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Archive for February 16th, 2008

Study: Delayed delivery of trucks led to Marine deaths

posted by admin in cnn, news

WASHINGTON (AP) — Hundreds of U.S. Marines have been killed or injured by roadside bombs in Iraq because Marine Corps bureaucrats refused an urgent request in 2005 from battlefield commanders for blast-resistant vehicles, an internal military study concludes.

The study was written by a civilian Marine Corps official and obtained by The Associated Press.

It accuses the service of gross mismanagement that delayed deliveries of the mine-resistant, ambush-protected trucks for more than two years.

Cost was a driving factor in the decision to turn down the request for the MRAPs, according to the study.

Stateside authorities saw the hulking vehicles, which can cost as much as a $1 million each, as a financial threat to programs aimed at developing lighter vehicles that were years from being fielded.

After Defense Secretary Robert Gates declared the MRAP the Pentagon’s acquisition priority in May 2007, the trucks began to be shipped to Iraq in large quantities.

The vehicles weigh as much as 40 tons and have been effective at protecting American forces from improvised explosive devices (IEDs), the weapon of choice for Iraqi insurgents. Only four U.S. troops have been killed by such bombs while riding in MRAPs; three of those deaths occurred in older versions of the vehicles.

The study’s author, Franz J. Gayl, catalogs what he says were flawed decisions and missteps by midlevel managers in Marine Corps offices that occurred well before Gates replaced Donald Rumsfeld in December 2006.

Among the findings in the January 22 study:

Budget and procurement managers failed to recognize the damage being done by IEDs in late 2004 and early 2005 and were convinced the best solution was adding more armor to the less-sturdy Humvees the Marines were using. Humvees, even those with extra layers of steel, proved incapable of blunting the increasingly powerful explosives planted by insurgents.

An urgent February 2005 request for MRAPs got lost in bureaucracy. It was signed by then-Brig. Gen. Dennis Hejlik, who asked for 1,169 of the vehicles. The Marines could not continue to take serious and grave casualties caused by IEDs when a solution was commercially available, wrote Hejlik, who was a commander in western Iraq from June 2004 to February 2005.

Gayl cites documents showing Hejlik’s request was shuttled to a civilian logistics official at the Marine Corps Combat Development Command in suburban Washington who had little experience with military vehicles. As a result, there was more concern over how the MRAP would upset the Marine Corps’ supply and maintenance chains than there was in getting the troops a truck that would keep them alive, the study contends.

The Marine Corps’ acquisition staff didn’t give top leaders correct information. Gen. James Conway, the Marine Corps commandant, was not told of the gravity of Hejlik’s MRAP request and the real reasons it was shelved, Gayl writes. That resulted in Conway giving inaccurate and incomplete information to Congress about why buying MRAPs was not hotly pursued.

The Combat Development Command, which decides what gear to buy, treated the MRAP as an expensive obstacle to long-range plans for equipment that was more mobile and fit into the Marines Corps’ vision as a rapid reaction force. Those projects included a Humvee replacement called the Joint Light Tactical Vehicle and a new vehicle for reconnaissance and surveillance missions.

The MRAPs didn’t meet this fast-moving standard and so the Combat Development Command didn’t want to buy them, according to Gayl. The study calls this approach a Cold War orientation that suffocates the ability to react to emergency situations.

The Combat Development Command has managers — some of whom are retired Marines — who lack adequate technical credentials. They have outdated views of what works on the battlefield and how the defense industry operates, Gayl says. Yet they are in position to ignore or overrule calls from deployed commanders.

An inquiry should be conducted by the Marine Corps inspector general to determine if any military or government employees are culpable for failing to rush critical gear to the troops, recommends Gayl, who prepared the study for the Marine Corps’ plans, policies and operations department.

No comment from the Marine Corps

The study was obtained by the AP from a nongovernment source.

If the mass procurement and fielding of MRAPs had begun in 2005 in response to the known and acknowledged threats at that time, as the (Marine Corps) is doing today, hundreds of deaths and injuries could have been prevented, writes Gayl, the science and technology adviser to Lt. Gen. Richard Natonski, who heads the department.

