Quantcast Trevor Immelman Seals Three Shot Masters Victory - Golf International Magazine Online
in
Tees2Greens Home Page

Navigate This Blog

Have You Seen This?

Subscribe To This Blog

Golf International Magazine Online

Follow The World... with Golf International Magazine Subscribe Online

Subscribe To This Blog

Trevor Immelman Seals Three Shot Masters Victory
Written By: Golf International on Apr 14 2008
Rate This:
Trevor Immelman has never felt better.

Four months after he had a tumor removed from his back, Immelman handled the wind and pressure of Augusta National far better than anyone chasing him Sunday to win the Masters, the first South African in a green jacket in 30 years.

Immelman held it together around Amen Corner and stretched his lead to as many as six shots on the back nine, taking the life out of a Masters that began with so much hype.

A two-putt par on the final hole gave him a 3-over 75, matching the highest final round by a Masters champion. Even so, it was good enough for a three-shot victory over Tiger Woods, whose hopes for a calendar Grand Slam ended with a thud.

Woods never got within five shots of the lead when he was on the course, twice missed birdie putts inside 8 feet and had to settle for a 72 and his second consecutive runner-up finish in the Masters.

“I learned my lesson there with the press,” Woods said with a smile. He was the one who started the talk about a Grand Slam by stating three months ago that winning all four majors in the same year was “easily within reason.”

The only slam possibilities now belong to Immelman, a 28-year-old with a polished swing, who finally realized his potential in the wicked wind of Augusta and a final round that yielded only four rounds under par.

Immelman, who finished at 8-under 280, started the week by playing a practice round with his boyhood idol, Gary Player, who won his third Masters in 1978 and set a record by playing for the 51st time.

Player told Immelman he was good enough to win the green jacket, and he left him a voicemail Saturday night that Immelman played on his speaker phone for his family to hear. The message: “I know you’re going to win.”

“He’s been on me all week, telling me to believe in myself,” Immelman said. “He also told me to keep my head still on putts. It’s really a special moment, and I’m glad I pulled it through for him.”

Reached by telephone in Abu Dhabi, Player told his assistant: “I am so proud of Trevor. What a thrill it was to see him come back from major surgery and beat Tiger. I can’t wait to see him and shake his hand personally.”

Immelman’s wife, Carminita, and their 1-year-old son were waiting for him behind the green. Jacob took hold of the 18th flag, fussing when he couldn’t go into the scoring shack to be with his father.

Immelman’s parents also were there to greet him with hugs. His father, Johan, is the former commissioner of the Sunshine Tour in South Africa.

“It’s his moment, not mine,” said the father, who waved away a reporter.

No one doubted he was capable of winning a major, but maybe not this one. Only four months ago, doctors discovered a tumor in his diaphragm that required surgery through his back to remove it. The tumor was benign and the recovery was quick, even though it took him two months to get his game back in shape.

The recovery hit warp speed this week at Augusta, where Immelman had only broken par once in his five previous Masters.

“This has been the ultimate roller-coaster ride, and I hate roller coasters,” Immelman said. “I win the Nedbank Challenge in South Africa, and a week later I’m having an operation to remove a tumor. … I felt like I had to start from zero again. Here I am after missing the cut last week.

“Masters champion—it’s the craziest thing I’ve ever heard of.”

Immelman built a two-shot lead with three rounds in the 60s, and held it together during a few nervy moments.

He made a 10-foot par save from the bunker at No. 9 to keep a two-shot cushion, but continued to look shaky. Immelman missed the 11th green well to the right when his chip didn’t quite reach and he was left with a 20-foot putt that was slick and dangerous.

Ahead of him, Woods was gaining momentum.

Woods holed a 70-foot birdie putt on the 11th, made an acrobatic escape from the trees on the 13th and spun a wedge down the slope on the par-5 13th that left him 5 feet away for birdie.

Immelman holed his par putt. Woods missed, just as he has done the last two years on the back nine of a major he once dominated. Brandt Snedeker and Steve Flesch, the last two players with any hope, folded quickly.

Woods closed with a 72 and has finished 3-2-2 in his last three Masters. It also was his fifth runner-up in a major.

Immelman earned $1.35 million for his second PGA Tour victory, with Woods also finishing second behind him two years ago in the Western Open.

“I was trying to be tough out there,” Immelman said. “There’s a disaster around every corner.”

Emotions were running wild for all the contenders, none more than Snedeker, who tied for third with Stewart Cink. The 27-year-old American with Huck Finn looks and a constant smile made only six pars in his round of 77, tying for the lead with an eagle on the second hole but stumbling badly the rest of the way.

“I went from extreme highs to extreme lows, and that’s what you don’t want to do around here,” Snedeker said.

Flesch was within two shots of the lead until a gust caught his 8-iron on the 12th hole, sending it into Rae’s Creek for a double bogey. He bogeyed four straight holes after that and shot 78.

Ultimately, everyone made it easy on Immelman. The three guys behind him at the start of the final round were a combined 18-over par.


Woods wasn’t much better. He managed only three birdies, the last one from 18 feet on the final hole that came way too late. Woods could only offer a dismissive wave when the ball disappeared.

“I hit the ball well enough to contend,” Woods said. “I definitely hit the ball well enough to put some pressure on Trevor. I just didn’t make any putts.”

The first blast of wind hit Amen Corner an hour before the leaders teed off, a sign of how tough it would be in the final round. And that didn’t account for the pressure on four guys contending for the first time in a major—at Augusta, no less.

