Nancy Armour

Oosthuizen has to settle for albatross at Masters

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AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Louis Oosthuizen owns a piece of history at Augusta National.

He’d rather have a green jacket, but that double eagle will have to suffice.

After kicking off the day with the rare albatross, Oosthuizen came up short to Bubba Watson in a playoff at the Masters Sunday, outdone by perhaps the only shot more spectacular than his. Unable to see the flag, Watson managed to hook a wedge off the pine needles to 10 feet on the second playoff hole while the South African couldn’t get up and down from in front of the green.

“It was tough after that double eagle. When something like that happens early in your round, you think that this is it,” Oosthuizen said. “It’s a hard day, but you know, congrats to Bubba. He did brilliantly.”

Despite a commanding win at the British Open in 2010 and one of the sweetest, smoothest swings in the game, Oosthuizen is still largely an unknown, even among the golf crowd. Maybe it’s because he splits his time between the European and PGA tours. Maybe it’s because he’s so low-key his idea of a good time is hunkering down on his farm in South Africa.

But he has the game to hang with anyone.

While everyone else was measuring Phil Mickelson for his fourth green jacket Sunday morning, defending champion Charl Schwartzel was putting his money on his countryman and junior golf buddy.

“I think he’s playing the best out of everyone up there,” Schwartzel said. “He’s hot right now.”

That albatross is sure to grab everyone’s attention.

In the fairway on No. 2, from 253 yards out, he blasted a 4-iron onto the front, than watched it roll from the front of the green to the back and into the hole. Oosthuizen raised both hands in the air and high-fived his caddie as fans let out a roar that shook the Georgia pines all the way to Amen Corner.

“I knew if I get it right, it’s going to feed toward the hole,” he said. “But never thought it would go in.”

It was the first double eagle ever on No. 2, and only the fourth in the 76 years of the Masters. It was the most famous albatross at Augusta since the one Gene Sarazen knocked in on No. 15 en route to a playoff victory in 1935 — known as the shot that put the Masters on the map.

“I just wanted to run over there and give him a high five,” Watson said. “As a fan of golf, that’s what you love watching and I got to see it front row.”

Oosthuizen sauntered to the cup and plucked the ball out. But forget about saving it for some grand trophy case back home, that’s not his style. He flipped it into the crowd, instead.

But the albatross was, well, a bit of an albatross.

“It was tough the next five holes to just get my head around it and just play the course,” Oosthuizen acknowledged.

He finally settled down about the 11th hole, but made only two more birdies the rest of the day. And both were on par-5s, where birdies may as well be pars for the way the long holes play at Augusta National.

Watson, meanwhile, made four straight birdies on the back nine to join Oosthuizen atop the leaderboard.

Forced into a playoff when neither could make a birdie on 18, Oosthuizen headed toward the putting green after signing his card only to find it had been taken over for the green jacket ceremony. Security led him back through the clubhouse, where a group of fans greeted him with applause.

Not so fast.

Beginning on 18, Oosthuizen thought he had it won on the first playoff hole. His approach from 150 yards out curled down and stopped 15 feet from the cup. The putt looked true as it rolled but it slid along the upper edge of the cup and refused to drop.

Oosthuizen’s knees buckled, and he buried his face in his hands.

“I thought it was in. There was no way that could stop turning,” he said. “It turned the whole way, and about a foot short of the hole just stopped turning. So you know, I thought it was over by then.”

But Watson missed his birdie putt, too, and they moved on to No. 10, the second playoff hole. When Watson launched his tee shot so far right it landed behind the gallery, Oosthuizen had another opportunity.

“And I like the tee shot on 10. So after he hit it in the trees there, I felt confident and just probably spun a bit out of it, catching it off the heel,” he said. “It just left me a lot further back than I wanted to be.”

He left himself short on his second shot, then flew the green. When Watson hooked his shot out of trouble and onto the green, Oosthuizen was all but finished.

“It’s fine,” Oosthuizen said. “He hit an unbelievable shot there. I played well. This is not one where I felt like I played badly. Great stuff to him, he deserves it.”

Oosthuizen has to settle for albatross at Masters

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Oosthuizen has to settle for albatross at MastersLouis Oosthuizen, of South Africa, reacts after missing a putt during a sudden death playoff on the 10th hole at the Masters golf tournament Sunday, April 8, 2012, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)(Credit: David J. Phillip)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — The putt rolled straight toward the cup, and Louis Oosthuizen was certain the ball was going to drop in.

So, of course, it didn’t.

On the next playoff hole, Bubba Watson made perhaps the only shot more spectacular than that double eagle that gave Oosthuizen the lead for all but the final seconds of the Masters on Sunday.

