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Dustin Johnson repeats at Pebble Beach

February 16th 2010 13:15



Dustin Johnson stood on the 18th tee as powerful waves crashed along the sea wall along the left side of the famous 18th hole at Pebble Beach. Then he turned to face what he considers the toughest drive on the golf course.

"It's such a gorgeous hole," Johnson said. "If you miss it a little left, it's not so pretty."


What followed was a tee shot as majestic as the scenery around him.

Johnson's drive was long and pure, setting up a simple birdie from the greenside bunker Sunday. It gave him a one-shot victory over David Duval and J.B. Holmes, making him the first player in 20 years to win back-to-back in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.

Johnson closed with a 2-over 74, the highest final round by a Pebble Beach champion since Johnny Miller (74) in 1994. The 25-year-old Johnson is the first player since Tiger Woods to go straight from college and win in each of his first three years on the PGA TOUR.

Johnson hit a 3-iron into the front right bunker, the best place to miss, and blasted out to 3 feet. He lightly pumped his fist when he made the putt, a mixture of celebration and relief from a long day in which four players had a share of the lead at some point.

"All you can ask for is a chance to win on the last hole," Johnson said.

Paul Goydos didn't get that opportunity. Leading by one shot with five holes to play, Goydos hit a chip that ran off the other side of the treacherous 14th green, another chip that came back down the slope toward his feet and three-putted for a quadruple-bogey 9.


He wound up with a 78 and tied for fifth.

Two other players -- Bryce Molder and Alex Prugh -- also made a 9 on the par-5 14th hole, the kind of carnage typically seen at the U.S. Open, which will be at Pebble in four months.

"It wasn't like I didn't try on all nine shots," Goydos said. "The ninth one I really wasn't all that excited about. Just everything I did on that hole didn't work out."

Johnson's two victories were nothing alike.

He essentially won last year when he walked off Spyglass Hill on a Saturday with a four-shot lead. Johnson was declared the winner two days later when the tournament was shortened to 54 holes because of rain.

He had to work a lot longer -- and harder -- this time around.

Duval put together his best four rounds in years, closing with a 3-under 69 that he didn't think would be enough until Johnson went over the green and made a pair of bogeys on the back nine.

Johnson's power, and the shot he struck on the 18th, made all the difference.

Duval doesn't have the length to get home in two at Pebble's closing hole, not into the ocean breeze on soft fairways, so he played smartly to the right. His wedge came up just enough short to catch the slope and roll 30 feet away.

"I feel like I did most of the things I wanted to do today," Duval said.

Holmes has the length, but he didn't have the direction on the 18th. Playing in the group ahead of Johnson, he hit into the right rough and had to lay up, then missed a birdie putt just outside 12 feet.

"Would have liked it to end a little better for me, but I had a good week," Holmes said after a 71. "Had my chances."

Johnson made the most of his.

"The tee shot he hit on 18 was all world," Goydos said. "I mean, that's never straight and narrow where he's hitting the ball, consider he has to make 4 to win the golf tournament. Pretty impressive."

Johnson became the first player since Davis Love III in 2003 to win Pebble Beach with a birdie on the 72nd hole from the final group. He finished at 16-under 270 and moved to No. 2 in the Ryder Cup standings.

His future looks as bright as the sunshine that graced the Monterey Peninsula for so much of the week. Not since Mark O'Meara in 1990 has someone won back-to-back at Pebble Beach, and this can only help Johnson with the U.S. Open coming to Pebble this summer. The other back-to-back winners are all in the Hall of Fame -- Sam Snead, Cary Middlecoff, Jack Nicklaus and Tom Watson.

"That's not a bad list," Johnson said. "Anytime you're on a list with those guys, you're doing all right."

Johnson joins Sean O'Hair as the only Americans in the their 20s with three TOUR victories.

Duval earned $545,600 and might be able to take some confidence to Mexico for the Mayakoba Golf Classic at Riviera Maya-Cancun. After he tied for second in the U.S. Open last summer, Duval took the next two weeks off and missed seven cuts over his last eight tournaments to lose his card.

The U.S. Open returns to Pebble Beach for the fifth time in June, although it will be far differently with firm greens and fast fairways. Even so, it doesn't hurt Johnson to have won twice here, even if he had only two sub-par holes in the final round.

