Final round: Perry ends month of flirtation with win

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Kenny Perry has been trying for the last month to grab a win and secure a spot on this year's Ryder Cup team.
Martin/Getty Images
Kenny Perry has been trying for the last month to grab a win and secure a spot on this year's Ryder Cup team.
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Jun. 1, 2008

DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) -- Kenny Perry joined Tiger Woods as the only three-time winners of the Memorial Tournament presented by Morgan Stanley on Sunday, taking a big step toward joining the No. 1 player in the world on the U.S. Ryder Cup team this fall.

With every contender in full retreat on the back nine, the 47-year-old Perry surged ahead with pars and one timely birdie, coasting home to a 3-under 69 and a two-shot victory that could not have come at a better time.

As he walked off the green to a warm handshake from the tournament host, Perry soon was surrounded by his wife and three children. It was the first time in his two decades on the PGA TOUR all of them had been at a tournament he won.

Bigger still was his answer to U.S. captain Paul Azinger's statement earlier in the week, that anyone making his Ryder Cup team would almost certainly have to win on TOUR this year.

Perry, who squandered two chances in the previous three weeks, delivered his best golf of the year.

He finished at 8-under 280, the highest winning score at the Memorial in 23 years. Perry earned $1.08 million for his 10th career victory.

The Ryder Cup will be held at Valhalla in his home state of Kentucky, and Perry is so desperate to make the team that he won't even bother qualifying for the U.S. Open. He does not like Torrey Pines, and believes he should devote his energy to tournaments where he has a better chance of earning points, such as Memphis next week and Hartford the week after the U.S. Open.

"When he (Azinger) said in the paper that you're probably going to have to win a tournament to get on his team, that changed my thinking," Perry said. "I'm glad I saw it."

Third-round leader Mathew Goggin lost his three-shot advantage in three holes and stumbled home to a 74, tied for second with former Masters champion Mike Weir, Justin Rose and Jerry Kelly, all of whom closed with a 71.

All of them had their chances until dropping shots somewhere along the back nine.

To read the rest of this story, click here.

TRIVIA QUESTION
trivia_image Can you answer this? In the 33-year history of Jack Nicklaus' event, there have been some big-name winners, some multiple winners and some pretty young winners, but who is the oldest winner to take home the trophy at the Memorial Tournament? See answer at bottom of page.
SHOT OF THE DAY ROUND OF THE DAY
England's Justin Rose blasted out of the left front bunker for an eagle-3 at the 532-yard par-5 seventh hole to move from one behind the leaders into a one-stroke lead at 8-under par. Rose had hit his second shot from 241 yards short and left of the green. His third shot from 32 feet was perfectly executed, giving him his second hole-out from a bunker in two days. John Mills' 4-under 68 was the day's low round, but it could have been much lower. He missed just one fairway and one green and never was in danger of a bogey. "It was as stress-free a round as you could get," said Mills, who played college golf close by at Kent State University, near Akron. "You don't get many of those, especially on a golf course set up this hard."
TOUGHEST HOLE EASIEST HOLE
The hardest hole out there Sunday was the par-4, 447-yard sixth. With just nine birdies and a whopping 26 bogeys, six double bogeys (34 pars) and one triple bogey, the average score on the sixth hole Sunday was 4.434. The players enjoyed the par-5, 563-yard seventh hole in the final round, which churned out four eagles and a staggering 46 birdies. Only five bogeys were recorded (21 pars), and the average score was 4.355.

PERRY IS DEFINITELY TIRED, BUT HOT BEATS TIRED
By Dave Shedloski, PGATOUR.COM Senior Correspondent

DUBLIN, Ohio -- He has played six weeks in a row. He's tired.

He's been home to Kentucky just one day in that stretch. He's about two months shy of his 48th birthday, about two years shy of a Champions Tour career. He's tired.

A winning Kenny Perry waves to the crowd after his final round at Muirfield Village Golf Club.
Martin/Getty Images
A winning Kenny Perry waves to the crowd after his final round at Muirfield Village Golf Club.

"It's going to be tough for me showing up in Memphis [this] week," he admitted.

He's tired.

But he's also one of the hottest golfers on the planet. Hot beats tired. Hot also beats an elite invitational field.

Kenny Perry can't stop now, not when he is on top of his game and once again on top of a PGA TOUR leaderboard. The personal pro from Franklin, Ky., who began the year with his sights set on making the U.S. Ryder Cup team, has to reassess his goals after his sterling performance Sunday at Muirfield Village Golf Club.

Perry fired a closing 3-under-par 69 on a pernicious layout to win his third Memorial Tournament presented by Morgan Stanley and his 10th PGA TOUR title. The two-stroke, come-from-behind victory, worth $1.08 million, lifted him to fifth in the U.S. Ryder Cup standings and put him a few steps closer to a return to Valhalla Golf Club in Louisville, which is about two hours north of his home.

"Everything I put on ... all the pressure I put on myself to try to make the Ryder Cup, it may be the No. 1 round, because it may take, this may solidify my spot," Perry, who surpassed Tom Watson as the oldest winner of Jack Nicklaus' tournament, said when asked to rank his performance Sunday. "When (U.S. Captain Paul) Azinger said in the paper that the guys on his team are going to have to win tournaments, that really changed my thinking. And I knew I had to win golf tournaments. To get it done and to kind of get your back against the wall and to actually do it, this may be the greatest round."

• To read the rest of this story, click here.

