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Stricker wins Memorial

It was a tale of two nines for Stricker, as it had been all week. He played the front nine in 20-under par, including his six birdies Sunday when he made the turn in 30 to build the big lead.
Jack Nicklaus, Steve Stricker
Steve Stricker

DUBLIN, Ohio — It was a tale of two nines for Stricker, as it had been all week. He played the front nine in 20-under par, including his six birdies Sunday when he made the turn in 30 to build the big lead. He played the back nine in 4 over, and didn’t have another shot to spare.

Kuchar and Jobe did all the could to catch him.

“My 5 under on the front didn’t gain any ground on him,” Kuchar said. “It was tough to see. Got two more on the back, played great golf. But looks like it’s just not quite good enough.”

Jobe has been battling injuries over the past several years, and the $545,600 pushes him over $1.16 million for the season and assures him keeping his card for next year. Jobe put the most pressure on Stricker by running off five straight birdies around the turn.

“I thought if we would have gone out and shot 65, that might have been good enough,” Jobe said. “But it looks like we’re going to be a little short. It was his tournament to kind of win or lose, and he’s going out there and winning it.”

Woodland would not get the official ranking until later Sunday night. He came into the week at No. 54, and the top 50 after next week are exempt from qualifying. Despite a bogey on the 18th hole, his sixth-place finish should be more than enough to stay in the top 50.

Stricker now heads to Congressional in two weeks as one of the players who could be a big factor in the U.S. Open. He was a runner-up at Congressional in 2007 during the AT&T National, and that putting stroke goes a long way on any course.

Lincicome ends win drought

GALLOWAY TOWNSHIP, N.J. — A new caddie, two bogey-free rounds and the chip of a lifetime on the final hole were all Brittany Lincicome needed to end a two-year victory drought on the LPGA Tour.

Lincicome made a four-foot birdie putt after hitting a marvellous chip out of high, green-side fescue Sunday to win the ShopRite LPGA Classic for her fourth LPGA Tour title and first since the 2009 Kraft Nasbisco.

“It feels great,” Lincicome said. “It’s like you said, since ’09. You don’t know if you’re ever going to win again or if you’ll ever have your time. So it feels fantastic.”

Lincicome’s birdie capped a 5-under 66 that gave her a dramatic one-shot victory over third-ranked Jiyai Shin and No. 4 Cristie Kerr. Shin also shot a 66, and Kerr had a 69.

Charlottetown’s Lorie Kane (74) finished in a group tied at 59th.

The 25-year-old Lincicome finished the 54-hole tournament on the Bay Course at Seaview with an 11-under 202 total, and some of the success had to go to new caddie, former LPGA Tour player A.J. Eathorne. The two started working together at the Sybase Match Play Championship two weeks ago.

“The more I talk and chattier that I am, the better that I play,” Lincicome said, noting Eathorne did a great job of picking up her spirits and getting her to talk everything from fishing to friends and pets.

Brooks hands title to Gilder

WEST DES MOINES, Iowa — Bob Gilder is heading off on a European vacation with a lot of extra cash and the glow that comes from winning.

Gilder won on the Champions Tour for the first time since 2006 on Sunday, sinking a 30-foot birdie putt on 18 and escaping with a one-shot victory in the Principal Charity Classic when Mark Brooks bogeyed the hole.

“That was well needed,” Gilder said.

Gilder leaves for his two-week trip on Monday, a jaunt that will end a long participation streak. He has played in 178 straight tournaments for which he was eligible and after what happened over the last three days, he couldn’t care less that he’ll miss the upcoming Greater Hickory Classic at Rock Barn.

Gilder played his last 44 holes without a bogey and closed with a 6-under 65 for a 14-under 199 total and his 10th victory on the senior circuit. But he needed help.

Brooks seemed assured of his first victory in seven starts on the Champions Tour when he led by three strokes with four to play. But he hit into the water on 17 and needed a nifty putt just to make bogey, then three-putted on 18 to hand the title to Gilder, who also won this tournament in 2002.

“It’s just been a long time,” said Gilder, choking up in the emotion of the moment. “You put in a lot of work as you get older. You kind of wonder if you can do it again.”

Brooks, the leader after the first two rounds, shot 68. Mike Goodes and Rod Spittle of Niagara Falls, Ont., each came in at 65 to finish two strokes back. Mark Calcavecchia, who trailed Brooks by one stroke heading into Sunday, shot 69 and finished three off the lead.

“That was a disaster,” Brooks said.

Gilder’s victory followed 61-year-old Tom Watson’s win in the Senior PGA Championship, the first time in the 50-and-over tour’s history that 60-plus players have won back-to-back tournaments. It’s just the 20th time that a player 60 or over has won.

Gilder also snapped a streak of four straight tournaments ending in playoffs. But even with his clinching putt, this one appeared headed for a playoff because Brooks needed to merely two-putt from 25 feet for a tie.

But he rolled his putt 5 feet past the hole, then missed the comebacker as the gallery groaned.

“That was one of the few I hit past the hole all week,” Brooks lamented. “The rest were short, short, short. If had putted good today, I would have won by three or four strokes.”

He didn’t, though, and Gilder had a long awaited victory, ending a drought of four years, eight months and 13 days since winning at the Constellation Energy Classic.

“I thought it was going to be a playoff,” Gilder said. “That’s not a good way to lose it for Mark. It’s not a fun way to lose.”

Trailing by four through 14 holes, Gilder shaved off a stroke on each of the next two holes with birdies, then got to within a single stroke of the lead when he parred 17 while Brooks bogeyed. Then came the dramatic 18th and one of the most memorable putts of Gilder’s career.

“Until he hit into the water on 17, winning really hadn’t entered my mind,” said Gilder, who had only one bogey in the 54 holes. “And then I saw that happen and I said geez, I could knock it on the green and he could make double and we’d be tied. Whoa. It’s like, time to panic.

“But I felt good, even after that.”

Spittle played the last 48 holes without a bogey. He got himself onto the leaderboard by making four birdies and an eagle during a seven-hole stretch in the middle of his round.

“I could have had a few more out there and looking at the leaderboard, it would have helped,” Spittle said. “But I played well. If you can shoot 65 or 66, that makes it fun for everybody.”

After two early bogeys, Goodes birdied seven of his last 12 holes to keep pace with Spittle, his playing partner. His highlight: A long chip for birdie on No. 17 after hitting into the stands.

“That was the only good shot I hit on that hole,” he said. “That’s the way golf is. Sometimes it only takes one.”

Calcavecchia was tied for the lead through 7, but bogeyed the par 5 No. 9 hole to fall three back and saw his hopes of a late run end with bogeys on the final two holes.

Defending champion Nick Price closed with a 66 to finish six back. Price had recorded nine straight rounds in the 60s in this tournament before shooting a 71 on Saturday.

Keith Fergus tied the tournament record with a 63, the best round of his Champions Tour career, after starting 76-73. He put up eight birdies in his bogey-free round, including four in a row on the front nine.

The difference? He left his allergy medicine behind.

“I think it kind of made me in a foul humour for two days,” Fergus said. “So I just said, ’You know what, if I die of allergies, I’m just going to die.’ I went out and I just played well and hit the ball and made some putts, felt a little more enthusiasm about my game.”

A 63 was recorded three times previously in this tournament, most recently by Tommy Armour III in the first round last year.