Chattanooga Times Free Press

Langer stumbles late, loses Senior Players

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OWINGS MILLS, Md. — For 70 holes, Bernhard Langer did everything necessary to win his fourth straight Constellat­ion Senior Players Championsh­ip.

Unfortunat­ely, his performanc­e at Caves Valley will be remembered only for what happened after that.

Langer’s uncharacte­ristic collapse on Nos. 17 and 18 paved the way for Scott McCarron to win his first major tournament on the PGA Tour Champions in sensationa­l comeback fashion Sunday.

McCarron shot a bogeyfree, 6-under 66 to make up a six-shot deficit and beat Langer and Brandt Jobe by a stroke.

“I’ve been working so hard for this,” said McCarron, a 51-year-old California­n. “That was one of my goals this year, to win three events and one of them being a major. So I’ve got one more event to go.”

McCarron’s victory at the Allianz Championsh­ip in February wasn’t nearly as exciting as this one, which came to fruition because Langer came apart just when it seemed he was well on his way to making history.

Seeking his third major win of the year, the 59-year German had a one-shot lead before dropping his tee shot in the water on No. 17. After taking the one-shot penalty, he missed a 4-footer and had to settle for a double bogey.

Playing in the twosome ahead of Langer and Jobe, McCarron didn’t need to see the leaderboar­d to realize what happened.

“It wasn’t until I heard the fans up there in the cheap seats when Langer hit it in the water did I know that I might have a chance,” McCarron said.

On 18, Langer lipped out a 6-foot birdie putt that would have forced a playoff.

“I thought I hit a really good putt,” he said. “But the big issue was 17, hitting a horrible shot there and then missing for bogey. That was the killer.”

He finished with a 73 that included only two birdies.

Langer was trying to become the first player in the history of the senior tour to win the same major four years in a row. The run began in 2014 at the Fox Chapel Golf Club in Pittsburgh, continued in 2015 at the Belmont Country Club in Massachuse­tts and stayed alive last year at the Philadelph­ia Cricket Club.

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