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One shot behind on the 17th, Allenby hit another pure shot that cleared the water, the bunker and looked as though it would funnel to the hole for a tap-in birdie. Instead, it checked up. His putt looked good all the way until it rolled up to the edge of the cup, then turned away. Allenby was so shocked he walked to the edge of the water, and no one would have blamed him for jumping in.
"For it to go up to the hole and take a little look over the top and then come back, that was a bit rude," Allenby said. "But obviously, the golfing gods were with Tim today, and I can accept that. I did everything that I could possibly do to try and win the tournament."
Allenby closed with a 70 to finish runner-up for the seventh time since his last PGA Tour victory.
Clark finished at 16-under 272 and earned $1.71 million from the richest prize in golf. It comes with a five-year exemption on the PGA Tour, and a three-year exemption to the Masters.
U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover wound up third with a strong finish -- a 31 on the back nine, including a 50-foot birdie putt on the 17th.
Westwood tied for fourth, four shots behind, although he had as good of a chance as anyone. He had a one-shot lead going into the final round, just as he did at the Masters, and held it going to the back nine.
Clark, however, ran off four straight birdies starting and ending with 18-foot putts on No. 9 and No. 12 to take the lead. Westwood, who made so many clutch pars early in the round, kept within two shots by making a 50-foot par on the 15th.
But his birdie putt caught the lip on the 16th, and his tee shot on the 17th clattered against the boards and went into the water, giving him a double bogey.
"Disappointed, but not something I'm going to pull my hair out over," Westwood said. "If you don't play well, you don't deserve to win. And I just didn't play well over the weekend."
No one will question whether Clark played well. He was simply at his best.
"I did all I could out there," Clark said when he finished his round. "That's as good as I could have played. I feel like I hit every shot I like I wanted to today."
It led to the best feeling of all -- a victory on the PGA Tour.
[Associated Press;
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