Vijay Singh wins on PGA Tour Champions after Paul Goydos five-putts 17th hole

Leading by a shot on the 17th, Goydos hit the green on the par-3 but needed five putts to find the jar.

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Vijay Singh returned to victory lane on the PGA Tour Champions on Sunday but he needed a big assist from Paul Goydos to get there.

Playing a course where he won three times on the PGA Tour, Singh earned his fourth win overall at Warwick Hills Golf and Country Club in Grand Blanc, Michigan, claiming the 2023 Ally Challenge for his first senior circuit win in five years.

Singh, 60, parred the 18th at nearly the same time some unfortunate circumstances were happening a hole behind him.

Leading by a shot on the 17th hole, Goydos hit the green on the par-3 and then putted to about three feet. From there, however, he needed another four putts to find the bottom of the jar, turning his advantage into a two-shot deficit.

Goydos blew his first putt past the hole and his comebacker caught a piece of the lip, returning to the spot where it was just a minute prior. After taking a few minutes to collect himself, he jabbed at the next putt, missing right and then he almost hit the tap-in before the ball came to rest. After picking up his ball out of the hole, he looked towards his caddie, crossed his arms, then stared at the hole in bewilderment for several moments. He would par the 18th to shoot a 71. Singh closed with a 68.

“I’m as shocked as anybody,” said Singh. “I guess for some reason I drive the ball very well here. Whenever I come here, tree-lined, I drive it well and I’ve putted well. My putting has been a mystery for a long time, but I’ve found a few things out the last few weeks and I’ve been putting really well.”

Due to heavy rain last week, the 54-hole tournament didn’t start until Saturday and was completed in two days.

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Bernhard Langer beats his age yet again, takes lead at TimberTech Championship

Langer is the only two-time winner of the tournament.

BOCA RATON, Fla. — After posting a 2-under-par 70 in Friday’s opening round, Bernhard Langer said it would take “two very good rounds” Saturday and Sunday for him to have a shot at winning the TimberTech Championship.

He exceeded his expectations Saturday, firing a 9-under 63 at Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club to take a one-shot lead over Paul Goydos heading into Sunday’s finale.

“I knew it would take a very good round, but this was a special round,” said Langer, 65, who began the day with three consecutive birdies and added two more birdies and a bogey to go out in 4-under 32 to beat his age by two shots. He also had five birdies on the back nine to come home in 31 for a two-round total of 11-under 133. “Nine under in windy conditions on this course is not easy.”

Langer is the only two-time winner of the tournament, with victories in 2010 and 2019, and he’s also had three seconds and two thirds. Saturday’s 63 was his lowest round in the tournament, which had previously been played at the Old Course at Broken Sound.

“Today actually wasn’t necessarily my best ball-striking day,” Langer said, “but I made a bunch of putts and shot 9 under, two better than my age, so that’s pretty exciting.”

Goydos shot a 66 with five birdies, a bogey and an eagle-2 on the short par-4 16th when he pitched in from just off the green. The Californian, 58, who won this event in 2015, opened with a 68 and played in the final group Saturday with Rod Pampling and first-round leader Miguel Angel Jimenez.

Pampling, of Australia, shot a 69 with three birdies and no bogeys and was alone in third at 7-under 137. Jimenez shot 72 after his opening 67 to fall into a tie for ninth at 5 under. The Spaniard birdied his first two holes Saturday and got to 8 under through nine holes to lead the tournament, but two bogeys and a double bogey dropped him to 4-under before he birdied the 17th hole.

Irishman Darren Clarke, who won the 2020 TimberTech title and the Senior Open Championship this summer, started off as hot as Langer on Saturday after opening with a 72. Clarke had five birdies on the front nine and was seven under through his first 12 holes, which at the time gave him the lead over Langer, who was playing four groups behind Clarke.

Clarke bogeyed the par-4 14th when he failed to get up and down after his lob wedge approach plugged in a greenside bunker. He came right back with a birdie at the par-3 15th to return to 7 under.

At the par-5 18th, which was tied with the par-5 13th as the easiest hole with a scoring average of 4.673, Clarke hit his second shot into the water. After a drop, he hit his fourth shot onto the green and missed his par putt to finish with a bogey and a 6-under 66 to move from a tie for 23rd place into a tie for fourth with four others.

