Bubba Watson

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Bubba Watson Wins Travelers Championship
CROMWELL, Conn. — Bubba Watson really wanted to play well at the Travelers Championship to impress U.S. Ryder Cup captain Corey Pavin.He did.Watson overcame a six-stroke deficit Sunday to force a playoff with Pavin and Scott Verplank, then beat Verplank with a par on the second playoff hole.Watson, the long-hitting left-hander from the Florida Panhandle, closed with a 4-under 66 to match Verplank (64) and Pavin (66) at 14 under. Pavin dropped out on the first extra hole.


Travelers Championship Leaderboard

1. Watson-x (-14)
T-2. Verplank (-14)
T-2. Pavin (-14)
4. Riley (-13)
T-5. Four tied at -12

x — won in playoff

• Scores
But he didn’t quit. He hit his tee shot 396 yards off the cart path, and made a 6-foot birdie putt to get into the playoff.”I guess you can’t say I choked, because I came back and birdied the next hole and now I’m the champion,” he said.No player in the first three groups made it into the playoff.Rose held the lead until he missed a 10-foot par putt on 10 and moved into a three-way tie with playing partner Ben Curtis and Verplank.Rose lost the lead after a bogey on the 12th hole, then hit his tee shot on 15 into the water on his way to a double bogey.Curtis, who bogeyed just two holes in the tournament coming into Sunday, hit his tee shot on 12 out of bounds to the left, and made a double bogey. Both he and Rose bogeyed 16. Curtis finished with a 73 to tie for 13th at 10 under.Chris Riley began the day at 8 under, but eagled the par-4 14th from 155 yards and was 5 under on the back nine. He finished a stroke out of the playoff at 13 under.”I bogeyed my first two holes and, I was like, ‘Ho, hum. Here we go,’” he said. “I was in something like 45th place. What makes this course so great is you can make up ground.”Watson ended Europe’s tour winning streak at three. Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell won the big prize last week at the U.S. Open. The Memorial was Rose’s first tour win, and fellow Englishman Lee Westwood won the St. Jude Classic.Watson earned .08 million and moved into eighth place in the FedEx Cup rankings.
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

Bubba Watson

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Bubba Watson Wins Travelers Championship
CROMWELL, Conn. — Bubba Watson stands 6-foot-3. Corey Pavin measures in at 5-foot-9. Watson’s drives routinely reach more than 300 yards. Pavin would need a friendly cart path bounce to get that far. Watson ranked T-58 in driving accuracy at this week’s Travelers Championship. Pavin was No. 1.


