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9:12AM

Newsday (N.Y.): Kaymer wins PGA after Johnson misses playoff because of odd penalty

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- For the world beyond America, it was another major championship. For Dustin Johnson, it was another heartbreak, and how many can one man absorb?

For golf, it was another one of those decisions which prove as depressing as they are bewildering. Martin Kaymer won the 92nd PGA Championship Sunday at Whistling Straits. He did it in a three-hole playoff against Bubba Watson after each finished with a 72-hole score of 11-under-par 277. Kaymer closing with a 70, Watson a 68.

It was a playoff which should have included Johnson, who missed out after he was assessed a two-shot penalty for grounding his wedge in a sand trap he didn't think was a sand trap on the 18th hole.

Kaymer joins Graeme McDowell of Northern Ireland, who won the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, and Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa, who won the British Open, to make it three majors in succession for players not from the United States.

On a day when third-round leader Nick Watney fell apart, shooting a 9-over 81, it was his playing partner, Johnson, who suffered equally.

Johnson had done at the U.S. Open what Watney did Sunday -- both had three-shot leads after 54 holes before collapsing. But Johnson seemed to have atoned for that failure of two months ago as he stood ready to play the final hole in the PGA Championship.

He was 12 under par, a shot ahead of Watson and Kaymer. He drove into the sand, or dirt, depending on one's interpretation. He then landed in rough near the green. After wedging on, Johnson two-putted for a bogey to fall into an apparent three-way tie.

But as preparations were made for the three-hole playoff, officials announced Johnson had grounded his club in the hazard, against the rules, before his second shot.

The resulting two-shot penalty dropped him into a tie for fifth at 279. The gallery, hearing the announcement of the penalty, responded by booing, something almost unknown in golf.

"I thought it was a piece of dirt the crowd had trampled down,'' Johnson said of the spot where his tee shot landed. "I never thought it was a sand trap. It never once crossed my mind that I was in a bunker.''

It was one of 1,200 bunkers at the Straits, a course diabolically designed by architect Pete Dye along the shore of Lake Michigan.

The PGA of America posted a notice in the locker room and on the first tee throughout the week, reminding players that all bunkers will be treated like hazards - even though the ropes go right through the middle of some of them, and fans can pitch a lawn chair in them.

Six years ago in the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits, Stuart Appleby was unaware of the rule and assessed a four-shot penalty.

"It's very unfortunate,'' Johnson said. "The only thing worse that could have happened was if I made the putt on the last hole.''

That would have been for a par and outright victory.

"I was excited I had a putt to win, or thinking I had a putt to win," Johnson said. "Then walking off the green talking to the rules official, saying that I've got a two-shot penalty.''

Asked if he felt something was stolen, Johnson said, "Maybe a little bit.''

Nothing was taken from Watney. He double-bogeyed the first hole and never recovered. "I think I got too far ahead of myself,'' Watney said, virtually repeating Johnson's words after his blowup at Pebble Beach.

Kaymer, a 25-year-old German who won the playoff with a bogey on 18 after Watson hit his approach in the water, moved up to No. 3 in the Ryder Cup standings for Europe and to No. 5 in the world.

"I don't realize what happened," Kaymer said. "I just won my first major. I've got goose bumps just talking about it."

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/kaymer-wins-pga-after-johnson-misses-playoff-because-of-odd-penalty-1.2213210
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.
9:25AM

Newsday (N.Y.): Bubba Watson, Molinari emerge from fog to lead PGA Championship

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


SHEBOYGAN, Wis. -- It was golf's Unfinished Symphony, a round that for the longest time couldn't get out of the fog and never did get to the end.

It was Day One of the 92nd PGA Championship, which when the weather cleared offered Tiger Woods' return from the depths and two disparate sorts, Bubba Watson and Francesco Molinari, temporarily on top of the leader board.

They came in with 4-under- par 68s, but still out on the Whistling Straits course when darkness moved in were two others at 4 under, Ernie Els and Matt Kuchar.

Play had had to be delayed 3 hours, 10 minutes at the start Thursday because the shoreline along Lake Michigan looked like something along San Francisco Bay, pea-soup stuff through which golfers couldn't see 100 yards.

That meant the late starters had no chance to get in a full 18, and with more fog forecast this morning, there's a feeling this tournament might last for days.

Woods, who was to go at 8:20 a.m., finally hit his first shot at 11:30, which since he shot a 1-under 71 -- he made birdie at his last hole, the ninth -- didn't prove to be detrimental. On the contrary, his play was greatly improved from his awful finish last weekend in the WGC-Bridgestone.

Phil Mickelson, who didn't begin until around 4:45 p.m., was 1 under par through 11 holes when play was called.

Watson, like Mickelson, a lefthander, contended he was not bothered by the delay. "I get excited about playing golf,'' Watson said. "So I stayed up late [Wednesday] night when I should have been going to bed. My wife was yelling at me to go to bed. I was up playing games on my phone . . . I wasn't myself this morning when I woke up. So maybe the delay helped, since I didn't have much energy.''

Molinari, from Italy, said of Whistling Straits: "It seems like some courses in Europe, but it's a lot softer, and I like the course. And watching Graeme McDowell [U.S. Open] and Louis Oosthuizen [British Open] win, we [Europeans] think we can win a major as well.''

"It played like an American course today,'' said Charles Howell III (69) of Whistling Straits, which looks like a British links but requires different shots. "It was a bit bizarre.''

Howell got up at 5:30 a.m. for what he thought would be an 8:50 a.m. start that evolved to a noon start at the 10th tee. He quickly birdied 11, 12, 13 and 14.

"I had breakfast three times,'' said Howell, as Woods said he did. "To have the start I did was beneficial because it calmed me down a bit.''

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/golf/bubba-watson-molinari-emerge-from-fog-to-lead-pga-championship-1.2205128
Copyright © 2010 Newsday. All rights reserved.

10:36AM

Global Golf Post: Analysis: When Hope Is Hopeless

By Art Spander

LA QUINTA, CALIF. -- There was a time, before ESPN, before an NHL team showed up in Tampa, before the major leagues went to Denver and Phoenix, that sport was different.

We were happy for small favors, pleased when people such as Bing Crosby and Bob Hope gave us golf tournaments that were as much about entertainment as competition.

Read the full story here.

Copyright 2010 Global Golf Post
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