Tiger Woods completed a four-shot victory at the Farmers Insurance Open on Monday, despite some anxious moments.
                                
Tiger Woods: Sloppy but successful 
 
 
The  former world number one began the day with a six-shot lead  with 11  holes to play and while he faltered badly in the closing stages,  he  still ran out a comfortable winner, the eighth time that he has done  so  at Torrey Pines. 
"In the end I just started losing my patience," Woods said after his round of 72 on Monday.  
"It was so slow out there." 
Despite losing three shots to par over the closing stages of the  round,  the world number two's even par round was enough for him to  finish on  14-under par for the event, four strokes ahead of 2012 winner  Brandt  Snedeker and Josh Teater. 
  Woods carded two bogeys and a double bogey between the 14 and  17th  holes, but managed a par at the final hole to close out the  victory. 
"It got a little ugly toward the end," Woods commented about his near-disasterous run at the end of the fourth round. 
 
"I started losing my patience with slow play and lost my concentration there a little bit." 
Monday's victory was the 37-year-old legend's first win since he  won  the US PGA National at Congressional in July 2012 and was a good   response to his disappointing showing in Abu Dhabi recently, where he   failed to make the cut. 
The win at Torrey Pines could also be a good omen for the 14-time  major  champion - of the six previous times he won the PGA event at  Torrey  Pines, he went on to win at least four tournaments that year, and  in  five of the 
six years, it included at least one major. 
"I would like to win eight, nine times a year," Woods continued.  
"That's not a bad thing." 
At one stage in the event, it seemed as if Woods would threaten  the  tournament victory margin record he set in 2008 when he won by eight   strokes, but his poor form in the final few holes took some gloss off   his win. 
"I had an eight-shot lead," Woods said. "I just needed to stay upright." 
The American took control of the tournament after the second  round and  stretched his two-shot lead to six during Sunday's third  round. 
In breezy conditions on Monday, he opened up an eight-shot lead  by the  time he birdied the 13th, but then bogeyed the 14th,  double-bogeyed the  15th and 17th, before parring the final hole. 
"I started losing my patience and consequently I made a few mistakes," Woods continued. 
 
"I played pretty well through 13, built myself a nice little  lead and  made a few mistakes coming home but had a big enough cushion  that it  was fine."
 
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