
A relaxed Faldo takes third green
jacket
Last
updated April 15, 1996 at 1:15
a.m.
By Rich
Copley
Staff
Writer
The Augusta
Chronicle
On Sunday, Nick
Faldo methodically chipped
away
at Greg Norman's six-stroke lead
in the
Masters and then methodically held on to capture
his third green jacket.
Nick Faldo started the day
six
strokes behind leader Greg
Norman, but came back to win his third green jacket.
By
Matthew
Craig/Augusta
Chronicle
He
finished at
12-under-par 276. Norman, his nearest
competitor, was five strokes back.
Faldo studied
each shot from all angles - even the
tap-ins. He never seemed to question
where a shot would
land, even when he drove the ball
into the trees at the 14th hole. He
studied the angles,
tested the wind and knocked it 35
feet from the hole.
As he
approached the green, he
again studied, marked his ball, took
a swig of bottled water and
smiled.
The rugged
Englishman even acknowledged the fans
with a grin and a small wave,
and two strokes later
saved par.
Oh yes, it was the old
obsessed-with-his-game Nick
Faldo who won the green
jacket in 1989 and 1990 and held the No.
1 spot in the Sony World
Ranking in 1993-94 for a
record 81 weeks. But as he claws his way
back to the top of the
golf world, it seems like
someone said, ``Hey Nick, have a good
time.''
Not that it's
all been fun.
Early
in 1995, there was the decision to play
the PGA Tour full time,
which took him out of his
homeland for much of the year.
There
was also constant
retooling of his game with coach
David Leadbetter.
But primarily,
there was that nasty
divorce late in the year from his
second wife, Gill, and suddenly very
public romance with
21-year-old former Arizona State
golfer Brenna Cepelak.
The British
press went nuts.
As Faldo remembers it, they
rummaged through his garbage, tapped his
phone, and every
move he made he felt the stare of
several-hundred-millimeter camera lenses
on his back.
Did it interfere with his game?
Of course, he said at Miami's
Doral-Ryder Open in
late February.
Faldo, who's never
enjoyed the media glare, was
suddenly about as far
as possible from being the loner he wanted
to be.
He started
perfecting that loner
image early.
Struck by the TV image of
Jack Nicklaus and the
towering pines of Augusta
in the 1971 Masters, Faldo took up golf at
the age of 13. It
quickly became an obsession to
him as his grades in school went to pot. He
usually played
alone, developing a silent
approach to the game that followed him into his
professional
career.
Faldo was famous
for playing rounds in complete silence. Being
paired with him
was tantamount to being paired
with a machine.
Not that all of this
silence served him
well.
In the early '80s,
he was becoming known as Foldo -
consistently blowing leads.
In 1985 he did a short
tutorial with emerging golf guru
Leadbetter, but Leadbetter's
prognosis of two years to
rebuild Faldo's game scared him off.
It wasn't until 1987,
when his career seemed to
be quickly winding down, that Faldo went
back to the man he now
affectionately calls
``Lead.''
He snatched a British Open
victory that year. Two years
later, he won that
first Masters. Then he picked up the second
in 1990 and the British in the
same year and
again in 1992. In 1993 he finished second at the
British and third in the PGA
Championship.
Then he hit a slide.
He simply wasn't
playing very well, he said,
and that wasn't
acceptable.
So he came to the United
States, though he's still a
citizen of Great
Britain, to play the PGA Tour full time.
Specifically, he wanted to improve
his putting by
working on the consistent greens of U.S.
courses.
He also got away from
some of the
highly technical stuff he and Leadbetter had
been working on, opting for ``the
natural
swing,'' and abandoning the cross-handed putting
grip.
He started the year
clowning
around at Pebble Beach and Phoenix on Super Bowl
Sunday. He moved east for the
Daytona 500
and a space shuttle launch in Florida, even taking
a late afternoon fishing trip
at Doral
with Cepelak, according to Sports Illustrated
magazine.
At Doral, Faldo said
he was
taking an easy approach to the year, feeling like
things were coming together and
his
battles with the British press were subsiding. His
expectations weren't too high - he
just
wanted to start winning tournaments again, especially
the majors.
But not
necessarily
the first one of the year.
Wearing his old-new
green jacket, Faldo said he
had modest
expectations coming into the Masters - having a good
tournament would do.
Now he's in
the history books, joining Gary Player, Sam Snead and
Jimmy Demaret as
three-time Masters
winners. One more green jacket and he's in Arnold Palmer
land.
Sunday night, a tearful
Cepelak said she was just trying to enjoy the moment.
At the
green jacket ceremony on
the Augusta National putting green, Faldo applauded the
fans,
extended condolences to Norman
and joked about his faithful caddy, Fanny Suneson,
having to
drag ``that heavy thing around,
and the golf bag, too.''
After the ceremony,
Suneson
and Faldo had a few laughs
talking about the difficulties of taking the flag stick at
18 home
on the plane.
Today, he'll play at a charity tournament in Columbia, with pop
stars
Hootie and the
Blowfish.
Just a few months into 1996, Faldo has already climbed
his way
back to the
top of the golf world, and that in itself is something to smile
about.
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