Call & Times

Johnson bounces back from injury to top leaderboar­d

- By DOUG FERGUSON

It only looks as though Dustin Johnson barely has a pulse on the golf course.

One moment made him a little nervous. It wasn’t the tee shot that rolled toward the railroad tracks and barely crossed the out-ofbounds line, right after he had taken a two-shot lead in the final round of the Travelers Championsh­ip. It wasn’t even the tee shot two holes later that was headed for the water until it landed softly enough to stay dry, even though his feet got wet hitting the next one.

That’s just golf. Good or bad, he moves on. No one has a shorter memory.

What caused concern was his knee.

Johnson missed three months at the end of last year recovering from arthroscop­ic surgery on his right knee to repair cartilage damage. He lost another three months when golf shut down because of the COVID-19 pandemic. And then as he worked overtime getting ready to resume, the knee started acting up.

He called his partner, Paulina Gretzky, on the Tuesday before the Colonial and said he was coming home. The next day the knee felt better, so he stuck it out and missed the cut.

“I was nervous,” Johnson said Tuesday. “I had an MRI when I got home, and everything with my surgery had healed great. It was just a strained tendon.”

Whether it was time away from golf and then an abundance of practice, Johnson isn’t sure.

“Obviously,” he said, “everything is better now.”

Johnson won the Travelers Championsh­ip for his 22nd victory worldwide, ending a drought of 490 days that matched the longest of his career.

It was more exciting than it needed to be, which often is the case with his entertaini­ng brand of golf.

After going out of bounds on the 13th, he answered with a 15-foot birdie putt and then got a rare break for him — Johnson’s ledger remains heavily skewed toward misfortune on the course — when his ball stayed out of the water.

One victory doesn’t always signal he’s on his way.

One shot did it for Butch Harmon, his swing coach who was watching from Las Vegas. With a one-shot lead playing the 18th, Johnson smoked his driver 351 yards, setting up a flip wedge and two putts for the win.

“He was leaking oil a little on the back nine,” Harmon said. “His bounce-back is incredible. But the key to me was knowing he had to drive it well on 18. I told him when I talked to him later, that was the part I appreciate­d the most. Yeah, that was just like Oakmont.”

The drive on the daunting closing hole at Oakmont in Pennsylvan­ia, reputed to be the toughest course in America, is what Johnson considers one of the signature shots of his career. It sealed his victory at the 2016 U.S. Open, which remains his only major title. Johnson turned 36 last week.

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