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For 2nd straight tourney, Tiger looks human

Like at PGA, Woods’ putter fails, which costs him chance to win Barclays

Image: WoodsGetty Images
Tiger Woods hangs his head. Woods missed a great chance to contend for The Barclays title on Sunday, but his putter failed him, writes Doug Ferguson.

JERSEY CITY, N.J. - Much to his chagrin, Tiger Woods has put some suspense back into golf.

Give him the lead going into the final round of the major, and victory is no longer as certain as death, taxes and Woods wearing a red shirt on Sunday. Watch him hit a clutch shot to the 18th green, and there is no guarantee he’ll make the putt.

Y.E. Yang delivered a shocker two weeks ago at the PGA Championship when he became the first player to beat golf’s best closer, rallying from two shots behind Woods for a three-shot victory at Hazeltine.

Woods rarely looked so human. And then on Sunday at Liberty National, he bled a little more.

He was on the cusp of contention for most of the final round at The Barclays until the bell rang for the final lap. Then, Woods made a 10-foot birdie on the 14th to move closer to the lead, a 15-foot par putt on the next hole to stay there, and a deft chip-and-run to 3 feet for birdie on the 16th that pulled him within one shot.

Needing a birdie on the final hole to post the clubhouse lead — at least force a playoff, maybe enough win — he drilled a 6-iron from 189 yards to the back pin at the 18th and listened to those familiar roars as the ball settled 7 feet from the cup.

Heath Slocum and Steve Stricker, tied for the lead, were on the 18th tee as Woods stood over his birdie putt. Even from 467 yards away, it was not difficult to figure out what was going on. If the cheers weren’t enough, that red shirt is hard to miss.

“Usually he makes it,” Slocum said. “Ho-hum for him.”

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The ball slid by on the left side of the cup, and they could hear the groans — twice. Because the large video boards and TVs in corporate chalets had about a 10-second delay, the big news reached some people later than others.

“It’s kind of funny, actually,” Slocum said, referring to the double dose of reaction. “But I knew that he had missed it.”

That wasn’t the case for Slocum. Despite hitting a fairway bunker, playing short of the green and hitting a wedge to 20 feet, he rolled in the best par putt of his life for a one-shot victory. Stricker had a chance to tie, but missed from 10 feet.

“I guess you can’t make ’em all,” Slocum said.

Yang was the first to see for himself when he took down the biggest name in golf.

Slocum beat a bunch of stars. The group one shot behind featured Woods, Stricker, Ernie Els and Padraig Harrington, who have combined to win 20 majors. All of them have been at least No. 3 in the world at some point.

The common thread in both tournaments was Woods having a chance to win, and Woods finishing second.

“That’s the way it goes sometimes,” he said.

Along with his 81 victories worldwide, he has finished second 32 times in tournaments recognized by the world golf rankings.

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Even so, this was only the fifth time in his career that Woods has finished runner-up in consecutive tournaments. The last time it happened was at the end of his 2006 season, when he was second to Yang at the HSBC Champions in Shanghai, then surrendered a lead on the back nine to Harrington and lost to him in a playoff at the Dunlop Phoenix in Japan.

Go back to 2005 to find the last time it happened in America. Woods was runner-up to Michael Campbell in the U.S. Open, then tied for second at the Western Open in Chicago.

Unlike the other four occasions, Woods had a realistic chance of winning both times as he stood on the 18th tee.


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