Brian Gay wins St. Jude Classic

By WKBW Sports

Brian Gay wins St. Jude Classic

July 8, 2010 Updated Jul 8, 2010 at 3:44 PM EDT

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Brian Gay thought so little of his chance
to play his way into the U.S. Open in his last possible chance that
he had plans for a week off. Not even a tentative plan sketched out
just in case.
Well, he better figure something out pretty quick. His
wire-to-wire victory Sunday in the St. Jude Classic punched his
ticket to Bethpage Black.
"Right now I don't know if we're going home first or what we're
going to do, whether we spend tomorrow traveling, going home and
repacking," Gay said. "Get to work on Tuesday I guess."
Gay came to Memphis as one of seven players with a chance to
grab the Open exemption as a multiple winner in the last calendar
year. He responded with his second win in his last five events and
the third victory of his career, beating David Toms and Bryce
Molder by five strokes.
"I felt I had to go out and play golf. If I won, I'd get the
chance to play," Gay said.
He grabbed the $1,008,000 winner's check at TPC Southwind in
runaway style, too.
Gay led by only a stroke after each of the first three rounds,
then shot his third straight 4-under 66 to pull away. He birdied
three of the first six holes to take all the suspense out of the
final round, and birdied the 18th to finish at 18-under 262.
Toms finished with a 65, and Molder had a 70. John Senden (64),
Paul Goydos (68) and Robert Allenby (69) tied for fourth at 12
under.
"It was a pretty good golf tournament except for one guy
stealing the show," said Toms, the tournament winner in 2003 and
2004.
Phil Mickelson, in his first event since announcing wife Amy has
breast cancer, and John Daly, returning from a six-month PGA Tour
suspension, tied for 59th at 1 over. Mickelson closed with a 75,
and Daly shot a 70.
It wasn't as large a victory as in April when Gay won by 10 at
Hilton Head. It just felt like that on a day where no one could get
close enough on wet fairways that stopped balls with almost no
roll. Officials had moved up the start by four hours hoping to beat
incoming storms that popped up in the morning to delay the start of
the final round - by four hours. It didn't rain again.
Gay needed only 100 putts to become the fourth wire-to-wire
winner in the tournament's 52-year history and first since Justin
Leonard in 2005.
Gay started pulling away on the par-3 fourth. After his tee shot
landed near the pin and rolled 20 feet past, he rolled in the
birdie putt to reach 16 under. Molder hit into a bunker and bogeyed
- a swing that gave Gay a four-stroke lead. Gay rolled in a
30-footer on No. 6 and a 17-footer on No. 9 for birdies.
The club let him down on his two bogeys.
He found a greenside bunker pin-high on No. 7 and blasted out to
15 feet, but two-putted. He missed a 9-footer for par on No. 10.
But Gay made up for that by sticking an iron a foot away for
birdie on the par-3 11th - the island green - for birdie to go back
to 17. That's when Molder was convinced this was Gay's tournament.
"I didn't even get close to catching him," said Molder, who
had his best finish on tour.
From there on, Gay parred six straight holes before finishing in
style. He stuck an iron 163 yards to 5 feet of the pin on No. 18,
then stroked in his 27th putt of the round for birdie. He
celebrated with a fist pump, a high five with his caddie and hugs
and kisses from his young daughters.
Mickelson spent the week trying to figure out how to play golf
and deal with all the emotions resulting from his wife's illness.
He accomplished that even if the results on course didn't. He
started the final round 10 strokes behind Gay and shot the 75 that
featured a triple bogey, three bogeys and three birdies.
"I needed to get a little bit of play in, see where my game was
at and get back on the golf course in a competitive frame of mind
if I was going to have a chance next week," Mickelson said. "I'm
looking forward to next week's U.S. Open.
Now he wants to focus on his putting after needing 120 putt this
week.
Six children treated at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
met him coming off the 18th green wearing shirts and a banner that
read "Thinking of Amy." The hospital is this event's lone
charity.
Mickelson talked with the children and signed their shirts.
"These are some pretty cool kids going through something we're
going to go through ourselves here in a few weeks," he said.

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