
I Dig Sports

FORT WORTH, Texas – Greg Biffle hasn’t lost a step.
Making his first NASCAR start since 2016 and his first NASCAR Gander Outdoors Truck Series start since 2004, Biffle drove to victory in Friday’s SpeedyCash.com 400 at Texas Motor Speedway.
“I’m just excited to be here. I don’t even know what to say,” said the 49-year-old Biffle in victory lane Friday evening.
In a race that featured more than a dozen cautions, mostly for crashes, Biffle had to work hard to make his return to NASCAR competition a triumphant one. Driving the No. 51 Toyota Tundra for Kyle Busch Motorsports, Biffle took the lead for the first time on lap 104.
A few laps later the caution flag waved for Stewart Friesen, who was trying to take the lead from Biffle in turns one and two. Friesen lost control of his truck and backed it into the outside wall, resulting in a caution period.
Biffle hit pit road for tires and fuel during the caution period, a move that would prove pivotal later in the race.
The race resumed with 55 laps left and Daytona Truck Series winner Austin Hill took the lead, though he would be forced to pit with 21 laps left for fuel. That gave the lead to Tyler Ankrum, but a caution with 15 laps left for the stalled truck of Austin Wayne Self set up the final round of pit stops.
Ankrum led several trucks down pit road, but Biffle’s team opted to keep him on the track so he could inherit the race lead. When the race resumed with 10 laps left Biffle shot out into the lead while Matt Crafton quickly raced his way into second.
For the next five laps Crafton tried desperately to find a way by 2001 Truck Series champion, but Biffle held serve during every challenge. With fuel mileage a big question, Biffle managed to save enough gas to get to the finish line first to earn his first Truck Series triumph since 2001.
“It means a lot to me…Kyle (Busch) giving me that opportunity to come back and drive this truck,” said Biffle, who earned a $50,000 bonus courtesy of Gander Outdoors for winning the first race of the Triple Truck Challenge. “This Gander Outdoors Series, I love this. A lot of competitive trucks here. These guys (KBM) make the difference. A lot of great guys that Kyle has assembled.
Biffle is now the only driver eligible to win the $500,000 bonus that is available to any driver who is able to sweep the Triple Truck Challenge, which began Friday at Texas Motor Speedway and continues the next two weeks at Iowa Speedway and World Wide Technology Raceway.
At this point Biffle is not scheduled to compete in the next two races. Asked if he’ll be back in a truck next week at Iowa, Biffle smiled and said, “You’re going to have to ask Kyle, not me.”
Crafton ended up chasing Biffle across the line in second and was admittedly frustrated post-race.
“It’s a shame,” Crafton said. “Right there at the end we got there, we had a chance. Just got really tight. Just sucks to finish second.”
Ankrum came home a career-best third for DGR-Crosley. Grant Enfinger and Harrison Burton completed the top-five.

LINCOLN, Ill. – The DIRTcar Hornets took center stage on Friday at Lincoln Speedway for the annual running of the Ed Cain Trucking Hornet Challenge, which was one by Eric Vanapeldoorn.
After winning his heat race, Vanapeldoorn claimed the six car dash before intermission. That put him on the pole of the 25-lap feature and the orange No. 77 continued to be too tough to tame for the competition.
The veteran driver raced out front early and never looked back to claim the win. Jake Momper finished second, followed by Jeremy Reed, Kenny Butterfield and David Lauritson.
In other action, Ray Bollinger took the win in the DIRTcar Modifieds, Jake Little was triumphant in the DIRTcar Pro Late Models, Andy Baugh collected the trophy in the Nutech Seed DII Midget class and Tim Hancock Sr. took top honors in the DIRTcar Pro Mods.

JACKSON, Minn. – Jack Dover, Brant O’Banion and Jake Kouba were victorious on Friday during Military Night at Jackson Motorplex.
