Micheel celebrates the winning putt. (Getty Images)
2003 - Magic Micheel
By Mark Garrod, PA Sport Golf Correspondent, Rochester
American Shaun Micheel completed the unlikeliest double in major
championship history on Sunday - and did it with the shot of the year.
The 34-year-old ranked 169th in the world won the United States PGA
championship - an event he had never played in before - at Oak Hill just a month
after 396th-rated Ben Curtis lifted the Open in his first-ever major appearance
at Sandwich.
Having just bogeyed the 17th to be only one ahead of compatriot Chad Campbell,
Micheel flirted with the rough with his final drive, then hit a 174-yard
seven-iron that landed around 10 feet short of the hole and curled up to within
three inches.
With Mike Weir and Jim Furyk having lifted the Masters and US Open, the 2003
golf season has seen four new major champions for the first time since 1969 -
the year Tony Jacklin won the Open.
Micheel, playing only his third major and previously best known for saving an
elderly couple from a sinking car 10 years ago, won by two with a closing 70 for
a four-under-par total of 276.
South African Tim Clark, who had been joint leader with nine to play, finished
third on one under and German Alex Cejka was fourth one further back.
Micheel was the first debutant winner since John Daly in 1991 - and it was his
first US Tour win as well, as it was for Curtis a month ago. And with the trophy
came a cheque worth £675,000.
As the Orlando-born player's celebrations began, world number one Tiger Woods
was long gone from Rochester, his worst-ever major performance as a professional
behind him.
Even with two birdies in the last three holes, Woods finished 12 over par and
joint 39th. His previous worst was 29th.
Micheel said: "My driving was leaving me, but I had the perfect yardage at the
last and a nice perfect lie.
"I was trying to hit it somewhere on the green and was fortunate I didn't
have to line that one up.
"When I birdied the 14th I felt I was pretty much in control and then
unfortunately I three-putted the next and Chad birdied. I was sweating coming
down the stretch, but I'm proud of being the PGA champion.
"I didn't think it would be happening when I came here."
Campbell had not won a US Tour event either and with Clark the other central
character it was not the trio many expected to be fighting it out on such a
demanding lay-out.
Masters champion Weir looked a danger at one under par overnight, three behind
Micheel and Campbell, but the Canadian left-hander incredibly bogeyed the first
five holes of his final round and shot 75.
World number two Ernie Els could do no better than 71 and had to settle for a
share of fifth with 49-year-old Jay Haas.
Clark turned in 32 to catch Micheel, but then three-putted the next two and
could not get back on terms.
Micheel was three ahead when he drove the green at the 323-yard 14th and
birdied it while Campbell bogeyed, but there was a two-stroke swing the other
way on the next.
The topsy-turvy nature of things continued when Micheel, having missed the
fairway at the 16th, made the green and rammed in a 25-footer to be two ahead
again, but he then bogeyed the 17th to set the scene for the dramatic finale.
England's Luke Donald holed a 167-yard seven-iron for an eagle two at the
second, but finished on eight over after 72, while playing partner Padraig
Harrington had a 73 for 10 over.
Gary Evans needed a 60-foot closing birdie putt for 15 over, Ian Poulter's 79
sent him crashing to 18 over - he dropped six shots in the last four - and Paul
Casey had a 76 for 19 over.
Woods beat them, but before Micheel had even teed off he reflected on another
disappointing week in the majors this year. He failed to capture any of the
game's four biggest trophies for the first time since 1998.
``This is a brutal test,'' said Woods.
Jack Nicklaus, whose record 18 majors is the one Woods is trying to catch,
went 12 majors without a victory prior to his eighth success in the 1970 Open,
so to go five without a win does not amount to a crisis in his career just yet.
But the 27-year-old, whose eighth and last major triumph was last June's US
Open, has discovered in the 14 months since then just how long and difficult the
road lies ahead if he is to leave no room for argument about whether he is the
best player in history.
And this was a particularly bad week. He has not finished outside the top 30
in any strokeplay event since the Bay Hill Invitational in Florida in March 1999
- nearly 100 events ago.
``I just haven't made enough birdies. I've only made four in three days and
that's not going to get it done,'' he said after his third-round 73. That became
only four in 69 holes until he birdied the 16th and 18th.
``I'm just a little off. On a golf course this penal (the rough is some of the
worst ever seen) you can't be a little off and expect to be okay.
