Monday, February 24, 2014

Day wins, and Dubuisson puts on a show

Day wins, and Dubuisson puts on a show

AP - Sports
Day wins, and Dubuisson puts on a show
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Jason Day, of Australia, poses with the trophy after winning his championship match against Victor Dubuisson, …
MARANA, Ariz. (AP) -- Jason Day posed with a trophy he always believed would be his when he arrived in the high desert of Arizona for the Match Play Championship.
He never could have imagined how.
Day stood over a 20-foot birdie putt to beat Victor Dubuissonon the 17th hole at Dove Mountain, a championship match that had been far from memorable to that point. When it finally ended on the 23rd hole, they delivered the wildest conclusion ever in the 16-year history this World Golf Championship.
Twice he thought Dubuisson had no shot. Twice the Frenchman delivered shots out of the desert that did not look humanly possible.
''I felt like I had a heart attack out there a couple of times,'' Day said. ''Match play is very exciting because you just don't know what's going to happen.''
The biggest flaw of the Accenture Match Play Championship is that it works in reverse. The excitement is at the start of the five-day tournament, and when the 64-man field is reduced to two finalists, the championship match rarely provides compelling theater no matter who is playing.
That all changed Sunday.
All it took was a 26-year-old Australian who played like he's ready to fulfill his talent, and a 23-year-old Frenchman who starred in defeat with two par saves in a playoff that even the great Seve Ballesteros would have applauded.
''Those two shots were amazing,'' Dubuisson said. ''I just played it like I had nothing to lose.''
By the end of a long day, so much was forgotten.
Day reached the final by holding off Rickie Fowler, who had a chance to cut the deficit to one hole with a 6-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole, and instead three-putted for bogey to lose the match. Dubuisson became the third player to reach the final in his debut when he beat Ernie Els on the 18th hole. Els hit into the bunker short of the green and missed a 12-foot putt to extend the match.
There were great moments in the final match, such as Day having to lay up on the par-5 11th hole only to hit a 3-iron from 269 yards into 5 feet to match birdies with Dubuisson. Day made another great putt on No. 15 to stay 2 up. He made putts like that all week.
But this is where it turned into theater rarely seen on a Sunday at Match Play.
Day was 2 up with two to play, and Dubuisson was in a fairway bunker 174 yards from the hole. Here's how the next two hours unfolded:
- Dubuisson blasted out to 15 feet and made birdie to stay alive.
- Day three-putted from the fringe on No. 18, leaving a 10-foot par putt for the win just short, flipping his putter in disgust.
Over the next two holes, Day thought he had won. And for good reason.
Dubuisson sailed over the green on No. 1 and into the desert, the ball lodged at the base of a cholla. Day was in the bunker, a fairly simple shot, especially when CBS announcer David Feherty walked over and said the Frenchman would have to take a penalty drop.
With an all-or-nothing swing, Dubuisson whacked his 9-iron through the sharp needles and into a TV cable. The ball scooted up a hill covered by 3-inch rough and onto the green to 4 feet below the hole. He made par to keep going.
''I was surprised because Feherty walked past and goes, 'He's got an unplayable.' And I'm going, 'Oh, great. That's perfect,''' Day said. ''After we both walked of the green, he (Feherty) looked at me and he goes, 'Sorry.'''
Now for the encore.
From the ninth fairway, Dubuisson pulled his approach left of the green, left of the bleacher and into the desert at the bottom of a bush. Surely, it was over.
''I walked over there and it was in a tree, a flower tree of some sort, in this little crevice. I mean, it looked absolutely dead,'' Day said. ''I'm like, 'Yes.' I hit 8-iron into 20 feet. There was so much pressure on him. And he does it again.
''At that time, you're just thinking, 'Do I need to just hand him the trophy now after those two shots?'''
Dubuisson had two chances to win. His pitch on the 10th hole took a hard hop and rolled out 12 feet, and they halved it with bogeys. And his 20-foot birdie putt on the 14th (the 22nd hole) turned away at the last inch.
Day ended the madness at Dove Mountain on the fifth extra hole when he pitched over a mound to 4 feet and made birdie, a sigh of relief as much as it was cause for celebration at capturing his first World Golf Championship.
It was worth $1.53 million and moved Day to No. 4 in the world.
Dubuisson earned $906,000, all but assuring a PGA Tour card for next year. And he all but clinched a spot on the Ryder Cup team in September, moving to the top of the points table by the equivalent of about $1.5 million.
He looks forward to playing more events in America. The next time, it's a safe bet everyone will know who he is.

