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<UID>
8702030885
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<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
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<DATE>
870719
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Sunday, July 19, 1987
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
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SPT
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<PAGE>
1H
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<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Associated Press
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<CAPTION>

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<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
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<MEMO>

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<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1987, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
HUNGRY AGAIN
WATSON HAS APPETITE FOR SIXTH OPEN FEAST
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MUIRFIELD, Scotland -- The putter came down steady, no hesitation, no
second-guessing, and -- mmmmmmwah! --  it kissed the little ball goodby.

  Five feet. Ten. Fifteen. Eighteen. . . . 

  Kerplop. 
  The crowd around the 18th green roared its approval, roared from under
umbrellas and wet suits and plastic bags. And the turtle-necked man in the
blue sweater and soggy red hair answered them with  a surprise -- a fist down
by his knees, a fist that seemed to say: "Sleep on that, folks. I'll be back
in the morning."
  Tom Watson was going to the clubhouse at four under par.
  Tom Watson was  back in the hunt to win his sixth British Open title.
  Is there any American not rolling with that fist this morning? Any American
who doesn't somehow want to see Watson, who  trails leader Paul Azinger  by
two strokes in this 116th British Open, kissing the silver winner's cup this
afternoon? Oh, maybe the very young. Maybe those too apple-cheeked to know the
first shiver of age, that horrible moment  when a trick you once did by heart
sends you scrambling for the instruction book.
  But the rest of us can find compassion with his story. Where has Tom Watson
been? The last time he won a tournament,  he was the No. 1 player in the
world. The best going.  His style was aggressive: big shots, great saves, long
putts. "The smartest of the lot," Jack Nicklaus once called him -- back when
he was winning.  That was a thousand days ago.
  Here is what has happened since 1984: He has questioned his desire, his
clubs, his confidence. His mail has been flooded with gift-wrapped putters and
notes that  read,  "TRY THIS, IT WILL FIX YOUR GAME, (signed) A FAN." The
British tabloids, which once revered him as the five-time winner of their
Open, have recently treated him like some fallen matinee idol. They alleged
drugs. Alcohol. Marital problems. All were blamed for Tom Watson's sudden
inability to put a little ball into a little cup as easily as he once did. 
  "I used to walk up to a 50-footer and see the  line and say there it is,"
he said just a few months ago. "I can't do that now. I've lost the touch."
  He sounded tired. 
  He sounded old.
  He was 37.
  The worst struggles of all are when  you have to fight yourself. There
was nothing physically wrong with Tom Watson, no tangible culprit for his
sudden drought of victory.
  But the same way a salesman may suddenly lose his edge, or a successful
boxer lose the sting of hunger, so too did Watson suddenly discover something
was missing, and so too did he engage in a get-nowhere wrestle with his
psyche. Suddenly, a man who once calmly  sank  40-foot putts was seeing
10-foot tries rolling past the hole. A guy who could save any shot was leaving
them all in distress. He switched putters. He lost his rhythm. His strokes
were indecisive.  "My swing is wrinkled," he declared, glumly.
  Even here, at the British Open -- which has always been his major -- he
slipped then fell. After winning in 1983, he blew up on the next-to-the-last
hole  in 1984 and finished tied for second. In 1985, he was 47th. In 1986, he
tied for 35th.
  Tom Watson? The  Tom Watson? Ten years ago, he and Jack Nicklaus staged a
British Open duel that still makes  golf- lovers weep. For two days along the
Scottish coast at Turnberry, they battled, far in front of the pack, one
brilliant shot after another, the guy wire of pressure at their throats the
entire time.  It was a lovely war, and Watson won it with a birdie putt on the
final hole. Nerve? You try putting to win with Jack Nicklaus staring across
the green.
  So he had nerve. People didn't always believe  it. (Indeed, Watson was once