While the possibility of individual corruption remains undetermined, the existence of corrupted MRAP processes is likely, and worthy of (inspector general) investigation.

Gayl, who has clashed with his superiors in the past and filed for whistle-blower protection last year, uses official Marine Corps documents, e-mails, briefing charts, memos, congressional testimony, and news articles to make his case.

He was not allowed to interview or correspond with any employees connected to the Combat Development Command. The study’s cover page says the views in the study are his own.

Maj. Manuel Delarosa, a Marine Corps spokesman, called Gayl’s study predecisional staff work and said it would be inappropriate to comment on it. Delarosa said, It would be inaccurate to state that Lt. Gen. Natonski has seen or is even aware of the study.

Last year, the service defended the decision to not buy MRAPs after receiving the 2005 request. There were too few companies able to make the vehicles, and armored Humvees were adequate, officials said then.

Hejlik, who is now a major general and heads Marine Corps Special Operations Command, has cast his 2005 statement as more of a recommendation than a demand for a specific system.

The term mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicle was very generic and intended to guide a broader discussion of what type of truck would be needed to defend against the changing threats troops in the field faced, Hejlik told reporters in May 2007. I don’t think there was any intent by anybody to do anything but the right thing.

The study does not say precisely how many Marine casualties Gayl thinks occurred due to the lack of MRAPs, which have V-shaped hulls that deflect blasts out and away from the vehicles.

Gayl cites a March 1, 2007, memo from Conway to Gen. Peter Pace, then the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in which Conway said 150 service members were killed and an additional 1,500 were seriously injured in the prior nine months by IEDs while traveling in vehicles.

The MRAP, Conway told Pace, could reduce IED casualties in vehicles by 80 percent. He told Pace an urgent request for the vehicles was submitted by a Marine commander in May 2006. No mention is made of Hejlik’s call more than a year before.

Delivering MRAPs to Marines in Iraq, Conway wrote, was his number one unfilled warfighting requirement at this time. Overall, he added, the Marine Corps needed 3,700 of the trucks — more than three times the number requested by Hejlik in 2005.

More than 3,200 U.S. troops, including 824 Marines, have been killed in action in Iraq since the war began in March 2003. An additional 29,000 have been wounded, nearly 8,400 of them Marines. The majority of the deaths and injuries have been caused by explosive devices, according to the Defense Department.

Congress has provided more than $22 billion for 15,000 MRAPs the Defense Department plans to acquire, mostly for the Army. Depending on the size of the vehicle and how it is equipped, the trucks can cost between $450,000 and $1 million.

As of May 2007, roughly 120 MRAPs were being used by troops from all the military services, Pentagon records show. Now, more than 2,150 are in the hands of personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Marines have 900 of those.
found here.

Bomb blast kills 4 ahead of Pakistan vote

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ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) — A bombing outside an election office in northwestern Pakistan killed four people and wounded 12 others Saturday, an opposition party spokesman said.

The reports came from party workers in an area bordering Afghanistan, said Farhatullah Babar, a spokesman for the Pakistan People’s Party of slain opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.

The explosion came two days before parliamentary elections considered crucial to restoring democracy after eight years of military rule under President Pervez Musharraf.

Zafar Ali, a party supporter at the scene, said the explosion occurred after a car rammed into an election office. Watch how the elections are shaping up

Several of our party members are lying in a pool of blood, he said. We are taking the injured and dumping them into pickup vans to bring them to the hospital. E-mail to a friend

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

found here.

Company: Gunman, Virginia Tech shooter used same Web dealer

posted by admin in cnn, news

DEKALB, Illinois (CNN) — A firearms dealer in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Friday confirmed a bizarre link between the graduate student accused of killing five people at Northern Illinois University and the gunman in last year’s deadly shootings at Virginia Tech.

A Web site used to buy gun accessories by Steven Kazmierczak is owned by the same company that operates a site patronized by Seung-Hui Cho, the company said.

Kazmierczak ordered two 9 mm Glock magazines and a holster for a Glock handgun from the Web site February 4, said a statement released by TGSCOM Inc.

He received them February 12, two days before the NIU shootings, it said.

TGSCOM Inc. also operates the Web site used by Seung-Hui [Cho] to purchase a firearm used in the Virginia Tech shootings last April, the statement said.

