Vancouver Sun

No doubting Thomas as PGA tourney champion

Youngster shoots final round 68 to win first major title and fourth event of year

- DOUG FERGUSON

Justin Thomas emerged from the shadow of a longtime friend and won the PGA Championsh­ip to take his place among the young elite in golf.

With two big breaks to start the back nine, a chip-in for birdie to seize control and a timely 7-iron that soared over the water to a peninsula green, Thomas closed with a 3-under 68 Sunday for a two-shot victory.

The PGA Championsh­ip was the most fitting major for the 24-yearold son of a PGA profession­al. Mike Thomas, a former PGA board member and longtime pro at Harmony Landing outside Louisville, Kentucky, walked along the edge of the 18th green and into the arms of his son, a major champion.

The week began with Jordan Spieth’s quest for a career Grand Slam. Spieth was at the 18th green late Sunday afternoon at Quail Hollow, but only so he could celebrate the moment with Thomas, close friends since they were 14.

“So awesome, dude,” Spieth told him.

Thomas was every bit of that. With five players still in the mix on the back nine, Thomas surged ahead by chipping in from 40 feet on the par-3 13th hole, and held his nerve down the stretch as his challenger­s eventually faded, one after another.

Graham DeLaet of Weyburn, Sask., tied for seventh at 4-under. The Canadian shot a 2-under 69 on Sunday and had five birdies.

Hideki Matsuyama, bidding to become the first player from Japan to win a major, recovered from back-to-back bogeys with birdies on the 14th and 15th holes to get within one shot. But the championsh­ip turned on the 16th hole.

Thomas faced a six-foot par putt to stay at 8-under. Matsuyama caught a good lie over the green and chipped to five feet. Thomas wasted no time over the putt and drilled it in the centre of cup. Matsuyama missed and was two shots behind.

“The last major of the year, and I was in contention,” said Matsuyama, a runner-up at the U.S. Open. “All I can do is try harder next time.”

Thomas sealed it on the 17th hole with a 7-iron from 221 yards, so pure that he let the club twirl through his hands as he watched it clear the water and roll out to 15 feet. The birdie putt curled in and his lead was up to three going to the 18th. A final bogey only affected the score.

Thomas finished at 8-under 276 for his fourth victory of the year.

“I can’t put it into words,” Thomas said about his PGA of America heritage. “I wish my grandpa could be here for it. It’s so special to get it done. I’m glad we have a trophy now.”

Kevin Kisner was the last one who had a chance to catch him. But he three-putted from 100 feet on the 16th for bogey, couldn’t birdie the 17th from long range and hit his second shot on 18 into the water and finished with a double bogey. Kisner, the 54-hole leader, played the final three holes in 6-over on the weekend. He closed with a 74.

“That’s not going to be fun to look at,” he said of his weekend finish over the brutal closing stretch at Quail Hollow. “I thought I had to get to 10 (under) starting the day to win, and that was about right. I had every opportunit­y. I just didn’t finish it off.”

Matsuyama also hit into the water on No. 18 and made bogey for a 72 to finish three back.

Louis Oosthuizen (70), Patrick Reed (67) and Francesco Molinari (67) tied for second, though none had a chance to win playing the 18th. Oosthuizen holed a 50foot birdie putt on the 18th to get a runner-up finish in the majors for the fourth time.

For Reed, it was his first top-10 in a major.

Just two months ago, fresh off a record-tying 63 in the U.S. Open to get in the final group at Erin Hills, Thomas struggled from the start and shot 75. He started this final round two shots behind, skulled a bunker shot on the first hole and had to make a 15-foot putt to avoid double bogey. He missed a short par putt on No. 3, and that was the last mistake he made until it no longer mattered.

Thomas began his move with a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 9, then caught two breaks on the par-5 10th. His tee shot sailed left into a tree and bounced out into the fairway. Then, his eight-foot birdie putt hung on the left edge of the cup. Thomas smiled and lazily turned away and a few seconds later, as he looked back toward the hole, gravity took over and the ball dropped into the cup.

He had a chance for a knockout until failing to birdie the two easiest holes on the back nine, only to make up for it with the tough bunker shot on the 16th that led to his clutch par, and a 7-iron that made him a major champion.

He gets referred to endlessly as Spieth’s best friend because Spieth, who is three months younger, has done so much so quickly. Their friendship dates to France when they represente­d the U.S. in the Evian Junior Masters. Thomas won that 36-hole event.

Ten years later, they have won consecutiv­e majors and head into the FedEx Cup playoffs battling for PGA Tour player of the year.

I can’t put it into words. I wish my grandpa could be here for it. It’s so special to get it done. I’m glad we have a trophy now.

 ?? STUART FRANKLIN/GETTY IMAGES ?? American Justin Thomas lifted the Wanamaker Trophy with pride after winning the 2017 PGA Championsh­ip by two strokes Sunday at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, N.C. to claim his first major title.
STUART FRANKLIN/GETTY IMAGES American Justin Thomas lifted the Wanamaker Trophy with pride after winning the 2017 PGA Championsh­ip by two strokes Sunday at Quail Hollow in Charlotte, N.C. to claim his first major title.

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