The other was his eagle on the par-5 sixth, when he pounded a tee shot and had only a 6-iron to the green, sticking it to 4 feet.

And while he treats his two victories equally, nothing tops walking off the 18th green in sunshine before thousands of fans, instead of last year when he got a phone call at breakfast on a rainy Monday morning with news he had won.

"Walking down that 18th hole with all the fans out there was just unbelievable, especially with the clear day," Johnson said. "It's one of the most beautiful holes in golf."

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Dustin Johnson and Paul Goydos could not be any more different, which is why it was so odd to see them atop the leaderboard Saturday at the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am with identical scores.

On their birth certificates, Goydos is 20 years older. On the tee, Johnson is 48 yards longer.

Johnson is tall and athletic. Goydos is ... not.

They played with the gifts they have, and they used them brilliantly on a gorgeous afternoon that gives Pebble Beach such iconic status as America's most famous seaside course.

Johnson overpowered Spyglass Hill for an 8-under 64 that included two eagles. Goydos poked his way along the splendid coastline of Pebble Beach and birdied two of the last three holes for an 8-under 64.

Nothing separated them on the scoreboard, which is all that matters. They were at 18-under 196, four shots clear of anyone else heading into the final round.

"His game is a little different from mine," said Johnson, who will try to become only the fifth back-to-back winner of the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, and the first in 20 years. "And he finds a way to get it done."

Johnson began his round at Spyglass Hill with a 343-yard drive, leaving him a hybrid for his second shot on the 595-yard hole. It rolled past the pin, and he made a 20-foot eagle from the fringe.

Goydos ripped a 268-yard drive on the par-5 second hole at Pebble Beach, leaving him a 3-wood into the 513-yard hole that he hit to 8 feet for an eagle.

Two questions to each player spoke volumes about how different they play.

Goydos was asked if he will simply ignore how far Johnson hits the ball off the tee.

"No, I fully panic," Goydos said. "You know, it is what it is. I don't know if 'ignore' is the right word, but you appreciate. I'm going to appreciate his play, but you go out and play your game, too. I have do things differently than he does, and he's got to do things differently than I do."

Johnson was asked which course plays long for him. His answer came through a fixed smile.

"Not too many of 'em," he said.

Even so, the 25-year-old Johnson, emerging as one of the top young American stars, is not about to take Goydos lightly.

"It doesn't matter how far you hit it or where you hit it," Johnson said. "You've just got to find a way to get it in the hole. Whoever can get it in the hole tomorrow is going to come out with the victory."

J.B. Holmes and Bryce Molder each had a 68 at Spyglass Hill, while Matt Jones had a 66 on the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula. They were tied for third at 14-under 200.

David Duval had a 67 and was tied for seventh. Phil Mickelson had a 69 at Pebble Beach and was eight shots out of the lead.

The biggest star Saturday was the weather, some of the most spectacular conditions this tournament has seen in years. Along the coast of Pebble Beach, huge swells crashed against the rocks and the sea wall.

"The ocean was angry today," Goydos said. "What they've got here is God's gift to golf."

Goydos' game isn't always so pretty, although there is no disputing how he reached the top of the leaderboard. On the par-5 sixth hole, his second shot from the rough barely cleared the hill and nearly went into a bunker. With an awkward stance, he did well to get it on the green. And after a two-putt par, he said to his partners, "That never looked like it was going to be better than a 5."

One hole later, with a stiff ocean breeze at his back and a downhill shot to a green 97 yards away, he hit sand wedge to 2 feet.

Over at Spyglass, traditionally the toughest course on the rotation, Johnson was whaling away. The defending champion had two eagles and played the par 5s in 6 under, and he had a chance at the course record of 62 until charging his birdie putt past the hole and missing the comeback putt for par.

"Length is not an issue," Johnson said. "Doesn't play very long for me. If I'm hitting it in the fairway, then it definitely plays right into my hands, because I can get to all the par 5s there."

On this glorious day with a stiff breeze, Spyglass was the place to be. Pebble Beach and the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula, a par 70 and newcomer to the rotation, are exposed along the ocean. Except for five holes, Spyglass is sheltered by pines and cypress.

Johnson and Goydos couldn't recall playing with each other before, and even if they did, it's not like they would have been together given the difference in their tee shots.

Goydos paused when asked if he considered Johnson to be a better player.

