MELBOURNE,
Australia
-
Tiger
Woods
gave
the
record
crowds
at
the
Australian
Masters
everything
they
could
have
wanted
with
his
victory
Sunday,
except
a
definitive
answer
when
he
would
return.
"I
promise
it
won't
be
as
long,"
Woods
said
to
yet
another
warm
ovation.
Woods
took
the
lead
for
good
with
a
seven-iron
to
within
four
feet
for
birdie
on
the
fifth
hole,
and
he
hardly
missed
a
shot
the
rest
of
the
way
for
a
4-under
68
and
a
two-shot
win
over
Australia's
Greg
Chalmers.
He
won
for
the
seventh
time
this
year,
and
the
82nd
time
worldwide
in
his
career.
Woods
now
has
a
trophy
from
every
continent
where
golf
is
played.
Australia,
the
13th
country
where
he
has
won
an
individual
event,
had
been
the
missing
link.
"I've
never
won
down
here,
so
now
I
have
won
on
every
continent,
except
for
Antarctica,"
Woods
said.
"I
haven't
played
the
Antarctica
Four-Ball
yet.
But
to
have
won
on
every
playable
continent,
it's
something
I've
always
wanted
to
do.
And
now
I've
done
that."
It
had
been
11
years
since
Woods
last
competed
in
Australia,
at
the
1998
Presidents
Cup.
Since
then,
he
has
won
13
majors
and
72
times
around
the
world,
becoming
the
face
of
golf
and
one
of
the
most
famous
athletes
in
the
world.
More
than
100,000
fans
who
passed
through
the
gates
of
Kingston
Heath
gave
him
rock-star
treatment.
Woods
put
on
quite
a
show.
One
day
after
he
lost
his
swing
and
nearly
fell
out
of
contention,
Woods
hit
every
fairway
and
only
ran
into
trouble
when
a
photographer
standing
too
close
clicked
twice
in
the
middle
of
his
swing,
leading
to
his
lone
bogey.
Starting
the
day
in
a
three-way
tie
for
the
lead,
Woods
began
his
final
round
with
a
3-wood
to
the
par-5
first
hole
that
landed
next
to
the
hole
and
rolled
30
feet
away,
producing
the
first
of
many
roars
from
thousands
of
fans
surrounding
the
green,
some
of
them
perched
in
trees.
After
his
birdie
on
the
fifth,
he
followed
with
his
most
exquisite
shot
of
the
day
-
from
82
yards
away
to
a
firm
green
just
over
a
ridge,
the
pin
on
a
slope
feeding
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