The Palm Beach Post

Valspar gets a Masters feel to it

Woods’ re-emergence as factor adds to drama as April approaches.

- By Steve Hummer Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

PALMHARBOR— The Valspar Championsh­ip has seldom been encumbered by significan­ce. As stops go, it is pretty much just another Cracker Barrel on the interstate of profession­al golf.

But Sunday, if you could get past the backdrop of mossdraped scrub oak and the shrill cries of ospreys in their twig penthouses, you’d almost think there was a Masters-esque quality to the final round here.

You had drama and a bit of what passes for golfing tragedy (those with a cruel streak or something personal against Patrick Reed would label it comedy).

You had a scoreboard with the kind of excellence, both domestic and internatio­nal, that is an Augusta specialty. The top four included three of the top 27-ranked players in the world as well as the world’s most famous 388th-ranked player ever, one who pretty much consumed all the oxygen in Pinellas County all week long.

That group included last year’s Masters champion, Sergio Garcia, who put up a Sunday 65 one day after being so enraged by a three-putt on 18 that he left a sizable dent in the scoring trailer with his foot. He moved up the board to 8 under for the tournament and a sole fourth place. So, yeah, he is primed and ready to defend.

And, just like a Masters tournament the way they used to make it, Tiger Woods was in the conversati­on right to the final pendulum swing of his putter. The Make Woods Great Again campaign did not reach its conclusion here in just his 14th competitiv­e round since back fusion surgery. His 1-under 70

lacked the closing conviction required to win out here. But it did not pass without a warning shot for all his heirs on Tour: A 43-foot birdie putt on the 71st hole of this tournament that just about changed everything.

Woods finished tied for second with Reed, just one stroke back of the hardchargi­ng Paul Casey, who earned his second PGA Tour victory (to go with 14 internatio­nal victories) on the merits of a Sunday 65.

The three takeaways from a high-volume afternoon in a normally low-profile event:

First, there Casey’s victory. He came out of nowhere Sunday, tied for 11th at the beginning of the day.

He went out and played the kind of dynamic golf often expected of him, but seldom seen on this side of the Atlantic (his only other PGA Tour victory happened nine long years ago in Houston). Just one bogey, on the third hole, negated by an immediate birdie on the fourth. And the run was on, allowing him to post a low score early and then stew for an hour while so many other antics played out.

Second, there was Reed’s finish, that will go down in the everlastin­g annals of golfing misfortune (self-induced chapter).

Needing to two-putt from 45 feet 9 inches on No. 18 to tie Casey for the lead, Reed occupied an awkward corner of a sloping green, with a patch of rough between him and the cup. Choosing to putt, Reed did not get his ball to the crest of the slope and watched it tumble back to his feet.

He was just one of two players who wear red and black on Sunday who didn’t quite have enough to win.

Which leads, thirdly and obviously, to Woods.

Yeah, he didn’t win, but he did position himself with a 39-foot putt on 18 to tie Casey. It checked up 2 1/2 feet short, prompting Woods to spank the offending club.

He’s on to play again this week at Arnold Palmer’s namesake event in Orlando, one he has won eight times. And then he’ll await the Masters, where he has made a bit of history. For the first time in a long time — given the feel of Sunday at the Valspar — there is evidence he could make more.

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD / GETTY IMAGES ?? “I believe my game is progressin­g,” Tiger Woods said after finishing in a tie for second Sunday.
SAM GREENWOOD / GETTY IMAGES “I believe my game is progressin­g,” Tiger Woods said after finishing in a tie for second Sunday.

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