This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/16/sports/golf/martin-kaymer-wins-us-open.html
The article has changed 5 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Kaymer, Leading Throughout, Runs Away to His First U.S. Open Title | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
PINEHURST, N.C. — Martin Kaymer arrived at the first tee Sunday dressed appropriately for a methodical man with a modest, logical plan for the day. | PINEHURST, N.C. — Martin Kaymer arrived at the first tee Sunday dressed appropriately for a methodical man with a modest, logical plan for the day. |
Kaymer chose a white shirt, muted dark gray pants and plain, all-white shoes. It was an outfit that matched his golf bag, which was white and unadorned by a sponsor’s logo, making it a rare piece of unpretentious golf gear that endorsed only its owner. | Kaymer chose a white shirt, muted dark gray pants and plain, all-white shoes. It was an outfit that matched his golf bag, which was white and unadorned by a sponsor’s logo, making it a rare piece of unpretentious golf gear that endorsed only its owner. |
But the stoic, steady and humble Kaymer had a different strategy to stand out. He was letting his clubs make a statement at the 2014 United States Open, not his clothes and certainly not a marketing campaign embossed on his bag. In the opening rounds, Kaymer stormed the Pinehurst No. 2 golf course with record-setting back-to-back 65s to stun the field. Every golfer trailing the surprise leader knew they could never catch him unless he faltered. | |
But from there, Kaymer had a simple blueprint for victory. He would keep his competitors at bay with the same systematic but assertively creative play that put him atop the leader board. | |
“I would play my game but never defend the lead,” Kaymer said. “Defending a lead is how you fall back. Feeling free and confident enough to continue to charge and excel is how you win. It’s the only way.” | “I would play my game but never defend the lead,” Kaymer said. “Defending a lead is how you fall back. Feeling free and confident enough to continue to charge and excel is how you win. It’s the only way.” |
Across four days, tactics, personality and steely purpose combined for a deft and artful performance that allowed Kaymer to distance himself from the field at nearly every important sequence of the tournament. It ended with an authoritative eight-stroke victory as Kaymer, the winner of 2010 P.G.A. Championship, captured his second major championship. | |
Kaymer’s final-round 69 gave him a tournament total of 271, nine under par. It is the second-best four-round total in United States Open history behind Rory McIlroy’s score of 268 in 2011. Kaymer is also just the seventh player in 114 years of the event to be the leader after each of the four rounds. | |
Erik Compton and Rickie Fowler tied for second place at 279, one under for the tournament. While there were days when the refurbished Pinehurst No. 2 course seemed both vulnerable and invincible, Kaymer, Compton and Fowler ended up the only players under par. Five players were tied at one-over 281. | |
Kaymer, a 29-year-old native of Düsseldorf, is the first German to win the event and the first to win the Players Championship, considered almost a fifth major, and the United States Open in the same year. He is also one of only five players to win the United States Open, the P.G.A. and the Players Championship. The others are Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Lee Trevino and Raymond Floyd. | |
“I didn’t make many mistakes at the start of the tournament, and that gave me a very nice cushion for the weekend,” Kaymer said. “Even when I didn’t play perfectly on Saturday, I kept it together, and I did not play conservative. I was still trying to extend the lead. | |
“Maybe the biggest challenge today was to not think too much about the trophy or about how I would react when I won. It does go through your head, but I worked hard to eliminate that.” | |
Kaymer, who was ranked No. 1 in the world for about two months in 2011, won the Players Championship on Mother’s Day in America and earned Sunday’s victory on Father’s Day. | |
Kaymer said Germany celebrated its Father’s Day earlier in the year. | |
“I did not get him anything for Father’s Day,” Kaymer said of his father, Horst. “Maybe this is his present.” | |
Kaymer began Sunday with a five-stroke lead, and though the Pinehurst galleries greeted him warmly, they were eager to see a thrilling competition and threw the bulk of their support behind Fowler, Kaymer’s playing partner. | |
Kaymer never seemed to waver from the consistent, middle-of-the-fairway style he started with on Thursday and displayed none of the nerves that might be expected on the final day of a major championship. He parred the first two holes and then birdied the third. | |
At the fourth tee, the grandstand implored Fowler to make a charge. He instead hit an approach shot short and right of the green, and then blasted a pitch shot from a sandy waste area 50 feet over the green. He recovered for a spectacular double bogey, but his chances to win disappeared with that hole as Kaymer saved another par from off the green. | |
For the next few hours, Fowler’s role was chiefly as a front-row witness to a coronation. “Martin was playing his own golf tournament today,” Fowler said. | |
The attention turned to Compton, who surged to get within four strokes of Kaymer at one point on the back nine. But then Compton made consecutive bogeys on the 11th and 12th holes, and soon Kaymer made successive birdies on the 13th and 14th. | |
There would be no drama in the final round. | |
“No one was catching Kaymer this week, not the way he was playing,” said Compton, who has had two heart transplants and was another fan favorite at Pinehurst. “I congratulate him, but I feel very happy, too. I’ve never gotten this far along in my story.” | “No one was catching Kaymer this week, not the way he was playing,” said Compton, who has had two heart transplants and was another fan favorite at Pinehurst. “I congratulate him, but I feel very happy, too. I’ve never gotten this far along in my story.” |
Kaymer’s childhood golfing hero was his countryman Bernhard Langer, who won two Masters championships, in the 1980s and ’90s. | |
“We almost have the German grand slam,” Kaymer said Sunday, smiling. “We just need the British Open.” | |
It was Langer who was instrumental in Kaymer’s resurrection after he fell from the top-ranked player in the world to 63rd in the rankings in early 2014. | |
Langer advised Kaymer to relax and to be more convivial with other golfers. | |
“He told me that I must stop worrying about my game so much,” Kaymer told a British newspaper. “Because I was getting in my own way.” | “He told me that I must stop worrying about my game so much,” Kaymer told a British newspaper. “Because I was getting in my own way.” |
On the eve of Sunday’s final round, it was evident Kaymer had taken Langer’s advice. He talked about having recently watched the golf movie “The Legend of Bagger Vance,” which is rife with themes about the ethos of the game. | |
Kaymer, a humble man who came to the golf course Sunday with a simple, common sense plan for victory, quoted the protagonist in the film. | |
“At the end of the day, we’re playing a game,” Kaymer said. | |
He added his personal take-away from that message. | He added his personal take-away from that message. |
“Now I just play,” he said. | “Now I just play,” he said. |