``You have to drive it great and hit your irons in the correct spots to have
birdie putts. The only thing I'm doing well is putting, but I just haven't had
enough looks at birdies. When I have I've made them.
``Yeah, I've not played my best, but the shots I've hit good still kick in the
rough or I put it in the wrong spot on the green. It's kind of just added up.
``It's the hardest fairest golf course we've ever played. Carnoustie (venue
for the 1999 Open were he shot 10 over par and still finished seventh) wasn't
fair. It was a great golf course, but it wasn't set up fairly.
``I've felt pretty good about my game the entire summer (his previous three
finishes were first in the Western Open, fourth in the Open at Sandwich and
second in the Buick Open), but this is just one of those weeks.
``I've been as patient as possible. I really have grinded and fought every
every inch of the way. If I had bagged it (American slang for giving up) I could
have shot a million.''
Collated final-round scores (USA unless stated, par 70):
276 Shaun Micheel 69 68 69 70
278 Chad Campbell 69 72 65 72
279 Tim Clark (Rsa) 72 70 68 69
280 Alex Cejka (Ger) 74 69 68 69
282 Jay Haas 70 74 69 69, Ernie Els (Rsa) 71 70 70 71
284 Loren Roberts 70 73 70 71, Fred Funk 69 73 70 72, Mike Weir (Can) 68 71 70
75
285 Niclas Fasth (Swe) 76 70 71 68, Kenny Perry 75 72 70 68, Charles Howell 70
72 70 73, Billy Andrade 67 72 72 74
286 Scott McCarron 74 70 71 71, Tim Herron 69 72 74 71, Rod Pampling (Aus) 66
74 73 73, Robert Gamez 70 73 70 73
287 Rocco Mediate 72 74 71 70, Jim Furyk 72 74 69 72, Carlos Franco (Par) 73
73 69 72, Kevin Sutherland 69 74 71 73, Toshimitsu Izawa (Jpn) 71 72 71 73
288 Stuart Appleby (Aus) 74 73 71 70, Luke Donald (Gbr) 73 72 71 72, Adam
Scott (Aus) 72 69 72 75, Phil Mickelson 66 75 72 75
289 Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 71 71 77 70, Woody Austin 72 73 69 75
290 David Toms 75 72 71 72, Todd Hamilton 70 74 73 73, Peter Lonard (Aus) 74
74 69 73, Padraig Harrington (Irl) 72 76 69 73, Frank Lickliter 71 72 71 76
291 Jesper Parnevik (Swe) 73 72 72 74, JL Lewis 71 75 71 74, Fred Couples 74
71 72 74, Lee Janzen 68 74 72 77, Vijay Singh (Fij) 69 73 70 79
292 Joe Durant 71 76 75 70, Mark Calcavecchia 73 71 76 72, Robert Allenby
(Aus) 70 77 73 72, Tiger Woods 74 72 73 73, Hal Sutton 75 71 67 79, Briny Baird
73 71 67 81
293 Angel Cabrera (Arg) 71 76 72 74, Duffy Waldorf 70 75 72 76, Tom Pernice 70
71 72 80
294 Ben Crane 73 73 76 72, Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 74 70 77 73, Shigeki Maruyama
(Jpn) 75 72 73 74
295 Jose Maria Olazabal (Spa) 74 74 76 71, Brian Gay 74 74 75 72, Jose Coceres
(Arg) 73 68 78 76, Gary Evans (Gbr) 74 74 71 76, Len Mattiace 74 70 75 76
296 Chris DiMarco 74 71 78 73
297 Bernhard Langer (Ger) 75 72 75 75, Bob Estes 71 76 73 77, Scott Hoch 75 72
73 77, Aaron Baddeley (Aus) 69 77 73 78
298 Billy Mayfair 76 72 78 72, Eduardo Romero (Arg) 77 71 76 74, Phil
Tataurangi (Nzl) 72 71 78 77, Ian Poulter (Gbr) 72 75 72 79, Jonathan Kaye 74 73
72 79
299 Paul Casey (Gbr) 79 69 75 76
300 Bob Burns 72 76 70 82
302 Rory Sabbatini (Rsa) 71 75 75 81
304 KJ Choi 74 74 80 76, Michael Campbell (Nzl) 74 71 80 79