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As the patrons rose to salute a familiar champion who was clearly the sentimental favorite on this day, Mickelson had one person on his mind. She was there, and she was beaming.
"I was just really glad she was there," he said. "I knew she would be watching. I didn't know if she would be behind 18. To walk off the green and share that with her is very emotional for us."
Woods' wife, Elin, would not have been waiting if her husband had won.
She stuck with her plan not to be at Augusta with their two kids, undoubtedly still grappling with the stunning reports that her husband has been cheating with numerous women.
At the start of the week, Woods hoped that returning to golf from a five-month layoff would return some normalcy to a life that's been tabloid fodder since the infamous Thanksgiving night car crash.
Plenty questioned if Woods was making the right call, returning from such a long layoff at the first major of the year, without so much as a warmup event. Some wondered if he'd even make the cut.
He did that and so much more, contending for all four days.
But he never made much of a run on Sunday, undone by one wild swing after another and a three-putt bogey from 6 feet at the 14th hole, the sort of mistakes he couldn't afford facing a four-stroke deficit at the start of the final round.
When Woods walked off No. 18, having closed with a birdie that only assured he would finish in a fourth-place tie with K.J. Choi, his answers were a bit terse and clipped.
"I wanted to win this tournament," he said. "As the week wore on, I kept hitting the ball worse."
What now?
"I'm going to take a little time off," Woods said, "and kind of re-evaluate things."
Westwood said there's no need to re-evaluate what he's doing, even though he keeps coming up oh-so-close on the biggest stages.
Over the previous seven majors, he finished third three times.
Now, he's been a runner-up.
"When you've come close, there's a tinge of disappointment straight off," Westwood said. "I was disappointed walking up to the last green, obviously. But once that's passed, I didn't do too much wrong today. I can walk away with a lot of positive thoughts and memories from this Masters."
So can Mickelson.
Enough to last a lifetime.
"I'm in love with this place," he said. "It brings out the best in me."
[Associated Press;
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