
Photo: Chris Condon - PGA TOUR
November 1 - Loren Roberts tremendous play throughout 2009 earned him a $1 million annuity and the Charles Schwab Cup title. It is the second time he's won the season-long Champions Tour competition. John Cook took home the Charles Schwab Cup Championship trophy. Read more...
Cook finishes year with win; Roberts takes Schwab Cup
SONOMA, Calif. (AP) -- John Cook had a tough time staying
focused Sunday in the final round of the Charles Schwab Cup
Championships. Loren Roberts had no such problem.
Cook spent the
morning exchanging text messages with Joey Sindelar, his close friend
and former Ohio State teammate who was hospitalized Saturday after
having a pulmonary embolism. Then Cook went out and won the
season-ending tournament by five strokes for his second Champions Tour
title in three weeks.
"That kind of shocks you a little bit when
one of your compadres goes down," said Cook, who closed with a 3-under
69 to finish 22-under 266 at Sonoma Golf Club.
"That's serious stuff. I don't like to see anybody, friends or family, go down like that. I was thinking of him all day."
Cook,
also the Administaff Small Business Classic winner two weeks ago in
Texas, broke the tournament record of 268 shared by Jim Thorpe and Andy
Bean.
Roberts shook off two days of struggles for a second
straight 66 to tie for sixth at 13-under 275 and win the points title
and $1 million annuity for the second time in three years. He had to
hold off a strong surge from Bernhard Langer (68), who also finished at
13 under.
"I played two totally different golf tournaments in
one week," Roberts said. "The first two days I really didn't hit it
very good and I really didn't putt well. You just hate to get to the
end and blow it."
He didn't, shooting 12 under over the final
two rounds. Roberts, the 2007 points champion, said he plans to donate
a portion of his winnings to a Sacramento-area school district to help
keep girls' and boys' golf programs going.
Russ Cochran (68)
finished second in the tournament. Brad Bryant (69) and Jeff Sluman
(68) were 15 under, and Phil Blackmar (69) was 14 under.
After
opening with a 68 on Thursday, Cook shot a tournament-record 62 in the
second round and followed with a 67 to enter Sunday with a comfortable
lead.
Though he continued to have a few problems off the tee,
Cook stayed consistent throughout the four days and avoided getting
into serious trouble. He was bogey free Sunday and had only two bogeys
the entire tournament, making up for whatever problems he did have with
a solid short game and steady putting.
Before teeing off in the
final round, Cook received an encouraging text message from Sindelar,
his college teammate at Ohio State who remained hospitalized after
having a pulmonary embolism during the third round. The Champions Tour
said Sindelar's condition had improved but doctors at Sonoma Valley
Hospital wanted to keep the 51-year-old for further observation.
"He said he was fine and to go finish the deal," Cook said. "Hopefully we'll get a chance to see him tonight."
Cook's lead was never really challenged.
Cochran
birdied No. 8 to pull within five strokes, but Cook moved to 21 under
when he curled in a long putt on the 427-yard, par-4 12th.
Cochran
had another birdie on the 436-yard, par-4 15th and made a long birdie
putt on the 18th, finishing second for the second time in his rookie
season on the tour.
Cook birdied the par-3 17th, then tapped in for par on the 18th.
This
is the last time the season-ending tournament will be held at Sonoma.
The event will be played at Harding Park in San Francisco in 2010 and
2011.
Roberts wouldn't mind a few more years in the wine country, however.
He
has celebrated the points championship twice while walking off the 18th
green at Sonoma and nearly missed a third in 2006 when he three-putted
on the final hole.
After falling behind Langer early this
season, Roberts charged back into contention with wins at the Senior
British Open in July and at the Boeing Classic in Washington in August
then went into the season finale with a 165-point lead.
He
didn't play well the first two rounds in Sonoma, but corrected a flaw
while on the driving range late Friday night then played 12 under the
rest of the weekend to secure the points title.
"For me, this
might be one of my best accomplishments in golf just because I really
wasn't playing very good the first part of the year," Roberts said. "To
be able to come back and win it essentially with two-thirds of a season
was remarkable to me."















