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Flying high in Hawaii

Woods eagles No. 18 twice to defeat Singh in playoff

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Posted: Wednesday November 22, 2000 8:01 PM
Updated: Friday December 29, 2000 2:01 PM

  Tiger Woods After a good night's sleep, Tiger Woods had the look of a champion, and proved it with a thrilling playoff win. AP

KAUAI, Hawaii (Ticker) -- A double at the 18th hole Wednesday gave Tiger Woods a triple at the Grand Slam of Golf.

Woods finished the 36-hole, four-player tournament with an eagle to force a playoff with Vijay Singh of Fiji. It lasted just one hole as Woods eagled the 18th to win it.

"I've had back-to-back eagles before but never in a tournament like that," said Woods, who pumped his fist after sinking the winning 8-foot putt. "Not with everything on the line."

Already the first player to compete in the unofficial PGA Tour event four straight years, Woods used the two eagles to become the first to win the Grand Slam in three consecutive seasons.

Despite suffering from jetlag after claiming his 10th win of the year in Thailand over the weekend, Woods shot a 4-under-par 68 to tie Singh at 5-under 139.

"I was pretty tired and I got a great night's sleep," he said. "Slept about eight or nine hours and felt great this morning."

Tiger Tracker
Tiger Woods made even more magic -- and history -- Wednesday at the PGA Grand Slam of Golf. His two eagles on No. 18 -- the first to force a playoff with Vijay Singh, the second to win -- were vintage Woods. Check out Tiger's rounds using CNNSI.com's Tiger Tracker and see how he made his charge. 
 
 

The reigning U.S. Open, British Open and PGA Championship winner claimed $400,000 after breaking his own tour earnings record by collecting $9,188,321 during the season.

Singh, the 2000 Masters champion who was runner-up to Woods when this was a match-play event in 1998, led by two strokes after the first round but settled for the $250,000 second prize. He won more than $2.5 million during the tour schedule.

Tom Lehman finished third at 1-under 143, and Paul Azinger placed fourth at 149. The two qualified as alternates in the event that is designed to bring together the year's four major winners.

Lehman was one stroke behind Woods and one ahead of Singh before finding the water on the par-4 13th hole and taking double-bogey to drop to even par for the tournament. He had a triple-bogey on Tuesday.

"Both days I feel like I played pretty well and suffered, well, one bad swing each day, which cost me five shots," said Lehman, the 1997 Grand Slam and British Open champ and PGA Tour Player of the Year.

Woods had three birdies on the front side to take a two-shot lead but fell back into a tie with Singh at the par-4 10th, where he bogeyed and Singh birdied.

Singh bogeyed the next two holes to fall two strokes back but birdied Nos. 13-15 to take a one-stroke lead.

Woods, however, tied Singh at 5-under with an eagle at the 550-yard, par-5 18th, where he went driver, 6-iron before rolling in the 10-foot putt. His driver, 7-iron combination in sudden-death helped him win it.

Before Woods' winning eagle, Singh had a chance for a 3 on the hole, but rolled a 12-foot putt four feet past the hole.

"He made two good shots and he made the putts," Singh said. "Bottom line is, he did what he needed to do."

 
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Singh grabs Grand Slam lead, while Woods struggles
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Tiger Woods is glad to have escaped yet another duel with Vijay Singh. (181 K)
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