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SAN DIEGO (AP) -- Tiger Woods wasn't sure if his
left knee would allow him to finish 72 holes of the U.S. Open. After
yet another defining moment at Torrey Pines, he was thrilled to get a
chance at 18 more. Down to his last stroke,
Woods holed a 12-foot birdie putt that curled into the right side of
the cup on the 18th hole to force a playoff with Rocco Mediate, who
could only watch on TV as Woods delivered another epic moment in an
Open loaded with them. Mediate, trying to
become the oldest champion at age 45, two-putted for par from above the
ridge for an even-par 71 to finish at 1-under 283, the first time since
2004 that someone broke par in a U.S. Open. It
looked like it might be good enough when Woods and Lee Westwood of
England, both one shot behind, hit into the bunker on each side of the
fairway on the 527-yard closing hole and had to lay up. Westwood's 15-foot birdie putt never had a chance, losing speed and turning away. He shot 73. From
an unpredictable lie in the right rough, Woods gouged a wedge out to 12
feet right of the pin. He started to backpedal as the putt neared the
hole, paused to make sure it was in, then clenched and pumped both
fists toward him with his head to the sky. "Unbelievable. I knew he'd make it," Mediate said as he watched from a scoring room. Woods shot 73 and will be in a playoff for the third time in a major, this one 18 holes of stroke play on Monday. The 50,000 fans at Torrey Pines, who thought they had seen it all during a most remarkable week, now get a little bit more. It
will be the first playoff at the U.S. Open - the only major that goes
18 holes of overtime - since Retief Goosen defeated Mark Brooks at
Southern Hills in 2001. And it was made possible by Woods, among the greatest clutch putters of all time, making a putt that simply couldn't miss. "A
little wobbly down there," he said of the poa greens, a grass that gets
bumpier in the afternoon sun. "I played probably 2 1/2 holes outside
right. Just take it back and make a pure stroke, because once it starts
slowing down there ... you don't know what's going to happen. All I
could control is my stroke." The birdie
concluded a week in which Woods played the first two rounds with Phil
Mickelson, shot 30 on his back nine Friday to get into contention, took
the 54-hole lead Saturday with two eagle putts totaling 100 feet, and
wobbled on a surgically repaired knee that often turned a megawatt
smile into a painful grimace. The knee, which
sidelined him from the Masters until this week, didn't seem to bother
him as much Sunday - certainly not when he launched into the wildest
celebration of the week. "I took some things to kind of relieve that," Woods said of the soreness. Adrenaline maybe? "Uh, that helps, too," he said. Mediate
made only one bogey over the final 13 holes, seizing on his best - and
perhaps only - chance to win a major. He grazed the edge of the cup on
a 15-foot birdie try at the 17th and hit a wedge too strong on the
18th, both pars keeping Woods in the game. Monday will not be the first time they have tussled. Mediate
played with a 23-year-old Woods in the final round of the Phoenix Open
in 1999, where he led by six shots and held on to win by three. It was
one of his five PGA Tour victories. "Battle
royale," Mediate said of what awaits. "The thing that is most amazing
is the man I'm going to play tomorrow has won 13 of these. It's amazing
how much it takes. I gave all I had today and I can't complain." Woods
has never lost a major when he had at least a share of the 54-hole
lead, and he came close to throwing this one away on a series of
questionable decisions and poor shots. He
tried to reach the 13th green in two from 291 yards when a birdie was
not necessary, then pulled it into a hazard and walked off with bogey
to slip one shot behind Mediate, who had birdied the 14th ahead of him. Woods
then laid up with an iron on the 14th, where the tees were moved up to
make it play only 267 yards, hit a sand wedge 20 feet beyond the hole
and made par. And two shots into the right rough on the 15th led to a
bogey that put him one shot behind. Standing over an all-or-nothing putt on the last hole, Woods again delivered. It
was reminiscent of the 2000 PGA Championship at Valhalla, where he made
a six-foot birdie putt that broke both ways to get into a playoff
against Bob May, the critical piece on his way to four straight majors. "It
feels very similar to what Valhalla felt like," Woods said. "If I
didn't make that putt, I don't get to continue to keep playing. At
best, I gave myself a chance to win the tournament tomorrow. And that's
all I can ask for." Westwood, trying to
become the first European in 38 years to win the U.S. Open, fell one
stroke short. He had a one-shot lead at the turn and fought to stay in
the game after consecutive bogeys early on the back nine. "It's
sickening not to be in the playoff tomorrow," he said. "But all in all,
I played pretty good all week. And if somebody said, 'You're going to
have a chance for a playoff on Monday,' then I would have probably
taken that at the start of the week. I think I've proved to myself and
a few others that I think there is a major championship in me." Woods even being in contention on the back looked uncertain the way he started. In
the final group for the sixth time in the last eight majors, this one
was packed with curiosity over the state of his knee, and it showed.
Fans stood 25 rows deep behind the tee, and those in the top row of the
bleachers on the 18th hole turned to watch. Among those in the crowd
was his swing coach, Hank Haney, who pleaded as Woods settled over the
tee shot, "C'mon, buddy." He snap-hooked the
tee shot over the gallery, and so began another journey to double bogey
- his second shot was left and hit a tree, his third shot clipped
another tree and stayed in thick rough, his fourth didn't reach the
green, and he got up-and-down for a 6. That put him 7-over for the week on his opening hole, and was his third double bogey on No. 1. After a three-putt bogey - his fourth of the week - on No. 2, he didn't make another mistake until the 13th. Woods
won that three-hole playoff at Valhalla by one shot, and he won the
2005 Masters in a sudden-death playoff with an 8-iron into 15 feet on
the first extra hole to beat Chris DiMarco. This
one is a full round on a wounded knee against a 45-year-old with a back
so creaky he once contemplated retirement. Now, Mediate feels as though
he has nothing to lose. "I don't know how you make odds on that," Mediate said. "Who knew I would be here playing against him tomorrow?" Then he noticed Woods standing at the door of the interview room. "And you better watch yourself tomorrow, pal," Mediate said playfully. "See, he's a little nervous right now." Woods joined the laughter. Nervous? Probably not. But definitely thrilled to still be playing. ©
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