Woods halfway to history after U.S. Open win (2024)

  • Associated Press

Jun 16, 2002, 03:33 PM ET

FARMINGDALE, N.Y. -- The longest course in U.S. Open history
was only a short stop for Tiger Woods on his way to a real Grand
Slam.

Another runaway victory in golf's toughest test made it look
inevitable.

What was billed as the "People's Open'' came down to one
person. Woods captured the U.S. Open on Sunday and became the first
player since Jack Nicklaus in 1972 to win the first two major
championships of the year.

His rivals wilted at Augusta National. They battled at Bethpage
Black.

It didn't matter. Nothing stops him.

Woods showed the power and skill to reach the 13th green with a
2-iron from 263 yards for a birdie that smothered his final
challenge. And he had the mental toughness, as always, to block out
everything around him except the shiny trophy waiting for him at
the end.

Earl Woods watched his 26-year-old son from his hotel room near
the course, and recalled how he jangled coins in his pocket during
the kid's backswing and kicked his tee shots into bad lies, all
designed to give him a killer instinct.

"I told him, 'I promise you one thing: You'll never meet
another person as tough as you,''' Dad said. "He hasn't. And he
won't.''

This was plenty tough:

-- Three-putt bogeys on the first two holes, giving Phil Mickelson and Sergio Garcia fleeting hope.

-- A 49-minute rain delay, right when Woods faced the meat of the
7,214-yard course.

-- The first final round over par when he was in contention at a
major.

But there he was again, doffing his cap and smiling during a
ceremonial walk toward the 18th green.

Next stop on his incredible ride: The British Open in Muirfield,
five weeks away.

"I would like to win the slam,'' he said. "I've done it
before. Hopefully, I can do it again.''

The only sour note was the ending -- bogeys on two of his last
three holes, including a meaningless three-putt in gathering
darkness on the 18th for a 2-over 72.

It was the first time the U.S. Open was played on a truly public
golf course, and the Black Course at Bethpage State Park certainly
held its own. Woods was the only player to break par, at 3-under
277.

He still finished three strokes ahead of Mickelson, who is now
0-for-40 in the majors but hardly felt like a loser.

"It's certainly a difficult challenge, five back to the best
player in the world,'' he said after closing with a 70.

Woods already has won his own version of the slam. A year ago,
he became the first player to win four straight professional majors
-- the Masters, U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship --
although purists argue a real Grand Slam is winning all four in the
same year.

Don't bet against him.

"I had all four trophies on my mantle at the same time, and no
one else has ever done that,'' Woods said. "Call it what you want.
This will be a different type of slam, I guess.''

The question remains: Can anyone stop him?

Woods reached eight majors faster than anyone in history, and
now has claimed seven of the last 11 -- unprecedented in golf's four
biggest events.

He moved into a tie with Tom Watson for most majors in a career,
and took one more step toward his ultimate goal, the record 18
professional majors that Nicklaus won.

Perhaps when the New Yorkers get their course back next week and
pay $39 greens fees on the weekend, they'll have an even greater
appreciation of how good this guy is.

"It's awesome, winning your national title and, on top of that,
on a public course in front of these fans,'' Woods said.

Mickelson and Garcia each got to within two strokes at times,
but not for long.

Woods simply gave them no chance. He missed only two fairways in
the final round and putted for birdie on 17 out of 18 holes.

Even after his miscues at the start, he didn't panic.

"I kept telling myself that I wasn't playing bad,'' he said.
"You're going to make some mistakes. Get them out of your
system.''

Mickelson and Garcia made more than a U.S. Open allows,
especially when trying to track out the world's best player.

Mickelson got to within two strokes of the lead with a two-putt
birdie from the fringe on No. 13, which put him at 2-under par.

Woods answered with his two most important shots of the day.

He hit a perfect drive on the 499-yard 12th hole, the longest
par 4 in U.S. Open history, to take bogey out of the equation.
Then, he nailed another one on the 13th to put him in position for
a two-putt birdie.

Sun, June 16

It was fantastic to see the top two players in the world battling it out on Sunday at the U.S. Open. It doesn't happen often, but when it does, it makes for a special afternoon.

