Entries Tagged as 'Masters'

tiger woods 1997 masters highlights PART 11/13


tiger woods and his win for the ages at the 1997 masters tournament

Tiger Woods, 2005 Masters, The best golf shot ever


Tiger Woods, 2005 Masters, The best golf shot ever

Tiger Woods Masters shot on 16th Hole 2005


Tiger Woods Masters shot on 16th Hole 2005

Tiger Woods – masters shot on 16th hole 2005 in Augusta.


Tiger Woods - masters shot on 16th hole 2005 in augusta

tiger woods 1997 masters highlights PART 10/13


tiger woods and his epic win at the 1997 masters tournament

Tiger Woods final round at the Australian Masters 2009 – Part 2 of 3


All of Tiger Wood's shots in the final round of the 2009 jbwere Australian Masters. Woods won by 2 shots at the Kingston Heath course in front of a massive Melbourne crowd.

tiger woods 1997 masters highlights PART 9/13


tiger woods and his epic win at the 1997 masters tournament.

TIGER WOODS – Greatest Shot Ever (Masters)


Tiger Wood's greatest shot ever. 16th Hole of the 2005 Masters

Tiger Woods Claims Australian Masters Win at Kingston Heath Golf Club in Melbourne, Australia

Victoria's hefty investment in Tiger Woods has returned a healthy dividend in the form of the 2009 JBWere Australian Masters title, the $270,000 first prize and the champion's yellow jacket, all safely secured by the world No.1 at Kingston Heath on Sunday.

Woods, the joint leader after 54 holes with Australians Greg Chalmers and James Nitties, fired a final-round 68 at the historic 6455-metre, par-72 layout in Melbourne's renowned sandbelt to prevail at 14-under by two shots from Chalmers (70) in outright second.

Francois Delamontagne of France elevated himself from amongst the also-rans with weekend rounds of 68 and 69 for a share of third place on 10-under with Jason Dufner (70) of the USA, while Nitties (73) rounded out the top five at minus-nine.

"It was a great day today," a satisfied Woods told his media conference.

"All the guys have raved about this golf course and I understand why."

"I enjoy all the sandbelt courses, really, because it brings back shot-making, something that we don't see enough of in the States."

Clad in his customary Sunday red, Woods constructed a copybook birdie at the first to signal that Saturday's misadventures, when he carded a frustrating and unsatisfactory 72, were well and truly behind him.

In fine, warm conditions, the 14-time major winner made his move with successive birdies at five and six.

First, he offered his huge gallery the thrills they were craving with a seven-iron to the pin for a gimme at the 351-metre par-four fifth for the outright lead, followed by a sand wedge to inches at the next for a tap-in to extend it.

Woods' most telling shot of the day was at the par-five 12th when he smashed a fairway wood from 268 metres to within four metres of the flag, setting up another birdie for a three-shot break on his rivals, though he later credited a clutch putt for par at nine for helping to maintain his momentum.

But it didn't all go the champion's way.

A furious Woods blamed an overenthusiastic photographer for his wayward approach which was to cost him a shot at 13 - his one blemish for the round - and a par at the par-five 14th was an opportunity lost.

"I felt I was in control of the tournament after I made that birdie on 12 and a photographer took the control right away from me," Woods told his media conference.

"He took a few shots on my downswing, I flinched and made bogey."

"I don't mind players taking away the control, but not when something happens from outside."

It was when he holed a three-metre birdie putt at the 142-metre par-three 15th that Woods effectively slammed the door shut on his rivals.

Critical of the softness of the Kingston Heath greens on Saturday, Woods said they were only marginally better for the final round.

"They were faster today but they still were holding and you could be quite aggressive going to some of these flags," he said.

"Even downwind the ball wasn't going to get away from you - you still had a chance to spin the ball which is normally not the case."

The champion was kept honest by Chalmers who managed a couple of early birdies and remained thereabouts despite a dropped shot at the 173-metre par-three eighth.

What really hurt the 36-year-old, however, was his failure to convert two gilt-edged birdie opportunities when he most needed to on the back nine at 14 and 16.

"Even though I finished second, I'm thrilled he (Woods) was here, I wish he would come every couple of years," said a gracious Chalmers.

"It's been a pretty fantastic week with the crowd and the atmosphere we had as golfers, it was like a football crowd brought to the golf."

"That was special, very exciting and it made you play better - it certainly did for me, anyway."

Woods' victory was warmly welcomed by Victorian premier John Brumby whose state government attracted criticism in some quarters for agreeing to underwrite Woods' $3 million appearance fee which was double the total prize money for the tournament.

The size of the final day crowd - 25,132 - was a useful barometer of the tournament's outstanding success on almost every level.

Adam Bland's 67 was the best of Sunday's rounds while two former Masters champions, Craig Spence, the 1999 winner and Aaron Baddeley (2007) both matched Woods' 68.

Defending titleholder Rod Pampling fired a final-round 73 to finish equal-14th at minus-four overall.

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Tiger Woods Chip at the 2005 Masters


Tiger's chip at the 2005 Masters. The best Golf shot I've ever seen next to my hole in one :p