Travelers Championship Leaderboard

1. Watson-x (-14)
T-2. Verplank (-14)
T-2. Pavin (-14)
4. Riley (-13)
T-5. Four tied at -12

x — won in playoff

• Scores
When it comes to playing golf, the two have nothing in common, right? The pair, along with Scott Verplank, faced off in a playoff Sunday at the Travelers Championship in which Watson brought home his first PGA Tour victory after shooting a final-round 66.”If you look at Corey, [we] are just alike, except he’s won 15 times and he’s the Ryder Cup captain,” Watson said with a laugh. “But we’re just alike. He shapes the ball more than anybody, and I shape the ball more than anybody. I’m just younger, so I hit it a little bit farther than he does. That’s it. Love you, Corey.” The simple fact that two players with diametrically opposite styles of golf games can reach a playoff in the same tournament proves that this week’s PGA Tour event is one of the fairest tests in golf. Pavin echoed that fact after being eliminated on the first extra hole Sunday evening. “Bubba’s one of the longest hitters on tour, and he won, and you can look at short hitters that have done well [here] in the past,” Pavin said. “So it’s just a golf course that fits my game. I feel comfortable on it.” Maybe Watson and Pavin aren’t all that different despite the overwhelming statistical evidence. At least that’s what aspiring Ryder Cup hopeful Watson said after the victory in an overt attempt to curry favor with the man who will lead the U.S. squad against the Europeans in Wales. How big was the disparity off the tee? On the 18th hole in regulation, Watson hit his drive 396 yards (with a little help from a cart path). Pavin’s drive on the same hole before the playoff, which he admittedly popped up, was just 242 yards. That’s a difference of 154 yards, or a likely 9-iron in Watson’s case. After the victory, Watson jumped up to 13th in the Ryder Cup point standings. The top eight after the PGA Championship in August automatically qualify, and Pavin will make his captain’s picks Sept. 7, just weeks before the Oct. 1-3 matches in Wales. Watson, a native of Bagdad, Fla. — also the home of PGA Tour players Boo Weekley and Heath Slocum — made no mistakes about using this experience in front of Pavin to prove he can hit the clutch shots when everything is on the line. In the playoff, Watson’s second shot on the par-4 18th stopped inches from the hole, just shy of ending the playoff with an eagle. After Verplank made his 10-foot birdie putt, Watson’s tap-in was just a formality, and the two went off to the par-3 16th while Pavin exited. In their careers, Pavin owns 15 victories and a major championship and Watson’s win total just hit one. Granted, Watson is 31 and Pavin just turned Champions Tour-eligible with his 50th birthday this past November. But there’s no telling what’s in store for Watson. The Americans’ 2008 Ryder Cup victory at Valhalla included long bomber J.B. Holmes. If Pavin were interested in having a prodigiously long driver of the golf ball to help change the complexion of some matches, he could do much worse than having Bubba Watson on his side at Celtic Manor.

Kevin Maguire is the golf editor for ESPN.com. He can be reached at Kevin.Maguire@espn.com.
ESPN Golf

ESPN Golf

CROMWELL, Conn. — Justin Rose shot an 8-under 62, birdieing five consecutive back-nine holes for the second straight round, to take a four-stroke lead over Kevin Sutherland on Friday in the Travelers Championship.


Travelers Championship Leaderboard

1. Rose (-14)
2. Sutherland (-10)
T-3. Singh (-9)
T-3. Lunde (-9)
T-3. Pavin (-9)
T-3. Wi (-9)

• Scores
Rose, the Memorial winner three weeks ago who failed to qualify for the U.S. Open last week at Pebble Beach, broke the tournament record for the first 36 holes, finishing at 14-under 126. The 62 was one off the course record at TPC River Highlands.”Yesterday’s finish was amazing, ran five birdies in the last six and then again today, managed to get five in a row again,” said Rose, who started his second round on the 10th tee. “Birdied 10 of the 12 holes, so from just cruising, suddenly I went to the top of the leaderboard just like that and began to get a nice little lead there.”Sutherland shot his second straight 65. Vijay Singh (66), Corey Pavin (66), Bill Lunde (63) and Charlie Wi (67) were five strokes back at 9-under.After making 162 PGA Tour starts without winning, Rose broke through at the Memorial three weeks ago. This was his first start since.”I think I’m just on a nice streak,” Rose said. “I’m not getting in my way. I’m letting it happen. It’s nice to not field the question, ‘Can this be your first win?’ I must say. That helps. Having done that, that’s one question that it’s just something less that I have to think about.”Winning a tournament in its own right is difficult. So, when you have the added expectation of it trying to be your first, that can be harder sometimes,” he said.Sutherland won’t be complaining about consistency after his 65s.”I’m very pleased. I’ve hit the ball very well,” Sutherland said. “I’ve had 10 birdies for the two days and haven’t had a bogey yet. I’m playing real consistent, real solid.”Lunde eagled Nos. 13 and 15.”That’s something on this golf course,” said Lunde, who also started on the 10th tee. “On the back nine, you got some opportunities to make some eagles and make a lot of birdies. It’s nice to get off to a quick start, to get the momentum going early.”Singh birdied his first two holes.”It started off, and I thought, ‘Here we go. It’s going to be a good one,’ and then I didn’t take the opportunities on the front nine,” said Singh, who played only par golf over the next seven holes.Pavin’s birdie bid on the ninth hole, his last of the day, stopped a revolution short.”It’s all fine by me,” Pavin said. “I’ve been here a long time. I guess the ones who are still alive are still cheering for me.”All eight of Rose’s birdie putts were inside 11 feet. His putts on the 13th and 15th holes were tap-in birdies after a pair of chip shots.”Really, I felt under-prepared coming in here,” Rose said. “I got to tell you. Didn’t do a lot of practice. I’m doing a lot of things well. My feel’s really good.”For a while, I was chasing results because I knew I was playing well, instead of just letting it happen. So, it’s a very fine line out here. It’s very subtle, and I haven’t really changed much. Suddenly, my name’s up there, and you think, ‘Well, what’s different?’ But really, nothing is different. It’s just suddenly happening,” he said.
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