The first to fall was Paul Casey, two shots out of the lead until it took him two shots to get out of the bunker on No. 4 for double bogey. Casey dropped six shots in a five-hole stretch, including the par-3 sixth, when he called a penalty on himself for his ball moving a fraction of an inch as he stood over a 3-foot putt. Casey closed with a 79.

For the others, it took awhile longer to collapse.

Snedeker provided most of the excitement on an otherwise dull day, holing a 35-foot eagle putt on No. 2 for a share of the lead. He made a 45-foot birdie putt across the green on the 12th for a birdie to pull within three shots.

But there was a massive shortage of pars, and far too many mistakes.

The biggest came on the par-5 13th. Riding the momentum from a two-shot swing on the previous hole, Snedeker went for the green in two and left it well out to the right, finding the bottom of Rae’s Creek for the second straight day. Snedeker held the club at both ends and flexed the shaft, wanting to snap it in half.

“Golly, man, if somebody could tell me how to play that second shot, I’d love to know,” he said. “Because two days in a row, I’ve hit it in the damn water.”

Immelman wisely laid up, then fired a wedge into the back bank and watched it roll down to 2 feet for birdie. As the bogeys piled up behind him, the South African suddenly found himself in the most beautiful spot at Augusta.

He had a five-shot lead with five holes to play, most of the trouble out of the way.

His lone mistake was a tee shot into the water on the 16th for double bogey, but by then he could afford it.

Final Masters scores

280 Trevor Immelman (Rsa) 68 68 69 75

283 Tiger Woods 72 71 68 72

284 Stewart Cink 72 69 71 72, Brandt Snedeker 69 68 70 77

286 Phil Mickelson 71 68 75 72, Steve Flesch 72 67 69 78, Padraig Harrington (Irl) 74 71 69 72

287 Robert Karlsson (Swe) 70 73 71 73, Andres Romero (Arg) 72 72 70 73, Miguel Angel Jimenez (Spa) 77 70 72 68

288 Paul Casey (Eng) 71 69 69 79, Nick Watney 75 70 72 71, Lee Westwood (Eng) 69 73 73 73

289 Vijay Singh (Fij) 72 71 72 74, Sean O'Hair 72 71 71 75, Stuart Appleby (Aus) 76 70 72 71

290 Mike Weir (Can) 73 68 75 74, Retief Goosen (Rsa) 71 71 72 76, Henrik Stenson (Swe) 74 72 72 72

291 Justin Leonard 72 74 72 73, Zach Johnson 70 76 68 77, Boo Weekley 72 74 68 77, Bubba Watson 74 71 73 73, Brian Bateman 69 76 72 74

292 Jeev Milkha Singh (Ind) 71 74 72 75, Arron Oberholser 71 70 74 77, J.B. Holmes 73 70 73 76, Adam Scott (Aus) 75 71 70 76, Ian Poulter (Eng) 70 69 75 78, Angel Cabrera (Arg) 73 72 73 74, Stephen Ames (Can) 70 70 77 75, Richard Sterne (Rsa) 73 72 73 74

293 Jim Furyk 70 73 73 77, Nick Dougherty (Eng) 74 69 74 76, Heath Slocum 71 76 77 69

295 Justin Rose (Eng) 68 78 73 76, Todd Hamilton 74 73 75 73, Johnson Wagner 72 74 74 75

296 Niclas Fasth (Swe) 75 70 76 75, Geoff Ogilvy (Aus) 75 71 76 74

298 KJ Choi (Kor) 72 75 78 73

299 Robert Allenby (Aus) 72 74 72 81, David Toms 73 74 72 80

300 Ian Woosnam (Wal) 75 71 76 78

302 Sandy Lyle (Sco) 72 75 78 77



Add to Technorati Favorites

Comments

No comments have been made.
So it's up to you to get the ball rolling...

About Golf International

Follow The World... with Golf International Magazine

Subscribe Online

Since its launch in 1997, Golf International has forged a reputation as the standout quality title in golf publishing. The caliber of columnists, writers, players and coaches is unrivalled, while the design and layout of the magazine separates it still further from the competition. In a congested market wrought with mediocrity, Golf International appeals to committed golfers who are as serious about their game as we are about ours.

The ethos behind Golf International is simple: our aim is to entertain, inform and educate our readers with a wide range of fresh and original editorial. Peter Alliss, Ian Wooldridge, Colin Callander, Tom Cox, Paul Mahoney, Clive Agran and John Huggan are listed among our regular columnists. Other notable contributors include Paul Trow and David Davies. We are particularly proud of our association with the teaching staff of the DLGA, who, under the guidance of the world’s No.1 coach – David Leadbetter – provide some of the finest instruction you will find anywhere. Monty’s coach, Denis Pugh, is another regular contributor, as is leading European Tour coach, Peter Cowen, and one of the world’s most innovative instructors, Robert Baker. The popular Senior Tour player, Tony Johnstone, has also made Golf International his literary home.

With the generous and on-going support of Volvo Car UK, we are committed to developing our Amateur pages, featuring regular profiles, interviews and tournament news from both the men’s and women’s amateur game. Another innovation has been our Business pages, which provide the magazine with a unique angle on business-related stories, along with regular features from our resident experts on golfing memorabilia (Kevin McGimpsey), betting (Jeremy Chapman) and motoring (Anthony ffrench-Constant). We hope you enjoy the magazine and invite you to be a part of our continued success.

With a new distribution partner – Comag – in place from the August ’06 issue (and already delivering a significant increase in newsstand sales), we will be raising our game in the retail sector while at the same time consolidating our position as the premium title in the air and selected-sponsorship sectors.

Privacy Policy | Legal Statement | Advertise
© 2006-2008 Tees2Greens, Inc.