Ottawa Citizen

Woods forced to wait another day to claim PGA’s No. 1 ranking,

Bay Hill win would put him back at No. 1

- DOUG FERGUSON

Tiger Woods is going to have to wait one more day to try to reclaim No. 1 in the world.

Moments after Woods made a 10-foot birdie putt on the second hole, a vicious thundersto­rm packing gusts that topped out at 100 km/h interrupte­d the final round of the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al and wiped out play until Monday.

The storm dumped nearly 11/2 inches on Bay Hill and formed small ponds in the fairways — there was even a fish in the middle of the 18th fairway. The wind toppled the TV tower behind the 10th green, which was a pile of metal poles, wood, mesh netting and had a stationary camera in the middle of it all.

About an hour after a tornado warning expired, officials said they would need time to clean up the course and let it drain. The final round was to resume at 10 a.m. Monday.

Woods is going after his eighth win at Bay Hill, which would return him to No. 1 in the world ranking for the first time since the last week of October 2010.

He hit all of six shots on Sunday, enough to build a three-shot lead over Rickie Fowler, Keegan Bradley, John Huh and Ken Duke.

“At least we got a little activity in today, so we’re not completely stagnant,” Woods said before leaving. “We’ve dealt with this before.”

There was plenty of action on a short day, none more bizarre than Sergio Garcia.

The Spaniard’s tee shot on the 10th hole somehow came to rest about 15 feet up in an oak tree, sitting between two large branches. Garcia used a cart to jump into the tree and, after a few minutes, hit a one-handed, backhanded shot back to the fairway, before jumping some eight feet back to the ground.

William McGirt was playing his shot from the fairway bunker on the other side and had no idea what Garcia was doing.

“I knew they were looking around the tree,” he said. “I didn’t know they were looking in the tree. I looked over and Sergio is up in the air, and I’m trying to figure out what in the hell he’s going to go. He called for a club. He’s hugging the tree. And the ball comes flying out. “Are you kidding me?” Two holes later, as the horn sounded. McGirt said Garcia handed him the scorecard and said, “I’m out of here.” Garcia earlier had taken a 9 on the par-5 sixth hole.

Billy Horschel hit three tee shots in to the water on the sixth hole and made an 11.

Attribute that to the wind, which was gusting hard when the leaders teed off.

Mark Russell, the tour’s vice-president of competitio­n, said officials discussed whether to play early Sunday from two tees to try to beat the storms. He said NBC Sports was involved in the discussion­s — Woods going for the win, with Fowler at his side, is sure to boost ratings — and they rolled the dice.

“If we played early, it was going to be a tape-delay situation. People were going to know who won before it came on television, so it defeats our television partners,” he said. “They wanted to take a chance. They’ve been involved in several situations where we played early and it didn’t rain. It was just unfortunat­e.”

This marks the third time this year on the PGA Tour that a tournament finished one day later because of weather.

It will be the third Monday finish in the 35-year history of this tournament.

The storm lasted about two hours, enough time to do plenty of damage. Tournament director Scott Wellington said his staff was just starting a full inspection.

Lawn chairs were toppled along the 18th fairway, where fans had been anticipati­ng a big finish with Woods in the lead. Two chairs had blown into a bunker on the 14th, and seedlings from oak trees were scattered across several greens. An osprey snagged a fish along the 18th and couldn’t hold on. A fan ran across the fairway to get the fish out of the rough, and then dove headfirst across the 4-inch deep puddle in the fairway, dropping the fish. It swam for about three feet before going motionless.

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 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES ?? Tiger Woods plays a shot on the second hole Sunday at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al. If he wins today, he will be atop the world rankings for the first time since October 2010.
SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY IMAGES Tiger Woods plays a shot on the second hole Sunday at the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al. If he wins today, he will be atop the world rankings for the first time since October 2010.

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