CROMWELL, Conn. — Justin Rose birdied five of his final six holes for a 6-under 64 and a share of the first-round lead Thursday in the Travelers Championship.Rose, the Memorial winner three weeks ago who failed to qualify for the U.S. Open last week at Pebble Beach, missed a 12-foot birdie putt on 18, leaving him tied with morning starters Padraig Harrington, Charlie Wi and Mathew Goggin.Rose was 1 under through 12 holes, before making his run, which included a 34-foot birdie putt on 17.


Travelers Championship Leaderboard

T-1. Rose (-6)
T-1. Goggin (-6)
T-1. Harrington (-6)
T-1. Wi (-6)
T-5. Seven tied at -5

• Scores
“I was more than happy to walk off there with a par,” he said. “But sometimes when things are going your way, you roll in a 30-footer and suddenly, I was like, ‘Things are going right now.’”Harrington and Rose are trying to run Europe’s tour winning streak to four.”As I’ve been saying for quite a while, European golf is very strong and there’s a lot of good young players finding their way in the game, learning how to win, given the opportunity,” Harrington said. “You’ve seen three in the last three weeks and a few others during the year.”Northern Ireland’s Graeme McDowell won the big prize last week at the U.S. Open. The Memorial was Rose’s first tour win, and fellow Englishman Lee Westwood won before that at the St. Jude Classic.Harrington, Goggin and Wi all capitalized on perfect morning conditions, finishing well before high wind and heavy rain hit the area in the afternoon, forcing a 90-minute delay.Harrington birdied his first three holes and was 4 under at the turn.Goggin made his run on the back nine, birdieing Nos. 13, 15 and 17.Both Goggin and Wi played bogey-free rounds. Wi made four back-nine birdies, including three straight on 12, 13 and 14 to pull into even.”The conditions were perfect when we teed off,” Wi said. “The wind didn’t start blowing until about the seventh hole so I was able to make some birdies when the conditions were perfect.”Vijay Singh shot a 65 in the afternoon despite wind gusts in the area of up to 25 mph.”It wasn’t totally into us, except for six holes, I think,” Singh said. “It wasn’t awfully bad. It was gusty, but if you timed it well, it wasn’t that bad.”Six others also shot 65s, including 50-year-old former U.S. Open champion Corey Pavin, who hit all 14 fairways in regulation.”It’s really important to hit the fairways, keep it in play, hit some nice shots into the greens and take a birdie when you can get it,” he said. “And it’s not a course generally where the scoring is tremendously low, but it can be, but you have to play smart golf here and play your own game.”Last year, Kenny Perry won by shooting 22-under par. Harrington said knowing scores could go that low forced some aggressive play.”You got to think you got to make birdies,” Harrington said. “You really do. You gotta poach first and take your chance every now and again that you will get yourself in trouble, but hopefully you’ll recover. But you’ve gotta take a chance to make plenty of birdies.”The shot of the day came from Chad Campbell, who used a 6-iron to ace the 165-yard 16th hole. Campbell knocked the ball just above the pin and watched it roll back into the cup.”There wasn’t much reaction on the green,” he said. “We didn’t know if it was going in. It was so early, it was pretty much just marshals back there. We didn’t know for sure it was in.”Campbell said he has 10 aces in his life and this was his second on tour. It was the 30th ace in the history of the Connecticut tournament.For his effort, Campbell won a ,000 shopping spree at a jewelry store.He followed the ace with a birdie on 17, and finished the first round at 3 under, three shots off the lead.
Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press
ESPN Golf

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