Lethbridge Herald

Hadwin hangs on

Canadian wins the Valspar Championsh­ip

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Canada’s Adam Hadwin only wanted a chance to win on the final hole Sunday at the Valspar Championsh­ip. He could have done without the self-inflicted drama.

Hadwin lost a two-shot lead with one swing on the 16th hole when his tee shot sailed into the water and led to double bogey. The 29-year-old kept his wits and closed with two pars, the final one good enough for a one-shot victory over Patrick Cantlay.

The victory sends him to Augusta National for the first time, even if it means altering a honeymoon trip to Tahiti.

Hadwin, from Abbotsford, B.C., is getting married March 24.

“I just wanted a chance to win coming up the last, and I had that chance,” Hadwin said.

Hadwin closed with an even-par 71, and it was hard work to the end. Tied for the lead, and with Cantlay having come up short into a bunker, Hadwin went just over the back of the green against the collar of the fringe. He used the leading edge of a sand wedge to send it down the slope to two feet from the cup.

Cantlay came up well short and missed his 15-foot par putt to force a playoff. He closed with a 68.

Hadwin is the third Canadian to qualify for the Masters, joining RSM Classic winner Mackenzie Hughes and 2003 champion Mike Weir.

The consolatio­n prize for Cantlay was a runner-up finish that paid $680,400, more than enough for him to secure full status for the rest of the year. The former No. 1 amateur was playing for only the second time since 2014 because of a stress fracture in his back

Even in loss, it was a bright return for the UCLA star. Cantlay wondered if his back would ever allow him to regain his game, and he endured an even greater burden a year ago February when his best friend and caddie, Chris Roth, was struck and killed by a car as they were walking to a restaurant for dinner in California.

“It doesn’t really feel like much consolatio­n at the moment,” Cantlay said about securing his card. “I didn’t finish the deal.”

Hadwin finished at 14under 270 after a duel that featured big putts along the back nine of the Copperhead Course at Innisbrook.

The Canadian had a fourshot lead with 10 holes to play when Cantlay started to apply enormous pressure with an approach into three feet at No. 9 and a 15-foot birdie putt to start the back nine. Cantlay had seven feet for a third straight birdie on the par-5 11th when Hadwin holed a birdie putt from 25 feet to keep a two-shot lead.

The big blow appeared to come at the par-3 13th, where Cantlay hit a 7-iron at the flag and came up about eight feet short. Hadwin played it safe out to the fat of the green, and his 55-foot putt swirled into the cup to keep the lead at two shots when Cantlay made his birdie

Cantlay made his fifth birdie in six holes with a 20-footer on the par-5 14th, only to fall two behind again with another poor bunker shot on the 15th.

Cantlay was only 1 of 6 in sand saves for the week.

That’s when Hadwin let him back into the mix one last time with his worst swing of the tournament, letting the fairway metal dangle over his shoulder as the ball headed to the middle of the pond.

The final mistake belonged to Cantlay, and that was enough for Hadwin to break through for his first PGA Tour victory.

David Hearn (70) of Brantford, Ont., tied for 18th at 4 under, Graham DeLaet (67) of Weyburn, Sask., finished 22nd at 3 under and Nick Taylor (74) of Abbotsford was 62nd at 5 over.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Adam Hadwin reacts after sinking the final putt to win the Valspar Championsh­ip golf tournament, Sunday at Innisbrook in Palm Harbor, Fla.
Associated Press photo Adam Hadwin reacts after sinking the final putt to win the Valspar Championsh­ip golf tournament, Sunday at Innisbrook in Palm Harbor, Fla.

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