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Posted April 13, 2014, 10:26 pm
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Bubba Watson wins second Masters in three years

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    Bubba Watson wins second Masters in three years
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    Bubba Watson reacts on the number eighteen green after winning the Masters Tournament at Augusta National Golf Club on Sunday, April 13, 2014, in Augusta, Ga.

 

Bubba Watson didn’t need a miracle shot from the pines in sudden death to win his second Mas­ters Tournament in three years. The only round in the 60s among the contenders Sunday was enough.

Watson beat Louis Oosthuizen on the second hole of sudden death in 2012, the final round ending in twilight and with Watson in tears.

There was no playoff Sunday, which meant plenty of sunlight for Watson to bask in after a three-shot victory, his second win of the season and sixth of his career.

“It’s overwhelming to win twice, to be with the great names (that have multiple Masters wins),” said Watson, the 17th player with more than one green jacket.

Watson was born in Pensacola, Fla., grew up in nearby Bagdad, Fla., and now lives in Tiger Woods’ old house in Windemere, Fla.

“A small-town guy named Bub­ba now has two green jackets,” Wat­son said. “It’s crazy to think that you’ve won.”

Watson, 35, took the walk up the hill to the 18th green with victory in hand this time, leading by three shots. In 2012, he was tied for the lead.

Watson, who started the day tied for the lead with Jordan Spieth, closed with 3-under-par 69 – his third round in the 60s – and a nice rebound from his third-round 74.

Spieth, the young Texan, stood tall in the face of the pressure for seven holes, holding a two-shot lead, but he couldn’t keep it up.

The 20-year-old, bidding to become the youngest Masters champion and the first Masters rookie to win in 35 years, ended up shooting 72 and tying for second place with Sweden’s Jonas Blixt (71), another Masters rookie. Blixt (70-71-71-71) broke par every day, and Spieth (71-70-70-72) never shot over par in a round.

After tapping in his par putt on No. 18, Watson broke down in tears again.

“For me, it’s a dream to be on the PGA Tour,” Watson said. “It’s a dream to win, and winning any tournament is a big deal. Winning the green jacket is a little bit bigger deal. So, yeah, I’m going to cry, because why me? Why Bubba Wat­son from Bagdad, Fla.? Why is he winning? So I just always ask the question ‘why, why me?’ That’s why I’m always going to cry. I’ll probably cry again tonight sometime, just thinking about it.”

Ted Scott, who has caddied for Watson in both victories at Augusta Na­tional, called the second win “a high you can’t explain.”

Said Scott: “This is the greatest stage in golf. You’re walking up 18, you look around, you see the history here, you see the crowd, it’s a beautiful day outside, the sun’s setting, the shadows are there. Every­thing about it is amazing. And you’re winning the Masters again.”

Spieth birdied four of his first seven holes, calling it a “dream start at Augusta.”

But he never made another birdie after that, playing his final 11 holes in 3-over fashion, with bogeys on Nos. 8, 9 and 12.

“It’s a stinger,” Spieth said. “I had it in my hand and could have gone forward with it. I didn’t quite make the putts. That’s what it came down to. The only thing I’m thinking about is: ‘When do I get back next year?’”

Watson opened with 69-68-74 and finished at 8-under 280, the highest winning score since Trevor Immelman’s 283 in 2008. In 2012, Watson shot 278.

It was one of the quietest second nines in recent memory, which was fine with Watson.

“There wasn’t too many birdies after No. 10, I don’t think,” he said.

Watson played the second nine in even-par 36 with bogey on No. 10 and birdie on No. 13 after shooting 33 on the front.

“That was some incredible golf he played down the stretch to hold it together and make his pars,” Spieth said. “Bubba Watson is a deserving Masters champion this year.”

It was a strong showing by the much-ballyhooed rookie class. Spieth and Blixt tied for second, and Jimmy Walker (70 on Sunday) and Kevin Stadler (73) both tied for eighth place. They will all be back next year by finishing in the top 12, which is an automatic qualifier.

Watson, who moved from 12th to fourth in the world rankings with the win, earned a Masters record $1,620,000 for the victory, $180,000 more than Adam Scott won last year.

The anticipated shootout in the pines never materialized. Of the 13 players within five shots of the lead entering the final round, Wat­son was the only one to shoot in the 60s.

“Nobody really caught fire,” Watson said.

It was the 20th time in the past 24 years that the winner came out of the final Sunday pairing, but the first time it’s happened since 2010.

It was shaping up to be a two-man race between Watson and Spieth on the front nine. Spieth birdied four of his first seven holes, highlighted by a holed-out bunker shot on No. 4, and took a two-shot lead over Watson after seven.

By the time the two hit the second nine, Watson had picked up four shots on Spieth and was two shots ahead. Watson birdied No. 8 and Spieth made bogey to even it up. Watson then birdied No. 9 and Spieth again made bogey, missing a short par putt.

“Nos. 8 and 9 were the turning points of the day,” Spieth said. “When I got to No. 10, I still thought I could get back into it.”

Spieth moved back to within a shot with a par save from a bunker on No. 10, which Watson bogeyed. It was on No. 10 that Spieth showed his first signs of anger, banging his club into the turf after his second shot found the bunker.

Watson went back up by two shots when he got up-and-down for par on the devilish par-3 12th hole, where Spieth scrambled to make bogey after hitting his tee shot in the water.

Watson put the hammer down with a 366-yard tee shot that hit a tree but still made it around the corner on the par-5 13th hole.

“That’s his day,” Spieth said after hearing about the shot.

It set up a wedge to 35 feet, which Watson two-putted, making a 7-footer to go up by three shots on Spieth.

They both parred the final five holes. Blixt played his final six in 1-under, catching Spieth for a share of second place.

Round 1
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InT
Par454343454364435453443672
Rnd453343454354434443443469
Tot.00-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-1-2-2-3-3-3-3-3-3
Round 2
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InT
Par454343454364435453443672
Rnd454343355364424342453268
Tot.-3-3-3-3-3-3-4-4-3-3-3-3-4-5-6-7-8-8-7-7-7
Round 3
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InT
Par454343454364435453443672
Rnd534444554383435454443674
Tot.-6-8-8-7-7-6-5-5-5-5-6-6-6-6-6-6-5-5-5-5-5
Round 4
Hole123456789Out101112131415161718InT
Par454343454364435453443672
Rnd455242443335434453443669
Tot.-5-5-4-5-5-6-6-7-8-8-7-7-7-8-8-8-8-8-8-8-8