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With Harrington still up by a shot, both hit drives into the rough at the 630-yard, par-5 16th hole -- dubbed "The Monster" by Arnold Palmer. Woods punched a shot into the fairway, but Harrington pulled his layup and it ended up on the slope of a trap. From there he hit a high shot that soared over the green and into thick rough.
Both players had been put on the clock for slow play earlier in the round, and then had been reminded they were falling behind on the 16th tee. Perhaps that caused Harrington to rush. Either way, the results were disastrous.
He hit a flyer from the deep hay behind the green, the ball rolling past the pin and into the lake that fronts the green.
"I just got it a little bit too much on the club face and didn't get under it enough and it came out strong," Harrington said.
After walking back down the fairway, taking a drop and hitting his sixth shot just over the green, he chipped on and hit the putt for a triple-bogey 8.
Meanwhile, Woods produced one of his characteristically clutch shots when most needed.
His 8 iron from 178 yards stayed in the air for a long time before coming down, then spinning back to within a foot.
"It was a superb shot. It was a phenomenal shot," Harrington said. "But I was having my own troubles at that stage."
Easy birdie. Four-shot swing. Another win at Firestone, and -- ho-hum -- another win in a WGC event for Tiger Woods.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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