Dover took the lead midway through the DeKalb/Asgrow presents the Midwest Power Series and Midwest Sprint Touring Series main event and he pulled away in traffic en route to the triumph.
Trey Starks powered from the eighth starting position and he earned a career-best result at the track with a runner-up finish. Carson McCarl placed third with Matt Juhl, who led early, finishing fourth. Dusty Zomer rounded out the top five.
O’Banion charged from eighth to win the Heartland Steel RaceSaver sprint cars presented by Wyffels Hybrids A Main. Brandon Bosma advanced from sixth to second with Colin Smith third, Bill Johnson fourth and Jody Rosenboom fifth.
Kouba drove into Victory Lane thanks to a strong performance during the NSL non-wing sprint cars presented by HitchDoc main event. Alex Schriever placed second. Brandon Halverson was third, Johnny Parsons III ended fourth and Clinton Bruns scored a fifth-place finish.

MECHANICSBURG, Pa. — Freddie Rahmer scored his second win of the season Friday night at Williams Grove Speedway, earning $4,080 for the sprint car win that was the eighth of his career at the speedway.
In the Tri-Track Late Model Challenge Series for super late models, Rick Eckert scored his second oval win of the season as well, making a clean sweep of his events by setting fast time, winning his heat and then the main event.
Chad Trout started second in the 25-lap 410 sprint car main and took the lead over polesitter Rodney Westhafer when action began as Rahmer came to second from fourth on the opening lap.
Rahmer raced in Trout’s shadow for the first six laps before finally getting the lead.
Prior to taking control, he raced to Trout’s outside repeatedly in the third and first turns only to be forced to fall back in line just behind the leader.
He was finally able to get far enough around Trout to complete the pass in the first and second turns on the seventh tour.
“I just moved up a half lane and had a little better exit,” Rahmer said of how he got the lead. “That’s what I thought I had to do to win.
“Once you get by yourself you can really focus on hitting your marks and managing your wheel spin,” he said of getting out front and setting the pace.
Rahmer hit the rear of the field with nine away but then saw his pace slowed, and his 1.7 second lead erased on the 12th lap when the only caution flag of the race unfurled for a stopped Troy Fraker.
Rahmer jetted away on the restart as Danny Dietrich raced with Trout for second.
With five laps to go Rahmer had a 3.8 second lead that dropped off a bit, to 3.578 seconds at the finish.
Dietrich finally got by Trout on the 24th circuit.
Trout finished third followed by Kyle Reinhardt and Westhafer.
Eckert started on the pole and led every lap of the 30-lap special for super late models to earn $3,000 for the win that was the eighth of his career at Williams Grove.
His pace was slowed by four caution periods but each time with Dan Stone and Coleby Frye lining up just behind, Eckert was up to the challenge and pulled away from the field.
Stone and Frye exchanged second spot more than once before Stone finally kept the spot to the finish.
Eckert’s margin of victory was 5.396 seconds. Frye was third followed by Jerry Bard and Jim Bernheisel.

ST. LOUIS -- St. Louis Blues forward Ivan Barbashev has been suspended for one game for an illegal check to the head on Boston's Marcus Johansson in Game 5 of the Stanley Cup Final, the league announced Friday.
Barbashev was not penalized on the play.
Barbashev has three goals, three assists and is plus-1 during the playoffs. Barbashev and the rest of the fourth line have played a key role in keeping Boston's top line, centered by Patrice Bergeron, in check this series.
The incident occurred in the first period of Thursday's Game 5, an eventual 2-1 Blues victory that put St. Louis on the precipice of the first Stanley Cup in franchise history -- with a 3-2 series lead and a chance to clinch at home Sunday.
According to a video explanation released by the NHL's Department of Player Safety, Barbashev delivered a "high, forceful hit that makes Johansson's head the main point of contact, on a hit where such head contact was avoidable."
In the video, the DOPS said that Barbashev was suspended because the brunt of the impact of the hit came from Barbashev's shoulder to the head of Johansson.
