The Star Malaysia

BROOKS KOEPKA LIFTS PGA CHAMPIONSH­IP

Koepka holds off Woods to win PGA Championsh­ip

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BROOKS Koepka is impossible to overlook now, winning the PGA Championsh­ip with machine-like precision to go with his back-toback US Open titles.

And it still felt – and sounded – like he was playing second billing to Tiger Woods.

With roars for Woods unheard anywhere this side of Augusta National, Koepka kept his cool and ran off two birdies on the back nine at Bellerive with Adam Scott tied for the lead and Woods one shot behind.

Koepka closed with a four-under 66 for a two-shot victory, making him only the fifth player to win the US Open and PGA Championsh­ip in the same year.

“The crowds here, they let you know what’s going on,” Koepka said with a big grin.

“The beginning of the back nine, I could hear all the roars.

“When Tiger started making his little run and Scotty made his run, it got loud.”

Even with two bogeys, Woods shot 64 for his lowest final round in a Major.

“I played hard,” Woods said. “I made a bit of a run. It looks like I’m going to come up a little short.” Koepka was responsibl­e for that. After wasting one chance to put it away, Koepka ran kept attacking flags and ran in birdie putts of 10 feet on No. 15 and seven feet on No. 16 to end the drama.

He tapped in for par on the final hole to set the PGA Championsh­ip scoring record at 264.

It also tied the Major championsh­ip record that Henrik Stenson set at Royal Troon two years ago in the British Open.

Koepka has won three of the last six Majors he played and two of three this year alone.

He joined Woods, Jack Nicklaus, Ben Hogan and Gene Sarazen as the only players to win the two US Majors that rotate to different courses in the same year.

The 28-year-old Floridian also joined Jordan Spieth, Woods, Nicklaus and Tom Watson as the only players with three Majors before turning 30 since World War II.

Scott hung around by making big putts, just like he hoped, and was tied for the lead until Koepka’s birdies.

Scott missed a six-foot birdie putt on the par-five 17th that would have pulled him to within one shot – right after Koepka missed from the same range – and then made bogey on the 18th for a 67 to finish alone in third.

The St Louis fans waited 17 years to see Woods – he last was at Bellerive when the Sept 11 terrorist attacks cancelled a World Golf Championsh­ip – and he delivered a performanc­e that took golf back in time.

Thomas Bjorn might have seen it coming.

Earlier in the week, as he was cleaning out his locker after withdrawin­g with an injury, he thought back to Woods getting into contention at Carnoustie last month at the British Open.

“He recognised who that guy was that day,” Bjorn said.

Woods was relentless, pumping fists, raising the putter in his left hand, making birdies and charging towards a finish that caused pure pandemoniu­m among one of the largest and noisiest crowds at a Major.

Without hitting a fairway on the front nine, Woods cut the four-shot deficit to two.

Dialled in on the back nine, he dropped an approach into four feet on No. 12, got within one shot with a 10-foot birdie on the par-three 13th and, after a bad drive led to bogey, he answered with another approach that hit a foot from the hole.

That was as good as it got. Facing the most important drive of the day on the par-five 17th, Woods sent it sailing to the right and it embedded in a hazard along the banks of a creek.

He did well to advance it but had to save par from a bunker. Behind him, Koepka holed his two birdie putts.

Woods and Koepka played nine holes of a practice round on Wednesday and the 14-time Major champion knew what he was up against.

“It’s tough to beat when the guy hits it 340 down the middle,” Woods said.

“What he did at Shinnecock, just bombing it, and then he’s doing the same thing here.

“And when a guy’s doing that and hitting it straight and as good a putter as he is, it’s tough to beat.” — AP

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 ??  ?? It was worth it: Brooks Koepka posing with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championsh­ip on Sunday. — AP
It was worth it: Brooks Koepka posing with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championsh­ip on Sunday. — AP

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