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Lietzkrieg!
Lietzke Captures Senior Open
By Ken Klavon, USGA
Toledo, Ohio – In the old days, his golfing buddies called
him leaky for the way he couldn’t close an event.
On Sunday, Bruce Lietzke’s engine nearly seized.
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| Scrambling most of the round, Bruce Lietzke
plays out of a bunker on No.9. (John Mummert/USGA) |
Lietzke, playing in his 53rd major, crept to the
first one of his career by taking the 24th U.S.
Senior Open at the Inverness Club. He fended off Tom Watson
by two strokes after shooting 7-under par 277 on the 6,983-yard
layout this week. Vincente Fernandez, the only other player
to break par, finished third at 4-under 280.
In winning, Lietzke became the fifth first-time winner of
a major at Inverness, joining Billy Burke (1931 U.S. Open),
Dick Mayer (’57 Open), Bob Tway (1986 PGA Championship) and
Paul Azinger (1993 PGA Championship). He also became the 16th
player in Senior Open history who won the event after either
sharing or holding the lead entering the final round.
Another runner-up finish for Watson naturally left him disappointed.
"I thought 5-under par would be a lock-cinch win,"
said Watson, who lost to Don Pooley in a playoff last year.
Said Lietzke, after posting a 2-over 73: "I don’t know
where to put this thing. If you’re talking the Masters, the
U.S. Open, the British Open, the PGA [Championship], I’ve
won a major on the Champions Tour. If you call this an all-encompassing
major, I’m a little confused where it is."
Don’t be dismayed. Lietzke really was pleased after maintaining
all week it was just another event and that golf was secondary
to family. When he sank an 8-footer for bogey on the brutal
18th green, he took off his visor and waved it
before kissing his wife, Rosemarie. He beamed while signing
his card.
"Golf is still the same priority as it was," he
said. "There’s nothing wrong with being a father and
good husband, and winning a couple of golf tournaments every
now and then."
Winning almost became an afterthought.
Coming off a third round in which he scrambled – yes, scrambled
-- to a 7-under 64 thanks to 7 of 15 fairways hit, the 51-year-old
tactician was moderately worse in the category Sunday (5 of
15). Alas, putting bailed him out.
There were two holes that proved pivotal.
On the elongated No. 8, a 554-yard dogleg left par 5 that
had a sloping fairway, Lietzke boomed his tee shot 360 yards.
A 5-iron hooked approach shot to 10 feet of the hole followed,
setting up a putt for eagle that gave him a six-stroke lead,
his largest of the day.
In the meantime, Watson’s cold putting game was epitomized
on the same green. He missed a 7-footer for birdie, sighing
as he walked off with par. There were six different occasions
that he couldn’t convert birdie putts 10 feet or less.
There would be no five-stroke comeback on the back nine as
there was last year at Caves Valley.
"I guess I used ‘em all up in the first round when I
had all those field goals," said Watson, referring to
the 24 putts he took on Thursday compared to the 33 he needed
Sunday. "Every putt I had was short or missed."
As Lietzke continued to miss fairways, the door opened just
a bit. By the 12th hole, Watson
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| Bruce Lietzke and wife Rosemarie embrace
on the 18th green. (John Mummert/USGA) |
trailed by three strokes. Watson’s antsy wife Hilary, who
was in the gallery, was imploring him to hit every shot well
at this point.
The other hole that proved a little more important than the
rest occurred on the par-4 14th, a slight
dogleg right. Lietzke pulled out driver, something he used
just seven times entering Sunday, and wailed his cut drive
too far right and past the ropes.
Looking at a row of trees in front of his ball, Lietzke had
a decision to make. Pitch out to the fairway or fly over the
trees. He chose the latter, opting for a 25-yard hook shot.
It worked as the ball came to rest 45 feet right of the hole.
Lietzke eventually took par, but with a three-stroke lead,
the consequences could have been much worse had the strategy
backfired.
"Those two holes [Nos. 8 and 14]," said Lietzke.
"I never thought two hook shots would win me a [championship]."
Lietzke staggered on the final two holes, bogeying both thanks
to playing out of the rough. He miss-hit out of the right
junk, needing three shots to get to the 17th green.
And on the 18th, he played out of the right rough
into the left-side green bunker.
"I kept on thinking, ‘Well, he’s got to make some bogeys,’"
said Watson. "He was leaking a lot of oil, smoking, but
it still worked."
To which Lietzke, a self-proclaimed practice-doesn’t-make-perfect
protégé, said: "I found out my golf swing
does leak a little oil. I have to thank my putting."
Even though next year’s event at Bellerive Country Club in
St. Louis will be pushed back to July 29-Aug. 1, Lietzke said
after Saturday’s third round that he would not defend his
crown if he won. He had only learned a month ago that the
event wouldn’t normally be held in June.
A family cruise to celebrate his daughter Christine’s high
school graduation had already been booked, he said. But he
changed his tune slightly on Sunday.
"If I can move the dates around, I want to come back
and defend this," said Lietzke, adding that he will skip
the Senior British Open this year.
The victory also made him $470,000 richer. In addition, he
is exempt into next year’s U.S. Open at Shinnecock Hills,
something that hadn’t dawned on him.
"I said good luck at Shinnecock," said Watson.
"He looked at me like, ‘Huh?’
"Bruce is a wonderful person. He’s a well-liked guy
out here by everybody."
In the early 1980s, Lietzke drastically cut back on his PGA
Tour schedule when he got married and had kids. No longer
were majors, or golf, as important to him as he became immersed
in coaching his son Stephen in little league baseball for
six years. Then it was his daughter’s turn in softball.
In the last few years, Lietzke has escorted his son to junior
golf events. When he was eligible to join the Champions Tour
in 2001, he posted seven top-10s in the 10 tournaments he
appeared in.
Lietzke credits three-time Senior Open winner Miller Barber
and golfing icon Don January for his success. In the early
1970s, Barber and January took the precocious Ben Crenshaw,
Bill Rogers and Lietzke under their wing in Texas.
Lietzke and Rogers, roommates and teammates at the University
of Houston, became close friends. The two befriended Crenshaw,
who had played at the University of Texas. For the better
part of a year, the two pros would "beat the brains out
of us," said Lietzke.
But the apprentices learned. Barber and Miller would take
the time to explain why something worked or didn’t work on
the course.
"I give them a lot of credit for my career," said
Lietzke.
Ken Klavon is the USGA Web Editor. E-mail him at kklavon@usga.org
with questions and comments.
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