Big Spring Herald

Woodland denies history with US Open title at Pebble Beach

- By DOUG FERGUSON AP Golf Writer

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — In front of Gary Woodland was a 263-yard shot to the scariest green on any par 5 at Pebble Beach, especially with a U.S. Open on the line. Behind him by one shot on the leaderboar­d was Brooks Koepka, the most dangerous figure in major championsh­ip golf these days.

The safe shot was to lay up on the 14th and take his chances with a wedge

"The idea was to play for the win," Woodland said.

With an extra boost of confidence from his caddie — Brennan Little, who was on the bag for Mike Weir in his Masters victory — Woodland delivered the shot of his life with a 3-wood that narrowly cleared a bunker, settled on the edge of the green and set up a birdie that gave him the cushion he needed.

The rest was pure theater — a 90foot pitch off the 17th green he nearly holed, a 30-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 2-under 69 and a three-shot victory that denied Koepka's bold bid to match a century-old record with a third straight U.S. Open.

Woodland's pitch across the 17th green over a hump that checked and trickled to tap-in range effectivel­y clinched it, taking its place with other big moments on the 17th green in the U.S. Open such as Jack Nicklaus and his 1-iron off the pin and Tom Watson's chip-in birdie. It even got the attention of Nicklaus.

"Took a lot of guts," Nicklaus said on Twitter.

Woodland had that it abundance, along with a message from an inspiratio­nal friend. "You got this."

Until Sunday, when he cradled the silver trophy at Pebble Beach, Woodland got more attention from one hole in a pro-am at the Phoenix Open. He was gracious and encouragin­g to Amy Bockerstet­te, a 20-year-old with Down Syndrome and sheer optimism. Woodland invited her to hit a shot on the par-3 16th (into a bunker). He wanted to blast it out of the sand but she said, "I got this." She hit it out to 8 feet and made the putt. The PGA Tour-produced video has more than 20 million views.

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