"It feels great," said Woods whose 10 under total secured his first title since the Australian Masters in 2009.
- England's Paul Casey (right photo), who was last in the 18-man field after a seven-over-par first round, ended third on five under.
- Casey, like Woods, hit five birdies in his closing three-under-par 69 to cap a remarkable turnaround in his weekend, while Scotland's Martin Laird finished in a tie for sixth on one under after a 70.
- But it was Woods's spectacular finish that stole the headlines.
- The American began the weekend ranked 52 in the world after struggling with fitness and form and the implosion of his private life, but ended it 21st.
- Asked to describe his feelings after ending his lengthy title drought, the 35-year-old replied: "It feels awesome, whatever that is.
- "I've been in contention twice this year, which is not very often. I had the lead at the Masters on the back nine and had a chance at the Aussie Open, so that's my third time with a chance to win it. I pulled it off this time."
- The 14-time major winner, who began the final round one behind overnight leader Johnson, was still one behind going down the 17th but sunk a 15-foot birdie putt to draw level.
- Johnson then missed a birdie attempt on 18 before Woods drained a six-footer to clinch his first title since November 2009 and end a run of 26 tournaments without a victory.
- "It was a lot of fun coming down the stretch," he added.
- "Zach put a lot of pressure on me. He turned the tide [with birdie on 16], next thing I am one down playing the last couple of holes. Then I made two good putts."
The World Challenge event was founded by Woods and his charitable foundation in 1999 as a fundraiser.
Woods, who has now won the tournament five times, lost in a play-off last year to Northern Ireland's Graeme McDowell.
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