Instead of the green jacket, Oosthuizen will have to settle for an albatross.

“It’s fine,” Oosthuizen said. “He hit an unbelievable shot there. I played well. This is not one where I felt like I played badly. Great stuff to him, he deserves it.”

Woods matches worst 4-round score at Masters

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Woods matches worst 4-round score at MastersTiger Woods waves after his putt on the ninth green during the fourth round of the Masters golf tournament Sunday, April 8, 2012, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)(Credit: Darron Cummings)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Tiger Woods arrived at Augusta National as a favorite to win his fifth green jacket. Instead, he left with his worst score as a pro.

A 74 on Sunday put Woods at 5-over 293 for the Masters, which was his worst four-round score since he posted the same number as a first-time amateur way back in 1995. He shot a 291 in 2007, but that was good enough for second that year, when it was windy and bitterly cold. When he left the course Sunday, he was tied for 41st, the same spot he finished in 1995.

“It was an off week at the wrong time,” he said.

Woods never broke par on the course where he was so dominant that Masters officials were accused of trying to “Tiger-proof” it when they redesigned parts of it. Worse, he was just 1 under for the week on the par 5s, where he normally collects birdies by the handful.

“If I look back on the week, I played the par 5s atrociously,” he said. “This is a golf course you just have to dominate the par 5s, and I did not do that at all this week.”

Expectations that Woods would win again skyrocketed two weeks ago when he won at Bay Hill — his first PGA Tour victory in 30 months. But things began unraveling when he closed with back-to-back bogeys Thursday, and he went into a full-scale meltdown Friday with a flurry of wayward tee shots, blocked approaches and missed putts from close range.

He cursed the bad shots or took mock swings in anger — sometimes doing both. After a poor tee shot on 16, booted his 9-iron about 15 yards.

The boorish behavior drew criticism from some fans, and he could be subject to discipline by the PGA Tour.

Tour policy states that players can be disciplined for conduct unbecoming a professional even at tournaments that are co-sponsored or approved by the PGA Tour, such as the major championships. The tour doesn’t comment on discipline, however, so whether he’s fined might never be known.

“It’s just the way it is,” Woods said Sunday. “I’m trying to compete, and unfortunately I just didn’t play well this week.”

Woods has been stuck on 14 major championships, four shy of Jack Nicklaus’ record, since winning the U.S. Open in a playoff in 2008 — on a broken leg, no less. Since then, there’s been the sex scandal that cost him his marriage and several sponsors, and injuries have kept him off the course for long stretches.

Now his problem is his swing. He’s been reworking it with Sean Foley for more than 18 months, and it remains a work in progress.

“What’s frustrating is I know what to do, and I just don’t do it. I get out there and I just don’t trust it at all,” Woods said. “I can get it on the range, I can get it dialed in there. We’ll work on the same things and it feels really good, and I go to the golf course and I just don’t quite trust it. It just means I just need to do more reps.”

When Woods won at Bay Hill, many saw it as a sign that he had mastered the changes he’d made with Foley. But his shots wound up all over the place, and he complained that bad habits were creeping back into his swing, saying he had “the Hank backswing, with the new downswing.”

Woods worked with Hank Haney from 2004-10.

“When you get into tough situations, you revert back to your old motor patterns,” Woods said. “That’s kind of what happened to me this week.”

But he has no doubt he’s on the right path.

“You’re still always working on little things. I know the big things that we’re working on are done, but it’s the little things, too, now,” Woods said. “The details sometimes can be magnified. Especially on a golf course like this, it doesn’t take much. You’re a yard off here or there, which happened to be quite often, and next thing you know, I’m 40, 50 feet away.”

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No more retro look for Couples at Augusta National

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No more retro look for Couples at Augusta NationalFred Couples tips his cap after putting out on the 18th green during the third round of the Masters golf tournament Saturday, April 7, 2012, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)(Credit: Matt Slocum)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Well, that was fun while it lasted.

A day after turning the clock back 20 years and grabbing a share of the lead at the Masters, Freddie Couples looked more suited for the Champions Tour than a green jacket Saturday. The 52-year-old blew up with a 75, and is barely within sight of the leaders going into Sunday’s final round.

“My only excuses were some of the swings I made,” Couples said. “I actually felt pretty good. I’m tired now, but I felt pretty good.”

Playing on the 20th anniversary of his green jacket, the Augusta National fan favorite heard cheers from every corner of the course. Forget these young phenoms. It was the grey-haired guy with the West Coast cool who the fans were pulling for.

“They’re yelling for everyone,” Couples said. “I wish a couple of them would have come out and played a few shots for me today.”

