Argentinian shrugs off poor playoff start to win
AUGUSTA, Ga. – The cheers came from every corner of Augusta National, the kind of mayhem that had been missing at the Masters.
The last one was for Angel Cabrera, a most unlikely champion.
He heard the roars for Phil Mickelson and Tiger Woods, a supercharged duel that was pure theater. Cabrera never lost hope when a roar rattled the pines after Kenny Perry got within inches of an ace on the 16th hole to build a two-shot lead with two holes to play.
“It’s a course that you can do a lot of birdies, a lot of bogeys,” Cabrera said through an interpreter. “A lot of magical things happen. It’s simply the Masters.”
Perry, a 48-year-old on the verge of becoming golf’s oldest champion, had gone 22 consecutive holes without a bogey until he dropped shots on each of the last two holes for a 71 to force a three-man playoff that included Chad Campbell.
Cabrera, who also shot 71, looked like the odd man out when his tee shot on the first playoff hole landed behind a Georgia pine, and his 4-iron struck another one. But he managed to scratch out a par with a sand wedge to 8 feet and a pressure-packed putt.
When luck turned against Perry on the second extra hole – a splotch of mud on his ball in the fairway that led to a bogey – Cabrera made a routine par to become the first Argentine in a green jacket.
At No. 69 in the world, he became the lowest-ranked player to win the Masters since the world ranking began in 1986.
“This is a great moment, the dream of any golfer to win the Masters,” Cabrera said during the green jacket ceremony. “I’m so emotional I can barely talk.”
Ditto for the 30,000 fans who witnessed this stunning show.
“I think I lost my hearing on a few holes, they were screaming so loud,” Perry said.
He also lost the tournament.
Perry bladed a chip across the 17th green for one bogey, then hit into a bunker on the 18th hole and narrowly missed a 15-foot par putt that would have brought him the major championship he covets.
But he was gracious as ever, clapping for Cabrera when he holed an 8-foot putt for his unlikely par to stay in the playoff. And even in defeat, it was hard not to appreciate the give-and-take nature that was restored at the Masters.
“I may never get this opportunity ever again, but I had a lot of fun being in there,” Perry said. “I had the tournament to win. I lost the tournament. But Angel hung in there. I was proud of him.”
Two years after winning the U.S. Open at Oakmont, Cabrera became the sixth player this decade to win multiple majors.
Campbell finished with a 69 to join the playoff at 12-under 276, but he was eliminated on the first extra hole when he found a bunker from the middle of the 18th fairway, then watched his 6-foot par putt lip out of the hole.
It was his second close call in a major. Six years ago at the PGA Championship, Campbell was one shot behind on the 18th hole at Oak Hill when Shaun Micheel hit a 7-iron to 2 inches.
“I just got beat by a better shot,” Campbell said. “And today, I kind of blew it myself. I hit bad shots.”
The final hour was almost enough to make a dizzy gallery forget about the Woods-Mickelson fireworks hours earlier.
For those who feared Augusta National had become too tough, too dull and far too quiet, the roars returned in a big way. Mickelson and Woods played together in a final round of a major for the first time in eight years, and they proved to be the best undercard in golf.
Mickelson tied a Masters record with a 30 on the front nine to get into contention. Woods chased him around Amen Corner, then caught him with three birdies in a four-hole stretch that captured the imagination of thousands of fans who stood a dozen deep in spots for a view.
But it ended with a thud.
Mickelson lost his momentum with a 9-iron into Rae’s Creek on the par-3 12th, and when he missed a 4-foot eagle putt and a 5-foot birdie putt down the stretch. He had to settle for a 67 that left him three shots behind.
Woods bogeyed the last two holes for a 68 to finish another shot back.
———
FINAL LEADER BOARD
x-Angel Cabrera 68-68-69-71—276
Chad Campbell 65-70-72-69—276
Kenny Perry 68-67-70-71—276
Shingo Katayama 67-73-70-68—278
Phil Mickelson 73-68-71-67—279
x – won in playoff