Singh has one hand on trophy
2008-09-04 15:30
St Louis - Buoyed by victories in his last two PGA Tour starts, Vijay Singh has all but clinched the FedExCup ahead of this week's BMW Championship.
The Fijian leads second-placed Sergio Garcia by 12 225
points going into the penultimate event of the playoff series
and could seal the overall prize of $10m before the
showpiece finale, the Sept. 25-28 Tour Championship.
In the absence of injured world number one Tiger Woods, the
inaugural FedExCup champion last year, Singh has dominated the
first two weeks in the four-event series.
After beating Spaniard Garcia in a playoff for the Barclays
Classic 10 days ago, the smooth-swinging Fijian spread-eagled
the field with a closing eight-under-par 63 to run away with the
Deutsche Bank Championship by five shots on Monday.
Although the leading 24 players in the standings still have
a mathematical chance of winning the FedExCup trophy, that
largely rests on successive victories being posted while Singh
finishes last in the next two tournaments.
Despite the near-impossible task facing his rivals, the
world number three has no intention of adopting a no-risk
strategy.
'Game plan'
"I don't know how to play safe," Singh, 45, told reporters
after sealing his third PGA Tour victory in five appearances.
"I'm going to go out there and play the best I can.
"I'm going to have a game plan and stick to it. Another win
would be the icing on the cake but I don't take anything for
granted."
The top 70 on the FedExCup points list have qualified for
the BMW Championship at Bellerive Country Club and the leading
30 players after this week will then advance to the Tour
Championship.
Going into this week, the top points earners are Singh
(120 500), Garcia (108 275), Canadian Mike Weir (106 965) and Americans Justin Leonard (105,388) and Jim Furyk (104 230).
Garcia, who has posted top-five finishes in his last three
tournaments, accepts he has no realistic chance of overhauling
Singh.
'Definitely exciting'
"Obviously when Vijay won the first two (playoff events) it
didn't help much," the 28-year-old told reporters on Wednesday.
"But these playoffs are definitely exciting. It's something
extra to keep everybody involved."
Along with many other PGA Tour players this week, Garcia has
vivid memories of the 2001 American Express Championship
scheduled to be held at Bellerive before it was cancelled
following the September attacks on New York.
"You remember what happened because this is where we were at
that point in time," said the world number five. "It was a sad
moment."
The BMW Championship starts on Thursday.
- Reuters