labeled a "choker" before  his  brilliant stretch of golf in the late 1970s.)
But now, in the mid-'80s, it wasn't choking that was getting to him. It was
something worse.
  He was starting not to care.
  When I began playing golf, every tournament was like to U.S. Open to me,"
Watson said. "It's not like that anymore. I wish it was. Really. I wish I
could tee it up  at the Quad Cities Open and say it felt like here at the
British. It doesn't."
  He was smiling less. He enjoyed it less. "This is not fun," he would
repeatedly say to his caddie. "My desire is not there," he told the press. Who
knows how these spirals get started? No fun leads to no success? No success
leads to no desire? Who knows? It all leads to questions  that lead to
questions that lead  to more questions. And suddenly, you look the same, you
weigh the same, but you are a memory of yourself, someone you see in your
sleep.
  "Do you think you can intimidate some of the younger players here?" someone
had asked Watson at the start of this tournament. "I don't think I intimidate
anyone  anymore," he said. "I haven't played worth a darn in two years."
  Can you imagine Tom Watson  a drug fiend? A raging alcoholic? Here is the
original Huckleberry kid, gap-toothed, reddish-hair, born and bred in
Missouri, for Pete's sake! He met his wife in a high school play. His dad
owned a duck  blind on the Missouri River. His fondest childhood moments were
going quail hunting with his pop. 
  He could sell breakfast cereal,  or deodorant.  He has the look of a guy
who comes downstairs and  says, "Honey, have you seen my blue socks?" Get the
man a peanut butter sandwich. Drugs?
  But that is what they were whispering -- and writing --  particularly in
Great Britain. A reporter here Thursday asked whether he was "sniffing
victory" at Muirfield and Watson cynically replied, "According to some of you
guys, I've been sniffing a lot more than that." 
  Amazing. Ten years ago, his victory at  Turnberry sparked one of the most
successful five-year runs in golf history. Now it was all coming apart.
Enormous talent, followed by enormous success, followed by enormous letdown.
  In many ways,  it was as American as a story can get.
  Which means a comeback would be perfect, right? And the first seeds of
that were planted last month, on a coast far sunnier than this one, Northern
California,  the U.S. Open at Olympic Club. There, just weeks after calling
the year "the worst time of my career," Watson finished second to Scott
Simpson. But places didn't matter. He was more enthralled with the  "click" he
heard inside his head during the second round.
  "All of a sudden," he recalled, "it was like, 'Yeah, that's the way you do
it. That's the way you swing a golf club.'
  "Suddenly, I was  able to accept the idea that I was going to make  some
bogeys and still keep the frame of mind to win a tournament. I had confidence
again. The putter started working."
  On Saturday here, he double-bogeyed  the second hole by burying the ball in
a bunker. A year ago that might have started a grumbling spiral that would
have squashed his chances. "But this time, when I finally put it in, I felt
fortunate to just have double-bogeyed. That's the difference. I was looking at
it as turning something bad into something good."
  And he did. On the third hole he sank a 10-foot putt. On the fourth he sank
 a seven-footer. On the fifth, an eight-footer. On the sixth, another
seven-footer. "That stretch really gave me confidence -- to be able to do
something with the putter again."
  He grinned. Here was  a man who has made hundreds of putts far more
difficult than those; a six-time player of the year, a Masters champion, a
U.S. Open champion. That gave him confidence? Those little putts? Yes.
Sometimes  the smallest steps back are the hardest ones to take.
  So who isn't rolling with that happy fist this morning? Certainly not anyone
who has ever experienced the blahs of middle-age, who has ever wondered
whether he has lost the touch, who has ever had to suck in a gut or lose 10
pounds or look long and hard in the mirror and figure out who was on the other
side.
  When Watson's mentor, Byron Nelson,  retired from the game, he was asked
why: "Because I have to try to try," he answered. Until recently, until this
week perhaps, that was Watson's biggest fear. But when he walked off that 18th
green Saturday, grinning at the crowd, the leader just two strokes ahead of
him -- trying, for once, didn't look to be  the problem.
  He looked as if  he couldn't wait.
CUTLINE
Tom Watson: "I wish I could tee it  up at the Quad Cities Open and say it felt
like here at the British. It doesn't."
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