Couples wasn’t the only one going in the wrong direction on Moving Day. Jason Dufner, his co-leader after the second round, finished his round with back-to-back bogeys and also signed for a 75. Rory McIlroy, whose green jacket was being measured until his infamous back-nine implosion last year, posted a 42 on the front nine.

Miguel Angel Jimenez, who began the day two strokes off the lead, tumbled out of contention with five bogeys on the front nine.

Of course, nobody had the crowd behind them like Couples.

His day started going downhill with a pair of bogeys on the first two holes. But to hear Couples tell it, it really disintegrated on No. 5, after he hit a wonderful drive into the middle of the fairway. Standing 175 yards from the hole with a 7 iron in hand, he hit a huge hook into the first cut of rough, came up short on the chip and needed three more to get down.

“A 6 from 175 yards in the fairway, that’s high school material,” Couples said. “And I panicked a little there.”

Driving the ball well — he hit 12 of 14 fairways — Couples got back within three shots of the lead with birdies on Nos. 8, 11 and 12. Was he ready to make another run for the ages?

Not really. He missed a 6-footer for birdie on 13 and then, with the leaders starting to make birdies in front of him, he tried to clear the water from 255 yards out on the par-5 15th.

“I was trying to cut it into the bunker” on the right side of the green, Couples said, “and I just kind of hit it straight.”

Straight into the water. A few minutes later, he was tapping in for 6 — his third of the day.

“I’m fairly disappointed,” Couples said. “I drove the ball really, really well. I stood there with the perfect clubs and I look back, and I see three sixes. That’s pretty bad.”

Even with that aching back, he has to return Sunday. He said he’ll try his best, but he’s not trying to build any hope for all those Freddie Fans out there.

“I’m not going to sit here and say I need to shoot a 65. I’m not going to shoot a 65,” Couples said. “It would be nice to sit here and tell you that, but I’m going to go out and play my best and certainly shoot better than 75. I’d hope I could do better than that.”

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NOTHING TO PROVE: Quick! Name the player with the most majors over the last five years.

No, it’s not that Tiger Woods guy. Phil Mickelson is a good guess, but it’s not him, either.

Try Padraig Harrington, who won back-to-back British Opens in 2007 and 2008, as well as the 2008 PGA Championship.

It may have been a few years since the Irishman won a major — been a while since he’s been in contention, really. But he feels no pressure going into Sunday’s final round at the Masters, even if he is quietly lurking five strokes behind leader Peter Hanson.

“I don’t need to go out there and prove anything tomorrow,” Harrington said. “I’m in a great position in that sense. I’ve won three majors, I’m going to win more majors, so I don’t have to do it tomorrow. That’s not my one-and-only chance.

“There are players out there who have not won a major who feel like, ‘I have to take this chance because they have not come around.’ Having won three, I realize that they do actually come around and they will come around. I don’t need to panic tomorrow.”

Harrington tied for fifth at Augusta National in 2008, but has missed the cut the last two years. He has only one top-10 finish on the PGA Tour this year, and that was back in February. Last weekend in Houston, he was 71st.

But even if he’s struggling with his game, there’s no denying Harrington has talent. After playing the first 11 holes at 1 over, he closed with five birdies in his last six holes.

“I can pick three or four tournaments this year where I’ve had four or five in a row in six holes in terms of birdies, so I made hay when it was going well,” Harrington said. “When things are going well, you have to make birdies. That’s very much what Augusta is like. When things are going, take your chances, because you’ll get a few which go against you, and you’ve got to make up for those dropped shots at times.”

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BACK IN THE GAME: Henrik Stenson already has a snowman and a double bogey on his scorecard at the Masters.

Yet somehow, he’s still hanging around.

Despite a bogey on the final hole Saturday, the Swede scratched out a 2-under 70 that left him five strokes behind Peter Hanson going into the final round

“I’m not worried that the wheels are going to come off tomorrow because they have been off so many times already,” Stenson said. “It’s just fun to go out and try and make birdies and save myself out of impossible situations when they occur.”

He’s certainly had plenty of practice.

Stenson was one hole from being the first-round leader when he blew up with a quadruple-bogey 8 on 18. It matched the highest score on the 18th hole in Masters history. The damage came a hole earlier Friday, when he made a 6 on 17.

He’s had to scramble all week, mixing great shots with utterly dismal ones.

“It’s definitely a little bit of a roller coaster,” Stenson said. “At this course I have got to try and stay very patient and not lose your head when you are making an easy mistake or two. That kind of happens to everybody around here. So I’ve had a bit of that already this week.

“Hopefully, I can stay away from most of that tomorrow.”

___

LUCKY No. 17: Peter Hanson’s son, Tim, might be his lucky charm.

