Continental shift
OAKMONT, Pa. – Tiger Woods missed a right-to-left putt Sunday that would have forced a playoff at Oakmont Country Club, and the 107th U.S. Open officially became “The International Open of America.”
Angel Cabrera of Argentina waddled off with the championship by shooting 1-under-par 69 and finishing at 285, 5 over par.
That was enough, on a humid day and a treacherous track, to hold off Woods and Jim Furyk, who ended up one-shot back at 286. Niclas Fasth finished fourth at 287, and David Toms and Bubba Watson finished four shots back at 289.
Cabrera joins a U.S. Open winners’ line behind Geoff Ogilvy (Australia, 2006), Michael Campbell (New Zealand, 2005) and Retief Goosen (South Africa, 2004).
But at least, this year, two Americans finished second.
After four rounds of a wild kingdom, survival-of-the-fittest competition, a man nicknamed Pato (the duck) beat a Tiger on a day when a bear had to be chased from the seventh fairway.
English is definitely a second language for the 37-year-old Cabrera, but he soaked up a lot of American love as he celebrated his victory with the gallery after his win.
“I watched all the majors on TV when I was a kid, and I never thought I would be here at this moment,” Cabrera said. “It is very difficult to describe this moment. Probably tomorrow when I wake up with this trophy beside my bed, I will realize that I have won the U.S. Open.”
All Cabrera did to win is get in the clubhouse first at 5-under and then wait to see if two former U.S. Open winners, Woods and Furyk, could track him down.
The smart money would have guessed it would happen, but guess what …
Cabrera won his first major in his 31st career try.
He became the first Argentine to win the event and only the second man from his country to win a major, joining Roberto de Vicenzo, who claimed the 1967 British Open. Unlike de Vicenzo, who lost a chance to win the 1968 Masters when he signed an incorrect scorecard, Cabrera had all his U.S. Open paperwork in order.
Cabrera was the only player this week to shoot two rounds under par.
“Angel played a beautiful round of golf,” Woods conceded.
Cabrera, though, gave both Woods and Furyk a back-nine opening and almost frittered away the tournament by making bogeys at Nos. 16 and 17 before closing with a clutch par at the 18th.
Furyk, tied for the lead and playing one group behind Cabrera, botched his chance when he hit driver into the thick, greenside rough at No. 17 and chopped out for a bogey. Furyk made par at No. 18, but it was too late.
Last year, he made bogey at the 72nd hole at Winged Foot to finish one shot behind Ogivly.
“No one likes consolation prizes,” Furyk, who shot even-par 70, said afterward. “A second is not that much fun, to be honest with you.”
Tell Woods about it.
He sought his 13th professional major title but he couldn’t find a birdie in his bag when he needed it. He managed only one birdie in his last 32 holes and had none on Sunday as he finished with a 72.
Woods has won all of his 12 majors while having at least a share of the lead on Sunday, but has yet to win one from behind.
He was one shot back entering the final round of this year’s Masters, seized a piece of the lead early, but then yielded the title to little-known Zach Johnson.
Two majors. Two opportunities lost.
“That’s one of the things I need to go back and analyze,” Woods said of his game.
He started Sunday two shots behind leader and final-round partner Aaron Baddeley. And while Baddeley collapsed to a 10-over 80 after opening with a triple bogey and Woods briefly took a piece of the lead, the world’s No. 1 player couldn’t hold it.
A double-bogey 6 at the par-four third had Woods in catch-up mode all day.
Woods, at 6 over, still had three holes left with Cabrera safely in the clubhouse at 5 over but could manage only pars.
It all came down, fittingly, to the mighty par-four 18th, which played the toughest all week – to an average of 4.6.
Woods needed some magic to force a playoff and thought he drilled his 3-wood off the tee only to watch it skid to a stop along the second cut of rough.
Woods used all his strength to muscle a wedge shot from there, taking a huge clump of grass with his swing, but his shot landed 20 feet from the pin, with a big right-to-left break.
When Woods could not coax his birdie putt home, Cabrera became the improbable winner. A player who likes to sneak puffs from a cigarette and swing from the heels, he picked a fine time to score his first big win on American soil. He had scored three wins on the PGA European Tour but has never savored anything like Sunday.
Cabrera prevailed while golf carnage unfolded around him.
Players did free falls from the leader board.
Poor Baddeley. He began the day with a two-shot lead over Woods but couldn’t get past the first hole. The player with the best third-round putting average, at 1.56, Baddeley three-putted from six feet at the opening hole for a triple-bogey seven. He was never heard from after that and finished tied for 13th at 12-over 292.
“I had no momentum with me at all,” Baddeley said.
Paul Casey and Stephen Ames started in the next-to-last group, only three behind Baddeley, and shared the tournament lead at one point.
And then all bogey broke loose.
Casey played the front nine in 8-over 43, shot 76 and finished at 291.
Ames had his usual laid-back look and big-tooth green, when he stepped to the tee box at the par-four seventh. He made a triple, then doubled the ninth on his way to 76 and 11-over.
Steve Stricker popped in for a leader-board visit, getting to 5 over at one point and a share of the lead, but he played the back nine in 42 and ended up 12 over par.
Oakmont was a drag for most players, but not for the chain-smoking Cabrera.
“There are some players that have psychologists … ,” Cabrerra said. “I smoke.”
Sunday, Cabrera smoked them all.