Cho killed 32 people before turning a gun on himself in that incident. Watch witnesses say they’re in shock

TGSCOM Inc. said it is assisting law enforcement in the investigation.

Meanwhile, investigators searched a room at a DeKalb, Illinois, hotel Friday in connection with the deadly shooting, a source close to the investigation said.

Police had been looking for a laptop computer, and one was found in the room and turned over to investigators, DeKalb Travelodge manager Jay Patel told CNN.

A bomb squad also swept the room for explosives, according to the source.

Earlier, Northern Illinois University’s police chief described Kazmierczak as an outstanding student who reportedly stopped taking medication recently and became somewhat erratic.

Kazmierczak of Champaign, Illinois, opened fire on a geology class Thursday, shooting 21 people before killing himself. Five people were killed in addition to the shooter.

All the victims were from Illinois. The DeKalb County coroner’s office identified four of them: Daniel Parmenter, 20, of Westchester; Catalina Garcia, 20, of Cicero; Ryanne Mace, 19, of Carpentersville; and Julianna Gehant, 32, of Meriden. See photos of the victims

The fifth victim, Gayle Dubowski, 20, of Carol Stream, died at a hospital in Rockford and was identified by Winnebago County authorities.

Three people remained in critical condition Friday afternoon.

University Police Chief Donald Grady said people close to Kazmierczak have told authorities he was taking medication but had stopped and had become somewhat erratic in the last couple of weeks.

Grady would not name the medication Kazmierczak had been using or the condition for which he was taking it.

He said investigators had not determined a motive and are not aware of any relationships the gunman may have had with anyone in the class where the shooting occurred. Nor did Kazmierczak have any previous contact with police, Grady said. Watch Grady detail the shooter’s profile

There were no red flags, Grady said. He was an outstanding student, he was an awarded student, he was someone that was revered by the faculty, staff and students alike. … So we had no indications at all.

Kazmierczak used a shotgun hidden in a guitar case and three handguns hidden under a coat, Grady said.

Grady said he didn’t know how many shots had been fired, but he said investigators recovered 48 bullet casings and six spent shotgun shells.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said all four weapons were bought at a gun store in Champaign.

Kazmierczak bought a Remington 48 shotgun and a Glock handgun Saturday, ATF spokesman Tom Ahearn said.

He bought a High Point .380-caliber handgun December 30 and a Sig Sauer 9 mm handgun in August.

The timing of weapons purchases could be significant in considering how long the shooter had been planning his spree.

Champaign police recovered at least one weapon from Kazmierczak’s apartment Thursday night after being admitted by his girlfriend, Chief R.T. Finney said.

Authorities in Polk County, Florida, said police in Illinois had them question the man’s father, Robert Kazmierczak of Lakeland, Florida.

A tearful Robert Kazmierczak stepped onto his porch and asked reporters to go away Friday. Watch the father break down

University President John Peters said the gunman was a former graduate student who had a good record as an undergraduate, receiving a degree in sociology at the school in 2006. Watch Peters reflect on the victims’ families

There’s no indication that there was any trouble, Peters said.

President Bush Friday asked Americans to offer their blessings — blessings of comfort and blessings of strength to the community at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, about 65 miles west of downtown Chicago.

All classes and events on the university campus were canceled until further notice. Dormitories remained open to house and feed students.

I know what’s happened, but I don’t want to believe it, said Stefanie Miller, who saw two of her friends die in the Cole Hall shooting. Watch the shocked student ask for prayers

Tributes were surfacing online. A Facebook community called Pray for Northern Illinois University Students and Families had more than 51,000 members by midday Friday. See photos of the campus in mourning

Gunman ‘just started shooting’

About 160 students were registered in the class that met in the large lecture hall.

Kevin McEnery said he was in the classroom when the gunman, dressed in a black shirt, dark pants and black hat, burst in carrying a shotgun.

He just kicked the door open, just started shooting, McEnery said. All I really heard was just people screaming, yelling ‘get out.’ … Close to 30 shots were fired. See a map of where the shooting took place

Student Zach Seward said, We were having lecture as normal, a PowerPoint presentation. All of a sudden the side door on the stage opens. Average-height male Caucasian comes out, draws a shotgun, pumps it and fires the first round on the first couple of rows.

