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Perry claims title after Austin, Watson stumble

Kentucky, Kenny Perry is coming home.

Perry shot a 6-under 66 on Sunday to win the Buick Open in Grand Blanc, Mich., by a stroke at 19 under, likely locking up a spot on the Ryder Cup team that will face Europe at Valhalla about 40 miles from his birthplace.

"I'm ecstatic," he said. "It really won't sink in until I'm actually putting on the red, white and blue."

Perry was amazed he won at Warwick Hills for a second time because Woody Austin closed with consecutive bogeys to blow the tournament and Bubba Watson just missed a 12-footer that would've forced a playoff.

While Perry was on the driving range, he backed into earning $900,000.

"I still can't believe I won," he said. "I feel like I need to go make a birdie out there to win."

Austin and Watson shot 68s.

Wheaton's Kevin Streelman, who tied for 10th last week, had another strong effort, earning $98,000 by finishing in a tie for 12th. Streelman, who shot 66 Sunday, had 8 birdies from holes 5-16 before finishing par-bogey.

The 47-year-old Perry joined Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson as the only multiple winners this year on the PGA Tour, became the oldest player to win at Warwick Hills and joined a short list of multiple champions at the 50th Buick Open.

Vijay Singh has three Buick Open titles, while Tiger Woods, Julius Boros, Tony Lema and now Perry have two.

"It's always nice to have your name associated with the greats of the game," Perry said. "I'm just hanging onto the shirttails.

"I'm the guy that's going to get their clubs out of the trunks of their car."

Austin sounded like he wanted to hide in a trunk.

He became the leader by curling a 9-footer in at the 16th, then fell back into a tie by missing a 13-foot putt for par on the next hole. Austin 3-putted from 63 feet to close the tournament and put Perry ahead.

"I threw it away," said Austin, whose demonstrative ways led him to cup a ball and slam it against the wood board marking the 7th tee. "I didn't hit the ball close enough to the hole the last two holes to counteract my yips.

"I've got to figure it out or I'd better quit."

Watson had a chance to force a 73rd hole despite a hooked tee shot by remarkably punching the ball onto the green to set up a makable putt that he barely missed.

"If someone had told me that on a tight golf course I'd have a putt for a playoff, I'd have taken the putt and skipped the rest of the week," he said.

Perry is not going to be at the British Open because he already committed to playing in Milwaukee the same week, following his decision to not attempt to qualify for the U.S. Open the day after winning the Memorial.

"I committed to all these tournaments before when I was ranked 100th in the world," he explained. "Now all of a sudden I've won twice, I'm probably top 20 in the world now.

"I've already committed to Milwaukee and I'm not going to back out."

Perry, who won in 2001 at Warwick Hills, has 11 victories on the PGA Tour.

He had a bogey-eagle-bogey-birdie stretch that dropped him from the lead and put him back into a tie with Austin at the 16th.

His best shot of the week was at the par-4 14th, where his tee shot landed in sand and he chipped in for eagle from 30 yards.

"It came off like a dream, took two hops and just slam-dunked right in the cup," Perry said. "You never expect to make them, but that really energized me for the last few holes."

Commerce Bank Championship: Loren Roberts led all the way in his first win of the year. He shot a 3-under 68 on Sunday to cap a 1-stroke victory over Nick Price and Lonnie Nielsen in the Commerce Bank Championship at East Meadow, N.Y.

Roberts has three second-place finishes on the Champions Tour this year, including last week to Jeff Sluman, but his 12-under 201 total gave him his eighth title on the over-50 circuit, matching his total from his PGA Tour career.

The 53-year-old Roberts earned the winner's share of $240,000 from the $1.6 million purse in the event he finished second in last year.

Price matched the tournament's low round with a 6-under 65 and finished tied for second at 11-under with Nielsen, the defending champion, who had a closing 66.

Sluman (66) and Gene Jones (67) were another stroke back at the 7,072-yard Red Course at Eisenhower Park.

Sluman, from Hinsdale, got within 1 of Roberts with a birdie on No. 15 from 13 feet, but he missed birdie putts on the next two holes and then bogeyed 18.

French Open: Spanish rookie Pablo Larrazabal won the French Open at Saint-Quentin-En-Yvelines, France, for his first European Tour victory, closing with a 4-under-par 67 to beat Colin Montgomerie by 4 strokes.

Larrazabal, who had to play two qualifying rounds, finished at 15-under 269.

"It was, for me, a six-day tournament," he said.

Woody Austin reacts on the 16th green during the final round of the Buick Open on Sunday. Austin finished bogey-bogey and finished 1 stroke behind winner Kenny Perry. Associated Press
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