Regina Leader-Post

Tiger still the master after staging major encore

- ANDREW BOTH

Tiger Woods was the compelling golf story of 2019, a year when Brooks Koepka completed an unpreceden­ted double, Ko Jin-young ruled the women’s game and Matt Kuchar’s reputation as a good guy took a hit.

It was a minor miracle that Woods was even able to compete again after undergoing a spinal fusion in 2017, a last-ditch attempt to alleviate searing pain after several less radical back surgeries had proved ineffectiv­e.

That he won again in 2018 at the Tour Championsh­ip, eight months after returning to competitio­n, was no mean feat, but it merely set the stage for the main act in April.

In capturing the Masters for his 15th major title, nearly 11 years after his 14th, Woods scaled a summit at the age of 43 that many had presumed would prove too tall an order.

Four-time major champion Rory Mcilroy summed it up best.

“I still to this day think people don’t give him enough credit for what he’s been through to get back to where he is,” said the Northern Irishman. “To me, if not the best comeback in sports, it’s definitely one of them.

“I’ve seen him in some pretty tough places. We had lunch in March of 2017 and he was struggling to get up and move and walk around. Fast forward two years and he’s winning the Masters.”

Woods used his guile and experience to hunt down the leaders at Augusta National, hanging within striking distance before pouncing mercilessl­y when the front-runners stumbled.

In shooting 13 under par, Woods compiled 22 birdies and nine bogeys. Four of those bogeys came at the same hole, the par-four fifth.

Woods eventually triumphed by one stroke, while 10 players finished within three shots, all of whom could realistica­lly have won had things gone a little differentl­y, such is the fine line between victory and no cigar in a game of inches.

Koepka would have forced a playoff had he holed an eight-foot putt at the last, but he had to wait only a month to rectify that disappoint­ment by winning the PGA Championsh­ip at Bethpage Black on New York’s Long Island.

In doing so, Koepka became the first player to hold back-to back titles in two majors — the PGA Championsh­ip and U.S. Open — at the same time.

He finished the year as the clear world No. 1, even if Fedex Cup champion Mcilroy controvers­ially won the PGA Tour Player of the Year in a vote of his peers after a season that included victories for the Irishman at the Players Championsh­ip, Canadian Open and Tour Championsh­ip.

While Koepka firmly planted his flag as the world No. 1, South Korean Ko establishe­d herself even more emphatical­ly as the premier women’s player, winning four times on the LPGA Tour, including two majors.

If Koepka bludgeons a course into submission, Ko by contrast swings with metronomic accuracy, splitting fairways with her textbook swing and finding the heart of greens with relentless precision thanks to her pinpoint iron shots.

She hit nearly 80 per cent of greens in regulation, three per cent more than anyone else, a dry statistic to be sure, but highly significan­t nonetheles­s.

Off the course, Kuchar made headlines for the wrong reasons after winning the Mayakoba Championsh­ip in Mexico in late 2018.

With only a vague verbal agreement in place, Kuchar felt no compunctio­n about paying David (El Tucan) Ortiz only $5,000 from his first prize of nearly $1.3 million, evidently feeling he was being rather generous.

Three months later, after being publicly shamed, Kuchar eventually upped the payout to a more respectabl­e $50,000, still small change for a man with career earnings of more than $50 million.

TEN HIGHLIGHTS

After more than a decade without a major title, Woods wins the Masters for his 15th major championsh­ip, leaving him needing three more to match the record held by Jack Nicklaus.

Woods wins the Zozo Championsh­ip for his 82nd PGA Tour victory, matching the all-time mark held by Sam Snead.

Sergio Garcia is disqualifi­ed from the Saudi Internatio­nal after officials deem he intentiona­lly damaged at least five greens during the third round. Earlier in the tournament, he was also seen angrily belting his club over and over again in a greenside bunker.

Patrick Reed is penalized two strokes after he improved his lie in a waste bunker at Hero Challenge in the Bahamas. Reed accepts the penalty but maintains the infraction was unintentio­nal.

A major revamping of the rules has teething problems early in the year as officials rescind a two-stroke penalty to Denny Mccarthy at the Phoenix Open and tweak a rule about when caddies are allowed to stand behind their player.

Mcilroy, after waiting his entire life to play at the British Open in his homeland of Northern Ireland, pulls his opening tee shot out-of-bounds, shoots 79 and eventually misses the cut.

An underdog European team beats the U.S. to win the Solheim Cup in a dramatic finish at Gleneagles as Suzann Pettersen sinks the winning putt and then announces her retirement.

Three months after winning the Mayakoba Classic, Kuchar, his good-guy reputation in shreds, finally stems the bleeding by upping his payment to his standin caddie from $5,000 to $50,000.

The never-ending issue of slow play finally reaches a tipping point when video of Bryson Dechambeau taking two minutes to line up a putt at the Northern Trust goes viral. The PGA Tour announces it will revamp its pace-of-play policy.

South Korean Bio Kim receives a draconian three-year suspension from the Korean Tour after making an obscene finger gesture to a fan whose smartphone camera had clicked during his swing. The penalty was subsequent­ly cut to one year.

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Tiger Woods

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