The Daily Wrap-up: Round 4, AT&T National

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Tiger Woods
Halleran/Getty Images
Tiger Woods shot a final-round 67 Sunday at Congressional to win the AT&T National by a stroke over Hunter Mahan.
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Jul. 5, 2009

BETHESDA, Md. (AP) -- Tiger Woods made it a hat trick of victories in tournaments hosted by PGA Tour stars, this one the most meaningful of all because it was his own.

Woods lived up to his hopes of being a "greedy host" Sunday, leaving Anthony Kim in his wake and then making a 20-foot birdie putt on the 16th hole to overtake hard-charging Hunter Mahan for a one-shot victory in his AT&T National.

The 68th victory of his PGA TOUR career moved him to the top of the money list and the FedExCup standings for the first time this year.

Woods closed with a 3-under 67 at Congressional for his third victory of the year, the others coming at the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill and Jack Nicklaus' Memorial Tournament.

The challenge came from a rising star, just not the Californian anyone expected.

Mahan made six birdies on the back nine for a 62, tying the course record that Kim set Thursday. The final birdie on the 18th gave Mahan a share of the lead, and he had to wait more than an hour to see if Woods could top him.

Woods twice scrambled for par to stay tied for the lead, then looked as though he squandered a good birdie chance on the par-5 16th when his chip from the rough came out heavy and stopped 20 feet from the hole. Backing off once, he rolled in it, then walked stoically to the hole, nodding his head.

He closed with routine pars to finish at 13-under 267.

Whether it gives him any momentum will be determined in two weeks at Turnberry.

All three of Woods' victories this year have come in his final start before a major, and he finished four shots behind in both the Masters and the U.S. Open at Bethpage Black two weeks ago.

The next stop is the British Open on a links course Woods has never seen.

As for the golf he played Sunday -- that was nothing new.

Woods kept mistakes to a minimum -- he failed to make par on the 11th hole for the fourth straight round -- and took advantage of his birdie chances when he had them.

Kim simply couldn't keep up.

It was the ideal final pairing at Congressional -- the world's No. 1 player and tournament host tied with Kim, a confident 24-year-old who was the defending champion. Kim lost four shots in four holes on the front nine, and didn't make a birdie on the back nine.

He shot a 71 to finish alone in third, four shots behind.

FedExCup facts
With this win, Tiger Woods:
• Earned 500 FedExCup points
• Moved to first from fourth h in FedExCup standings
• Is 177 points ahead of Kenny Perry

"I had a lot of fun," Kim said. "I know I'll be knocking on the door again. It's only a matter of time. I learned if you have a birdie putt, you better make it."

Bryce Molder closed with a 68 to finish alone in fourth, which came with a $288,000 check that was worth more than money alone. It put him atop a special money list that ended Sunday, earning a trip to the British Open. The other spot from the money list went to Paul Goydos.

Brandt Snedeker, finally healthy after a rib injury, had a 68-67 weekend and tied for fifth with U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover. Snedeker also earned a spot at Turnberry as the leading player among the top five not already eligible for the British Open.

Mahan had to settle for his third straight top 10, although he put on quite a show, even if hardly anyone noticed.

Most of the 40,000 fans at Congressional scrambled for a sight of the present and the future -- Woods and Kim -- until Mahan started dropping in putts from everyone on the back nine.

"I think everybody was watching AK and Tiger and expecting kind of a battle there, and I knew I just had to go low today," Mahan said. "I figured great players up on the leaderboard like that, I figured they'd make it to at least 13 or 14 under."

He was in the family dining area when he finished, watching with Woods' wife, Elin, and their 2-year-old daughter, Sam. Woods missed a 10-foot putt on the 14th and Mahan said he jokingly cheered in a light moment.

But he knew better.

"I mean, he's pretty good," Mahan said. "He knows what he's doing. He knows how to play this game better than anybody."

Kim found that out quickly.

Playing with Woods for the first time -- in the final pairing at Woods' own tournament, no less -- Kim walked with a swagger and a smile to the first tee, dressed in white pants and a royal blue shirt. He then smoked his driver some 25 yards past Woods, nearly holed out his wedge and tapped in for birdie for a quick advantage.

A four-hole stretch changed everything.

Despite a wild hook into the gallery, Kim managed to reach the green 60 feet away and lagged to 5 feet. He missed the par putt, though, and Woods pulled away on the sixth with a big tee shot and an approach that barely cleared the water, leaving him 15 feet for birdie.