"Well, I mean, they're going to look at things that happen in games, and that's just part of it," Blues coach Craig Berube said before the suspension was handed out. "It's physical hockey, it's heavy hockey out there both ways, and they're going to look at some stuff once in a while. So that's the way it goes."
On Friday, Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy said Johansson had "no lingering effects" from the hit that he was aware of.
"I thought it was a high hit," Cassidy said. "I thought the officials were close enough to call it. They didn't. I'm not going to go down that road again. If he gets a suspension, that's up to the NHL. They'll make that call and we'll just worry about Game 6."
For a replacement forward, the Blues likely will turn to Robby Fabbri. The 23-year-old has played in 10 playoff games this spring but has scored just one goal and zero assists, while averaging less than nine minutes a night.
This is the Blues' second suspension of the Stanley Cup Final. Oskar Sundqvist missed Game 3 after boarding Matt Grzelcyk.
The two suspensions against the Blues this year are the first in the Stanley Cup Final since 2011.

Jeff Skinner, who would have been one of the most coveted free-agent wingers this summer, is officially off the market after signing an eight-year, $72 million contract extension with the Buffalo Sabres on Friday.
Skinner, 27, had a career-high 40 goals in his first season in Buffalo, which acquired him last summer from the Carolina Hurricanes for Cliff Pu, plus Buffalo's second-round pick in this year's draft and a third- and sixth-rounder in 2020. He waived his trade protection to come to the Sabres.
Skinner opted not to sign an extension during the season, leading to some speculation the Sabres would potentially move him at the trade deadline. But while Skinner was waiting to maximize his earning potential in a career year, Buffalo general manager Jason Botterill was confident the team and the player could get a deal done.
Eight. More. Years. ? pic.twitter.com/i6AfBlizT6
— Buffalo Sabres (@BuffaloSabres) June 8, 2019
"Both sides want to get a deal. I think it's been a very good relationship, and we've continued the dialogue going. I understand people want a deal done as of yesterday," Botterill said Wednesday at a news conference introducing new head coach Ralph Krueger. "We want him to be a part of our group moving forward here."
Skinner scored 40 goals and added 23 assists in 82 games for Buffalo, playing most of the season with star center Jack Eichel, who posted career highs in goals (28) and points (82). But Skinner's production dropped dramatically in the final two months of the season with the Sabres out of contention, as he scored just four goals and had two assists in his final 19 games.
Clearly, that didn't give the team pause. Skinner's $9 million average annual contract value makes him the third-highest-paid left wing against the salary cap, behind only Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals ($9,538,462) and Jamie Benn of the Dallas Stars ($9,500,000). Skinner has the second-highest cap hit on the Sabres behind Eichel, who makes $10 million against the cap.
Because they were the team he played for last season, the Sabres were the only ones who could give Skinner an eight-year contract.
Skinner has 244 goals and 198 assists in 661 games, the majority of them with the Hurricanes. He won the Calder Trophy as rookie of the year in 2011. He has yet to appear in a postseason game in his NHL career; the Sabres haven't appeared in the playoffs since 2011.

The U.S. opened up a four-point lead Friday at the Arnold Palmer Cup.
The Americans lead the International team, 8-4, after Friday’s mixed fourballs at The Alotian Club in Roland, Ark. Three of the last four matches of the 12-match opening session went to the U.S.
The anchor duo of Cole Hammer and Hailee Cooper, both from Texas, topped Jiwon Jeon and Keita Nakajima, 2 and 1. USC’s Jennifer Chang and Duke’s Alex Smalley, and UCLA’s Mariel Galdiano and Texas A&M’s Chandler Phillips each notched 4-and-3 victories while Vanderbilt’s John Augenstein and Wake Forest’s Emilia Migliaccio posted a 4-and-2 win.
