Cape Times

It’s ‘crazy’ for Thomas to toast like Woods did

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CHARLOTTE: Justin Thomas was seven-years-old when he attended the 2000 PGA Championsh­ip in his hometown of Louisville, Kentucky.

Watching Tiger Woods win, Thomas was hooked.

“That’s the first memory of me in terms of being live and being at a golf tournament,” he said after being crowned winner of the same championsh­ip 17 years later on Sunday.

“I wanted to play profession­al golf. Any kid, no matter whatever they are doing, they think they are going to be the best at it and they want to be the best.

“Being at the PGA that week, and hearing the roars and what Tiger was producing out there, I mean that week was the reason that I (decided) this is really what I want to do.”

Thomas was in the clubhouse when Woods made a crucial putt at the 72nd hole to force a playoff.

“(Woods) hit the putt on camera and before it could fall in on TV, I could just hear the roar outside. I’ll never forget that,” Thomas said. “It’s crazy to be sitting up here now after watching him do his champion’s toast and hoping that I’m there one day – and I am.”

Thomas said his parents did not push him to play golf, but he always loved it and never seriously considered pursuing another sport.

“I was lucky to have supportive parents,” he said. “It was set up for golf to be in my bones. They are the reason I’m sitting up here right now.”

Thomas, one of the longest hitters on tour, has a powerful swing and a deft short game.

He started this season with a bang, winning three times early and looked set to make a challenge in the majors.

After finished tied for 22nd at the Masters, fading in the final round at the US Open to tie for ninth and missing the cut at the Open, Thomas finally made the major breakthrou­gh on Sunday.

It does not seem so long ago that he was playing for a dollar against his father.

“I was at a young age but I wanted to beat him and he wanted to beat me,” Thomas said. “It was pretty heated out there. I’m a pretty sore loser and did not handle it well when I lost and had to give up a dollar.

“It probably came from my dad’s pocket anyway.”

Elsewhere, while Jordan Spieth failed in his bid to become the youngest player to win all four majors, Louis Oosthuizen completed a somewhat unwelcome career grand slam of his own on Sunday with his second-place finish at the PGA Championsh­ip.

Oosthuizen, who finished tied for second behind Thomas alongside Francesco Molinari and Patrick Reed, lost a playoff to Bubba Watson at the 2012 Masters, another playoff to Zach Johnson at the Open in 2015 and tied for second behind Dustin Johnson at that year’s US Open too.

Oosthuizen had flashed into contention late in the final round on Sunday when he pitched in for eagle from 20 yards at the par-5 15th at Quail Hollow, but a long three-putt bogey from nearly 100 feet at the 16th ended his hopes.

“I gave it everything I had coming in,” he said. “I left myself with an impossible first putt on 16. I mean, I didn’t really make any putts the whole round.

“The only putt I made was on the last hole (for birdie).”

That five-footer gave Oosthuizen a round of 70 and a six-under 278 total, two strokes behind Thomas.

Oosthuizen’s victory at the 2010 Open, when he finished seven strokes clear, suggested the floodgates were about to open for the sweet-swinging South African but the 34-yearold has not kicked on in the majors the way many had expected.

Oosthuizen is in fine company with his runner-up slam, joining the likes of Greg Norman, who lost playoffs in all four majors.

 ?? Picture: ERIK LESSER, EPA ?? THE NAME IN BRIGHT LIGHTS: Justin Thomas poses for photos with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow on Sunday.
Picture: ERIK LESSER, EPA THE NAME IN BRIGHT LIGHTS: Justin Thomas poses for photos with the Wanamaker Trophy after winning the PGA Championsh­ip at Quail Hollow on Sunday.

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