Their day was summed up at the par-3 seventh, when both hit tee shots 6 feet away.

Kim missed, Woods made.

Kim then three-putted from 20 feet on the eighth, missing a 3-foot par putt.

The threat came from Mahan, an explosive player like Kim, minus the hip-hop.

He teed off more than an hour before Woods, then poured it on along the back nine with six birdies, including a 15-foot putt on the final hole to tie the course record.

Mahan was on his way to the range when they heard a roar a half-mile away and his caddie checked his phone to see that Woods had made birdie. Mahan finished hitting balls and was headed to the putting green when a young girl approached him for an autograph.

He might not have noticed what was written on the back of her T-shirt: "Tiger's Back."

Other notables at the AT&T National
Name Score Position Comment FedExCup points
Hunter Mahan 12 under 2 Mahan tied a course record at Congressional with a 62 on Sunday. That's three straight finishes in the top six for Mahan. 300
Anthony Kim 9 under 3 The final-round duel with Tiger Woods never really materialized for the 2008 champion. 190
Lucas Glover 7 under T5 The U.S. Open champion hasn't had a break since his win at Bethpage and neither has his golf with a T11 and a T5 since. 105
Vijay Singh 6 under T7 A front-nine 30 led to a 66 on Sunday for Singh's best finish in more than a month. 82.50
Danny Lee 6 under T7 It was the best finish of Lee's young career and he's now within just under $200,000 of temporary TOUR membership and unlimited exemptions. NA
Sunday's Best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-4 eighth hole was the easiest with a Sunday scoring average of 3.776.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 25 PARS: 43
BOGEYS: 8 OTHERS: 0
The par-4 11th hole was the toughest with a Sunday scoring average of 4.434.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 4 PARS: 43
BOGEYS: 21 OTHERS: 8
SHOT OF THE DAY ROUND OF THE DAY
Michael Allen struggled to a 74, but holed out from the fairway for an eagle on the par-5 ninth hole. Watch his shot Hunter Mahan tied the course record at Congressional and as a result finished one shot back. Check out his scorecard

INSIDE THE ROPES WITH THE PGA TOUR NETWORK
PGA TOUR Network correspondent John Maginnes offers these observations from Sunday's action. Listen to PGA TOUR Live coverage on XM 146/SIRIUS 209 or right here at PGATOUR.COM.

xm_maginnes.jpg

He let them think they had a chance. Some might say that he was toying with them a little. If Tiger was hosting a picnic this week, the 11th hole would have been the ants. He bogeyed it three times and made double bogey on it once. That ties his worst performance on a hole in any non-major of his career.

But in the end, the host with the most added to his ever growing mantle. The third AT&T Classic ended in predictable fashion with Tiger's 68th career victory. As predictable as the win was, the route to it was a bit more circuitous than normal for Tiger. Hunter Mahan finished more than an hour-and-a-half before Tiger and set the bar at 12 under, doing it shooting a course-record tying 62 in the final round.

The duel with young Anthony Kim, in the final group with Tiger, never really developed. The defending champion birdied the first hole to take a one-shot lead, but the rest of his round flat-lined. Anthony finished alone in third. The exciting thing, beyond Tiger winning his own tournament, is the fact that there were five young Americans just in Tiger's wake. Hunter Mahan, Anthony Kim, Bryce Molder, whose performance earned him a spot in the British Open, Brandt Snedeker and Lucas Glover were the next five names on the leaderboard. Can you say future Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup teams?

This week's Kodak Challenge hole
HOLE: The par-4, 466-yard 18th at Congressional
LAST YEAR: The 18th played to a stroke average of 4.090, with players recording one eagle, 55 birdies, 254 pars, 65 bogeys and 12 double bogeys.
DESCRIPTION: Congressional's signature hole sets up perfectly for a long, right-to-left tee shot. Anything too far right could find trouble and a thick grove of cedars. Bunkers right of the green combined with water on three sides make the second shot a test of courage. (Click here for tour)
This week at the Kodak Challenge hole
Round-by-round statistics on the par-4 18th at Congressional
Round Rank Stroke avg. Eagles Birdies Pars Bogeys Dbl.bogeys Others
1 T5 4.193 0 13 77 23 5 1
2 4 4.144 0 16 75 22 4 1
3 13 4.00 0 12 53 10 1 0
4 7 4.132 0 7 54 14 0 1
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