US Open Notebook: Don鈥檛 cry for Argentina
Just weeks removed from Eduardo Romero's back-to-back runner-up finishes on the Champions Tour, the man he encouraged to pick up the game at the age of 15, Angel Cabrera, is atop the sport.Cabrera's cool-as-can-be round of 1-under 69 gave him a 5-over 285 total on Sunday at the 107th U.S. Open, and marked his first PGA Tour victory, the high point of a pro career that began in 1990.Romero so believed in Cabrera years ago that when Cabrera failed to qualify for the European Tour three times, Romero underwrote his expenses in 1995.Finally, Cabrera joined the European Tour in 1996 – and has won three times there – including the 2005 BMW Championship.He didn't join the PGA Tour until 2003, and led the 2004 U.S. Open after one round.But it wasn't until this year that the 37-year-old – nicknamed "Pato " – was finally able to break through on the biggest of stages.Cabrera becomes the first Argentinean winner of the U.S.