The 'never-before-seen' moment amid Tiger's miracle victory
Amid Tiger Woods’ remarkable comeback victory, golf pundits have been left in shock by an insane ‘never-before-seen’ moment.
Tiger capped one of the most remarkable individual comebacks in sporting history with a victory at the Tour Championship on Monday(AEST), his 80th PGA Tour title.
The 14-time major champion and overnight leader closed with a one-over-par 71 and at 11 under he finished two shots ahead of runner-up Billy Horschel (66).
It is the first victory worldwide for Woods since the 2013 WGC-Bridgestone and he is now just two titles shy of Sam Snead’s all-time list record of 82.
As Tiger was walking towards the 18th green, he was absolutely mobbed by fans wanting to witness a win they thought they’d never see again.
Images of the incredible scenes immediately went viral, with one golf journalist saying she’d never seen anything like it before.
I’ve never seen anything like this! #TigerWoods pic.twitter.com/ZlnXUNQjJF
— Teryn Gregson (@teryngregson) September 23, 2018
Golf is Tiger Woods
Golf needs Tiger Woods
Golf missed Tiger Woods
Golf is happy because of Tiger WoodsTiger Woods is the gift that keeps on giving to Golf pic.twitter.com/og0nVHNcCO
— JO (@Jadenosteen) September 23, 2018
This is what the 18th hole of the PGA Tour Championship looked like when Tiger Woods sunk his putt to win the PGA Tour Championship on Sunday September 23, 2018. #Insane #HugeGallery pic.twitter.com/C2lJqu8LMU
— tatooed goalie dad #31 (@sandropacheco71) September 23, 2018
Please don’t tell me the Golf doesn’t need Tiger Woods. pic.twitter.com/DJn1LaPDFm
— Dave Barabas (@Dave_Barabas) September 23, 2018
Tiger Woods 1997
Tiger Woods 2018This bloke knows how to draw a crowd. Golf bosses are dancing a jig right now. #TigerWoods @TigerWoods #PGA @PGATOUR pic.twitter.com/Vbomr2RfDd
— Peter Brown (@SydneyEditor) September 23, 2018
Tiger Woods is..
The needle. The pinnacle. The reason thousands of fans charge down the 72nd hole. THE GOAT. pic.twitter.com/QWiBAqsPrC
— Harvey Jamison (@HarveyJamison) September 23, 2018
Did you see the crowd around Tiger Woods at the #PGAChampionship !
I'm not exaggerating when I tell you it looked like the line to get into a @realDonaldTrump rally! #MAGA pic.twitter.com/m7OFnL1vyz— #MAGA: How Donald Trump Will Save America (@CCOT_MAGA) September 23, 2018
Tiger Woods is golf. pic.twitter.com/QjiK4kYrDG
— John Henry (@thecatzpyjamaz) September 23, 2018
Tiger falls just short of FedExCup victory
Dustin Johnson (67) finished third at seven under, while world No.1 Justin Rose (73) won the $US10 million ($A13.7 million) FedExCup bonus with a share of fourth.
The Englishman two-putted the last hole to secure the season-long points race.
Having sat on the sidelines for 10 months last year while recovering from spinal fusion surgery and facing the possibility of never playing golf again, former world No.1 Woods’ ranking plummeted to 1,199 in November.
But on Sunday the 42-year-old tapped in for par at the par-5 18th at East Lake Golf Club to earn a storybook win that will propel Woods eight spots to world No.13.
Woods marched up the 72nd hole with rock concert scenes unfolding behind him as thousands of fans ignored security and police officers to walk the fairway and soak up the occasion.
“It was just a grind out there but I loved every minute of it,” Woods said.
“As this year progressed, I proved I could play, I found a swing, put the pieces together and knew I could do it again.
“I had a hard time not crying on the last hole; I still had shots to play so I had to suck it up.
“But once I got the ball on the green I gave (caddie) Joey (LaCava) a high five because it was done.”
The victory was nothing like the clinical finishes during Woods in his world-beating prime, but he has maintained a perfect record when holding a 54-hole lead of more than two shots.
He started the day with a three-shot lead and at one stage increased that to five before the wheels seemed to fall off on the back nine.
He bogeyed the 10th but responded with a birdie three holes later but two consecutive bogeys from the 15th had fans nervous.
But when he piped his drive 348 yards down the fairway on the last, it was a coronation despite Woods putting his second in the green-side bunker and missing the ensuing birdie putt.
How the Aussies fared
Meanwhile, the Australian contingent finished well back on the final day.
Jason Day closed with a two-under 68 to finish at two under, while fellow Queenslander Cameron Smith posted the score to earn an even-par score.
Marc Leishman (71) rounded out the Australian tilt and he finished at one over.
with AAP