After that, everybody ducked down, started screaming, going toward the door. On the way out, I heard shots still being fired. Everybody was screaming and running out of the room. It was chaos. Watch Seward describe the chaos

The shooting began at 3:06 p.m., and in less than a minute there were two university police officers in the area of the scene, Grady said.

Soon there were eight officers on the scene, he said, adding that the response was immediate.

At 3:20, an all-campus alert went out via the school Web site, e-mail, voice mail, the campus crisis hot line, the news media and alarm systems, he said.

By 4 p.m., DeKalb police had swept the area and determined there was only one gunman and that he was dead, Peters said.

While authorities said they responded within seconds to Thursday’s incident, they also vowed to see what might have been done better.

If there is a way where this tragedy could have been anticipated, or stopped beforehand, we will find it, said Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

He ordered flags flown at half-staff throughout the state.

Security around campus was increased in December when police found threats scrawled on a campus bathroom wall that included racial slurs and references to last April’s Virginia Tech shootings.

Peters and Grady said no evidence points to a link between the December incident and Thursday’s shooting.

The university revised its emergency procedures after the Virginia Tech massacre, Peters said.

I believe that paid off, he said. That’s really a sad thing to say, that you have to learn from an event like that, but we knew how we wanted to communicate and we sort of had some messages prearranged, and we got out there fairly quickly.

Meanwhile, the president of Virginia Tech expressed his shock and horror about Thursday’s shooting.

We would like to think that institutions of learning and of rational thought would be spared such madness. Sadly, this is not the case in today’s world, Charles Steger wrote in a letter to Peters.

Northern Illinois University has an enrollment of more than 25,000. The campus covers 755 acres.
found here.

Company: Gunman, Virginia Tech shooter used same Web dealer

posted by admin in cnn, news

DEKALB, Illinois (CNN) — A firearms dealer in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Friday confirmed a bizarre link between the graduate student accused of killing five people at Northern Illinois University and the gunman in last year’s deadly shootings at Virginia Tech.

A Web site used to buy gun accessories by Steven Kazmierczak is owned by the same company that operates a site patronized by Seung-Hui Cho, the company said.

Kazmierczak ordered two 9 mm Glock magazines and a holster for a Glock handgun from the Web site February 4, said a statement released by TGSCOM Inc.

He received them February 12, two days before the NIU shootings, it said.

TGSCOM Inc. also operates the Web site used by Seung-Hui [Cho] to purchase a firearm used in the Virginia Tech shootings last April, the statement said.

Cho killed 32 people before turning a gun on himself in that incident. Watch witnesses say they’re in shock

TGSCOM Inc. said it is assisting law enforcement in the investigation.

Meanwhile, investigators searched a room at a DeKalb, Illinois, hotel Friday in connection with the deadly shooting, a source close to the investigation said.

Police had been looking for a laptop computer, and one was found in the room and turned over to investigators, DeKalb Travelodge manager Jay Patel told CNN.

A bomb squad also swept the room for explosives, according to the source.

Earlier, Northern Illinois University’s police chief described Kazmierczak as an outstanding student who reportedly stopped taking medication recently and became somewhat erratic.

Kazmierczak of Champaign, Illinois, opened fire on a geology class Thursday, shooting 21 people before killing himself. Five people were killed in addition to the shooter.

All the victims were from Illinois. The DeKalb County coroner’s office identified four of them: Daniel Parmenter, 20, of Westchester; Catalina Garcia, 20, of Cicero; Ryanne Mace, 19, of Carpentersville; and Julianna Gehant, 32, of Meriden. See photos of the victims

The fifth victim, Gayle Dubowski, 20, of Carol Stream, died at a hospital in Rockford and was identified by Winnebago County authorities.

Three people remained in critical condition Friday afternoon.

University Police Chief Donald Grady said people close to Kazmierczak have told authorities he was taking medication but had stopped and had become somewhat erratic in the last couple of weeks.

Grady would not name the medication Kazmierczak had been using or the condition for which he was taking it.