BYU’s Peter Kuest and Texas’ Kaitlyn Papp also won their match, making two eagles in a 3-and-1 triumph.
Here are the complete results from Day 1:
Galdiano/Phillips (U.S.) def. Kinhult/Nyfjall, 4 and 3
Migliaccio/Augenstein (U.S.) def. Greville/McClymont, 4 and 2
McCarthy/Scott (Int.) def. Benton/Martin, 3 and 2
Lau/Scott (U.S.) tied Ruffels/Aoshima
Nam/Eckroat (U.S.) def. Laisne/Yu, 1 up
Belac/Gagne (Int.) def. Parmerter/Cummins, 4 and 3
Carlson/Gordon (U.S.) tied Stormo/Rey
Harford/Grimmer (U.S.) def. Go/Pichaikool, 1 up
Papp/Kuest (U.S.) def. Garcia/Ramirez, 3 and 1
Chang/Smalley (U.S.) def. Harm/Schmid, 4 and 3
Naveed/Kanaya (Int.) def. Wu/Kim, 1 up
Cooper/Hammer (U.S.) def. Jeon/Nakajima, 2 and 1

Jeongeun Lee6 didn’t come to the ShopRite Classic to bask in the glow of winning the U.S. Women’s Open last week.
The LPGA rookie came to turn that victory into something even more incandescent.
“I don’t want to think, 'Oh, I won a major, so I’m good,’” Lee6 said before teeing it up at Seaview Hotel and Golf Club outside Atlantic City, N.J., this week. “I want to play well the rest of the tournaments.”
Lee6 put herself in position Friday to follow up her U.S. Women’s Open title with another victory. She opened with nine birdies, an eagle and three bogeys to shoot 8-under-par 63. She’s tied with Pornanong Phatlum for the first-round lead.
“I played it just like how I played it last week,” Lee6 said. “I feel pretty confident.”
Lee6 said she was encouraged by the strong support she is getting in the wake of winning her first major.
“I feel pretty happy that so many people are watching me,” Lee6 said. “It feels really weird sometimes, because I won the U.S. Open, and then also a lot of people came to watch me, especially a lot of Korean galleries. I feel pretty good about it.”
Like Lee6, Lexi Thompson is right back in the hunt. She opened with a 64. She’s tied for second with rookies Kristen Gillman and Muni He.
Thompson had a chance to win the U.S. Women’s Open Sunday, but a cold putter cost her. She got passed by Lee6 in the final round at the Country Club of Charleston and ended up tying for second.
“Last week was tough,” Thompson said. “It’s so intense and such a long week. It’s very draining.”
The short week, with ShopRite a 54-hole event, gave Thompson an extra day to recuperate. Despite her inability to convert chances in the final round at Charleston, she said she likes the new claw grip she began using just two days before the U.S. Women’s Open. She made seven birdies and no bogeys on Friday.
“This is a very gettable golf course,” Thompson said. “A lot of birdies out there, because it is playing a good bit shorter. The defense on this golf course is basically the wind. If it gets blowing out here, it definitely plays a little harder. But a lot of wedges into the greens, so definitely a lot of birdie opportunities.”
If Lee6 can claim back-to-back victories, she’ll join world No. 1 Jin Young Ko as the only two-time LPGA winners this year. At No. 5 in the Rolex Women's World Rankings, Lee6 already leads the LPGA’s money list ($1,353,836). A victory this week will move her closer to Ko in the battle for world No. 1 and the Rolex Player of the Year race. Lee6 is second to Ko in the POY race, trailing by 46 points. A victory this week is worth 30 points.
Tiger tales: A dozen memories of majors’ biggest win ever

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — Tiger Woods is the only player to hold all four major championships at the same time. He set 20 records when he won the Masters for the first of his 15 majors at age 21. He made the cut in 142 consecutive PGA Tour events. For all his feats, however, nothing illustrated his dominance like his 15-shot victory in the 2000 U.S. Open, the largest margin in major championship history.
