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A Look at the Hall of Fame Career of Greg Norman Tune into Shark.com each Thursday for a recap of every victory -- from the 1976 West Lakes Classic to the 2001 Skins Game. In total, Norman has won 86 professional events around the world, including two British Open
Championships and 20 U.S. PGA Tour titles. |
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Norman Tames TPC Sawgrass
| 1994 Players Championship | | Venue: | TPC at Sawgrass | | Where: | Ponte Vedra, Florida | | Date: | March 25-28, 1994 |
When Greg Norman is on his game, few stand a chance.
The Australian played yet another round of exquisite golf yesterday,
closing with a 5-under-par 67 to win the Players Championship by four
strokes.
For the third consecutive round he set a scoring record on the home
course of the PGA Tour, the TPC at Sawgrass, a course once cursed by
players as unplayably difficult.
But Norman, drawing on his British Open triumph last summer and
taking full advantage of what he called soft conditions, turned Sawgrass
into his personal playground.
He opened the tournament with a 63 and set course records at 130 for
36 holes and 197 for 54. His final round produced a total of 24-under
total of 264, six shots better than the course record set by Nick Price
last year.
Norman ranked the runaway, wire-to-wire triumph "very high" among
his 66 career victories around the world.
 | | On the 18th green, Zoeller famously walked up to Norman and dabbed his forehead with a white towel. |
"For the last two days, I drew on Royal St. Georges," he said,
referring to the near-perfect final round last summer that provided him
with his second British Open title.
"Royal St. Georges was a great advantage for me. At Royal St.
Georges, I played with focus and control and dedication. That's the way
I played today," he said.
"It's a very important win for me, playing like I did and going into
Augusta" and the Masters week after next, he said.
But even with all the superlatives, he failed to reach the personal
goal he had set.
"I've never gone through 72 holes without making a bogey," he said. "That was my goal today."
He failed by the thickness of a butterfly's wing.
His only bogey of the week came in the final round, on the par-3
13th, where he missed the green "with the only really bad swing I made
all week."
He chipped to about 8 feet and was standing over that par putt when
a butterfly fluttered across his line. He didn't flinch. And he didn't
back away. But the putt missed on the left.
It was a bogey. But in the end, it mattered not at all.
He led by four shots going into the final round, increased the
margin to six on the first hole and really wasn't threatened in the
front-running romp.
"He was very difficult to beat," said Fuzzy Zoeller, the easy-going
veteran who now has been a runner-up in his last three starts. "He played extremely well. He did everything you have to do to win.
I got beat by the best in the world."
Zoeller, playing in the final twosome with Norman, outlasted Jeff
Maggert in the battle for second place, making birdie on three of the
last four holes for a 67 and a 268 - a score good enough to win all 20
previous Players Championships.
And he refused to join the chorus clamoring for changes to make the
golf course more difficult.
"They shouldn't make any changes," he said. "They should just pat us
on the back and let us come back next year. There's nothing wrong with
the course. It was just the conditions and you can't do anything about
that," he said.
Although Norman never appeared to be in danger of being overtaken,
he could not be totally secure until he got his tee shot safely on the
island green of little terror that is the par-3 17th.
"It's the toughest 141 yards under pressure in golf," Norman said. But when he hit his 9-iron to within 2 feet of the flag, Zoeller
gave him a high-5, acknowledging that the game was over.
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