Woods playoff was cool, says Mediate as U.S. Open returns to Torrey
Pines
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[June 15, 2021]
By Frank Pingue
(Reuters) - Rocco Mediate may not be at
this week's U.S. Open but is ready to drive down memory lane as the
major returns to Torrey Pines in San Diego for the first time since
2008 when he lost a thrilling playoff to Tiger Woods.
Mediate was on the cusp of securing the biggest win of his life but
it slipped from his grasp as Woods, playing on what was essentially
a broken leg, pulled off one of the most improbable victories of his
career in a 19-hole Monday playoff.
Although Mediate earned six wins on the PGA Tour, including one two
years later at the age of 47, he is comfortable that his most
high-profile moment was a defeat that has left him forever linked to
Woods.
"There haven't been many great U.S. Open playoffs because there
haven't been that many. Those playoffs weren't awful, they just
weren't with Tiger," Mediate told Reuters in a video interview.
"If that U.S. Open playoff was with anybody else, and this is
totally not disrespectful, would it have been (as memorable)? Of
course not. It wouldn't even have been close."
Mediate, who led by a shot on the 16th playoff hole and remembers
the day vividly, said he will not be bothered when clips of his duel
with Woods get replayed this week.
"It's cool to be part of that. If it wasn't so cool and special they
wouldn't put the clips on," said Mediate.
"I didn't lose because I hit it in the lake on 18 and made a
double-bogey or three-putt from 10 feet to lose or something
devastating. That ruins careers, that's the end of you mostly. And
I'm 45 at the time.
"I just lost. I played my heart out, hit the best shots I've ever
hit in my life that week, especially in the playoff."
HEAD GAMES
Mediate said he was irked to learn that seemingly every golf analyst
gave him no chance going into the playoff, figuring the world's
157th-ranked player would crumble under the pressure of playing with
Woods.
"He had no effect on me. Zero. The only person that could affect me
was me. I loved that arena," said Mediate.
"I might have been more disappointed that we didn't keep playing in
the playoff than I was when I lost because it was so much fun all
day playing in front of everybody."
And when Mediate showed up wearing a red shirt, which Woods had made
his Sunday trademark, some suggested he was trying to play mind
games.
"People actually thought that was a planned thing. Yeah, like it
would really bother him," said Mediate, whose red shirt was the last
clean one he had. "The only thing it would do is piss him off which
you don't want to do."
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Rocco Mediate of the U.S. hits to a sand
trap on the fourth hole in second round play on Torrey Pines South
course during the Farmers Insurance Open PGA golf tournament in San
Diego, California January 28, 2011. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Mediate said when he woke up the day
of the playoff he felt in his heart that he would win, especially
since he had been better than Woods through the air all week.
"That's how you win Opens most of the time unless of course Tiger is
involved," said Mediate. "The greatest players of all time did it
every single possible way to be done. That's what makes them great."
Woods made a 12-foot birdie at the final hole in regulation to force
an 18-hole playoff. He birdied the 18th again on Monday to keep the
playoff alive and closed the deal on the next hole after Mediate
missed the fairway.
'PRETTY COOL DAY'
While Mediate has long since moved on from the sting of defeat he
still shakes his head about a comment he said Woods's caddie Steve
Williams made.
"He said 'oh Rocco and guys like him have nothing to lose in these
events'. Are you that dumb? Nothing to lose? Let me think about this
for a second: playing against the man, him, for the thing that I
covet the most in my sport. Nothing to lose? Moron," said Mediate.
"But Tiger had everything to lose? He's already got two of them. He
had nothing to lose. I did.
"We both had everything to lose because it was the United States
Open and in my world that's the most important thing in golf."
Mediate said he and Woods have never discussed what many consider
the greatest U.S. Open playoff.
"That would've been fun but we never did that which is kind of sad
because it was a pretty cool day for me," said Mediate, who has gone
on to a successful PGA Tour Champions career where his four wins
include a Senior PGA Championship.
"I'm sure it was for him but I don't know. We never really talked
about it. I've done all the talking."
(Reporting by Frank Pingue in Toronto, editing by Ed Osmond)
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