Hanson’s golf balls all have the number “17″ on them in honor of Tim, who was born last Nov. 17 at 5:17 p.m. — or 17:17, if you’re going by a 24-hour clock, as Europeans do.

“I asked the guys over at Taylor Made to put his name on the ball, and they were kind enough to do it,” Hanson said.

Despite making only his second appearance at Augusta National, the Swede takes a 1-stroke lead into Sunday’s final round of the Masters.

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WOODLAND WITHDRAWS: Gary Woodland’s left wrist ached on the green, off the tee and everywhere in between.

By the end of the day, he was simply counting strokes until he could be finished.

“I probably should have stopped,” Woodland said after playing the final 10 holes with pain shooting through his entire arm. “It was a long, long day.”

Woodland, who began Saturday four strokes off the lead at the Masters, withdrew after completing his third round Saturday. He played the last 11 holes at 11 over, making par on only three of them, and finished with a 13-over 85.

“I felt like I was right in the heart of the golf tournament. I thought I had a pretty good chance,” he said. “For this to happen, I’m pretty upset right now.”

Woodland felt some pain in the wrist earlier this year, when he was hitting a lot of balls in an effort to rework his swing. It wasn’t anything that lingered, however.

But the wrist was sore and stiff Saturday morning and, despite taking some anti-inflammatories, the pain got progressively worse as the day went on. When he made a swing on No. 8, pain shot up his arm and down through his hand. The athletic trainer who examined Woodland on No. 11 urged him to quit. So did his caddie.

But Woodland pressed on. His left wrist was heavily taped, and he held a bag of ice on it between shots.

“The trainer didn’t think I could do anymore damage,” he said. “I worked too hard to get here. I wanted to at least finish today.”

___

MUST-SEE TV: The Masters is a smash hit.

ESPN’s telecast of the second round Friday drew an average of 4.1 million viewers, the third-largest audience ever to watch golf on cable, according to fast nationals from the Nielsen Co. It also was a 14 percent increase from last year’s average of 3.5 million.

The 4.9 million who tuned in for ESPN’s coverage of the first round in 2010, when Tiger Woods returned to competition following a shocking sex scandal, is still the record for the largest golf audience on cable. Woods’ playoff victory over Rocco Mediate at the 2008 U.S. Open, which gave him his 14th major, is second at 4.8 million.

Friday’s telecast also had a 3.3 household rating, up 14 percent from last year. Ratings measure the percentage of homes with televisions tuned into a program.

Average viewership for the two days was 3.4 million, up from 3 million last year. The two-day average rating was a 2.8, a 12 percent increase from last year.

___

AP National Writer Eddie Pells contributed to this report.

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Quadruple bogey on 18 costs Stenson Masters lead

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Quadruple bogey on 18 costs Stenson Masters leadHenrik Stenson, of Sweden, hits out of the gallery off the 18th green during the first round of the Masters golf tournament Thursday, April 5, 2012, in Augusta, Ga. Stenson took a quadruple bogey on the hole to finish his round at one under. (AP Photo/Chris O'Meara)(Credit: Chris O'meara)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Henrik Stenson tumbled from the top of the leaderboard with a quadruple-bogey 8 on 18.

Not exactly a cause for celebration on his 36th birthday. The Swede says he doesn’t think he’s ever finished with an 8.

Stenson’s problems started off the tee, when his drive hooked left and into some bushes. He thought he’d found enough of a gap to get out, but the ball got caught up and landed on some trampled-down pine straw. Rather than take the easy out, he gave it a go with a 4-iron and carved it up the fairway.

His next shot flew the green, and he chunked the chip shot coming back. When he finally got on the green, he missed about a 3-footer for triple-bogey.

He finished at 1-under 71.

Mid-Amateur champ savoring 1st trip to Masters

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Mid-Amateur champ savoring 1st trip to MastersAmateur Randal Lewis pumps his fist after making par on the first hole during the first round of the Masters golf tournament Thursday, April 5, 2012, in Augusta, Ga. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)(Credit: Darron Cummings)

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Two double bogeys, five bogeys, never sniffed a birdie. It was the best 81 of Randal Lewis’ life.

The 54-year-old financial adviser from Alma, Mich., is believed to be the oldest Masters rookie ever. Paired with two-time champion Jose Maria Olazabal on Thursday, Lewis said playing Augusta National was a “dream come true.” He also played a practice round with 19-year-old son Nick — short for Nicklaus — who got to meet his namesake.

“There’s nothing bad about a sunny day at Augusta National,” Lewis says.

Lewis figured his chances of playing in the Masters ended 15 years ago, when he lost 3 and 2 in the 1996 Mid-Amateur final. But he became the oldest Mid-Am champ by five years last summer.

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