Crenshaw won for the second time. (Allsport)
CRENSHAW WINS SECOND MASTERS
An emotional Ben Crenshaw won his second US Masters at Augusta - a
perfect end to a traumatic week in which he lost his mentor Harvey Penick.
The 43-year-old Texan, who flew to Austin to attend Penick's funeral on the
eve of the tournament, birdied the 16th and 17th holes to beat fellow American
Davis Love.
Love, who only got into the event by winning last week's event in New Orleans
and had never finished in the top 10 at any major championship, had set the
target of 275, 13 under par, with a best-of-the-day 66.
But Crenshaw still had three holes to play at that point and his tee shot at
the short 16th curled round the slope to finish three feet from the flag.
After slotting that in, Crenshaw's silky smooth putting stroke, admired by all
the great players in the game, worked again at the 17th. He left himself a
12-foot chance this time, but in it went again.
That enabled him the luxury of a bogey at the last and even with that - his
only one on the back nine all week - he was round in 68 for a 14-under-par
aggregate of 274 and said: "I had a 15th club in my bag this week and that was
Harvey.''
Love had birdied the 14th, 15th and 17th himself in a gripping climax, but also
three-putted the 16th. And, with his failure to birdie the last, that was to
prove crucial.
Joint third were Greg Norman and another American, Jay Haas. They were
knocking on the door entering the final stretch, but Norman could not produce
the magic after missing a seven-foot eagle chance on the 15th, where Haas went
in the water.
Love and Norman, paired together, were three behind overnight leaders Crenshaw
and Brian Henninger at the start, but moved into real contention by going to
the turn in 32 and 33 respectively.
Both then birdied the 10th as well - Norman chipped in - but Crenshaw stayed
in front by hitting his second shot to the ninth to tap-in distance. He was out
in 34 and not to be denied on the famous inward half.
So Norman was denied again. He has now finished in the top six seven times,
but has still to win.
Defending champion Jose Maria Olazabal was again the leading European, but was
only joint 14th and not one of them featured in the title shoot-out on the
final day.
A closing 72 kept the limping Olazabal - he is still affected by the toe
operation he had in January - at four under par.
Colin Montgomerie shot 69, but that followed a third-day 76 and he was only
three under with Ian Woosnam (73), one in front of Nick Faldo (75) and David
Gilford (71).
Faldo had set out believing he still had a chance at five off the lead, but
double-bogeyed the first, going into sand off the tee and then hitting his
third through the green.
"It's been a long week - nothing happened to get me going,'' said the
pre-tournament favourite.
Woosnam told a similar story. "Nothing went right - I couldn't hole a
sausage,'' he said.
And Montgomerie was even more disappointed. "I've never felt more frustrated.
I am shattered. I've never driven the ball better - I can't drive any better -
and I couldn't have hit my irons any better.
But I can certainly putt better and when I come back I am just going to go
on the greens in practice. That's where it's won and lost.
"It's a shame I've not performed to my ability. The 14th was the culmination
- the end of the straw.'' He four-putted there, twice missing from a yard, but
then birdied three of the last four holes to earn himself a return visit next
April. "Now I know I can perform here,'' he added. "I'm not frightened of
winning.''
Bernhard Langer dropped to level par with a 75, while Seve Ballesteros, out
first with a marker on his 38th birthday after collapsing to a 78 on Saturday,
improved only three strokes on that, going into the lake at the short 12th for
the second day running.
On the eight over par total of 296 he was next to last of the 47 players who
made the halfway cut. "I was playing well coming in, but nothing went right,''
he said afterwards. "Everything went wrong.''
His American coach Mac O'Grady, when asked if the 1980 and 1983 champion had
been trying too hard, answered: "No question. His decision-making let him down
and only if he can get that to match his genius will the full resurrection
happen.''
Both Montgomerie and Gilford did enough to finish in the top 24 and so make
sure of their places in the event next year. Monty and Woosnam were joint 17th
and Gilford and Faldo tied for 24th.
Runner-up Love, close to Penick as well, said: "I am as happy as anyone for
Ben. There couldn't have been a better winner in the week that Harvey passed
away.
"There must have been a lot going on in Ben's head, but there was a lot going
on in mine too. I was trying to win my first major, but although I didn't quite
do it nobody will ask me ever again about my not having finished in the top 10
at a major.''
Crenshaw, who dissolved into tears the moment he holed the tiny putt to win,
added: "It was as though somebody put a hand on my shoulder and guided me
through.
"I believe in fate and fate had dictated another championship here, as it
does so many times.''
Final collated totals (US unless stated): (x) denotes amateur
274 B Crenshaw 70 67 69 68 (£245,657)
275 D Love 69 69 71 66 (£147,394)
277 G Norman (Aus) 73 68 68 68, J Haas 71 64 72 70 (£79,155 each)
279 D Frost (SA) 66 71 71 71, S Elkington (Aus) 73 67 67 72
280 P Mickelson 66 71 70 73, S Hoch 69 67 71 73
281 C Strange 72 71 65 73
282 F Couples 71 69 67 75, B Henninger 70 68 68 76
283 K Perry 73 70 71 69, L Janzen 69 69 74 71
284 J M Olazabal (Spain) 66 74 72 72, T Watson 73 70 69 72, H Irwin 69 72
71 72
285 C Montgomerie (GB) 71 69 76 69, P Azinger 70 72 73 70, B Faxon 76 69
69 71, I Woosnam (GB) 69 72 71 73, R Floyd 71 70 70 74, C Pavin 67 71 72
75, J Huston 70 66 72 77
286 D Gilford (GB) 67 73 75 71, D Edwards 69 73 73 71, L Roberts 72 69 72
73, N Faldo (GB) 70 70 71 75, D Waldorf 74 69 67 76
287 B Estes 73 70 76 68, M Ozaki (Jap) 70 74 70 73
288 B Lietzke 72 71 71 74, P Jacobsen 72 73 69 74, B Langer (Ger) 71 69 73
75, M O'Meara 68 72 71 77
290 D Forsman 71 74 74 71, W Grady (Aus) 69 73 74 74, J Nicklaus 67 78 70
75, C Beck 68 76 69 77, M McCumber 73 69 69 79
292 T Lehman 71 72 74 75
293 M Calcavecchia 70 72 78 73, (x) T Woods 72 72 77 72, J Sluman 73 72 71
77, P Stewart 71 72 72 78
296 S Ballesteros (Spain) 75 68 78 75, J Daly 75 69 71 81
297 R Fehr 76 69 69 83
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