(I spent 3 hours to edit this video from several TVshow & clip)
Rickie Fowler Wins 2015 Players Championship In
Dramatic Play-off
PONTE VEDRA BEACH,
Fla. – What started as a snooze turned into a scream of a finish at the
Players Championship at
TPC Sawgrass.
Rickie Fowler survived a three-hole aggregate playoff and one
hole of sudden death, dispatching
Sergio Garcia and then
Kevin Kisner to win his second
PGA Tour event, breaking a
dry spell of three years and four days.
“I was always looked at as only having one win on Tour,” Fowler said as darkness fell Sunday. “
And I always felt that I needed to put myself in position to win more often, and I did that last year. I wasn’t able to end up as the last guy standing. It feels good to be back in that position.”
Fowler went 6 under par for his last six holes of regulation—his total of 11 strokes on holes 15-18 is the lowest score on those holes in any single round in tournament history—and 2 under for his four extra holes.
The 25-year-old will move to sixth in the world, the highest ever ranking, and collects a first-prize check worth $1.8 million.
After rolling in a five-foot birdie putt at the 17th hole to end it, Fowler hugged his mother
Lynn—he said his purple shoes, and purple-blue-white shirt were in honor of
Mother’s Day—and accepted a kiss from his girlfriend
Alexis Randock.
Bubba Watson (with his son
Caleb) later offered his congratulations, as did Fowler’s
2007 Walker Cup teammate
Billy Horschel.
“
Finally everything clicked,” Fowler said.
Bill Haas (70) and
Ben Martin (70) missed the playoff by one at 11 under.
The winner came into this week in the shadow of
Rory McIlroy and
Jordan Spieth, and having tied for the most overrated player on Tour in a much-talked-about anonymous player poll in
Sports Illustrated. Fowler said Sunday that he laughed off the poll but added, eying the trophy, “If there was any question, I think this here answers everything you need to know.”
Fowler,
Garcia and Kisner went a combined 8 under on the last three holes of regulation in a mad dash to the finish.
“It was a cool experience to be part of that,” said Kisner, who also lost a playoff, to
Jim Furyk, at the
RBC Heritage at
Hilton Head last month.
Garcia, who could manage only three pars in the aggregate playoff, while Fowler and Kisner each birdied 17, said he was heckled down the stretch.
Fowler’s back nine 31 included a tap-in eagle at the par-5
16th hole, and his 67 was tied for the best round of the day. His birdie-par-birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie finish was reminiscent of the
2010 Ryder Cup, when Fowler birdied the last four holes to halve his match against
Edoardo Molinari.
Garcia was two shots back when Fowler finished, but birdied the 16th hole and made a 44-foot birdie putt from the back of the 17th green.
Haas and
Martin narrowly missed out on the playoff—Haas unable to make birdie from in front of the green, and Martin unable to save par.
That left the stage to Kisner, who at 31 was trying to win for the first time on Tour. Kisner, The 123rd ranked player in the world, he was also trying to become the first
Players first-timer to win since
Craig Perks in
2002. Kisner’s birdie try from just inside 10 feet at the
18th hole would have ended it in regulation, but his ball burned the edge and he signed for a 69.
Rory McIlroy started the day four strokes off the lead and in a tie for 17th place, but he could only manage an even-par 36 on the front nine, and finished with six straight pars for his third straight top-10 finish here (T8).
Tiger Woods began the day 3 over par for the tournament and made a run with birdies on holes 10-12.
Alas, after a ghastly triple-bogey 7 at the par-4
14th hole, and a bogey on 18, he signed for a 72.
- published: 11 May 2015
- views: 37067