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| Last hole drama sets up US Open play-off Goosen and Cink reflect on their amazing misses Retief Goosen and Mark Brooks will take part in an 18-hole play-off for the US Open on Monday after astonishing scenes on the final green. Goosen missed a three-foot putt for the title and now goes head-to-head with Brooks with the pair deadlocked on four-under par. Just seconds earlier Goosen's playing partner Stewart Cink had fluffed a similar putt - in what will go down as one of the most remarkable final holes in the history of this great championship.
Tiger Wood's failure to extend his winning streak in Major tournaments had opened the door for one of the game's unsung players to claim the crown. But none of the contenders seemed willing to take the title, as one after the other they threw it away. Two top-class players who had been expected to make a charge in the final round - Phil Mickelson and Sergio Garcia - blew their chances with poor displays. Then Brooks - the only one of the challengers with Major-winning pedigree - could have secured victory, only to three-putt for a bogey at 18.
Goosen, who had led the field after every round with a masterful effort of controlled golf, now appeared certain to win. But taking Cink's cue, he too developed a serious case of the jitters - and, to the disbelief of a packed grandstand, squandered his gilt-edge opening. Brooks, who was watching from the clubhouse, was given a reprieve. And one of the most bizarre US Opens - which is the only one of the four Majors to use an 18-hole play-off - was set for an anticlimatic finale, with the leaders asked to return the next day. Muted Tiger As ever, much of the focus was on Woods, who started the day nine shots adrift. But the world number one failed to produce the sensational form he needed to stay in touch and carded a 69 to finish on three-over par.
But the defending champion dropped a shot at the second hole - and, although he picked up two more strokes before the end, he never looked like securing another title. Europe's only genuine contender, Spaniard Garcia, saw his own challenge suffer a setback with dropped shots at the second and fifth. And a disastrous double-bogey six at the ninth effectively ended his title hopes. Mickelson blows it Mickelson, another of the favourites for the title, also failed to find his best attacking form. The left-hander dropped a shot at the fourth - but a marvellous wedge from the rough brought him a birdie four at the long fifth.
Another American, Rocco Mediate, dropped off the pace with three bogeys in five holes around the turn. The world's best golfers again struggled to cope with a notoriously difficult course, with only four players finishing the four rounds below par. The most eye-catching performances of the day came from Fiji's Vijay Singh and US veteran Tom Kite, who both stormed to six-under par 64 - the best rounds of the week - and Olin Browne, who sank a hole-in-one at the 11th. But their efforts were soon forgotten. This US Open will be remembered instead for the amazing scenes on the very last green. |
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