Woods celebrates his win. (Getty Images)
WOODS WINS FOURTH GREEN JACKET
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The golf world can forget the 'Fab Four' for a while at least. The 'Fab One'
is back - after yet another Augusta epic.
After 10 majors without a win and five where he had not even been in
contention in the last round, Tiger Woods achieved an amazing fourth Masters
victory on Sunday night.
He beat Ryder Cup team-mate Chris DiMarco with a 15-foot birdie putt at the
first hole of a sudden-death play-off.
Woods seemed to have their duel in the bag following one of the most dramatic
shots of his short career on the par three 16th.
Having sent his tee shot long and left, Woods chipped up the slope beyond the
flag and watched the ball come back down, stop on the lip and then fall in.
It put him two ahead, but he was in the trees at the 17th and a bunker on the
last, and could not save par either time, pulling a 10-footer wide at the 72nd.
They tied on the 12-under-par total of 276, an incredible seven clear of
Britain's Luke Donald and South African Retief Goosen.
Donald had two eagles and two birdies in the last eight holes for a finish
only ever bettered by eight players on their first attempt in the event.
Woods and DiMarco, showing great courage after a horrid morning in which he
fell from four ahead to three behind when the third round had to be completed,
returned to the 18th tee - the first time sudden death has started there.
DiMarco had hit the hole with his chip at the last and from almost the same
spot, after coming up just short again, he got his ball to within inches.
But that left Woods with another chance - and he took his career play-off
record to an incredible 10 wins and only one defeat. Nobody has ever been better
under pressure.
With the win Woods not only returned to the world number one spot but also
improved his collection of major crowns to nine. He is now halfway to the
record set on the same course by Jack Nicklaus 19 years ago.
The 29-year-old is now joint third in the all-time list alongside Ben Hogan
and Gary Player. Tom Watson has been left behind and only Walter Hagen with 11
and Nicklaus lie ahead.
Moreover, four green jackets is an achievement he now shares with Arnold
Palmer. Again only Nicklaus - inevitably - has more with six.
The day had begun with Woods four behind DiMarco nine holes into the delayed
third round, but within 30 minutes the picture had changed.
Woods, resuming on the 10th fairway, hit a six-iron to 10 feet and made what
was his fourth successive birdie. DiMarco, in the group behind, squirted his
approach into a bush, took a penalty drop and came off with a double-bogey six.
The gap was instantly down to one and Woods then took his run of birdies to a
record-equalling seven in a row, holing from 15 feet, seven feet and seven again
- after almost dumping his five-iron into Rae's Creek.
The first-ever 62 in majors was a real possibility at that point, but he
three-putted the 14th and went from trees into the lake for a bogey six at the
15th and had to settle for a 65 on top of his second-round 66.
It seemed far more than three days ago that he putted into the creek on the
13th and hit a drive only 100 yards on the second.
DiMarco could find no answer, coming home in 41 and falling three behind with
a bogey on the 17th.
Four hours later they set out for the final lap - and Woods birdied the first
two holes to get to 13-under.
DiMarco, however, matched his four on the long second and was back to only
three behind when Woods three-putted the fifth.
All Woods' previous eight major championship victories had been played from
the front and with 16 birdies in his last two rounds - a 13-under 131 which
equalled the record he established in 1997 - he was a big odds-on favourite.
In the weekend that saw Nicklaus bring the curtain down on his Masters career
Woods could take that as a lucky omen.
Nicklaus' last US Open was in 2000 and Woods won by a major record 15 shots.
The Golden Bear's farewell to the US PGA was two months later and Woods won that
in a play-off against Bob May.
Woods also thought that Nicklaus was playing his last Open when he won at St
Andrews in 2000, but Nicklaus has now said he will play again on the Old Course
this summer.
That was down the road. Today, barring a nightmare somewhere, he was in a
straight head-to-head with DiMarco.
That was because Dane Thomas Bjorn, four behind with a round to go, went into
the trees on the second, was forced to take a penalty drop and ran up a seven en
route to a nightmare 81.
Woods was four clear when he birdied the ninth, but DiMarco followed him in and
then got a sniff of a chance when his playing partner fluffed a chip at the
10th.
Loser of a play-off to Vijay Singh in the US PGA last August - few players
have suffered such heartbreak in two majors running - he made a 30-footer at the
11th, but bogeyed the 12th to fall two behind again.
It was far from over, though. DiMarco hit a glorious approach to the 14th and
when he birdied the 15th after laying up he was on level terms.
It was only for a few seconds. Woods was on in two and two-putted, then
produced his heroics on the 16th.
Again it looked over. But it was not - not yet.
DiMarco said: "To be in the thick of it was awesome and to make my
five-footer on the 18th was great. The difference was his chip on the 16th went
in and mine on the 18th lipped out."
Singh could not hold on to the world number one position despite a closing
birdie for a share of fifth - South African Trevor Immelman was among the four
alongside him after a hole-in-one at the 16th.
Defending champion Mickelson double-bogeyed both par-threes on the back nine,
the 12th and 16th, and fell back to 10th.
Just behind him was American amateur champion Ryan Moore, who matched the
13th-placed finish of Casey Wittenberg last year - the best two performances by
amateurs since Charles Coe was ninth in 1962.
But this weekend belonged to Woods.
Incredibly, the tournament began with him putting into Rae's Creek on the
13th, hitting a 100-yard drive on the second hole (his 11th) and handing in a
card for 74.
He was 33rd after that, but his middle rounds of 66 and 65 equalled his own
best mark and a closing 71 got it done. Just.
"Chris has no back-off in him," he said afterwards.
"This was such a hard-fought week with the rain delays and everything. And I
didn't get off to the greatest of starts."
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