“Making six on the last is inexcusable,” said Clarke, who downplayed his eight birdies and solid putting. “I just rolled it nicely and a few went in. I got lucky today, my speed was good for the most part, that’s why a few went in.”

Langer switched putters Saturday and had only 21 putts, which was helped when he holed a bunker shot for a birdie on the par-4 third hole.

“Same model, same everything, but a little different blade, a little different look to it,” he said of a putter that he has used before for many years. He said he also read the greens better Saturday than he did during the pro-ams Wednesday and Thursday and on Friday.

“I don’t know what I did different, I just read them correctly.”

Langer tees off in the final threesome Sunday with Pampling and Goydos, who admitted that Langer has the advantage.

“This is a course where you just need to plod along. You’ll make birdies and also bogeys and double bogeys out here,” Goydos said. “(Langer) is a plodder, he doesn’t make mistakes. He very rarely beats himself, so it’s no big surprise that he’s playing well on this particular golf course.”

So it probably wouldn’t surprise Goydos if Langer has one more very good round.

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Cameron Beckman wins Dick’s Sporting Goods Open on PGA Tour Champions

Cameron Beckman came from three strokes back with a 4-under 68 Sunday to claim his first PGA Tour Champions win.

ENDICOTT, N.Y. — Cameron Beckman came from three strokes back with a 4-under-par 68 Sunday to claim his first PGA Tour Champions victory in the Dick’s Sporting Goods Open.

A 51-year-old Texas resident making his 15th start on the senior tour, Beckman made eight closing-round birdies at En-Joie Golf Course and sidestepped a bogey at the 18th to top Ernie Els by a shot.

Beckman finished 12-under to Els’ 11-under, with five sharing third at 10-under.

Els, leader by three through 36 holes and by two at the turn Sunday, shot even-par 72 with three birdies and three bogeys. He was offered wonderful opportunity at the 18th when Beckman drove in a hazard left of the fairway, but left his second from 94 yards in the fairway well short and two-putted.

Beckman, whose most recent win came in 2010 on the PGA tour, had two previous top-10s on the PGA Tour Champions. Sunday’s victory qualified him for next week’s U.S. Senior Open.

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Monday qualifier Dicky Pride wins Mitsubishi Electric Classic on PGA Tour Champions

One week after Alex Cejka won the Regions Tradition as an alternate, Dicky Pride won on the PGA Tour Champions as a Monday qualifier.

Just get in. Doesn’t matter how.

One week after Alex Cejka won the Regions Tradition after getting in the field as an alternate, Dicky Pride won on the senior circuit as a Monday qualifier, claiming the Mitsubishi Electric Classic at TPC Sugarloaf in Georgia on Sunday.

And he did it in runaway fashion.

Pride took his first outright lead with a birdie on the par-3 8th hole to get to 9 under. Doug Barron made things interesting after he eagled the 10th and birdied the 12th to tie things up. But on the 13th, Pride reclaimed the solo lead with a birdie and a few moments after that, Barron doubled the 15th, giving Pride a three-shot lead with five holes to go and he cruised home from there.

Pride, 51, opened the week as one of four Monday qualifiers making the field, but qualifying actually took place on Tuesday. Then on Friday, Pride opened the tournament with a 71 and then followed with back-to-back 67s to win by three shots.

Moments after putting out for the win, Pride turned to the fans in attendance and yelled out “Let’s go!”

Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP
Dicky Pride tees off on the 11th hole during the final round of the PGA Tour Champions’ Mitsubishi Electric Classic golf tournament at TPC Sugarloaf on Sunday, May 16, 2021, in Duluth, Georgia. (Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journal-Constitution via AP)

It’s his first Champions title in 11 tries and he’s now won a tournament on three different PGA Tour circuits. He won the 1994 Federal Express St. Jude Classic in a playoff on the PGA Tour. Six years ago, he won the 2015 Portland Open on the Korn Ferry Tour.

“I’ve now won on all three tours, which is something I’ve always wanted to do,” he told Golf Channel after his win.

First-round leader Stephen Ames and second-round leader Paul Goydos joined Kirk Triplett in a three-way tie for second. It’s Triplett’s best finish since winning the Pure Insurance Championship in September of 2019. Barron was among three golfers to tie for fifth, along with Billy Andrade and Brett Quigley.