Woods halfway to history after U.S. Open win (1)

But when it comes down to it, the best player in the world -- Tiger Woods -- had control of the golf tournament from the 18th hole in the first round on. Whenever anybody made a run, he had an answer. Whenever he played poorly, he had an answer.

He has an answer for everything right now.

Tiger Woods understands what it takes to win major championships. He understands how to get ready. He understands how to play the golf course. He understands how to manage his emotions. Nobody else in the world can do all of that.

Look at him this week -- for the first two days, he was ahead because of clutch putting. For the last two days, he stayed ahead because of some remarkable shot-making. Woods pulled his putter out of the bag 38 times on Sunday. There aren't too many men who have won the U.S. Open using their putter that often in the final round. But he finds a way to do what needs to be done, seemingly any time he needs to do it.

He three-putted the first two holes on Sunday. That would have broken a lot of players. But Woods understands -- he had his bad holes out of the way. He'd made his mistakes. He gets control of his emotions, control of his golf swing and doesn't break down, no matter what the situation is. That's why he's won eight major titles. More ...

"I knew I still had some tough holes to play and couldn't
afford a mistake,'' Woods said.

Mickelson made it easier for him with bogeys on the 16th and
17th holes.

It was Mickelson's seventh top-3 finish in a major, tying him
with Harry "Lighthorse'' Cooper among players who have never won
one.

Jeff Maggert had a 72 and finished third at 282, although he was
never a factor.

Garcia was the only other player to make a run at Woods.

He got to within two strokes after Woods three-putted the first
two holes, and stayed on his heels until the 22-year-old Spaniard
made the kind of mistakes that a U.S. Open won't allow. Three times
he overshot the green, wound up in ankle-deep grass and couldn't
save par. Garcia had a 74 to finish fourth.

His only consolation was that Woods finally spoke to him -- but
only after the Open had been decided. Earlier in the round, Garcia
tried to be his pal, even retrieving a divot for Woods on the
fourth hole.

Woods never looked at him. This was Sunday in a major
championship, and Woods had only one thing on his mind.

Nick Faldo made the most of a special exemption by closing with
a 66-73 on the week to tie for fifth, earning him a trip back next
year.

Scott Hoch, who said his goal was to break 80 the first time he
saw Bethpage Black, made an ace on the 207-yard 17th hole for a 69
and also tied for fifth at 285.

Woods became only the fifth player to win the Masters and the
U.S. Open in the same year. The others were Craig Wood (1941), Ben
Hogan (1951, 1953), Arnold Palmer (1960) and Nicklaus in 1972.

Nicklaus went for the third leg at Muirfield, but finished
second by one stroke to Lee Trevino, his chief rival at the time.

Right now, Woods doesn't have one.

None of the six players behind him at the start of the final
round had the experience of winning a major. Their task was to beat
the No. 1 player in the world, who has never lost a 54-hole lead in
a major and is 24-2 when he leads going into the last day.

Garcia seemed like a logical choice to do it, especially after
pouting earlier in the week that Woods was getting all the breaks.

Close to 50,000 people packed into Bethpage State Park and
treated this genteel game like a championship fight when Woods and
Garcia walked to the first tee. The only thing missing was a
staredown.

Instead, Woods was the first to offer his hand to his playing
partner, and after launching tee shots into the fairway, they
walked down the steep slope and into the arena.

The final-round pressure of a U.S. Open only intensified when
Woods' four-shot margin was cut in half before he got to the third
tee -- a three-putt bogey from 45 feet on the first hole, another
three-putt bogey on the second from about 40 feet.

Mickelson made a quick charge with a 6-foot birdie on the first,
but an approach over the fifth green led to bogey, and he took a
wild adventure on the next hole -- from bunker, to knee-high fescue,
to bunker -- and had to made an 8-footer for bogey.

Even the battle with Garcia didn't hold up. The key swing came
at the 489-yard seventh, with the Spaniard still only three strokes
behind.

Garcia went just over the green into thick rough and failed to
save par. Woods drained a 20-footer for his first birdie of the
round, pointing to the hole as the ball disappeared.

Mickelson returned to make another small run, but that was only
for show.

This wasn't Woods vs. Garcia, or even Woods vs. Mickelson.

He is playing only against history at the moment, and even that
looks like a mismatch.

Woods halfway to history after U.S. Open win (2024)
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