Day defeats Noren in marathon play-off for second Torrey victory
What happened at the Farmers Insurance Open?
Away from the Tiger Woods comeback show (see Talking point) there was a fascinating shoot-out at Torrey Pines as Jason Day and Alex Noren matched each other shot for shot in a play-off, so much so that they returned on Monday morning to decide the winner.
In a three-man play-off Noren spun one back down to kick-in distance which meant Day and Ryan Palmer had to match his birdie. Palmer’s wedge was wide and his putt never threatening but Day knocked his 10 footer straight in the middle. And then it was two…
This time around both players found the green, Day playing a brilliant iron from the first cut to 15 feet, but the result was the same, a pair of birdies.
On to the par-3 16th where Day missed a 10-footer, Noren two-putting from three times that distance, which took them to the par-4 17th and another pair of pars despite both finding the sand off the tee. The Aussie’s putt came up one roll shy of ending it in style while Noren knocked it in from three feet.
It finally looked like going in Noren’s favour after he found the green with his hybrid from 240 yards but Day, having found sand off the tee, wedged to eight feet and holed yet another nerveless putt in almost darkness.
So, it was to be settled on Monday morning.
Day looked to have handed the advantage to the Swede from the 18th tee after he lost his drive right, but, it wasn’t to be for Noren.
Smelling blood he grabbed his three-wood and aimed for the centre of the green but his effort came up just short on the banking and found the water, Day knew a birdie would be good enough.
The Australia hit one of the finest wedge shots of his career to around 18 inches with Noren knowing unless he holed out from the fairway it was all but over.
Noren knocked his effort past and saw the resulting putt slide by leaving Day to tap home for his 11th PGA Tour victory and his second at Torrey Pines.
? No. 11 after six playoff holes!
Congrats to @JDayGolf on his victory at the @FarmersInsOpen. #QuickHits pic.twitter.com/4PT3FYUxvO
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 29, 2018
Coming down the stretch in regulation play there was a four-way tie at 11 under but then Noren, Palmer and JB Holmes all made a mess of the 14th while up ahead Day was bogeying the 15th.
Day’s back was so bad that he had to pull out of the pro-am and could hardly line up a putt on Thursday but then found his game and some pain relief as he then posted a 64. His 70 set the clubhouse target after going out in 32 only to come back in 38 for a four-round aggregate of 10 under.
Holmes added back-to-back bogeys at 15 and 16 to leave himself needing an eagle to tie with Day. After an age he finally pulled the trigger… on a wedge after putting the fairway wood back in the bag. The lay up finished in the rough and while he made a birdie he came up one shot short.
But Palmer, who also bogeyed 15 and needed a closing birdie, played a delightful pitch, using the slope to finish just a few feet away and he joined the play-off.
Noren was a victim of Holmes’ indecision and he changed to a 3-wood from a hybrid at the 18th and overshot the green by such a distance that he had to take a drop off to the side of the green. The Swede gave himself a 15-foot putt for victory but the putt was too pacey.
Defending champion Jon Rahm looked all set for something special after opening rounds of 68-66 but he then doubled the par-5 18th for 75 and his Sunday was two shots worse as he tumbled down the leaderboard.
Best quote
“The only thing I have is my short game and my heart. That got me through today,” Tiger after hitting three fairways on Saturday and still shooting a two-under 70
Talking point
Do you really have to ask? After day two Tiger Woods had to birdie his final hole just to make the weekend, after day three he described his play as ‘gross’ and he only hit 17/56 fairways yet there were plenty of positives as he made his long-awaited PGA Tour return.
Given the Hero World Challenge isn’t an official event this was Tiger’s first weekend golf on Tour since the Wyndham in August 2015. He might have spent much of the week trudging off towards the galleries after a two-way miss off the tee but he finished the week admitting that he thought a 65 on Sunday might have given him a chance of victory.
As it was he was round in 72 for a three-under total and with his work around the greens in good order. After all the talk of chyips and ‘release patterns’ there were whispers down in the Bahamas that he was still a bit iffy with some loft in his hands.
This week there was none of that this week and, while the driver was the low point, the short game deserved an A+.