Other notables in the field: defending champ Scott McCarron tied for 10th, Jim Furyk tied for 19th, Cejka tied for 26th, Major League Baseball Hall of Famer John Smoltz finished 76th out of 77 golfers, beating only Shigetoshi Hasegawa. Vijay Singh withdrew after nine holes on Sunday. John Daly withdrew after eight holes on Saturday.

Next up

The second PGA Tour Champions major of 2021 is in two weeks at the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

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Stephen Ames leads Mitsubishi Electric Classic on PGA Tour Champions

Stephen Ames shot a 6-under 66 on Friday at TPC Sugarloaf in Duluth, Georgia, to lead the Mitsubishi Electric Classic.

The next PGA Tour Champions major is in two weeks at the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

But first things first.

Stephen Ames shot a 6-under 66 on Friday at TPC Sugarloaf in Duluth, Georgia, to lead the Mitsubishi Electric Classic. He opened with a bogey but was bogey-free from there. He hit just 11 greens but led the field with 23 putts.

Paul Goydos is one back, while Gene Sauers is two back. John Houston and Billy Andrade are tied for fourth at 3 under. In a group of nine golfers at 2 under, four off the lead, is Scott McCarron, who won the Mitsubishi in 2019 and is the defending champion as the tournament was canceled last year.

Also at 2 under is Jim Furyk and Miguel Angel Jiménez.

Ames is looking for his second win at the event and second win on the senior circuit. He also claims the 2017 title. Monday qualifier Dicky Pride and last week’s winner Alex Cejka are among four golfers at T-15 at 1 under.

Major League Baseball Hall of Famer John Smoltz shot a 12-over 84 and is one shot ahead of last place.

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Paul Goydos tells an epic story of how he knew Tiger was back

Paul Goydos points to a moment at the 2018 Arnold Palmer Invitational when he knew Tiger Woods was capable of winning another major.

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Tiger Woods’s victory at the Masters last year is the stuff of legend, but it didn’t come out of nowhere. There were all sorts of signs that Woods was capable of claiming his 15th major and first in more than a decade. In the preceding months I’ve asked various players, commentators and industry observers what was the sign that Tiger was back to a level of play that not just winning but winning majors was plausible again?

There were several thoughtful answers, but one stood out and it is so great in every way that it simply makes the others forgettable. So, let’s skip to the good stuff, which is supplied by the one, the only Paul Goydos.

The scene is the practice putting green on Tuesday at Bay Hill during the 2018 Arnold Palmer Invitational. Woods had finished second at Innisbrook (at the 2018 Valspar Championship), the week before re-stoking the flames that Tiger was back. Goydos, 53 at the time and a PGA Tour Champions regular, was in the API field as a past champion and hitting putts when two Bridgestone balls rolled by the hole.

Paul Goydos

“I look up and here comes Tiger,” Goydos recalls. “I said hello and told him great playing last week. Tiger’s not a chit-chatter; he’s working. He doesn’t need to chit chat with Paul Goydos. That’s the last thing he wants to do. I’m more or less on vacation. This is like spring break for me at Bay Hill. Plus, Tiger is the King. He rules the roost. He’s walking away and I say, ‘Tiger, you know what’s great about playing this Tour?’ Tiger stops and looks at me and I say, ‘Where I drive the ball there are no divots.’

“Now, it’s a reasonably funny self-deprecating joke. Tiger smirked, but then he said, ‘How many woods do you carry now?’ So, I make a joke about myself and Tiger has to immediately annihilate me with a joke about me and my game. Tiger’s needle is long, sharp and he uses it a lot. He just needled a Champions Tour player on Tuesday at Bay Hill. I’m so far down the threat level to Tiger’s game. I’m non-existent in his world.

“I thought, ‘Holy crap, this guy is back. He’s a killer. That’s a killer attitude. He doesn’t care who you are.’ If you’re one of the 144-man field he is going to stomp you if he has to. I walked away and went over to my caddie and said, ‘Oh, Jesus, these guys have no idea what’s coming. They’re not ready for this.’ These guys that say, they’d love to compete against Tiger? They have no idea. Tiger is back to being a killer. When I told him that joke, that’s when I knew.”

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