In the end, Tiger always stands alone

Victory at Torrey Pines again proves when it comes to playoffs, Woods has no peer

Everybody expected Jose Maria Olazabal to make the putt.

Tiger Woods certainly did. CBS had a camera trained on Woods as Olazabal settled over a 4-footer in the fast-fading afternoon light. And Tiger, cold-eyed as ever, already was staring off into the distance as if mentally rehearsing his next tee shot.

TV analyst David Feherty expected Olazabal to make it, and said so. Under their breath, so did most of the few thousand spectators ringing the green on the second extra hole Sunday at the Buick Invitational and millions more looking in from the comfort of their living-room sofas.

Olazabal expected to make it, too, and with good reason. The 39-year-old Spaniard is one of the nerviest putters around. He’s rolled them in for two decades now, with Masters, Ryder Cups and two dozen other tournaments on the line.

But not this time, and not against Woods, because … well, because nobody ever hangs on long enough to beat him.

Some guys peel off early, some in the middle of a round, and a tough few, like Olazabal, only when their fingernails are pulled all the way back. But they all let go of Tiger’s tail, eventually.

The putt Olazabal needed to force another playoff hole was a fast, tricky downhiller, with plenty of right-to-left break. The greens were bumpy by then, and the cool, moist, late-afternoon air made them even greasier, but the conditions weren’t anything Olazabal hadn’t faced dozens of times in a dozen different locales before.

“I had to make it,” Olazabal began, “so I decided that I was going to put less break on it and just hit it a little firmer. But I didn’t hit it firm enough.”

How many times have you heard some variation of the phrase – “I had to make it, so I decided …” – from one of Tiger’s pursuers?

Sometimes he wrings the concession speeches from opponents with a barrage of birdies, forcing everybody near the top of the leaderboard to start gambling like tourists waiting on a delayed flight home from Las Vegas. Other times, Woods piles up just enough pars on an opponent’s chest that the collective weight makes it tough to breathe. He gets tougher the longer the golf goes and one way or another, squeezes everybody – even good pals like Olazabal – out of their comfort zone.

There’s no single measure that quantifies the effect Woods has on other golfers playing head-to-head. But here’s two stats that help: He’s won all but three of 36 tournaments on the PGA Tour while holding at least a share of the 54-hole lead; and, he’s 12-1 in playoffs worldwide (losing only to Billy Mayfair at the 1998 Nissan Open).

“I shouldn’t have even been in the playoff,” Woods said. “Of all the things that happened today, I kept saying, ‘At least you have a chance.”‘

That’s about as humble as the man gets. Woods got ripped early in his pro career for admitting he won a tournament without his “A-game,” and he quickly learned to beg off the questions about why this competitor or that folded by saying, “You’ll have to ask them.”

Feherty felt no similar compunction to hold his tongue. He broke the brief silence after the missed putt with a few words that spoke volumes about Olazabal and Green, and for that matter, every other golfer who’s been undone by Tiger.

“Two pars by Woods. The other two fell on their swords.”