“His short game is probably as good or better than I ever remember it being,” said Saturday playing partner Brandt Snedeker. “The things I look for are: Is he fighting? Is he grinding? Is he doing the short-game stuff? It’s all there. It’s not as far away as I thought it would be not being able to play professional golf for really two years. I was very encouraged by it.”
Another positive was Woods’ ability to hit shots out of the rough – there was no rough in the Bahamas or in Florida at this time of year – the main problem now is how to avoid hitting so many shots from the thick stuff.
An in-depth analysis of Tiger's new swing. ? pic.twitter.com/TM5eWA8f5b
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 28, 2018
Moments of the week
What. A. Shot.#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/Yzftzi07fz
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 29, 2018
Down to two!
Day and Noren sink birdies the first playoff hole. #QuickHits pic.twitter.com/X8p9tsOrZc
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 29, 2018
Know your game.
Alex Noren spins it back to within two feet on the first playoff hole.#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/PXjOKHMJFp
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 29, 2018
"If Rahm can do it so can I." – @JustinRose99, probably.#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/z51Mbit0W6
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 28, 2018
Some pars are more important than others…@JDayGolf stays at -11 still one-shot back of the lead.#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/DY884BU8MR
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 28, 2018
Last 11 holes for @JBHolmesgolf: NINE birdies. #QuickHits pic.twitter.com/jBSWidctHK
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 28, 2018
Shot 1: 290 yds. ?
Shot 2: 252 yds.?
Shot 3: 38' 2" ft. ?#ShotoftheDay pic.twitter.com/eOeuF1ETfY— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 28, 2018
A birdie at the last for @TigerWoods!
He shoots 33 on his back 9 to move inside the cut line.
It wasn't easy. #QuickHits pic.twitter.com/zWFDingLXp
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 26, 2018
WOW!
THAT close to a hole-in-one for @TigerWoods!#QuickHits pic.twitter.com/VfEpjdSq6A
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) January 25, 2018
Best dressed
I’ll be honest I’m hardly looking at the clothes. That hair. Ollie Schniederjans doesn’t have a cap deal and thank the lord that he doesn’t. The PGA Tour finally has an answer to Robert Rock..
Worst dressed
Ordinarily the Swedes are fairly natty dressers but David Lingmerth has let the side down here. There is probably a story behind the shoes, maybe the yellow laces are meant to mirror the national flag but it hasn’t worked here.
Tweets of the week
It took me 30’ to do a mile exiting right of #TorreyPines
On top of that I have to deal with drunk drivers.— Emiliano Grillo (@GrilloEmiliano) January 27, 2018
My stats may look bad to the average person, but please don’t ignore the fact that I’m leading the PGA Tour in suitcases packed after the first round! Also in the top 10 in flights booked after the first round. #golfishard #help
— Steve Wheatcroft (@wheatiePGA) January 26, 2018
I want to see every shot tiger hits… it’s why I practiced early this am! Love watching when I’m not playing. I’m a little biased toward @TomLovelady25 #roommatelyfe https://t.co/bnF5ogbZXI
— Justin Thomas (@JustinThomas34) January 25, 2018
Best stats
This was Tiger's longest measured tee shot in a PGA Tour event in 940 days (2015 Greenbrier 2nd Round) https://t.co/zwJ6BOjThk
— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGC) January 28, 2018
Fewest official starts before reaching OWGR no. 1 (began in 1986):
Tiger 21
Spieth 77With a win Sunday, Rahm will get there in 39 starts.
— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGC) January 26, 2018
Tiger Woods: 30.4% fairways hit this week, a career-low on the PGA Tour for any 72-hole tournament. Previous low: 36% at East Lake in 2004.
— Justin Ray (@JustinRayGC) January 28, 2018
.@JonRahmpga has been inside the top-10 of the leaderboard 41 times (t-most of any player) after any round @PGATOUR Since the start of the 2016-17 season #ShotLink pic.twitter.com/wm37PfH5vA
— PGA TOUR Media (@PGATOURmedia) January 27, 2018
Record-breaking Li takes Dubai Desert glory as McIlroy edged out
Cartpool Karaoke: Andy Sullivan
‘Players must be able to make a respectable living on the LET’
Mark Townsend
Been watching and playing golf since the early 80s and generally still stuck in this period. Huge fan of all things Robert Rock, less so white belts. Handicap of 8, fragile mind and short game