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    Sunday, May 26, 2024

    Golf roundup

    Watson, Prugh tied at Bob Hope Classic

    Bubba Watson, Alex Prugh and Joe Ogilvie all had late chances Sunday at La Quinta, Calif., to create a little separation atop the Bob Hope Classic field.

    All three made mistakes better suited to their amateur playing partners, leaving the leaderboard even more crowded heading to the Monday finale.

    Watson double-bogeyed the final hole in the fourth round, dropping him back into a tie with PGA Tour rookie Prugh at 23-under 265. Prugh missed a 3-foot putt to bogey his own final hole, while Ogilvie sat two strokes back after a double bogey on his 17th.

    After knocking his second shot into the water on the par-4 18th, Watson finished with 3-under 69 to match Prugh (70) at 23-under 265. Bill Haas and Tim Clark were a stroke back after 66s, Ogilvie (68) followed at 21 under, and Mike Weir was in a group at 20 under after his fourth straight 67.

    Watson, Prugh, Haas and Clark have never won on the PGA Tour, but all have a golden opportunity in a famed event featuring none of the tour's top 35 players this year. Haas' father, Jay, won the Hope Classic in 1988.

    Watson was in position to take a solid lead into his chase for his first PGA Tour victory Monday in the event that was pushed back a day after rain washed out play Thursday in the four-course event. Instead, he dropped back with his disappointing finish on the Nicklaus Private course, allowing Prugh to sneak back atop the board.

    "Tomorrow is going to be a tough day no matter if I had the lead, was tied for the lead, or one back, or five back," Watson said. "Tomorrow is going to be a fun day. This is what we live for. The more chances I get to win, maybe I'll get one to luckily fall in and win one."

    All but a handful of amateurs and celebrities stuck around to play the fourth rounds Sunday - and second-round leader Watson surged back ahead of Prugh with six birdies in a round that was steady all the way until the 18th hole.

    Prugh, the 25-year-old former University of Washington star making his third PGA Tour start, missed an easy putt to bogey his final hole on the SilverRock course, finishing another self-described unremarkable round.

    "The way things were going the first three days, where the scores were going, I definitely didn't think 2 under would keep me in it," Prugh said.

    Ogilvie appeared the angriest at himself after he double-bogeyed the 17th at La Quinta. Ogilvie, whose only PGA Tour victory came in Milwaukee in 2007, paid the price for guessing at a yardage distance.

    "My caddie was about 30 yards off," said Ogilvie, who hadn't made a bogey since early in the second round. "I had uncertainty on the tee, and it's a mistake to hit driver when you're not confident standing there. You can't have double bogeys and win the Hope."

    Watson wins season-opening Mitsubishi

    Tom Watson became the 13th oldest player to win on the Champions Tour, birdieing the final two holes for one-stroke victory over senior newcomer Fred Couples in the season-opening Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Kaupulehu-Kona, Hawaii.

    The 60-year-old Watson, coming off a win with Jack Nicklaus in the Champions Skins at Kaanapali, closed with a 7-under 65 to finish at 22-under 194 for his 13th Champions Tour title and his first victory in 34 career starts in Hawaii on the two tours.

    After driving into the right rough, Watson hit a spectacular second shot that rolled 20 feet on the 18th green and stopped 4 feet from the hole.

    Couples, who closed with a bogey-free 64, just missed his 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole. Watson calmly sank the winner and waved his cap to the roaring crowd.

    It was a sweet victory for Watson, who made a magical run last year at the British Open before losing to Stewart Cink in a playoff.

    Couples was trying to become the 16th player to win his Champions Tour debut.

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