The Associated Press interviewed a dozen people who practiced, competed or walked alongside Woods during that landmark victory for this story that first ran in 2010:
Tiger Woods rapped in one last putt, the final stroke of his U.S. Open masterpiece at Pebble Beach. No one had ever been more dominant in 140 years of major championship golf. Those who played with him that week doubt anyone will see such a performance again.
The scoreboard behind the 18th green stood as a monument. Fans didn’t just look at it. They were transfixed by it.
Next to Woods’ name at the top was a row of red numbers that stretched across the holes until it ended at 12 under. The rest of the white board was filled with black numbers: Everyone else was over par, no one within 15 shots.
His swing coach, Butch Harmon, was in the TV tower for British-based Sky Sports and rushed down to congratulate Woods. Standing on the green, Harmon overheard Miguel Angel Jimenez, who shared second place with Ernie Els, say to a USGA official in his heavy Spanish accent, “Excuse me, sir. Can you tell me where the playoff starts for the other tournament between me and Ernie?”
That’s what it felt like 10 years ago at the U.S. Open — two tournaments.
Woods might as well have been playing alone.
In a major billed as the toughest test in golf, Woods went 22 holes without a bogey to start the championship and 26 holes without a bogey at the end. No one had ever finished a U.S. Open in double digits under par. His 15-shot margin was the widest ever in a major, breaking a record that had been set in 1862.
“At that moment in time, we thought we saw some of the best golf we’ll ever see by any player,” Thomas Bjorn said.
Bjorn, who played with Woods in the third round that week, was among a dozen people interviewed by The Associated Press who practiced, competed or walked alongside Woods in the days leading up to his landmark victory at Pebble Beach.
Woods stopped to see Harmon in Las Vegas on his way to Pebble Beach. He played that Sunday at Rio Secco with one of Harmon’s newest pupils, a 19-year-old Australian named Adam Scott, who did not qualify for the Open and planned to turn pro the following week.
In 25 mph wind, Woods set the course record with a 63.
“He did things that I didn’t know you could do on the golf course,” Scott said. “I’m glad he won the U.S. Open by 15 the next week. Because if he didn’t and played like that, I don’t think I would have turned pro. I said to Butch, ‘We’ve got a lot of work to do.’ What I saw was pretty amazing.”
Harmon didn’t play, but he accompanied them.
“Everyone on my staff ran down to the casino and bet on him,” Harmon said. “We didn’t get great odds, obviously, but it was as good of a lock as I’ve ever seen.”
Woods and Mark O’Meara, played the previous week at Isleworth, their home course in Orlando, Fla., and practiced together all three rounds at Pebble Beach. O’Meara was his usual practice partner at the majors. He had seen it all. This was different.
“He hit every shot just perfect. He never missed a shot,” O’Meara said. “He seemed calm, he seemed relaxed and he seemed in control Those were the three things that were different about him.”
John Cook, another close friend from Isleworth, arrived from the Buick Classic and joined them for the final two practice rounds.
“He was in the middle of a pretty special time,” Cook said. “You could see his confidence building and building. Tuesday and Wednesday were so flawless in preparation and attitude. Everything was in sync. Every shot was the perfect trajectory.”
NBC Sports analyst Johnny Miller followed them for a couple of holes on Wednesday and asked how Woods was playing.
“I said, ‘Nobody is going to beat him. Nobody is going to beat him for a long time,’” Cook said. “With the exception of one or two holes, it probably was the most flawless major championship ever.”
O’Meara made a similar prediction driving to dinner with his wife.
“She said, ‘How are you playing?’” O’Meara recalled. “I said, ‘I’m playing all right, but it doesn’t really matter. The tournament is already over.’ She said, ‘How can you say that?’ I said, ‘Tiger is going to win. And not only is he going to win, he’s going to blow away the field.’ I don’t know how he couldn’t. He’s playing well. He loves the course. And he proved me right.”