Multiple winners at the Memorial Tournament
Player No. of wins Years won Scores Runners up
Jack Nicklaus 2 1977, 1984 281, 280 Hubert Green '77, Andy Bean '84
Tom Watson 2 1979, 1996 285, 274 Miller Barber '79, David Duval '96
Hale Irwin 2 1983, 1985 281, 281 Ben Crenshaw '83, Lanny Wadkins '85
Greg Norman 2 1990, 1995 216, 269 Payne Stewart '90, David Duval, Mark Calcavecchia, Steve Elkington '95
Kenny Perry 3 1991, 2003, 2008 273, 275 280 Hale Irwin '91, Lee Janzen '03, Mathew Goggin, Jerrk Kelly, Justin Rose, Mike Weir '08
Tiger Woods 3 273, 269, 271 1999, 2000, 2001 Vijay Singh '99, Ernie Els, Justin Leonard '00, Paul Azinger, Sergio Garcia '01

QUOTE OF THE DAY
"If I retire, I need to build a house right on this golf course." -- 2008 champion Kenny Perry on how much he loves -- and how well he plays at -- the Muirfield Village Golf Club.

What the leaders said
Player Score Finish Comment
Justin Rose 6 under T2 "I just come off three missed cuts in a row to finish second.I guess I'll take it at the start of the week.But at the same time, I felt great about today.I really felt like it could have been my day.I felt like I played, performed really well.I was great mentally out there.And just the putts didn't go in, when winning is all about making the putts at the right time, and I had a hot putter this week, and today I felt like I was hitting decent putts, but I just didn't quite have the confidence in the read today."
Jerry Kelly 6 under T2 "I'm looking forward to a week off and then going to the U.S. Open.Torrey Pines is a tough test, and I'm striking the driver well, hitting fairways.I know they're going to be a lot narrower, which is going to play to my advantage there.I'm hitting good iron shots.And my short game has been very good.It's just a matter of consistency for me.And I've got to find a consistency instead of ‑‑ and this was a good four rounds of just hanging in there.But I need a good four rounds of really good golf like I did the first day.So it's something to build on, but it's not what I was after completely."
Mathew Goggin 6 under T2 "It's another good experience.Obviously, with a three‑shot lead, you sort of expect to win.I was disappointed to not win.But Kenny's been playing so well for the last month, he's led every tournament at some stage.He's been the best player in the world for a month.He's such a great guy.It's just one or two guys that have beat him."
Kenny Perry 8 under 1st "But you know what? I knew I was playing great. I'm hitting the ball awesome, I'm hitting my driver terrific, my irons are on the money, and I've got great touch with the putter right now. So I come to this place, and the magic always happens for me here. For whatever reason. I just love this place. This is by far the best place for me."
immelman_notes.jpg
Immelman

NOT FEELING GRAND (SLAM) YET
Trevor Immelman made his first cut since winning the Masters at the Memorial Tournament, but the only man who has a chance to win this year's Grand Slam isn't heading into the U.S. Open with much confidence.

BY THE NUMBERS
3Memorial Tournament victories for Kenny Perry, tying Tiger Woods for most in the 33-year history of the event.
18Players who finished in the top 10, including ties, the highest number of players this year credited with a top-10 finish.
280Kenny Perry's winning aggregate score, the highest at the Memorial Tournament since Hale Irwin's 281 total in 1985. It was only the 11th time in 33 years that the winner did not reach double figures under par.

"I wouldn't bet much on me at this point," he said Sunday after closing with what looked like a heartening 3-under-par 69 at Muirfield Village Golf Club to finish tied for 31st at 4-over 292. "I've got a lot of work to do before then."

Immelman, who plans to play this week at the Stanford St. Jude Classic, said his long game is lacking. His putting, meanwhile, is as good as or even better than it was on the way to his Masters victory.

"I made nine birdies but only shot 3 under, so that should tell you something," said Immelman, who played for the first time since withdrawing from THE PLAYERS because of illness. "I'm back to full health, but my game isn't there yet in the form I want. It's pretty average, but I hope I can turn it around before I get to Torrey Pines."

goggin_notes.jpg
Goggin

DISAPPOINTED BUT READY TO QUALIFY
Mathew Goggin slept on the lead for three rounds at the Memorial Tournament before being overtaken by Kenny Perry on Sunday. His first career runner-up finish turned out to be an eye-opening experience.

Goggin, who turns 34 in two weeks, closed Sunday with a 2-over-par 74 and 282 total while Perry raced off to his third Memorial title. Most of the damage was sustained via bogeys on two of the first four holes, but he held it together the rest of the way, and, in fact, birdied the last to sneak back into a share of second, worth $396,000 and 1,650 FedExCup points.

"It's a matter of experience," Goggin said before racing to catch a plane to Memphis in preparation for a 36-hole U.S. Open qualifier Monday. "It's another opportunity, and I'm sure there will be more. I made a couple of bogeys with good shots and didn't take advantage of a few opportunities, so it wasn't as bad a day as what it seemed.

"It's another good experience. Obviously, with a three shot lead, you sort of expect to win. I was disappointed to not win," he added.

Goggin was a bit down, but he took solace in some words from the winner.

"Yesterday, [Saturday] he [Perry] was really happy for me. He said, 'Just keep doing what you're doing. You're playing awesome.' And he's just been a real supportive person. He was real excited for me. And he's a real class act."

TRIVIA ANSWER
trivia_image This was a little bit of a trick question -- If you paid attention this week, then you know that Tom Watson was the oldest winner on file for the Memorial Tournament; that is, until now. At 47 years, nine months and 22 days, Kenny Perry just became the senior-most winner of Jack's event.
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