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  Focus should be on Tiger Woods winning   (AP)  Updated: 2006-03-08 09:14  
 Woods finishes second far fewer times, which speaks just as much — if not 
more — to his will to win.
 In their first 10 years on the PGA Tour, Nicklaus and Woods either won or 
finished second about one-third of the time. The difference is Woods won 48 
tournaments and has been runner-up 19 times; Nicklaus won 38 tournaments and was 
runner-up 30 times.
 Woods can be an intimidating presence, no doubt.
 Still, some people make it sound as though Toms was standing on the 18th 
green at Doral when he looked over his shoulder at Woods in the fairway and 
started shaking.
 Toms had a 4-iron from the rough with a pin cut over the water to the left. 
His only choice without doing anything stupid was to play to the fat part of the 
green and take his chances. He was left with a 60-foot putt that, once it starts 
to break, goes swiftly with the grain toward the water. The best he could have 
done, without the hole getting in the way, was to leave it about 4 feet below 
the cup. His putt slid 10 feet by and he missed it.
 Toms made only five bogeys all week. Three came at the 18th hole, a monster 
for everyone but the Herculean hitters on tour. Par was no small task in the 
final round, when the average score was 4.5.
 Woods caught a decent lie in the rough and had 170 yards to the hole. Odds 
were that if Toms made his par putt, Woods hits his 9-iron to the middle of the 
green and makes par. 
 That's what he does — whatever it takes to win. 
 Whenever someone makes a mistake, it is too quickly written off as the Tiger 
factor. 
 If Els was so spooked by Woods in a playoff at Dubai, how to explain what 
happened to Woods on the same course four years ago? He was tied with Thomas 
Bjorn going to the par-5 18th, hit into the water and made double bogey to lose 
by two shots. 
 Few players are more crafty with a wedge than Olazabal, and his bunker shot 
on the 16th hole in the playoff at Torrey Pines was scary good. Trouble was, he 
left himself 4 feet straight down the hill and breaking sharply to the left on 
greens that will never be mistaken for what one might find in Phoenix. 
   
  
  
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