BBC SPORTArabicSpanishRussianChinese
BBCiNEWS  SPORT  WEATHER  WORLD SERVICE  A-Z INDEX   SEARCH 

BBC Sport
 You are in: Golf: US Masters 
Sport Front Page
-------------------
Football
Cricket
Rugby Union
Rugby League
Tennis
Golf
Statistics
US Masters
US Open
The Open
USPGA
Ryder Cup
Motorsport
Boxing
Athletics
Other Sports
-------------------
Special Events
-------------------
Sports Talk
-------------------
BBC Pundits
TV & Radio
Question of Sport
-------------------
Photo Galleries
Funny Old Game
-------------------
Around The UK: 
N Ireland
Scotland
Wales

BBC Sport Academy
News image
BBC News
News image
BBC Weather
News image
SERVICES
-------------
LANGUAGES
EDITIONS

 Monday, 15 April, 2002, 11:51 GMT 12:51 UK
Where were the famous five?
Ernie Els despairs as his Master challenge dies on the 13th hole
Els despairs as his challenge dies on the 13th
By BBC Sport Online's Tom Fordyce

Behind the tale of Tiger's third Masters win lies a second story - the failure of the world's supposed next-best to get close.

Five players from the world's top seven, all of whom have either won Majors or just missed out, were poised to make a charge on Sunday.

That not a single one managed to raise a sweat on Tiger's forehead left us with a final round high on admiration for the eventual champ, but desperately low on excitement.

What happened to the challenge of the famous five?


Retief Goosen

Joint leader with Woods overnight, the US Open champion was expected to push Tiger all the way.

Retief Goosen plays out from the trees
Goosen finds himself in the trees once again
After all, this is a man famed for his mental strength, the man who could miss a two-footer for his first Major title yet come back to win a play-off the following morning.

Since that triumph at Southern Hills, he has also shown the sort of game that could win him another biggie.

Not on Sunday. While Woods took a comfortable par at the first, Goosen rattled his first putt 20 feet past the hole and dropped a shot.

Woods hit his stride and birdied the next two. From being level, Goosen was suddenly three shots down and slipping out of sight fast.

It was to get worse. At the short fourth, he three-putted horribly, unable to withstand the pressure being exerted by his unflappable playing partner.

He went to the turn in a three-over 39, title hopes behind him in tatters.


Vijay Singh

Champion two years ago, Vijay was the man who gave Tiger his second green jacket on the 18th green 12 months ago.

This year, he had virtually handed it over by the 13th.

Vijay Singh winces as another iron flies wide
Singh winces as another approach misses the green
At that stage, Singh was Woods' closest pursuer, three shots behind. A birdie or two would have given the leader something to think about.

Instead, he followed a perfect drive by belting his second into the stream which runs along the green.

Somehow he salvaged par, but the white flag had been raised.

At the 15th, he hooked his drive and was forced to lay up short. His pitch - not an easy shot, but one which a player of his calibre should make 999 times out of a thousand - landed straight in the lake.

As did his second attempt. A quadruple-bogey eight was the result - and he finished a disconsolate seventh.


Ernie Els

If not one South African, why not the other?

Ernie Els managed to hang on to be within three shots of Woods at the par five 13th, despite looking out of sorts all the way round.

Ernie Els plays out from the trees
Els digs out in the trees
Like Singh behind him, Els knew that taking the birdie chance on offer would have him breathing down Tiger's neck.

He did worse than the opposite. Aiming for a boomer of a drive, he hooked into the trees and then took on a highly ambitious rescue attempt which put him into Rae's Creek.

Taking a penalty drop, Els spanked his fourth straight into the water in front of the green. He took an eight.

"I got greedy, " he admitted. "I had been telling myself all week not to get greedy, and then I did just that."


Phil Mickelson

Positive-thinking sportsmen have a phrase to repeat to themselves when facing a do-or-die sporting showdown.

"If not you, who? If not now, when?"

Phil Mickelson watches in disbelief as a putt slips by
Mickelson watches another putt slip by
Sadly for Phil Mickelson, there are two simple answers: "Someone else" and "Never".

Once again he worked himself into a position to win his first Major, only for his putting to put paid to his chances.

There were three birdies on the outward nine, but also three bogies. On the back nine, his putts just would not drop.

Finishing in third place, four shots off the lead, is no disgrace. It's just not as much as Mickelson's talent deserves.


Sergio Garcia

This was Sergio's last shot at winning a Masters title at a younger age than his childhood hero Seve Ballesteros.

Sergio Garcia plays out of a bunker at Augusta
Garcia's last-day charge never materialised
For three rounds, he had us thinking that it might, just might, be possible.

After all, who better to tame Tiger than the man often simplistically referred to as his European equivalent?

For all the hype, Garcia's final round of 75 was proof that that this dog is yet to have his day.

At no stage was there the scent of victory in Sergio's nostrils, nor more than a glimmer of the glamour golf he can conjure up.

Maybe one day Garcia will begin to challenge Woods' hegemony. But not yet.


Tiger's triumph

Tiger hole-by-hole

Earlier action

Palmer says farewell

US Masters guide

Sports Talk

Official link
Links to more US Masters stories are at the foot of the page.


News image
News imageE-mail this story to a friend

Links to more US Masters stories

News imageNews imageNews image
News image
© BBCNews image^^ Back to top

Sport Front Page | Football | Cricket | Rugby Union | Rugby League |
Tennis | Golf | Motorsport | Boxing | Athletics | Other Sports |
Special Events | Sports Talk | BBC Pundits | TV & Radio | Question of Sport |
Photo Galleries | Funny Old Game | N Ireland | Scotland | Wales