
Final ROUND Tidbits
Mar. 30, 2008
By Dave Senko, PGA TOUR Staff
PALM COAST, Fla. -- With his victory,
Bernhard
Langer won for the third time in 11 starts on the Champions
Tour and earns a check for $375,000, largest of his brief
Champions Tour career. In those 11 starts, Langer has averaged
$148,657 per start with seven top-10 finishes.
Loren Roberts shot over
par Sunday for the first time in his last 21 rounds.
(Miller/WireImage)
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INSIDE
THE NUMBERS |
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Final Leaderboard |
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1. Bernhard Langer |
204 -12 |
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T2. Tim Simpson |
212 -4 |
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T2. Lonnie Nielsen |
212 -4 |
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T4. Joe Ozaki |
213 -3 |
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T4. Fred Funk |
213 -3 |
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T6. David Eger |
214 -2 |
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T6. Tom Watson |
214 -2 |
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T6. Nick Price |
214 -2 |
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T9. John Cook |
215 -1 |
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T9. Craig Stadler |
215 -1 |
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• Langer's victory moved him into a
commanding lead in the season-long Charles Schwab Cup race.
Langer's 375 points increased his point total to 851, a margin
of 363 points over
Scott Hoch
(488). Fred
Funk is third with 435 points followed by
Brad Bryant
(427) and Jay
Haas (423). At the conclusion of the season, the winner
receives a $1 million annuity.
• Langer's victory ends an 0-90 drought in
the state of Florida in official Tour events for Langer. It was
also his second win in his last three starts. He won the Toshiba
Classic in a seven-hole playoff with Jay Haas earlier this
month.
• Langer's eight-stroke victory was the
largest on the Champions Tour since he posted an eight-stroke
victory at the Administaff Small Business Classic last October
near Houston, his initial Champions Tour title. It was also the
largest winning margin in 2008.
• Langer joins Scott Hoch as the only
multiple winner on the Champions Tour in 2008. Langer also takes
over the lead in the 2008 money race with $860,627 and leads
Hoch by $294,358.
•
Loren Roberts
shot a 3-over-par 71 on Sunday, ending his streak of consecutive
rounds par/better at 20. That was the longest streak in that
category on the Champions Tour this year.
• The 77-man field battled a constant 25 mph
wind with higher gusts on Sunday and the scores reflected the
difficult conditions. The scoring average soared from 72.584 on
Saturday to 76.571 on Sunday. That is the highest single-round
scoring average this year on the Champions Tour, surpassing the
previous high of 76.078 in the final round of the Turtle Bay
Championship. It was also the highest average for a round since
the second round at last year's Senior British Open (77.200).
• The most difficult hole on Sunday was No.
9 with an average score of 4.883 (+.883). There were no birdies
and just 24 pars. It was also the most difficult for the three
rounds at 4.397. That would make it the second most difficult
hole on the Champions Tour to No. 6 at Valencia CC (4.451) for
the AT&T Champions Classic. Hole No. 7 ranked as the second most
difficult on Sunday with an average score of 4.545 (+.545). The
only birdie on that hole was by
Jim Dent.
• Only three players posted rounds under par
Sunday --
Fuzzy Zoeller (69),
Bruce
Summerhays (71) and Bernhard Langer (71). Zoeller was 5
under par with two holes remaining before making bogeys on his
final two holes.
•
Tim Simpson's
tie for second was his best effort on the Champions Tour. His
previous best efforts were a trio of fifth-place finishes,
including the 2006 Senior British Open (fifth), 2006 Greater
Kansas City Golf Classic (tied for fifth) and the 2007 Senior
PGA Championship (tied for fifth).
•
Lonnie
Nielsen's runner-up finish was his best finish since winning
the Commerce Bank Championship last summer. Nielsen led all
players with 17 birdies, one more than
Larry Nelson.
•
Joe Ozaki
made one of the best turnarounds in the 77-man field. After
opening with a 2-over-par 74 (tied for 41st), Ozaki jumped 37
spots in the next two rounds to finish tied for fourth.
•
Ian Woosnam
tied for 51st in his Champions Tour debut. Defending champion
Keith Fergus
tied for 31st.
David Eger
(tied for seventh), Fred Funk (tied for fourth) and Ozaki (tied
for fourth) earned top-10 finishes for the second consecutive
year.
• Ozaki had the fewest putts of any player
in the event with 77.
Ben Crenshaw,
Boonchu
Ruangkit, David Eger and
Bruce
Fleisher led all players in driving accuracy at 78.57%,
while Crenshaw also led in greens in regulation at 68.52%.
Crenshaw had come into the event ranked 47th in that category on
the Champions Tour.
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