Supreme shotmaking

In 2005, winning majors hinged on golfers' ability to be consistent all week, not just in crunch time

The best shots by major champions are not always the most memorable.

Sometimes, they look so routine that they don’t even get the courtesy of a replay. In the case of Tiger Woods at the British Open, his best were never shown on TV.

There was nothing extraordinary about his five-shot victory, a calculated performance at the Old Course that kept a small cast of challengers from catching him. Even so, Woods knew right away that Sunday at St. Andrews would be special, starting with a series of shots not many people saw.

That’s because they were on the practice range.

“I hit the 100-yard sign four straight times,” Woods said in an interview last week. “That was the start of my warmup. I hit a couple of little wedges to loosen up, then hit to the sign. Peppered it four straight times in the air, on the right zero – not the middle zero, the right zero.”

Swing coach Hank Haney was standing behind him, quietly impressed, and offered advice to the caddie.

“He hit that sign four times in a row – and five out of eight,” Steve Williams said. “Hank says to me, ‘The first time he gets inside 100 yards, you might want to tell him to aim away from the flag.'”

Williams laughed, just as he did that day. Turns out it wasn’t a joke.

Tiger Woods reacts after his chip-in birdie on the 16th hole during the final round of the 2005 Masters at Augusta National Golf Club. Woods, shown April 10 in Augusta, Ga., beat Chris DiMarco in a playoff for the green jacket.

“First time I’m inside 100 yards is on No. 6,” Woods said. “I had 98 yards to the hole. What happens? I one-hop it off the flag and it spins off the shelf.”

Woods had to scramble for par, and on the way to the next tee, Williams told him what Haney said on the range.

“I said, ‘You idiot, why didn’t you just tell me to aim away from the flag?’ It’s not that hard,” Woods said.

The next time he had under 100 yards was on No. 7.

Woods nearly holed out.

“I had to aim away from the flag there,” he said with a smile, “because of that shelf.”

The majors this year will be remembered for signature moments, although it was tough to find one at St. Andrews. Woods’ pitch on the 12th hole, which bounced up the throat to a front pin and stopped 4 feet away for birdie and a two-shot swing, was as good as any.

The other three majors had a defining shot, along with one that often gets overlooked:

Masters

Woods’ chip from behind the 16th green made a U-turn at the top of the slope, trickled toward the hole, paused two full seconds on the edge of the cup for effect, and became part of Augusta National lore the moment it dropped for birdie. For all his magic, he now is best identified by that shot.

As dramatic as that was, however, Woods was prouder of two shots that were simply steady – his 3-wood off the tee in the playoff with Chris DiMarco, and an equally pure 8-iron into 15 feet that set up his winning birdie.

“My two best golf shots of the week,” Woods said. “You can think of 16 all you want, but if 18 doesn’t happen, then it’s DiMarco’s – what a great chip and a great putt he made on 18, and all those things.”

U.S. Open

Michael Campbell was scratching out pars along the back nine as Woods was closing in. Woods certainly helped the cause with two late bogeys that gave Campbell a cushion.

But this was Pinehurst No. 2, where shots are dropped easily. Campbell delivered a knockout punch with his 20-foot birdie putt on the 17th hole that gave him a three-shot lead.

“I think everyone will remember the 17th,” Campbell said.

Still, the Kiwi won the U.S. Open on the par-3 15th with a bunker shot that ranks among the best of the year.

He missed the green to the left, and the only thing worse than a nasty lie was the length of the shot. He had to carry it some 25 yards to a turtleback green that fell off on all sides.

“It was semi-plugged, and I had to get it up over a little lip,” Campbell said. “If it goes three feet beyond the pin, it was off the green. Six feet below the pin, and it was off the green. That was the shot of the round.”

It came off perfectly, and he holed the 6-foot par putt.

“That bunker shot turned the game around,” Campbell said. “Tiger birdied that hole (to get within two), and he had not played the 16th yet. That could have changed the whole momentum of the round.”

PGA Championship

Phil Mickelson was up to his ankles in rough to the right of the 18th green, tied with Steve Elkington and Thomas Bjorn, needing to get up-and-down from some 50 feet to win his second major.

It was the kind of chip he had practiced countless times in his backyard as a boy in San Diego.

“It could have been the easiest chip, and still wouldn’t have been easy,” Mickelson said. “It was the situation that made it tough. The ball was sitting down a little bit in the grass, and I was able to go in and be aggressive with it because I had a little bit of upslope to the pin, and I didn’t fear the ball would take off by the hole.”

He raised his arms before the ball settled two feet away for a tap-in birdie.

But while Mickelson is among the best with a wedge, the shot that might have won the PGA was his drive. Baltusrol was softer and longer, with a stiff breeze. Mickelson needed birdie to win. He needed to be in the fairway.

“The best drive he’s ever hit,” caddie Jim Mackay said that afternoon.

Mickelson reached out and tapped the plaque for Jack Nicklaus, who hit the 18th green with a 1-iron to win the 1967 U.S. Open. He could not have done that from the rough.

“Ultimately, I had a chance to go at the green on 18, and almost got it up,” Mickelson said. “But I ended up making birdie.”

That’s all that mattered.