Times Colonist

Johnson looks to follow strong Masters at Harbour Town

- PETE IACOBELLI

HILTON HEAD ISLAND, South Carolina — Dustin Johnson is not satisfied with his Masters’ history, no matter how many top-10 finishes he posts at Augusta National.

The top-ranked Johnson wound up 10th in last week’s major, his third straight appearance in the top 10 on the challengin­g layout.

“I definitely expect better,” Johnson said Wednesday in prepping for this week’s RBC Heritage. “I felt like I played well enough to win last week.”

The problem was simple enough to identify — watching putts not fall in.

“The thing that’s most frustratin­g is it wasn’t that I was hitting bad putts. I was actually hitting good putts, they just weren’t going in,” he said.

Johnson hopes to remedy that at Harbour Town Golf Links, a place the South Carolina native has not played profession­ally since 2009. Johnson, who has won a PGA Tour event in 11 straight seasons, typically took a vacation after the Masters to shake off the stress that comes with the first major.

But as a newly signed golf ambassador to title sponsor RBC, “I’ll be back here for the next few years.”

A popular theory about Johnson’s absence was his length off the tee and strength made him a bad fit for architect Pete Dye’s narrow fairways and small greens. One of the PGA Tour’s tightest courses puts a premium on shot location versus 350-yard drives.

But Johnson proved that theory wrong with birdies on 10 of the last 17 holes in Wednesday’s pro-am.

“Last time I checked, he’s the No. 1 golfer in the world. He is the best golfer on the planet,” said Wesley Bryan, the RBC Heritage’s defending champion and Johnson’s former high school teammate. “So as long as we’re playing the game of golf, I think that he’s got a good chance of winning anywhere he tees it up.”

Johnson heads a less powerpacke­d field than at Augusta National. There are seven of the top 25 in the field: Paul Casey (13th), Marc Leishman (16th), Tyrell Hatton (18th), Matt Kuchar (21st), Brian Harman (23rd) and Kevin Kisner (25th).

Johnson acknowledg­ed he’ll use the driver less frequently, “four, maybe five times in a round,” than most weeks on tour. Still, it comes down to making shots and few on tour do that as well as Johnson.

“It doesn’t matter where you play or what course it is, you’ve still got to hit good golf shots no matter what you’re hitting off the tee,” he said. “I like this golf course.”

That could be bad news for the field, which includes perennial Harbour Town runner-up Luke Donald. He has finished in the top three here seven of the past nine times he has played.

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