The Golf Blog says: Francesco Molinari, who may be the hottest golfer on the planet the past two months, won his first major at the 2018 Open Championship, with an unbelievable bogey-free weekend. Molinari shot a 2-under to finish 8-under for the tourney, which was 2 shots clear of the field. Third-round leaders Jordan Spieth and Xander Schauffele faltered on the front nine to give up the lead, but Schauffele recovered and came close, but bogeyed No. 17. And then there was Molinari’s playing partner, ahem, Tiger Woods, who was the first one in that group to take the lead for the tournament on Sunday. Twitter erupted as Tiger was leading another major on Sunday–for the first time in a decade.
And here is the worldwide heat map just after noon in the east coast, showing Tiger Twitter activity when he was squarely in the hunt. Just amazing. #Tiger #TheOpen @TigerWoods pic.twitter.com/Ri5zjHExoY
— Tiger Tracker (@GCTigerTracker) July 22, 2018
But Tiger’s lead was short-lived. Here’s what happened.
Hole 10
Tiger Woods took a 1-shot lead after the front nine, after shooting 2-under 34 and going 7-under for the tournament. Spieth and Molinari were 1 back. Woods hit his 3-wood into the left-side fairway bunker. Woods then hit a miraculous bunker shot from the fairway, swinging his wedge with all his muscles. Woods saved par, to keep a 1-shot lead.
Tiger Woods with an amazing shot from the fairway bunker on 10 to stay at -7 and in the lead at #TheOpenpic.twitter.com/OpxlpvxQot
— Always Pressing POD (@alwayspressDFS) July 22, 2018
Hole 11
Woods must have been feeling confident or pumped up, because he pulled out a 3-iron on the tee. NBC analyst Johnny Miller immediately questioned the selection, wondering why Tiger wasn’t going with the driving iron with graphite shaft. Miller may have been thinking about the 20 mph wind blowing into the tee and also in a slice direction, or he might have been thinking that Tiger had hit the driving iron well. Sure enough, Tiger made a bad swing with the 3-iron and the ball sliced to the rough, blown even more off course by the wind. On his approach shot, Tiger either bladed the ball or hit a flyer out of the rough, and the ball went straight for the gallery well off-course and deep. Luckily for Tiger, the ball hit a spectator on the head and bounced back toward the bunker and green.
What it's like to get hit by a Tiger Woods tee shot…pic.twitter.com/VVNi841li0
— Josh Berhow (@Josh_Berhow) July 22, 2018
All things considered, it could have been worse–such as with his ball into gourse bushes. Tiger had a green-side pitch, which wasn’t easy, but it was much better than where it looked like the ball was heading. On-course analyst David Feherty said Tiger had 2 options: (1) he could try a high flop shot with very little green to work with, or (2) a pitch to the left side of the green. Feherty said the “more sensible” shot was pitching to the left part of the green, away from the flag. Miller said that Tiger looked like he was practicing for the flop. Feherty remarked, “Really?? Now it’s a party.”
Tiger Woods sets up for a high flop shot toward the pin
But the party was over for Tiger. His flop failed to hit the green. And from off the green, Tiger elected to putt his ball, but it went too far by the hole and Tiger had to settle for a 2-putt double bogey. Tiger had birdied Hole No. 11 three days in a row. But, on Sunday, the hole came back to bite Tiger. Tiger’s decision off the tee and off the green cost him the tournament and a chance at his 15th major, what would have been his first in a decade. Tiger gave up the lead on that hole and never got it back. The high-risk flop shot was unnecessary. It’s something you might see out of Phil Mickelson, who’s known for his gambler’s, go-for-broke mentality. But, with a one-shot lead on the back nine, Tiger probably should have settled for bogey at worst and played the easier pitch to the left side of the green. C’mon, how many times have you seen a flop shot at Carnoustie this week, let along links courses in general?
At 42 years old and in a 10-year majors drought, Tiger may have squandered his best chance to win his 15th major. What could have been.
TweetThis is a dream come true. I can’t thank everyone enough. Family, friends, and fans- I couldn’t have done it without you all. This is what TEAM REED IS ABOUT! @TheMasters #TheMasters #MastersChamp pic.twitter.com/NBIJAWUvX2
— Patrick Reed (@PReedGolf) April 9, 2018
The Golf Blog says: Patrick Reed aka “Captain America” showed nerves of steel as he claimed his first major at Augusta National, holding off dramatic Sunday charges by Rickie Fowler and Jordan Spieth. Rory, who?
On what should be a celebration of Reed’s major accomplishment, we were surprised to hear about some apparent backlash against Reed. What did Reed do? We were waiting to hear about some adulterous affair, illegal behavior, or use of performance enhancing drugs (though, with his physique, that wouldn’t be our first suspicion). But those stories never materialized.
I knew Reed wouldn't be a popular win, but I've gotta admit that I'm surprised by the amount of backlash against him. What exactly is it that people hate? It can't just be his in-your-face confidence.
— Ashley Mayo (@AshleyKMayo) April 9, 2018
Instead, the worst news we heard from some golf reporters is that Reed apparently doesn’t like his parents or sister, and he chose to side with his wife over them. Wait? Is that the big news? The guy don’t like his family. Well, join the club. But, wait, there’s more: Reed’s college golf teammates hated him, and he may have acted like an A-hole in college. For real? That’s it? That’s all you got? That sounds like millions of other college students in the United States. Hold on, there’s more: in a book published a couple years ago, some players apparently accused Reed of attempting to cheat during a college match by hitting the wrong ball. Oh, OK, that sounds serious. But who knows what happened? Remember, Ken Venturi accused Arnold Palmer of actually cheating to win the 1958 Masters!!
TweetThe moment that saved Jordan Spieth's round. #TheOpen pic.twitter.com/deDHAszH92
— Global Golf Post (@GlobalGolfPost) July 24, 2017
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Heart of a Champion. Find a way. Congratulations @JordanSpieth, 3-time Major Winner. #IWILL pic.twitter.com/5S1ZZ4Bh5X
— Under Armour (@UnderArmour) July 23, 2017
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