He said investigators had not determined a motive and are not aware of any relationships the gunman may have had with anyone in the class where the shooting occurred. Nor did Kazmierczak have any previous contact with police, Grady said. Watch Grady detail the shooter’s profile

There were no red flags, Grady said. He was an outstanding student, he was an awarded student, he was someone that was revered by the faculty, staff and students alike. … So we had no indications at all.

Kazmierczak used a shotgun hidden in a guitar case and three handguns hidden under a coat, Grady said.

Grady said he didn’t know how many shots had been fired, but he said investigators recovered 48 bullet casings and six spent shotgun shells.

The federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said all four weapons were bought at a gun store in Champaign.

Kazmierczak bought a Remington 48 shotgun and a Glock handgun Saturday, ATF spokesman Tom Ahearn said.

He bought a High Point .380-caliber handgun December 30 and a Sig Sauer 9 mm handgun in August.

The timing of weapons purchases could be significant in considering how long the shooter had been planning his spree.

Champaign police recovered at least one weapon from Kazmierczak’s apartment Thursday night after being admitted by his girlfriend, Chief R.T. Finney said.

Authorities in Polk County, Florida, said police in Illinois had them question the man’s father, Robert Kazmierczak of Lakeland, Florida.

A tearful Robert Kazmierczak stepped onto his porch and asked reporters to go away Friday. Watch the father break down

University President John Peters said the gunman was a former graduate student who had a good record as an undergraduate, receiving a degree in sociology at the school in 2006. Watch Peters reflect on the victims’ families

There’s no indication that there was any trouble, Peters said.

President Bush Friday asked Americans to offer their blessings — blessings of comfort and blessings of strength to the community at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, about 65 miles west of downtown Chicago.

All classes and events on the university campus were canceled until further notice. Dormitories remained open to house and feed students.

I know what’s happened, but I don’t want to believe it, said Stefanie Miller, who saw two of her friends die in the Cole Hall shooting. Watch the shocked student ask for prayers

Tributes were surfacing online. A Facebook community called Pray for Northern Illinois University Students and Families had more than 51,000 members by midday Friday. See photos of the campus in mourning

Gunman ‘just started shooting’

About 160 students were registered in the class that met in the large lecture hall.

Kevin McEnery said he was in the classroom when the gunman, dressed in a black shirt, dark pants and black hat, burst in carrying a shotgun.

He just kicked the door open, just started shooting, McEnery said. All I really heard was just people screaming, yelling ‘get out.’ … Close to 30 shots were fired. See a map of where the shooting took place

Student Zach Seward said, We were having lecture as normal, a PowerPoint presentation. All of a sudden the side door on the stage opens. Average-height male Caucasian comes out, draws a shotgun, pumps it and fires the first round on the first couple of rows.

After that, everybody ducked down, started screaming, going toward the door. On the way out, I heard shots still being fired. Everybody was screaming and running out of the room. It was chaos. Watch Seward describe the chaos

The shooting began at 3:06 p.m., and in less than a minute there were two university police officers in the area of the scene, Grady said.

Soon there were eight officers on the scene, he said, adding that the response was immediate.

At 3:20, an all-campus alert went out via the school Web site, e-mail, voice mail, the campus crisis hot line, the news media and alarm systems, he said.

By 4 p.m., DeKalb police had swept the area and determined there was only one gunman and that he was dead, Peters said.

While authorities said they responded within seconds to Thursday’s incident, they also vowed to see what might have been done better.

If there is a way where this tragedy could have been anticipated, or stopped beforehand, we will find it, said Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

He ordered flags flown at half-staff throughout the state.

Security around campus was increased in December when police found threats scrawled on a campus bathroom wall that included racial slurs and references to last April’s Virginia Tech shootings.

Peters and Grady said no evidence points to a link between the December incident and Thursday’s shooting.

The university revised its emergency procedures after the Virginia Tech massacre, Peters said.

I believe that paid off, he said. That’s really a sad thing to say, that you have to learn from an event like that, but we knew how we wanted to communicate and we sort of had some messages prearranged, and we got out there fairly quickly.

Meanwhile, the president of Virginia Tech expressed his shock and horror about Thursday’s shooting.

