Flopping Tiger aims to clean up his entire game

Updated: 2013-06-04 07:25

By Reuters in Dublin, Ohio (China Daily)

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 Flopping Tiger aims to clean up his entire game

Tiger Woods of the US catches his ball before making a par on the 11th hole in the final round of the Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio on Sunday. Matt Sullivan / Reuters

Flopping Tiger aims to clean up his entire game

Tiger Woods ended a largely forgettable week at the Memorial Tournament, languishing tied for 65th in a field of 73, and conceding that he needs to clean up every aspect of his game before the upcoming US Open.

A five-time winner at Muirfield Village Golf Club where he was the defending champion, Woods struggled with his putting on lightning-fast greens for all four rounds as he finished up a distant 20 strokes behind winner Matt Kuchar.

Though his accuracy off the tee was surprisingly good throughout the tournament, Woods totaled 119 putts during the week and paid a hefty price after running up big numbers on certain holes at a venue he knows as well as anyone.

"It happens," Woods told reporters after closing with an even-par 72 at Muirfield Village to finish at 8-over 296, the second-highest score of his career. His highest in a 72-hole event was 298 at the 2010 WGC-Bridgestone Invitational

"It happens to us all," said world No 1 Woods, who had triumphed three times in his previous four starts on the PGA Tour. "I will go home next week and practice.

"It's just one of those weeks. This week I obviously didn't putt well. I had bad speed all week. I thought the greens didn't look that fast, but they were putting fast. I could never get the speed of them."

The second major of the year, the June 13-16 US Open at Merion in Ardmore, Pennsylvania, is fast approaching, and Woods gave a succinct reply when asked which areas of his game needed improving.

"Everything," said the 37-year-old American, who won the most recent of his 14 major titles at the 2008 US Open.

"You want everything clicking on all cylinders, especially at the US Open, because everything is tested in the US Open."

Woods began the final round among the back-markers for a second day in a row and ran into trouble when he triple-bogeyed the par-three 12th after taking two shots to escape from a terrible lie in a greenside bunker, then three-putted.

"I was just trying to put the ball against the face on the up-slope on the other side so I had a chance to spin the next one," he said of his first bunker shot.

"And it actually rolled back on the bottom where there's no sand. I hit a decent shot and obviously it skipped by. And the first putt was awful, just bad speed. The second putt I pulled as well."

Woods dropped another stroke at the par-four 14th before finally being rewarded with a birdie at the par-five 15th where he struck a wedge to four foot and buried the putt.

Woods had astonishingly recorded a bogey and two doubles there in the three previous rounds.

"I birdied in a conventional way, I guess," he said of the 15th. "With a wedge in there to about three-and-a-half feet behind it.

"Other times (this week) I had a chance to go for (the green in two) and knock it on there and I didn't make very good shots."

He also bogeyed the 14th before picking up his first shots of the day at the 15th and 17th to reach the turn in 2-over 38.

Woods fared a lot better on his back nine, sandwiching birdies at the second, fourth and fifth around a lone bogey at the third to come home in two-under 34.

"It wasn't like it was that far off today," he said of his overall game, having hit 12 of 14 fairways and 13 of 18 greens in regulation. "It was just one hole that cost me obviously a few shots."

(China Daily 06/04/2013 page24)

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