| Moore 
			passes Players' toughest test, others not so lucky at infamous 17th 
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			 [March 15, 2019] 
			By Steve Keating 
 (Reuters) - Every year 100,000 balls 
			are retrieved from the waters around the 17th hole at the TPC 
			Sawgrass but on Thursday fans watched a golfer pull one out of the 
			hole for just the ninth time after Ryan Moore struck a hole-in-one 
			at the Players Championship.
 
 Jim Furyk described the par-three 17th as the place where golfing 
			ghouls come "to watch the car wreck" and there was plenty of carnage 
			during the opening round to satisfy the massive gallery at the 
			Island Green as 14 balls hit the drink.
 
 But the biggest roar came for Moore when he struck a 121-yard 
			sandwedge dead on, his ball striking the pin and shooting straight 
			into the cup.
 
 The ace was just the ninth ever hit during the Players and the first 
			since Sergio Garcia in 2017.
 
 "That ace on 17 was pretty unbelievable," said Moore.
 
 "It's (17) one I'm always happy to walk off with a three, I know 
			that.
 
 "I have certainly made some birdies, I've definitely hit it in the 
			water a few times, but at this point who hasn't, after my 12th time 
			or so playing this event."
 
 Thousands of golfers, from major winners to weekend duffers who 
			shell out close to $500 for a round on the public course, have 
			watched their balls plunk into the murky waters guarding the 
			infamous green.
 
 Last year's Players Championship saw the 17th claim 54 balls and 
			along with them a few title hopes.
 
 Since 2003, Australian Aaron Baddeley has put a record 13 balls into 
			the water while Phil Mickelson and Bob Tway have dunked nine apiece. 
			Tway also holds the dubious distinction of carding the highest score 
			at 17, taking a 12 in 2005.
 
			
			 
			With a wedge in hand, a 121-yard par three would be considered a 
			piece of cake for most of the game's top golfers.
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			But with the green surrounded by a pond with only a small path 
			connecting it to the mainland, the 17th is famed course designer 
			Pete Dye's most diabolical creation and one of the golf world's most 
			famous holes.
 Players also have to contend with thousands of howling spectators, 
			tricky winds and the pressure of knowing one wayward shot on a 
			Sunday could sink their hopes of claiming golf's unofficial fifth 
			major.
 
 "It is like having a 3 o'clock appointment for a root canal," said 
			Mark Calcavecchia in 2009. "You're thinking about it all morning and 
			you feel bad all day."
 
			 
			
 Tiger Woods, the only golfer to win the Players in March and May, 
			was challenging for the title once again last year but put his tee 
			shot into the water in the final round to end his bid.
 
 "I had to put the hammer down on 16 and 17 and 18," recalled Woods 
			on Tuesday about his run for the title last year. "I hit it right in 
			the water on 17, so it wasn't very good."
 
 He also has some good memories from the hole, however. In 2001 he 
			drained the famous “Better than Most” birdie, snaking in a 60-footer 
			to help him to his first Players title.
 
 For Mickelson, the 17th is an unforgiving hole that demands a player 
			commit completely to his shot. "This is one of the few holes that I 
			can think of that has no bail-out, that has no margin of error, that 
			has no area for recovery," he said in 2007.
 
 "It's an all-or-nothing type shot." (Editing by Peter Rutherford)
 
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