| A birdie at the second playoff hole ended the 
				long drought for the 39-year-old American after one of the worst 
				starts he could have imagined with a bogey at his first hole 
				followed by a double-bogey at the second.
 "I haven't been able to pull it off for so long," a tearful 
				Howell, who dropped to his knees and buried his head in his 
				hands after making the winning putt, told Golf Channel.
 
 Howell twice narrowly missed long birdie putts at the 18th hole 
				which would have won him the tournament -- at the end of his 
				fourth round of three-under-par 67 and at the first playoff hole 
				-- before finally sinking a 15-footer for the title.
 
 "I just thought 'Don't leave this one short. Whatever you do ... 
				knock it off the green, but don't leave it short'," he added.
 
 Howell's last win on tour came in February 2007 at the Los 
				Angeles Open and he had lost two playoffs in the intervening 
				years.
 
 "I did wonder if this day would ever come," Howell said. "But in 
				weird way I probably okay with it because I enjoy I enjoy 
				playing the game and the competition."
 
 He had plenty of that on Sunday.
 
 RODGERS PRESSURES
 
 Both he and Rodgers finished 18 holes at 19-under 263 with 
				Rodgers, who has never won on the PGA Tour, lighting up the 
				Seaside Course at Sea Island with eight birdies in a bogey-free 
				round for a sparkling eight-under 62.
 
 Webb Simpson narrowly missed the playoff, finishing one stroke 
				back in third after a closing 65.
 
 Both players parred the first playoff hole but Rodgers missed a 
				birdie attempt at the second hole to give Howell a third 
				opportunity to seal the deal.
 
 Just getting to the playoff, however, had been a struggle for 
				Howell, who had led the first three days of the tournament and 
				started his final round with a one-stroke lead.
 
 "I knew I had put myself behind the eight ball," he said of his 
				poor start.
 
 He responded with birdies at the fifth, sixth and 10th holes to 
				get back to par for the day before three birdies in a row from 
				the 15th put him back amongst the leaders.
 
 "To get to make that birdie putt on 16 was really big. That just 
				gave me a chance," Howell said.
 
 Rodgers kept applying the pressure, however, connecting on a 
				birdie putt at 18 to tie the score, forcing Howell to play two 
				more holes to win the title.
 
 "Golf is a brutal game," Howell said. "The highs of the highs, 
				it comes with a lot of really low lows. It's a wonderful lesson 
				to be learned that if you truly believe in what you’re doing, to 
				stay the course."
 
 (Reporting by Gene Cherry in Salvo, North Carolina; Editing by 
				Christian Radnedge)
 
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