Gary Woodland Enters Golf History Books After US Open Heroics
18th June 2019
But his signature moment came at 17 -- the same hole where Jack Nicklaus set up a tap-in birdie with a stinging one-iron in 1972 and Tom Watson chipped in 10 years later to deny Nicklaus a fifth US Open title

- Gary Woodland stared down the top player in the world to win the 119th US Open as a kinder, gentler Pebble Beach produced yet another classic major championship
- Don't let Woodland's 13-under par total fool you -- the 35-year-old American needed shot-making skill and intestinal fortitude to come through on Sunday for his first major title
- Koepka -- winner of the last two PGA Championships as well as the prior two US Opens and a runner-up in April at the Masters -- was breathing down his neck when Woodland produced a pair of shots that will live in US Open history
PEBBLE BEACH, United States- Gary Woodland stared down the top player in the world to win the 119th US Open as a kinder, gentler Pebble Beach produced yet another classic major championship.
Don't let Woodland's
13-under par total fool you -- the 35-year-old American needed shot-making
skill and intestinal fortitude to come through on Sunday for his first major
title, a triumph that denied Brooks Koepka's bid for an historic third straight
US Open victory.
Koepka -- winner of
the last two PGA Championships as well as the prior two US Opens and a
runner-up in April at the Masters -- was breathing down his neck when Woodland
produced a pair of shots that will live in US Open history.
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"The idea was
to play to win," Woodland said of his three-wood second shot to set up a
birdie at 14.
But his signature
moment came at 17 -- the same hole where Jack Nicklaus set up a tap-in birdie
with a stinging one-iron in 1972 and Tom Watson chipped in 10 years later to
deny Nicklaus a fifth US Open title.
Woodland, up by two
with Koepka threatening to birdie or even eagle the last, found the wrong spot
of the green with his tee shot at 17, landing 30 feet from the pin and on the
wrong side of a ridge.
Knowing he couldn't
get a putt close, Woodland pulled out a wedge and hit a perfect pitch that left
him a tap-in for par.
He didn't even need
the 30-footer for birdie at 18, although his 69 did make him just the fifth
golfer to shoot four rounds in the 60s in a US Open.
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Koepka was the
fourth, but the first to do so and not win.
After the criticism
and carping over conditions at wind-whipped Shinnecock Hills last year, players
were gushing in their praise of Pebble Beach -- and of the US Golf Association
for letting the jewel of a course shine.
"It's
perfect," said Phil Mickelson, who was only sorry he didn't play well
enough to challenge in one of his last remaining chances to complete a career
Grand Slam with a US Open crown.
"It's
identifying the best players. It's making the players the story."
Pebble Beach
remained receptive in cool, cloudy conditions, and only a gentle sea breeze
stirred on Sunday.
- 'Come play it yourself' –
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It was a far cry
from the fierce winds that Tom Kite battled on the way to his US Open triumph
in 1992.
But with the rough
up, there was plenty of danger lurking and Rory McIlroy, whose challenge for a
fifth major title faded with two double-bogeys on Sunday, had a succinct answer
for anyone who thought Pebble Beach was playing too easy for a US Open.
"Come play it
yourself," snorted McIlroy.
With the first three
majors of 2019 in the books thanks to the new front-loaded golf calendar, three
different champions have emerged heading into the Open Championship at Royal
Portrush.
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Tiger Woods, who
electrified the golf world with his Masters victory in April -- his 15th major
title coming 11 years and multiple back surgeries after his 2008 US Open
victory at Torrey Pines -- missed the cut at the PGA Championship and didn't
find a spark at Pebble until he birdied six of his last 12 holes on Sunday.
The 43-year-old will
take a few weeks off before he heads to Northern Ireland to tackle a course
he's never played before.
"I'll
definitely have to do my homework once I get there," Woods said.