No coach saw more of Woods that week than Hank Haney, who was working with O’Meara but whom Woods hired four years later. He was not amazed by how Woods was hitting the ball because it was like that the previous week at Isleworth.
“It was one of those special putting weeks, and you don’t see that coming in practice,” Haney said. “You never see a guy get done in a practice round and say, ‘This guy is making everything.’ Because they don’t even putt toward the hole.”
Steve Williams began working as Woods’ caddie in March 1999, and they won their first major together at the PGA Championship that year. This was their sixth major, yet the preparations were vastly different in one area — putting.
“Tiger spent an unusually longer amount of time practicing putts inside 10 feet than he would normally do,” Williams said. “When the greens are fast and bumpy, it’s difficult to chip it close. On the Wednesday night we were out there putting with the lights on, in the dark, trying to get a key, trying to dial in something that would help.
“Obviously, he found a key. He started hitting the putts a little more up on the ball to get it rolling. It’s not an uncommon thing, but it’s something you would never think about if the greens are pure.”
Paul Goydos qualified for the U.S. Open by finishing in the top 15 the previous year. When he registered Monday morning, he saw the sign-up sheet for practice rounds. First off Wednesday morning was Woods, Mark O’Meara, John Cook and TBA.
“To be announced,” Goydos said. “I said, ‘Boys and girls, attention! We’re announcing who’s playing. I am.’ I wrote my name in.”
What a treat that turned out to be.
“He seemed as unconcerned with life as anyone I had ever seen on the golf course the day before a U.S. Open,” Goydos said. “We’re all hitting 20 chips and putting to all these spots, and he would hit a shot into the fairway, knock it on the green, hit a few putts and sit there and talk to Butch. It’s almost like he was saying to Butch, ‘Look at these idiots.’
“It wasn’t like, ‘I’m going to win.’ But he had it all figured out.”
When they finished the round, two reporters were waiting to speak to Goydos.
“I had never seen a display of golf like that in my life,” Goydos said. “He’s going to win by 10. That’s what I said to these reporters. That tournament ended on Tuesday. The only thing he had to do was stay upright. There was just no question. If I could gamble, I would have bet everything I had. I saw a 10-shot victory. And I was wrong.”
Of all the holes Woods played in practice, Wednesday at the par-3 12th was what got everyone’s attention. The green was brick hard, typical of a U.S. Open. There was no way to get it anywhere near the hole, much less keep it on the green. Or so they thought.
“We were on the 12th tee, the pin was back right. He hit a 4-iron, this high cut about a yard-and-a-half that never left the flag and stopped about 5 feet away,” O’Meara said. “Butch said, ‘Good swing.’ And I said, ‘Really? Now I know why you’re such a great teacher. What was your first clue, that he hasn’t missed a shot all day?’ We were needling each other pretty good.”
Cook’s son was caddying for him that week and he recalled the teenager’s reaction as much as the shot.
“He hits this towering 4-iron, and this thing would have landed on the hood of your car and stopped,” Cook said. “We all looked at each other. My son Jason, who was 14, had his mouth open and his eyes real big. I said, ‘That’s a golf swing.’”
Goydos hit 4-iron about as flush as he could, as high as he could, then watched it bounce over a green he described as a trampoline.
“Tiger hits this shot over the moon, flies the bunker and stops this far,” he said, holding his hands about 5 feet apart. “I said, ‘What did you hit there?’ He said, ‘4-iron.’ So that’s a little disappointing.
“We get to 18 and I drove it down the left side, had about 233 to the front and hit 3-wood. Tiger hit the ball a little farther right and he was about 5 yards ahead of me. He hits this shot — WHOOOSH! — like a rocket. I said, ‘What did you hit?’ He said, ‘4-iron.’ And I said, ‘Boys, this tournament is over.’ Because if you can hit a 4-iron 195 yards in the air and 225 yards in the air when you want, this tournament is OVER.”
