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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, June 4, 2009

Nicklaus, Woods play Skins Game for the ages

 •  Time to turn pro for NAIA champion Cyr


By DOUG FERGUSON
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods, who have a combined 32 major titles, enjoy the moment during the Memorial Skins Game at Muirfield Village in Dublin, Ohio.

JAY LAPRETE | Associated Press

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DUBLIN, Ohio — Beneath a gray sky and dreary rain, thousands of colorful umbrellas framed both sides of every fairway at Muirfield Village. On a miserable day to watch golf, no one was about to miss a single shot.

Not with Jack Nicklaus in his familiar crouch, grinding over a birdie putt that everyone wanted him to make. Not with Tiger Woods, down to his last shot, delivering in the clutch with a 12-foot par everyone knew he was going to make.

The final cheer and the biggest prize belonged to Woods.

This might be Jack's course, but this is Tiger's era. In a closest-to-the-pin chipping contest on the 18th hole, Woods won the Memorial Skins Game yesterday by holing his chip from 25 yards in the rough.

"Didn't surprise me," Nicklaus said. "Didn't surprise him."

They first played with each other at Augusta National in a practice round before the 1996 Masters, after which Nicklaus predicted 10 green jackets or more for Woods. They last competed against each other in the opening two rounds of the 2000 PGA Championship, which Woods won in a playoff for his third straight major.

"Do you remember what I said that day?" Nicklaus recalled. "I said there is no more passing of the baton. It's been taken."

The record still belongs to Nicklaus, who set the standard with 18 majors. Woods is closing in, capturing his 14th major last summer at the U.S. Open.

Yesterday's Skins Game replaced the traditional pro-am when sponsor Morgan Stanley withdrew its presence this year because of scrutiny over corporate entertainment.

"That's one of the great things about our sport," Woods said. "Guys from past generations — not just one generation removed, but a few — can still compete out here. Not at the highest level, but for nine holes. A few holes, they certainly can play with us, and even beat us."

Nicklaus did just that on the par-5 11th, hitting an 8-iron to 4 feet for a birdie to win two skins. Woods answered on the 13th hole with a 25-foot birdie putt to win two skins. Stewart Cink collected a skin with a birdie on the 14th. Kenny Perry, the defending champion at the Memorial, looked like he would take four skins on the 18th with a par save from the bunker until Woods made his 12-footer.

That's when the fun began.

Woods was the second to play, and his chip landed perfectly and rolled toward the cup until it disappeared.

Nicklaus was next, and his chip looked good until the final few feet when it broke below the hole.

Perry, the only player without a skin, was last to hit and watched his chip burn the right edge of the cup. The other foursome included British Open and PGA champion Padraig Harrington, Jim Furyk, Vijay Singh and Camilo Villegas.