73-78-MC), Danny Lee (79-73-MC), Richard Johnson (76-76-MC), Chris Stroud (77-75-MC), Padraig Harrington (75-77-MC), Charles Howell III (75-77-MC), Bart Bryant (73-79-MC), Greg Owen (74-78-MC), Aaron Baddeley (79-74-MC), Peter Lonard (77-76-MC), Kevin Streelman (77-76-MC), J.B. Holmes (82-72-MC), Brian Davis (78-77-MC), Charles Warren (77-78-MC), James Kamte (77-78-MC), Justin Rose (80-75-MC), Ryan Moore (75-80-MC), Chris Wilson (79-77-MC), Ryan Palmer (80-76-MC), John Rollins (80-77-MC), James Driscoll (77-80-MC), Adam Scott (77-81-MC), Parker McLachlin (81-78-MC), Kevin Chappell (86-75-MC), Brad Faxon (83-78-MC)

Weather:

Thursday: Sunny and mild in the morning with temperatures in the lower 70s. Afternoon high reached 77 degrees with NNE winds 5-10 mph. Friday: Mostly sunny with a morning low of 58 degrees. Continued sun in the afternoon with a high of 77 degrees and NNE winds 10-15 mph. Saturday: Sunny skies with morning lows in the mid 50s. Mostly sunny in the afternoon with highs in the upper 70s and NNE winds 10-15. Sunday: Mostly sunny with a morning low of 58 degrees. Partly cloudy in the afternoon with a high of 84 degrees. Winds SSW 5-10 mph.

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