Woods played the opening two rounds with Jim Furyk and Jesper Parnevik, in conditions so foggy that the first round Thursday eventually was suspended with 75 players yet to finish. Woods teed off in the morning and shot a bogey-free 65, the lowest score ever at Pebble Beach in a U.S. Open.
“He had complete control as far as drawing the ball, cutting the ball, hitting it high, hitting it low. Whatever the shot called for, he seemed to be hitting it right at the pin,” Furyk said. “I just remember him rolling in 8-footers and 12-footers. Pebble Beach isn’t the smoothest surface, and these 8-footers were going in with perfect speed. I was just shaking my head.”
Parnevik was doing more than that. He was laughing.
“It almost became a joke,” Parnevik said. “We could not figure out if he ever missed a putt from inside 20 feet. And you know how Pebble Beach greens can be. I remember we were on the 12th hole Friday. We got called off because of darkness. Tiger had about a 40-footer and he decided to keep going and not leave it until the morning. And he holed it. If you watch the highlight reels, you can see me and Lance (Ten Broeck, his caddie) laughing. It was incredible.
“I don’t know if he’s ever played that well,” he said. “It was special to be there.”
Returning to the 13th hole Saturday morning to complete the second round, Steve Williams reached into the bag and noticed something wrong. There were only three balls in the bag. He was concerned at first, then figured they would be OK with only six holes to play.
From the left rough, Woods hit a 56-degree sand wedge with such force that it put a scuff mark on the ball.
“He putts out for his par and gives it to a kid as he leaves the green,” Williams said. “My first thought was, ’I’ve got to go get the ball off that kid. I’m watching this kid, and he’s showing his dad the ball. It’s got Tiger’s name on it, he’s all excited. How can I ask for this ball back? So we have two balls left.”
Woods bogeyed the 14th, birdied the 15th and parred the next two holes, keeping the same ball.
Then comes the 18th, with the ocean down the left side of the hole and out-of-bounds well to the right. Woods was leading by seven.
“My first thought was to hit iron off the tee, but he’s driving fantastic,” Williams said. “I can’t say, ‘Tiger, you can’t hit driver here because we ain’t got enough golf balls in case you hit it in the ocean.’ It’s the only time I can actually say I had butterflies in my stomach standing over a tee shot.”
For good reason. Woods hooked it in the ocean.
One ball left.
“I said, Tiger, you’ve got a seven-shot lead, take that iron out, hit it down the fairway, get it up there and let’s go to lunch and not waste making a horror number,’” Williams said. “He said, ‘Give me that (expletive) driver.’ I can’t say, ‘This is the last golf ball you’ve got.’ I tried as best I could, as conservatively as I could, to talk him out of it.”
Woods hit the fairway, hit into the bunker and got up-and-down for bogey and a 69. He had a six-shot lead, a U.S. Open record for largest 36-hole margin. Woods didn’t find out until after the tournament why Williams was insisting on an iron.
“He said, ‘What was all that commotion on the 18th tee on Saturday morning,’” Williams said. “I said, ‘Well, that was the last golf ball you have. If you had hit that down there in the water, we were going to see how quickly I could run 800 yards to the hotel room and back in five minutes.’ We always laugh about that.
“But if he hooked that second one in the ocean, I wouldn’t be standing here telling you the story.”
The first big blunder for Woods came on the third hole Saturday afternoon when he took two swings to escape gnarly rough and made a triple-bogey 7. He birdied two of the next four holes, and that was end of the suspense.
“Yes, he made a triple bogey down the third,” said Bjorn, paired with him that day. “But it was literally perfection all the way through. It was a different kind of golf to watch than anything I’ve ever seen. He was in full control of what he was doing. It was, looking back, one of the most special moments in the history of golf, to be honest.”
Woods shot 71, the only round he failed to break par. His 10-shot lead through 54 holes was another U.S. Open record.
