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August 10, 2020 12:51 IST

Morikawa serves notice with PGA Championship triumph

IMAGE: Collin Morikawa poses with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the 2020 PGA Championship. Photograph: Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports/Reuters

Collin Morikawa made a stunning late eagle after the drive of his life to pull away from a jam-packed leaderboard and secure a two-shot victory at the PGA Championship on Sunday in only the second major start of his career.

The 23-year-old American, who began the day at Harding Park two shots back of overnight leader Dustin Johnson, shot a bogey-free six-under-par 64 to reach 13 under for the tournament.

 

Former world number one Johnson (68) and English Ryder Cup veteran Paul Casey (66) finished in a share of second place, while the wheels came off Brooks Koepka’s (74) bid for a third straight PGA Championship title early on.

Morikawa, whose only mistake of the day came when the lid fell off the Wanamaker Trophy as he lifted it up on the 18th green, said he was on “cloud nine” after the win.

“It’s hard to think about what this championship means, and obviously it’s a major, and this is what guys go for, especially at the end of the their career, and we’re just starting,” he added.

The first major of the COVID-19 era, played without fans on a cypress-lined municipal course, looked headed for a playoff as the day began with 11 players within three shots of Johnson, and at one point late in the round seven players shared the lead.

Morikawa got his nose in front at the par-four 14th where he chipped in from 54 feet for birdie.

Then, after narrowly missing a birdie at 15, Morikawa hit the shot of the tournament as his drive at the 294-yard par-four 16th settled seven feet from the cup to leave him with a putt for eagle.

“We were just hoping for a really good bounce, and we got it, hit a really good putt, and now we’re here,” said Morikawa, who collected the third win of his career and the second since the PGA Tour resumed in June.

With the win, Morikawa joins Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy as the only players since World War Two to win the PGA Championship at age 23 or younger.

Koepka began the day two shots off the lead but slid out of contention after going four over on the front nine, a stretch that included three consecutive bogeys going into the turn as he struggled with the thick rough and green speeds.

“You know ... wasn’t meant to be,” said Koepka. “Three in a row, you’re not really supposed to do two in a row looking at history, but that’s all right. Got two more (majors) the rest of the season and we’ll figure it out from there.”

Johnson, who was in a share of the lead late in the day, suffered a bogey at 14 shortly after Morikawa made his move. He is the first player to finish runner-up at the PGA Championship in consecutive years since Nicklaus (1964, 1965).

Casey was tied for the lead when he reached the 17th but his hopes of a maiden major championship suddenly slipped away as Morikawa, one group behind, hit the tee shot that led to an eagle and a two-stroke cushion.

“I played phenomenal golf and there’s nothing I would change,” Casey said after his best finish in a major.

“The glorious shots Collin hit like on 16 to make eagle, you have to tip your cap ... He’s already sort of proved it but he’s really stamped his authority of how good he is today.”

Woods, who said he would skip next week’s PGA Tour event, finished with a three-under 67 for a share of 37th place.

Kang claims Marathon Classic win after late Ko collapse

IMAGE: Danielle Kang from Las Vegas, Nevada, holds up the championship trophy after winning the final round of the Marathon LPGA Classic golf tournament. Photograph: Marc Lebryk-USA TODAY Sports

Danielle Kang profited from a late Lydia Ko collapse to win the Marathon Classic by one shot on Sunday and become the first player to win back-to-back events on the LPGA Tour since Shanshan Feng in 2017.

Kang, who won last week’s Drive On Championship, looked out of contention as she trailed New Zealander Ko by five shots with six holes to play but a few words of encouragement from her caddie turned things around.

“My caddie looked at me and said, ‘You’re right in it,’” the 27-year-old American said.

“I looked at him and said, ‘I’m five down with six holes to go.’ I kind of liked that mentality, made some good birdies coming in and kept it together.”

Her final round of three-under-par 68 saw her finish at 15-under 269, one stroke better than Ko (73) and England’s Jodi Ewart Shadoff (67).

Ko led by four heading into Sunday’s finale and looked on course to end her two-year wait for a title before bogeys at 14 and 16 and a double-bogey at the 18th tripped her up.

Source: REUTERS
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