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<UID>
9601200201
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
960617
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, June 17, 1996
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
NWS
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1A
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo GABRIEL TAIT
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>



The moment of triumph for Steve Jones, who said he lived every
golfer's dream of winning the Open.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1996, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
MONSTER FINISH
STEVE JONES AN UNLIKELY U.S. OPEN WINNER
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
When you reach the highest level of golf, someone else carries your clubs.
You have to carry your story. On Sunday, in the dying afternoon heat, four
unlikely men, with four unlikely stories, came  down the mean stretch of the
U.S. Open at Oakland Hills Country Club, trying to slay the course they called
the Monster, a beast that often waits until the final holes to blow its fire.

  None of the  four was a household sports name -- no Greg Norman, Jack
Nicklaus, Nick Faldo or Tom Watson here -- but all were top-notch golfers. And
their personal dramas? Whoa. It was like an afternoon soap.

  One guy was from Michigan, had played for the Wolverines, and what a fairy
tale it would be if he could win here at home, in front of his college
buddies, right? Another was a talented near-misser,  always a bridesmaid,
who'd played so many dinky tournaments in his life, he could remember one
where animals attacked each other on the course. What a fitting payoff a title
would finally be for him,  no?
  The third contender was one of the top golfers in the game who was still
waiting to win a Big One. He had lost his father in a plane crash, and here it
was, Father's Day, and wouldn't that be  a perfect story? And then there was
the last guy, who had it all going for him a few years ago, lots of early tour
success, and then he crashed a dirt bike in the Arizona desert, messed up his
finger,  couldn't grip a club, and spent three years on a couch, wondering
whether he would ever play golf again.
  Such was the stage for the good-bye round of America's toughest tournament
on one of its least  forgiving courses. With five holes left, only one stroke
separated the four golfers -- John Morse, Tom Lehman, Steve Jones and Davis
Love III -- and all anyone really knew out there was this: Somebody was going
to win his first major here.
  And three other stories were going to get longer.
  The first to fall off the horse was Morse, the Michigan man, who at 38 had
been a long time away from  the Maize and Blue. Still, local fans had sang
parts of "The Victors" when he passed, and yelled "Go Blue!" And for a while,
it looked as if he might have the college magic. He was one stroke from the
lead -- and then he teed off into the rough on the 16th. He took a quick drag
on a cigarette as he walked toward his approach shot, as if he suddenly knew
this was the final mile. He made a weak putt  for par, missed by an inch, and
bogeyed out of the picture.
  Love was next. He had charged down the back nine, going from even to three
under in five holes, and much of the golf world was rooting  for him. Many
consider him the best American golfer to never win a major, and besides, he
has golf all over his gene pool. He is the son of a former touring pro, Davis
Love Jr., who was competing in  the Masters the day his son was born.
  Father taught son the game, and was his only coach and best adviser --
until eight years ago, when he was killed in a plane crash. Even the thickest
audience could see the natural drama of Davis -- who was a runner-up in last
year's Masters, and fourth in last year's U.S. Open -- winning his first major
on Father's Day.
  This, I suppose, is why playwrights  don't work in the sports section. The
only lessons Davis learned Sunday were 1) You can't always get what you want,
and 2) When you think you've hit a putt hard enough, think again. After
sharing the lead on the 16th, Love bogeyed the 17th by a few inches on his
putt, then came to the 18th -- which had been eating golfers all week -- and
missed a makable birdie putt, missed the next easy par putt,  and fell off the
rainbow with a good-bye bogey. Farewell, wonderful story.
  "I came a little closer this year," Love said, "but I'm a lot more
disappointed."
  Then there were two.
The final chapter
  Lehman had been the leader coming into Sunday, having tied the course
record with a five-under 65 Saturday. Unfortunately, the lankly, likable
fellow -- with a tanned face that is somewhere between  Kevin Costner and Bob
Dole -- has often been better on Saturdays than Sundays. He had the lead on
the last day of the 1994 Masters, and lost to his playing partner, Jose Maria
Olazabal. He was tied for  the lead on the last day of last year's U.S. Open,
and lost to Corey Pavin.
  Now, here he was again, playing career Ping-Pong with his partner for the
day, Steve Jones. The two had been friends for a while. When they started the
round, and Jones hit into the rough, Lehman -- who knows Jones has found
religion -- quoted something from the Bible, a line about being "strong and
courageous."
  They're  quoting the Bible to each other? Hmm. Not exactly Michael
Jordan-Gary Payton, is it?
  So be it. Lehman took a commanding lead, then lost command. He went from
four under to two under --  bogey on  the 10th, bogey on the 12th -- and came
into the final hole tied with Jones. All the other golfers were finished now.
This was it for the tournament and the national title. In the trailer, Love
waited  with his one-under score, in case -- he hoped, he hoped -- there was
some kind of tie.
  There would be no tie. Lehman, hitting first, put his drive into the
amoeba-shaped bunker. Jones, a tall man,  playing with sunglasses all day,
put his tee shot in the fairway. That pretty much told the tale. A few minutes
later, Lehman's last gasp at a miracle washed away when his par putt went
long, and Jones  knocked his final shot home, then shook his fists and opened
his arms to his children, his wife, and the world of great stories.
  For here was a guy who had won three tournaments in 1989, and hadn't  won
anything since. He nearly gave up golf after his dirt bike injury -- "I was
with a friend, he went down, I tried to avoid him and woke up with a sprained
ankle, a separated shoulder, and ligament  damage in my left ring finger" --
and each time he came back to the clubs, he couldn't hold them correctly. For
a while he sold a car wash product called Dry Wash, "until I realized I wasn't
a salesman."
  Dry Wash?
  He began the slow journey back. Two years ago, he earned less than $9,000
on the PGA Tour. Last year, he earned $234,000. On Sunday, he made more than
that combined, and as his two young  kids jumped into his arms, he gave golf a
much- needed human touch, a father winning on Father's Day.
  "I can't believe it, really," Jones said. "I read this book last week, on
Ben Hogan, and how he  won here in 1951. And it really helped me. He talked
about just focusing on the shots, not anything else. That's what I did today.
I didn't look at the scoreboard. At the 18th, I asked my brother how  we were
doing, and he said we were tied for the lead. And I knew I just had to golf
against Tom."
  Do you believe it? Why not? It's a perfect end to a marvelous tournament --
hats off, Oakland Hills  -- that began in a thunderstorm and ended in a heat
wave, and in between saw a farewell from a legend,  Nicklaus, the humbling  of
several superstars (Norman, Faldo) and a final, goose-bumpy family get-
together on the 18th, from a guy who couldn't hold a club a few years ago.
It's an American golf tournament, the biggest we have. And let's be honest:
What do Americans like better than a good old-fashioned comeback  story?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>
THIS ELECTRONIC VERSION MAY DIFFER SLIGHTLY FROM THE PRINTED  ARTICLE.
</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
STEVE JONES; WINNER; US OPEN; MAJOR STORY; GOLF
</KEYWORDS>
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