Manawatu Standard

Johnson embraces being target

- DOUG FERGUSON AP

Fresh off his victory at Riviera that elevated Dustin Johnson to the top of the world ranking, the question was how he would handle the expectatio­ns and attention that come with being the world golf No 1.

‘‘I’ve only been No 1 for about 30 minutes,’’ he said. ‘‘Ask me in a couple of weeks.’’ Two weeks later, there was no need. Johnson faced the strongest field of the year at the Mexico Championsh­ip. He was so preoccupie­d with how far the ball was flying at nearly 7800 feet that he played only 18 holes over two practice days at Chapultepe­c Golf Club. The greens were so perplexing that he converted only nine of 17 putts from inside five feet, and he missed six putts from the six-foot range or closer in the opening round alone. And he still won. Johnson is not obsessed with the world ranking. But he understand­s he is the target now, and he embraces it.

‘‘You look at the leaderboar­d, there’s a few names you don’t want to see,’’ Johnson said. ‘‘Mine would be one of them.’’

He doesn’t claim that measure of intimidati­on to be his alone.

No one wanted to see Rory Mcilroy’s name anywhere near the top when his three straight victories in the summer of 2014 were a World Golf Championsh­ip sandwiched between two majors. No one wanted any part of Jordan Spieth in 2015 when he was pursuing the Grand Slam, or Jason Day when he was winning seven times in 17 tournament­s, including a record score in the PGA Championsh­ip.

‘‘The competitio­n is so good out there it’s a joke,’’ Johnson said. ‘‘There’s a few guys out there that have a target.’’ None is bigger at the moment. Johnson now has won five PGA Tour victories in his last 15 starts dating to the US Open last summer at Oakmont. His other victories were two World Golf Championsh­ips, a Fedex Cup playoff event and the Genesis Open at Riviera, which had the strongest field of regular PGA Tour events.

He closed with a three-under-par 68 on Monday, his 12th consecutiv­e round under par.

Dating to the start of 2016, he has finished among the top 10 in 20 out of 29 tournament­s worldwide.

‘‘He has the potential to crack on for the next few years or a decade and be the dominant player, if he plays the golf we’ve seen him play,’’ Paul Casey said.

The PGA Tour leans on a popular category called ‘‘strokes gained’’ that measures how a player performs compared with the rest of the field from teeto-green and with putting. Casey has created his own statistic for Johnson that can’t be measured.

‘‘Nobody ever talks about strokes gained mentally,’’ Casey said. ‘‘Strokes gained attitude, he’s probable No 1.’’

Johnson was one shot out of the lead starting the final round. He was four shots ahead when he made the turn. Five holes later, he was one shot behind Jon Rahm, the fearless rookie from Spain who had an eagle and two birdies in a five-hole stretch. Johnson never flinched. He made birdie from a tough lie in the bunker on the par-five 15th to regain a share of the lead. He could see Rahm in the group ahead of him three-putting for bogey on the next two holes. Johnson played without incident.

It still required some work at the end, especially when his tee shot on the 18th went into the left side of a bunker and made par a challenge. His feet were half in the grass, half in the sand. The ball was below his feet. He was 127 yards away, an awkward distance for a sand shot.

Johnson hit a three-quarter shot with his 54-degree wedge – a ‘‘dink’’ shot, he called it – and he came out to the middle of the green to end any suspense.

‘‘Probably the best shot I hit all week, especially under the circumstan­ces, was that second shot on 18,’’ he said. ‘‘A fantastic shot.’’

He now has 14 victories in his 10th year on the PGA Tour, which includes four World Golf Championsh­ips, the most of anyone except for Tiger Woods, who won 18 of them. The Westgate Las Vegas Superbook listed him as the 6-to-1 favourite to win the Masters.

Johnson will have two weeks at home before beginning his road to Augusta National — the Dell Matchplay, the Shell Houston Open and the Masters.

Odds are, he will be No 1 when he gets there.

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