"He's won twice in two years. I've won twice in 18," Goydos said. "'Better' is an interesting word. He's definitely off to a much better start than I had. There's a slight curve because I've been out so long. So if he'd won 10 times after 18 years, the answer is 'yes.' But right now? I don't know."

Then he paused once more before adding, "He's definitely showing signs of it."

this artice written by By Staff and Wire Reports
from PGA tour .com
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Defending champion Dustin Johnson closed with five consecutive birdies to finish with an 8-under 64 and top the leaderboard at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am on Thursday.

Johnson overpowered the par 5s with his string of birdies on a pristine day at Pebble Beach to equal the tournament record with a 30 on the back nine.

Charley Hoffman had a 6-under 64 on the Shore Course at Monterey Peninsula, the newcomer to a three-course rotation that opened to rave reviews and scenery to match.

"One of my favorites now on TOUR," Phil Mickelson said after a 68 at Monterey Peninsula.

The best round might have belonged to David Duval, who played bogey-free until the final hole for a 5-under 67 at Spyglass Hill, traditionally the toughest course of the bunch. The average score at Spyglass was 71.52, compared with a 70.89 at Pebble Beach and a 69.97 at Monterey Peninsula.

J.B. Holmes finished eagle-birdie at Pebble Beach for a 7-under 65, an unusual streak that began by holing out an 8-iron on the par-4 eighth hole over the edge of the Pacific Ocean. Korea's K.J. Choi also had a 65 at Pebble Beach.

The most famous of the three courses was the best place to be in such serene conditions. If wind and rain is in the forecast -- anything is possible in these parts -- it's best to get Pebble out of the way.

"It's one of the best places you want to be when it's good weather," Johnson said. "It's so pretty, too. It's a fun place to be."

It's always good to have length, and Johnson used that to his advantage.

He reached the front edge of the green on the 573-yard 14th hole, setting up a chip and a putt to start his birdie run. Johnson was worried momentarily when he pulled his 3-wood toward the out-of-bounds stake, safe by some 20 feet and leaving him a sand wedge that he hit inside 6 feet. Johnson finished with another big drive that left him only a 3-iron to the middle of the par-5 18th green.

Johnson had 169 yards to the hole, typically an 8-iron. But with the pin to the back right, he tried to protect against too much spin down the slope. Instead, he hit what Johnson called a "chip 7-iron" that settled about 6 feet away.

"One of the better swings," he said.

Johnson missed a 30-inch par putt on the fifth hole, but that's not unusual at this tournament, with soft, damp greens that get plenty of footprints considering the 156 players each have an amateur partner.

Holmes also missed a par putt about that length on the par-3 seventh hole, but he bounced back better than he could have imagined. The 8-iron over a corner of the ocean to a tough green at No. 8 covered the flag and landed about 10 feet behind the cup before it spun back into the hole. He followed that with a 40-foot birdie putt on the ninth.

"That's one of those rare occasions when you make one and you actually hit it perfect," he said of his 8-iron from 175 yards.

Holmes has been working with Dave Stockton over the last month, and the first instruction was to ditch the belly putter. Stockton wanted Holmes to putt the way he did as a kid -- similar to the advice Stockton gave Mickelson-- and Holmes learned quickly that it was tough to make a forward press with the end of a putter jabbed into his gut.

"That was a pretty quick decision," Holmes said. "I had been wanting to go to the short putter, anyway."

The celebrities were at Monterey Peninsula, and the antics were at a minimum. Most of them -- whether it's Bill Murray or George Lopez or Andy Garcia -- pace themselves for the third round Saturday at Pebble Beach.

The best golf out of Mickelson's group belonged to Brian Gay, who shot a 68. Mickelson made the turn at 3 under, but he missed a short par putt on the 14th and played his final eight holes in 1 over.

One similarity to Pebble -- along with the Pacific scenery -- is that it's best to play Monterey Peninsula on a calm day. Half of the holes run along the coast, making them exposed to the wind.

"We caught it on a pretty calm day, and I thought that there were some low rounds to be had out there," Mickelson said. "But you've got to make some putts. That was the one area that I didn't quite do."

Hoffman's highlight was an eagle at the par-5 sixth with a hybrid that cleared the bunker and stayed on the top shelf, some 18 feet away.

Japan's Ryo Ishikawa, 18 had a 72, while 21-year-old Rickie Fowler ended with a 67.

Information was taken from PGATour.com
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