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Reynolds was back on the bag for the third and fourth rounds -- when Watney shot 65-61 to win by a stroke -- saying he didn't fly 24 hours to just sit in his room all weekend.
Watney had 11 birdies in the first 17 holes Sunday and needed only one more to join an elite club of players who've gone under 60 in a competitive round on a major tour. He had a bogey on the last hole, but it didn't bother him because, he said, the win was more important. And he praised Reynolds' contribution for keeping him level-headed.
On the 11th, Watney said Reynolds convinced him to lay up instead of going for the green, and that was the key to his birdie.
"Then, on the very next hole, I wanted to hit a 7-iron, he said it was an 8, and I hit it about 4 feet and made another birdie," Watney said. "He definitely helped me. And it's good just to have somebody you're comfortable with coming down the stretch."
As for Amber, she's planning on enjoying her first trip to Malaysia. Watney has won five times on the PGA Tour. His win in the CIMB Classic, which will become an official event on the PGA Tour next year, was his first in Asia.
"My wife carried the last hole (Thursday), so she can say that we won the tournament when she caddied," Watney said.
[Associated
Press;
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