Albuquerque Journal

Morikawa already showing world-class polish

The 23-year-old won PGA Championsh­ip on Sunday

- BY DOUG FERGUSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO — Collin Morikawa couldn’t help but break into a smile, and not just because the shiny Wanamaker Trophy he won at Harding Park was positioned on a stand next to him.

Just over 14 months ago, Morikawa went through commenceme­nt after his AllAmerica­n career — on the golf course and in the classroom — across the Bay Bridge and up the road at Cal-Berkeley.

Since then, he has played 28 tournament­s around the world and already has three victories on the PGA Tour, one of them a major championsh­ip. In the last 50 years, only four other players won their first major before age 23 or younger — Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy, Tiger Woods and Seve Ballestero­s. He already is No. 5 in the world. That alone puts him among the elite, except that Morikawa didn’t need to win the PGA Championsh­ip to feel that way.

“When I woke up today, I was like, ‘This is meant to be.’ This is where I feel very comfortabl­e,” Morikawa said. “This is where I want to be, and I’m not scared from it. I think if I was scared from it, the last few holes would have been a little different. But you want to be in this position.”

Morikawa embraced the moment and delivered the signature shot that allowed him to win a thriller. Actually, there were two moments. After catching a good break — even the most tested major champions need those — with a tee shot off a tree and into play on the 14th, he was short of the green and chipped in for birdie to take the lead.

Two holes later, Paul Casey tied him with a nifty up-and-down for birdie on the 16th, where the tees were moved forward to 294 yards to entice players to go for the green.

Morikawa thought back to the driveable par-4 14th hole at Muirfield Village during the Workday Charity Open, where he fearlessly hit driver in a similar situation and drilled it to 12 feet.

His shot Sunday was the signature moment of this major, a driver that bounced just right and onto the green and rolled up to 7 feet below the cup. He made the eagle putt and won by two shots.

Morikawa won at Muirfield Village last month not from that bold play on the 14th hole, but after Justin Thomas made a 50-foot birdie putt in the playoff. Morikawa answered with a 25-foot birdie of his own and won two holes later.

He is comfortabl­e in the most uncomforta­ble situations.

It was Thomas who gave Morikawa more confidence than he needed. They got together for dinner at the Canadian Open last summer, Morikawa’s first start since graduating from Cal. Thomas told him he was good enough, he would make it.

Morikawa won the Barracuda Championsh­ip last summer to earn a PGA Tour card. He won against a strong field for validation. Now he’s a major champion.

Young stars are emerging every year, and it was easy to overlook Morikawa. He was a runner-up two years in a row for the Hogan Award, given to the nation’s best college player. Doug Ghim won in 2018, Matthew Wolff a year later. And it was Wolff who denied Morikawa a victory last year in Minnesota by making a long eagle putt on the last hole.

“There’s always a bunch of guys that rock up on the scene, and he didn’t necessaril­y get the most publicity out of the group he was in,” Casey said. “I know talent when I see it. I don’t like the term ‘talent,’ but you know when somebody is good. And Collin was good. We could just tell. … And we weren’t wrong.”

Morikawa grew up in Southern California with Wolff. He considers the Bay Area a second home from his time at Cal.

In just over a year — it feels less than that because of the three months golf was shut down because of the pandemic — he has emerged as a star without ever being surprised.

He thought back to his debut 14 months ago and recalled being comfortabl­e then. He tied for 14th.

“There’s a different sense of comfort now,” Morikawa said.

Another big smile. A bright future.

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