Bjorn was out of it early and shot an 82. He felt as much out of control as Woods was in command.
“I thought going into it, ‘This is going to be the toughest day I’ve ever experienced as a player,’ and I realized very quickly what I was facing,” Bjorn said. “The whole course felt like it was moving because of the crowd. It was literally an impossible day for me. When I got to about 8 or 9, I just decided to sit back and watch history in the making instead of worrying about what I was doing.
“The way he played then, everything he did was so different from what anyone else could do.”
Els had a 68 in the third round that put him in the final pairing Sunday with Woods, and even 10 shots behind, he wasn’t waving a white flag on the first tee. He wanted to get off to a good start and see how Woods was playing.
Woods was flawless. Els had a balky putter. Within an hour, the only question was the margin of victory.
“It wasn’t easy for me,” Els said. “The tournament is over, and you basically watch another guy just kill you. It wasn’t the greatest of feelings. But it was nice to see. As I look back now, I was glad I was there, because it was obviously something very special.”
Woods opened with nine pars, then ran off four birdies in a five-hole stretch to start the back nine. At that point, his only goal was to play the final round without a bogey. Els never felt so alone playing before so many people.
“He wouldn’t say a word to anybody,” Els said. “I was kind of playing on my own with a circus around me. I was basically watching him play. It was his show. If you don’t approach him, he doesn’t say anything, especially in the fourth round. With that lead, I don’t know what he had to prove. But he wanted to prove something. He never let up. He kept putting his foot on the gas. I’m sure he enjoyed it.”
Woods closed with a 67, the low score of the round for the third time that week.
After his final putt, Woods raised his right arm and smiled toward a gallery that was not sure what it had just witnessed. He set or tied six U.S. Open records that week, but those are just numbers.
No one had ever destroyed a championship field like that in golf.
“I don’t think we’ve ever seen anything like it before,” Bjorn said. “And I find it difficult to believe we’ll ever find anybody doing it again.”
McDowell's Open Championship hopes: No Portrush, no biggie

Graeme McDowell estimates he's played Royal Portrush "probably 300 to 500 times." As for whether or not he competes in next month's Open Championship there, the 39-year-old Portrush native is no longer concerned.
"Be fun to be there, but really isn't the end of the world if I'm not," McDowell said Friday at the RBC Canadian Open.
McDowell is not currently qualified for The Open, which returns to Portrush for the first time since 1951, but he could punch his ticket Sunday at Hamilton Golf and Country Club. The top three players inside the top 10 who are not already qualified earn Open Championship invites. McDowell is T-7 after 36 holes, though Scott Brown, Nick Taylor and Adam Hadwin are currently in position.
Many feel like McDowell should receive a special exemption, but McDowell is OK with letting his play decide his Open fate.
"I feel like I've had three or four months wrestling with the Portrush dilemma," McDowell said. "Thinking of putting a statement out on Twitter and saying I appreciate everyone's concern. The people that think I should get an invite and the people that think I shouldn't, I hear them. But I'm pretty much come to terms with the fact that if I play well between now and Portrush I will play. If I don't play well between now and Portrush I won't and I'll deserve not to play."
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There are several more Open Qualifying Series events left, including the PGA Tour's Rocket Mortgage Classic (June 27-30) and John Deere Classic (July 11-14) and European Tour's Andalucia Valderrama Masters (June 27-30), Irish Open (July 4-7) and Scottish Open (July 11-14).
McDowell, though, would rather not look past this week.
"I'm going out here trying to win the RBC Canadian Open this week," McDowell said. "I [couldn't] care less about Portrush. I would rather win this week and not play Portrush. That's the bottom line. Yes, it will be a special week, but it's not instant success. I could be there and miss a cut and think,' Well, what was all the fuss about?' It's like, I would rather play well on this weekend and let Portrush take care of itself. I really don't care."