The Daily Wrap-up, Round 4: Turning Stone Resort

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Oct. 6, 2009

VERONA, N.Y. (AP) -- It had been so long since Matt Kuchar had won on the PGA TOUR that a huge case of nerves was a given, especially when faced with a sudden-death playoff.

"I had a hard time falling asleep (Sunday night). My mind was racing," Kuchar said Monday after defeating Vaughn Taylor on the sixth extra hole of the Turning Stone Resort Championship. "I was extremely nervous. It's a feeling that you don't feel very often. It's exciting to feel it. It really makes you feel alive."

Kuchar rolled in an 18-inch putt for par for the victory, just his second on TOUR and first in seven years.

"It's hard to describe the feeling," said Kuchar, who missed the cut at Turning Stone two years ago. "They're so difficult to win. If you don't win, there's not a whole lot of rewards. The game beats you up."

Kuchar knows from experience. A heralded amateur player -- he was the 1997 U.S. Amateur champ after Tiger Woods' three-year run -- and a star in college at Georgia Tech, he won the 2002 Honda Classic in his first full season on the PGA TOUR.

That was it until Monday.

"There's something to be said about guys that win," Kuchar said as he hugged his young son Cameron and kissed his wife Sybi.

Kuchar improved to 2-0 in playoffs, and the top prize of $1.08 million boosted his earnings for the year past $2.3 million to 25th on the money list. His best previous finish in a tournament this year was a fifth-place tie at the Memorial Tournament in June.

Tied for the lead after 72 holes, neither player managed to win after two playoff holes on Sunday. They each birdied the first extra hole and parred the second before play was suspended because of darkness.

The playoff was staged over two par-5s, the 12th and 18th holes, and the par-4 13th. Kuchar missed a chance to win on the first hole Monday when his short putt lipped out at No. 13 as each player bogeyed the hole.

"There certainly were a lot of nerves on that opening hole," Kuchar said. "I had a chance to win it with a 3- or 4-footer and missed."

They matched each other again on the next two holes, and there was plenty of tension. At No. 18, Kuchar sank a 20-foot birdie putt and Taylor then calmly rolled in a 7-footer.

Taylor nearly won at No. 12, but his 21-foot putt for birdie stopped just shy of the hole and Kuchar saved par from a greenside bunker.

Then, as a stiff crosswind picked up and a light rain began to fall, Kuchar got a huge break when Taylor hit his tee shot into the water hazard along the right side of the fairway on No. 13 and had to take a penalty stroke.

"Just a bad swing," Taylor said.

With a light mist blowing in his face, Kuchar hit his second shot into the rough on a slope to the right of the green and pitched inside 2 feet to set up an easy par.

"I was nervous on that putt from 18 inches," Kuchar said. "It felt great to hear it hit the back of the hole."

Taylor finished with double bogey on a hole he had parred during every round. "I felt like I had a chance to win a couple times," said Taylor, who has two victories on tour, the Reno-Tahoe Open in 2004 (in a playoff) and again in 2005. "Maybe next week."

It was the first six-hole playoff on the PGA TOUR since Greg Norman beat Larry Mize at the 1986 Kemper Open, so it was no surprise the tension mounted with each swing.

"You're just so nervous," Kuchar said. "After I missed the short putt at 13 and hit my chip 20 feet by the hole (at 18), I'm like, 'Aw, what have you have done here? You've just given this thing up.'"

Turning Stone is the first tournament of the Fall Series, which is comprised of five events. Players are vying to finish the year in the top 125 on the money list to retain full exemption for 2010, and the 33-year-old Taylor was right on the cusp at No. 131 with $519,282. He more than doubled his total with his runner-up check of $648,000, putting him over $1 million in earnings for the sixth straight time.

"I was trying to keep the (PGA TOUR) card this Fall Series, and I think I locked it up," Taylor said. "So, you know, one goal accomplished."

Bubble Watch
Player Money List Pos. Score Position Comment
Chris Riley No. 126 1 under T71 After three straights 71s, Riley tumbled even further with a final-round 74.
Joe Ogilvie No. 127 1 over Missed cut Ogilvie improved three strokes with Friday's 71 compared to Thursday's 74, but he still missed the cut.
Chris Stroud No. 128 6 under T47 Thanks to birdies on his final two holes, Stroud was able to move up 13 spots on the leaderboard.
Stuart Appleby No. 129 4 under T55 The putter plagued Appleby all week, but none moreso than on Sunday when he took 33 putts.
Troy Matteson No. 130 6 under T47 Matteson salvaged an otherwise nondescript round with back-to-back birdies to shoot a 2-under 70.
Sunday's best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 18th hole was the easiest with a Sunday scoring average of 4.547.
EAGLES: 1 BIRDIES: 36 PARS: 34
BOGEYS: 4 OTHERS: 0
The par-3 11th hole was the toughest with a Sunday scoring average of 3.320.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 4 PARS: 44
BOGEYS: 26 OTHERS: 1

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

approachstevens.jpg

It was probably appropriate that a tournament that featured so much rain on the front end would end in a Monday morning wind-driven shower. Matt Kuchar's win over fellow Georgian Vaughn Taylor also fittingly ended when Kuchar, who missed a 4-footer to win when the 13th hole (the first one they played Monday morning), got his chance for redemption three holes later.

Kuchar is one of the sunniest characters on the PGA TOUR, smiling more than even Phil Mickelson, no matter the situation on the golf course. So it was a bit of a surprise when he proved he could smile and cry at the same time as he held his toddler son, Cameron, after sinking the winning putt. When you win early in your career, you think it'll happen often. But when you've waited seven long years to hit the jackpot again, and have been through what Kuchar's been through, including a trip back to the Nationwide Tour, the victory at Turning Stone is oh-so-sweet. And to share it with his wife Sybi and two young boys (infant Carson slept through the whole ceremony on the winning green), family that wasn't even a gleam in his sparkling eyes when he won that first time, generated the surprisingly emotional moment.

Most accounts will focus on Taylor driving it into the water on the sixth playoff hole as the key to Kuchar's win, but a pair of 20-footers on the two previous holes might have told just as much. Kuchar banged one home for birdie at the par-5 18th hole (he'd made a bushel of 15-20 footers all week) when Taylor was just 6 feet away, then on the next hole, the par-5 12th, Taylor left a similar putt just short but right on line. He told me afterward that he knew the moment he hit it that he hadn't given it enough juice. His next swing was the wild one that drowned his chances to win.

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