The Daily Courier

Stenson closes with 64 to win at Wyndham

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GREENSBORO, N.C. — Henrik Stenson kept making birdies on the back nine Sunday at the Wyndham Championsh­ip. They added up to a tournament record — and his first victory of the year.

Stenson closed with a 6-under 64 for a one-stroke victory in the final event of the PGA Tour regular season.

The 2013 FedEx Cup champion finished at 22-under 258 at Sedgefield Country Club, breaking the course’s 72-hole record set by Carl Pettersson in 2008 and matched last year by Si Woo Kim. The Swede earned $1,044,000 and 500 FedEx Cup points for his sixth win on tour and his first since the 2016 British Open.

“It’s certainly a good time to start firing,” Stenson said. “We know the kind of damage you can do in the playoffs . . . . If you get hot and keep on playing well, you have a chance to challenge.”

Stenson said he left his driver in his locker all week — “he’s a little anxious to get out there and start getting some air time next week,” he quipped of the club — and certainly didn’t need it on the par-70 Sedgefield course.

For the second straight day, he had four birdies in a five-hole stretch of the back nine.

Ollie Schniederj­ans shot a 64 to finish second. Webb Simpson was 18 under after a 67.

“I had to keep on making birdies,” Stenson said, “because Ollie was surely not backing down.

Stenson had three consecutiv­e birdies on Nos. 15-17 — leaving a 20-foot eagle putt on the 15th hole about a foot short — after he and Schniederj­ans were both at 19 under.

Stenson’s 30-foot birdie putt on No. 17 moved him to 22 under.

He needed it, because Schniederj­ans kept the pressure on him. The 24-year-old former Georgia Tech player made a 40-foot birdie putt on No. 17 and added another birdie on the par-4 18th hole after placing his second shot 2 feet from the pin.

“I thought I had a two-shot cushion . . . and as I walked over (to the 18th hole and) looked around, ‘Oh, OK, (Schniederj­ans) birdied it as well,” Stenson said. “So I better scramble a par here to get the win.”

With Schniederj­ans watching the television broadcast and hoping for a tie, Stenson rolled a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 18 off the right edge of the cup, then made a three-footer to end it.

Low scores and tight leaderboar­ds once again were the norm at Sedgefield. With seven holes left for the final pairing, four players — Stenson, Schniederj­ans, Ryan Armour and Kevin Na — shared the lead at 18 under.

Ottawa’s Brad Fritsch and Nick Taylor of Abbotsford were the low Canadians at 6 under. David Hearn of Brantford, Ont., was 3 under.

The other subplot at Sedgefield was the push by bubble players to qualify for the playoffs that start next week at The Northern Trust for the top 125 on the points list.

Geoff Ogilvy, who was at No. 125, finished at 11 under and earned enough points to move to No. 116.

And Martin Flores, who started at No. 139, jumped to No. 118 and made the playoffs for the first time since 2014 after a 63 highlighte­d by a hole-in-one on the par-3 16th. J.J. Henry, Harold Varner III and Rory Sabbatini also played their way into the top 125.

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