Tiger, Peyton win an exhibition as good as the real thing

AP photo by David Dermer / Former University of Tennessee and NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, left, laughs while talking with Tiger Woods on the 11th hole at Muirfield Village Golf Club during the pro-am for the Memorial Tournament on May 30, 2018, in Dublin, Ohio.
AP photo by David Dermer / Former University of Tennessee and NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, left, laughs while talking with Tiger Woods on the 11th hole at Muirfield Village Golf Club during the pro-am for the Memorial Tournament on May 30, 2018, in Dublin, Ohio.
photo AP photo by Jay LaPrete / Former University of Tennessee and NFL quarterback Peyton Manning, right, high-fives Tiger Woods after making a birdie putt during the pro-am round of the Memorial Tournament on May 29, 2019, at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio.

Tom Brady delivered the shot of the match that made it easy to forget the rest of his swings. Tiger Woods didn't miss a fairway and earned a small measure of revenge against Phil Mickelson.

The PGA Tour is set to return in just more than two weeks, and it has a tough act to follow.

In another charity match that brought live golf to TV for the second straight weekend, this exhibition was as entertaining as the real thing.

Woods lagged a long birdie putt close enough that his partner, Peyton Manning, didn't have to putt. That secured a 1-up victory over Mickelson and Brady in "The Match: Champions for Charity."

The goal was to raise $10 million or more for COVID-19 relief funds, and online donations sent money climbing toward twice that much.

This made-for-TV exhibition would have have been worth pay-per-view, the model Mickelson and Woods used for a $9 million winner-take-all match in Las Vegas on Thanksgiving weekend in 2018 that Mickelson won in a playoff under lights. It felt forced, lacked banter and turned out to be free for all to see because of technical trouble.

Throw in two NFL greats in Brady and Manning, and this Lefty-Tiger rematch allowed viewers to ride along for 18 holes at Medalist Golf Club in Hobe Sound, Florida, with four of the biggest stars in sport.

PGA Tour golfer Justin Thomas pitched in as an on-course reporter, bringing a mixture of humor and insight with the right amount of words.

Woods and Manning took the lead on the third hole and never trailed, building a 3-up lead in fourballs on the front nine, with Manning making two birdies (one was a net par).

Brady, whose six Super Bowl titles are more than any NFL quarterback in history, took a beating on social media and in the broadcast booth from Charles Barkley, who twice offered $50,000 of his own money toward charity if Brady just hit the green on a par 3. He missed so far right it would be comparable to a pass that landed three rows into the stands.

New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton weighed in on Twitter, noting Brady signing as a free agent with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers by saying he liked the "Florida" Brady much better.

Brooks Koepka, a four-time major champion, offered $100,000 if Brady could just make a par.

One shot shut everyone up.

Never mind that Brady had to take a penalty drop before getting back to the fairway on the par-5 seventh. With his fourth shot, with Barkley needling him relentlessly, Brady's golf ball landed beyond the pin and spun back into the cup.

"Shut your mouth, Chuck," said Brady, whose microphone piece dangled off the back of his pants.

photo AP photo by Eric Risberg / NFL quarterback Tom Brady, right, is greeted by playing partner Ricky Barnes of the PGA Tour, left, after making a putt on the second green at Pebble Beach Golf Links during the third round of the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am on Feb. 8, 2014.

Woods still thought he won the hole with a 25-foot eagle putt that instead spun hard off the back of the lip. All that, and they ended up halving the hole.

Donations for COVID-19 relief funds kept piling up, and the entertainment didn't stop even as the rain returned. It caused a 45-minute delay at the start, and as Woods said on the practice range, "I don't normally play in conditions like this."

Mickelson brought out his "Tiger Slayer" putter that he used to shoot 64 at Pebble Beach Golf Links in 2012, the last time they were in the final group together on the PGA Tour. Woods shot a 75 that day. It didn't help Lefty with a few critical birdie putts to square the match, though he rolled in a 15-foot par putt to stay 1 down with two to play.

The back nine was modified alternate shot - all players hit tee shots, and it was alternate shot from there. It was key for the quarterbacks to find the fairway for the pros to hit shots into the green, and Brady came through until the 18th.

Woods was playing for the first time since Feb. 16 when he finished last at Riviera in Los Angeles. He chose not to play the next four weeks with his back not feeling just right, and then the pandemic shut down golf and sports worldwide.

The 15-time major champ looked sharp for the most part, with his game and his words. On the fifth hole, Mickelson asked Woods to mark his ball from some 80 yards away.

"You want me to mark with a U.S. Open medal," said Woods, a three-time champion of the only major Mickelson hasn't won.

"Do you have one? I have some silver ones," Mickelson said, referring to his record six runner-up finishes.

Mickelson boasted about taking Woods down on his home course at Medalist, and now their TV matches are tied at 1, even with each getting a little help. Mickelson said he was a little nervous on the front nine until he found his groove, driving the green on the par-4 11th with Brady making a 20-footer for eagle that began their rally.

"Phil said he was nervous. I know Tom and I were comparing notes," Manning said. "To be behind the ropes in these guys' worlds, to be in the arena with them, it was really a special experience. I was not comfortable the entire time. Knowing $20 million was raised and helping people going through tough times, it was an honor to be invited.

"It's something I'll always remember."

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