Tiger 20th as Quiros wins in Dubai
The 70th-ranked Quiros shot a 68 to finish at 11-under-par 277, one stroke ahead of Anders Hansen of Denmark (70) and James Kingston of South Africa (67).
Woods had a 75 and tied for 20th at 4-under 284. "There were quite a few positives this week,'' he said, "but a couple of glaring examples of what I need to work on."
Woods entered the round a stroke off the lead, but for the second straight day he had two bogeys in his first three holes.
"All my old feels [for clubs] are out the window when the winds blow," he said. "That's the thing when you are making changes. It's fine when the wind is not blowing. But when you have to hit a shot when the wind blows, the new swing patterns get exposed."
Woods had trouble for much of the day with errant drives, and his putting also was shaky, leading to several missed birdie chances. He also showed flashes of anger, at one point yelling at photographers for disturbing his shot.
Woods, who won in Dubai in 2006 and 2008, is in the longest victory drought of his career. His last title came at the Australian Masters in November 2009.
Points wins at Pebble
D.A. Points captured his first PGA Tour victory after holing out for eagle from 100 yards on the 14th hole. Points followed that with a bending 30-foot birdie putt, and he shot a 5-under 67 for a two-shot victory in the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am.
"Pebble Beach may be the most iconic place in America to play golf, and to win here, it's just a dream come true," said Points, whose 15-under 271 earned him his first trip to the Masters.
Hunter Mahan (66) was second and Tom Gillis (70) finished third. Steve Marino, who led by one stroke entering the final round, found the Pacific Ocean twice on 18 and made a triple-bogey eight. Not making par to share second cost Marino $327,200.
Lehman takes Allianz
Tom Lehman (69) birdied the final hole to win the Allianz Championship by a stroke in Boca Raton, Fla. Lehman, 51, earned his third Champions Tour win.
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