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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, February 11, 2008

Lowery tops Singh in playoff

Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Steve Lowery gets a kiss from his wife Heather as actor Clint Eastwood looks on after Lowery won the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am for his first PGA Tour victory in more than seven years.

BEN MARGOT | Associated Press

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Having gone more than seven years and 199 tournaments without winning, Steve Lowery had every reason to feel out of his element yesterday.

He was on the 18th tee at Pebble Beach, one of the most famous spots in golf.

He was in a playoff against Vijay Singh, one of golf's toughest customers.

And he never felt more at ease.

Lowery took advantage of a stunning collapse by Singh, who made three straight bogeys on the back nine, then put him away on the first extra hole with a 7-foot birdie putt to win the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.

"I couldn't have given it any more in 18 holes," said Lowery, who closed with a 4-under 68. "I just told my caddie, 'I've got nothing to lose.' Just go out and play aggressive. If anything, it kind of freed me up a little it. I just felt like I didn't have anything to lose."

Honolulu's Parker McLachlin shot a 2-under-par 70 and finished tied for 14th. McLachlin finished at 4-under 284 and earned $87,360.

The 47-year-old Lowery became the oldest champion in the 71-year history of this event, and under a variety of circumstances, one of the more surprising winners.

He was No. 305 in the world ranking when he arrived on the Monterey Peninsula. He suffered a freak wrist injury last year that kept him out for three months and gave him temporary status this season. Most surprising of all is that Lowery was three shots behind Singh when he walked off the 14th tee.

Singh made three straight bogeys, only a wedge into 2 feet on the 18th hole for birdie at a 71 allowed him one last chance in a playoff. That didn't last long, as Singh found two more bunkers on the 18th in overtime and did well to make par.

Both players finished at 10-under 278.

"I let this one slip away," Singh said. "I was in control, but those (bogeys) took a little air out of me. I still should have won the tournament. There's no excuse for that."

Lowery earned $1.08 million and a two-year exemption. He was on a minor medical extension because of the wrist injury and was given eight tournaments to earn $282,558 to keep his card the rest of the year.

He was only exempt to opposite-field events in Mexico and Puerto Rico the next two months.

Now he's going to the Masters.

It was his first victory since the 2000 Southern Farm Bureau Classic and third in his career, all won in playoffs.

"After seven years and winning on this course against Vijay and everything ... it's probably the most special," Lowery said.

The first playoff at Pebble Beach since 1992 didn't even seem remotely possibly when Lowery walked off the 14th green with a bogey. He was three shots behind Singh, who had just hit a brilliant flop shot to 6 feet to save par on the 13th.

Turns out that was a sign of sloppy play that followed.

Singh went at the flag on the 14th with a sand wedge from 92 yards, but it was a tad strong and spun down the slope, and the best he could do was chip to 20 feet and make bogey. He missed the 15th green to the left, chipped weakly and missed an 8-footer for par.

The free fall continued on the 16th when Singh hit fairway metal into a bunker, went over the green down a slope to the back bunker and two-putted from the fringe for his third straight bogey.

His only break came on the 18th in regulation, when his tee shot bounced off the trunk of a tree and deflected to the left. No such luck in the playoff, however. From a fairway bunker, Singh's second shot hit the top of the trap, leaving him a 4-iron into the green, and that one caught a plugged lie. He blasted out to 8 feet and saved par.

Dudley Hart, who started the final round tied with Singh, didn't make a birdie until making three in a row at the end for a 72 to finish one shot out of the playoff. He tied for third with John Mallinger (65) and Corey Pavin (66).

Jason Day, the 20-year-old from Australia, finished alone in sixth after a 70.

ELSEWHERE

Allianz Championship: Scott Hoch won his second Champions Tour title, birdieing five of the final eight holes for a 4-under 68 and a one-stroke victory over Brad Bryant and Bruce Lietzke in the Allianz Championship in Boca Raton, Fla.

Indian Masters: Shiv Chowrasia, the 29-year-old son of a Royal Calcutta Golf Club greenskeeper, won the Indian Masters for his first European tour title, closing with a 5-under-67 for a two-stroke victory over Ireland's Damien McGrane in New Delhi.

Australian Ladies Masters: England's Lisa Hall won the ANZ Australian Ladies Masters when South Korea's Shin Hyun-ju missed a 3-foot par putt on the final hole. Hall closed with a 6-under 66 for a 13-under 203 total in the rain-shortened tournament in Gold Coast, Australia.

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