Rickie Fowler makes biggest move in U.S. Ryder Cup standings

Rickie Fowler makes biggest move in U.S. Ryder Cup standings

PGA.com 
Bubba Watson, winner of the Northern Trust Open two weeks ago, was the only player to make a move in the top 10 of this week's U.S. Ryder Cup points standings.
Watson moved from No. 7 to No. 6 (and Zach Johnsondropped from No. 6 to No. 7) by finishing in a tie for ninth at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.
2014 RYDER CUP: U.S. points standings | How U.S. Points are earned | Team USA | Team Europe
Rickie Fowler, who made it to the semifinals at the Match Play and defeated Ernie Els in the consolation match, catapulted from No. 53 to No. 20 with his third-place finish.
Here's a look at the current top 12 (remember, the top 9 after the PGA Championship in August automatically qualify, while U.S. Captain Tom Watson fills out the team with three captain's picks):
1. Jimmy Walker 2. Dustin Johnson 3. Phil Mickelson 4. Harris English 5. Jason Dufner 6. Bubba Watson 7. Zach Johnson 8. Webb Simpson 9. Ryan Moore ----------------------- 10. Chris Kirk 11. Kevin Stadler 12. Jordan Spieth
Jordan Spieth -- the 2013 PGA Tour Rookie of the Year -- was the only player not previously in the top 12 to make a move at the Match Play. With his tie for fifth, Spieth took over the No. 12 spot, bumping previous No. 12 Patrick Reed to No. 13.
Jim Furyk, a veteran of eight U.S. Ryder Cup teams, moved from No. 19 to No. 14 with his tie for fifth at the Match Play.
Follow T.J. Auclair on Twitter, @tjauclair.

Losing finalist Dubuisson makes big PGA Tour splash

Losing finalist Dubuisson makes big PGA Tour splash

 
PGA: WGC - Accenture Match Play Championship-Final Round
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Feb 23, 2014; Marana, AZ, USA; Victor Dubuisson reacts after his putt on the 21st hole after winning …
(Reuters) - Three months after bursting into the limelight with his maiden victory on the European Tour, Victor Dubuissonelevated his profile on the PGA Tour in spectacular fashion Sunday at the WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship.
Despite never having played matchplay golf until this week's elite event in Marana, Arizona, the 23-year-old Frenchman produced several moments of magic, along with a bucketful of birdies, as he stormed through to Sunday's final.
Though bitterly disappointed after losing one down to Australian Jason Day in a marathon title match that lasted 23 holes at Dove Mountain, Dubuisson had much to be proud of after making only his fifth start on the U.S. circuit.
"I'm happy but, at the same time, disappointed because this afternoon I didn't play very well," the Cannes native told reporters after a birdie by Day at the 23rd hole, the driveable par-four 15th, ended the match.
"I just battled, especially the back nine. And at the end, I really battled hard because I wanted to take a chance, at least try to take my chance.
"I've learned that my nerves, my mental approach, can be very solid in a difficult situation. I've learned that anything can happen. I did well this week and I had some good nerve against my opponent. I know what I have to do now to improve."
Dubuisson, who in November won the inaugural Turkish Airlines Open where Tiger Woods and U.S. Open champion Justin Rose were also in the field, conjured two spectacular recovery shots on Sunday that fans watching will never forget.
On the 19th hole, the par-four first, he got up and down to save par from desert scrub over the back right of the green, hitting his third shot from behind a cactus, via sand, rocks and a television cable strung in front of him, to four feet.
WRY SMILE
One hole later, at the par-four ninth, he missed the green badly to the left with his approach, his ball ending up in a bush from where he amazingly hit his third to seven feet, prompting a wry smile from Day.
"I just play my shot 100 percent, like it was a playable shot, like I have nothing to lose," Dubuisson said of his strategy.
"I battled as hard as I could at the end," added the Frenchman, a brilliant amateur who turned professional after he missed the cut at the 2010 British Open following his only major start so far.
Day was astonished as anyone after watching Dubuisson's two up-and-downs from seemingly impossible positions.
"Vic coming down the stretch was just unbelievable," the 26-year-old Australian said. "I've never seen someone as young, apart from Jordan Spieth, and in the old days, Tiger Woods, how clutch he was, especially out of the cactus.
"I kept shaking my head because it was so surprising because there was a couple of times there where I thought he was absolutely dead. The tournament was mine (to win). I'm just so thankful to be here right now," said the winner.
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by Larry Fine)