We would like to think that institutions of learning and of rational thought would be spared such madness. Sadly, this is not the case in today’s world, Charles Steger wrote in a letter to Peters.

Northern Illinois University has an enrollment of more than 25,000. The campus covers 755 acres.
found here.

Birdies lift Mickelson atop Northern Trust

posted by admin in cnn, news

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) — Phil Mickelson played golf as spectacular as the weather at the Northern Trust Open on Friday, finishing with a 20-foot birdie putt on the final hole for a 7-under 64 and a four-shot lead.

Even after starting with a 68, Mickelson felt he was close to putting his game together. It started with a 3-iron to 12 feet on the par-5 first for a simple birdie, and built momentum with a 60-foot birdie on the fifth and never slowed.

When he finished his best score ever at Riviera, he was at 10-under 132 and in firm command going into the weekend.

This is a tournament that has eluded me, Mickelson said of the only city on the U.S. West Coast swing where he hasn’t won. The West Coast means a lot to me.

A year ago he lost in a playoff.

Robert Allenby, who won at Riviera in 2001 in the cold and rain, did OK in warm sunshine with a 66 that put him at 136 with Jeff Quinney, who made bogey on the final hole for a 67.

Mickelson and the top dozen players atop the leaderboard got one big break with the draw by playing early Thursday and in the afternoon on Friday, essentially avoiding the strongest of the wind that gusted along the eucalyptus trees lining the fairways.

For those who faced a cold wind on Thursday afternoon and more swirling breezes on Friday morning, the best anyone could muster was David Toms (68) and Kevin Sutherland (69), each at 3-under 139.

For the second straight day, not everyone finished the round.

So there will be a Saturday cut, quipped Rory Sabbatini on his way to the 18th tee as the sun began to dip behind the hill, and players were still just making the turn.

The Players Advisory Council recommended another change in policy to a Saturday cut if the field is more than 78 players. If approved, that wouldn’t happen until the Florida swing at the earliest. Otherwise, when the cut is more than 78 players, only the closest to 60 can play on the weekend, and the notorious Rule 78 looked as though it could happen for the third time in five events.

The cut won’t be made until six players finish the second round early Saturday.

With the field featuring 17 of the top 20 players in the world, five of them missed the cut, and Sergio Garcia at 3 over was on the verge of going home under Rule 78.

John Daly shot a 74 to finish at 1 over, but made his first cut of the year.

Scott McCarron, who nearly won this tournament in 2002, had a 65 and was part of a large group at 5-under 137 that included Scott Verplank, Chad Campbell and Vaughn Taylor.

Mickelson wasn’t about to practice posing with the trophy, and no one was conceding anything with 36 holes left to play on a course that was playing fast with the firm conditions.

If Phil is at 10 under, that’s fine, Allenby said. There’s a long way to go. There’s still 36 holes to go and a lot of birdies out there. I’ve made plenty of birdies here before, so there’s no reason why I can’t do it on the weekend.

Quinney will join Mickelson and Allenby in the final group. Quinney made a late surge up the leaderboard, including birdies on the 12th and 15th hole.

Even so, Mickelson appears to be hitting his stride.

He began pulling away after a three-putt bogey on the sixth hole, hitting wedge to 2 feet on No. 7 and a gap wedge with the breeze at his back on No. 9 to 12 feet. After going well left of the par-4 10th, he chipped to a 3 feet for birdie, then got up-and-down for his fourth birdie in five holes at the par-5 11th.

Even stronger was his finish, which began with a par.

Mickelson went long on the par-3 16th, leaving himself a downhill chip that went about 12 feet by the hole. He made that for his par, which kept momentum on his side for the closing holes.

The biggest shot that set up those two birdies was the par putt on 16, Mickelson said. It kept momentum of the round going and it didn’t let the round kind of slip away.

Mickelson didn’t have an answer for why he is playing so well on a course that was rarely part of his rotation. He has won 15 times in California and Arizona during his career, but never on the course off Sunset Boulevard. Until last year, Mickelson only played this tournament eight times, missing the cut in half of them and never faring better than a tie for 15th.

Mickelson has said this is one tournament he wants to win, but kept that in perspective.

I haven’t won the U.S. or British Open, either, and I really want to win those, he said. Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
found here.

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