The Daily Wrap-up, Round 4: Sony Open in Hawaii

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Jan. 18, 2010
By Staff and Wire Reports

HONOLULU (AP) -- Ryan Palmer expected the worst when his chip from 50 feet short of the 18th green came out a little strong.

Seconds later, he never felt better.

His chip struck the pin squarely, and instead of running about 8 feet past the hole, it settled a few inches away. Palmer tapped in for a birdie and a 4-under 66, giving him a one-shot victory in the Sony Open in Hawaii when Robert Allenby missed a 10-foot birdie putt.

"What a way to start the year," Palmer said.

All week long at the Sony Open, he tried to stay in the moment, a lesson he picked up earlier in the week while reading an article about defending champion Zach Johnson. The chip turned out to be the greatest moment of all.

"It was a good chip," Palmer said. "The grain was running against me. It was either going to hit it fat or do what I did. Fortunately, I got the good break."

FedExCup facts
With this win, Ryan Palmer:
• Earned 500 FedExCup points
• Moved into a share of first in FedExCup standings
• Is 169 points ahead of Rory Sabbatini

Palmer's three PGA TOUR victories include one at Disney with Tiger Woods in the field. This was far more meaningful. The 33-year-old Texas was atop the leaderboard every day, and kept his composure in a tight final round at Waialae against Allenby and Steve Stricker, who was briefly tied for the lead and eventually finished third.

"What I got out of this is beyond words," Palmer said. "It's a great field. To do it every day ... my bad round was 2-under par. I never once got upset or impatient. What I did today was the best round of golf I ever experienced."

And it came with some pretty good perks.

Palmer, who finished 150th on the money list last year, is exempt on TOUR through 2012. He's going to the Masters for the first time in five years. He can add THE PLAYERS Championship and PGA Championship to his list, along with at least one World Golf Championship.

Allenby was trying to win his third consecutive tournament on three tours, a feat believed to have never been accomplished, and he gave himself every chance. He played bogey-free on the back nine, but he needed one more birdie. His second shot out of the rough on the 18th came out hot and over the green, and he did well to give himself a realistic chance at birdie and a playoff.

Allenby, who won the Nedbank Challenge on the Sunshine Tour and the Australian PGA Championship on the Australasian PGA Tour at the end of last year, closed with a 67.

"I had a couple of chances out there," Allenby said. "It's so easy to look back and say, 'I could have made that, I could have made that.' But at the end of the day, realistically, I needed to make a birdie at the last."

Palmer finished at 15-under 265 and earned $990,000.

Stricker had a 65 and finished two shots back. Two-time U.S. Open champion Retief Goosen closed with a tournament-best 62 and was atop the leaderboard as Palmer and Allenby were making the turn, although his 12-under 268 never looked as though it would be enough.

Palmer might not have been in this position without reading the article about Johnson and his strategy of not thinking ahead.

"I played each day for that day," Palmer said. "I wanted to win today."

About the time Goosen finished, Stricker hit a hybrid from the grassy collar of a bunker onto the par-5 ninth green for a birdie, then hit a good pitch to 3 feet on the 10th to join Goosen at 12 under. With so many holes left, and Palmer and Allenby behind him, it turned into a three-man race over the final two hours.

Stricker certainly had his chances, although it was an example that even one of the best putters in golf doesn't make everything. He lipped out a 5-foot birdie chance on the 12th and missed from 8 feet on the 14th. He also holed a birdie putt on the 13th that briefly put him in a tie for the lead, and a 25-footer on the 17th that kept alive his hopes.

But he found a bunker on the 18th, and Waialae sand makes it tough to get spin on the ball. His long bunker shot went 20 feet long and high of the hole, and Stricker's birdie putt to join the leaders grazed the edge of the cup.

"I did leave a couple out there," Stricker said. "It's a little disappointing. I hit the ball great today, gave myself a lot of opportunities. All of a sudden, I found myself doubting a couple of reads. I was getting confused a couple of times."

Allenby might have saved his chances early in the round. He had a sloppy three-putt on the fourth, then went through the green on the fifth with a sand wedge. His chip came out hot and ran 15 feet by the hole, and Allenby was so disgusted he kicked at the ground -- with his left ankle, at least -- but then holed the par putt.

Palmer's volatility came with his scores. He had a one-shot lead going to the back nine, then didn't make a par until he missed an 8-foot birdie putt on the 15th hole. He birdied the 10th, 12th and 14th, all from inside 12 feet. He bogeyed the 11th and 13th from bunkers.

Allenby caught him again with a tough shot inside 3 feet on the 15th, and the duel was on.

Charles Howell III, who learned in the offseason his wife is expecting their first child, ended a stretch of 17 tournaments without a top 10 with a 66-64 weekend to tie for fifth with Carl Petterson (66) and Davis Love III, who holed out for eagle from the 16th fairway and closed with a 67.

Sunday's best
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 18th hole was the easiest with a Sunday scoring average of 4.423.
EAGLES: 2 BIRDIES: 38 PARS: 30
BOGEYS: 1 OTHERS: 0
The par-4 13th hole was the toughest with a Sunday scoring average of 4.239.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 8 PARS: 38
BOGEYS: 25 OTHERS: 0
Other notables at the Sony Open in Hawaii
Name Score Position Comment FedExCup points
Retief Goosen 12 under 4th Nine birdies after an opening-hole bogey led to the low score of the week in a final-round 62. 135
Davis Love III 11 under T5 A final-round 67 was highlighted by the Shot of the Day, a hole-out eagle from the fairway on No. 16. 100
Ernie Els 8 under T12 Els saved his best for last, shooting a 66 in which he hit 89 percent of his greens in regulation. 59.50
Angel Cabrera 5 under T25 The Masters champion recovered from a few early bogeys with thre birdies over his final five holes. 39.50
Stewart Cink 1 under T52 Cink never put it all togteher, hitting just over half his fairways and averaging over 31 putts per round. 16

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.

Maginnes-XM.jpg

There were new faces and familiar faces at the Sony Open. But there was one guy that hadn't been around for a while who survived the weekend and kept a smile on his face even though he finished tied for 68th. Jim Carter hadn't played a PGA TOUR event since 2006 when he missed the cut in all three of his starts. Carter took a job back home in Phoenix with Merrill Lynch and began a new career, but somewhere in the back of his mind the game was still calling.

Last year, when his surgically repaired shoulder started to feel well enough to play more golf Carter decided to give it another try. He played a few Nationwide Tour events late in the season. To start the 2010 campaign, he flew to Hawaii to try to Monday qualify for the Sony Open. He did more than that -- he made the cut and played all four days. The 48-year-old is planning on starting the season on the Nationwide Tour with trips to Australia and New Zealand. The understated Carter is one of the true gentlemen of the game and has shown that there is still a little game left in his bag.

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