Daily Southtown

Burns rallies, wins 2nd title

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JACKSON, Miss. — Sam Burns ran off four birdies in a six-hole stretch to start the back nine and pulled away for a 5-under 67 to win the Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip on Sunday for his second PGA Tour victory this year.

Against a list of contenders looking for their first win, Burns showed what it takes at the Country Club of Jackson by playing flawlessly on the back nine until it didn’t matter.

He seized control with a 15-foot birdie putt on the par-3 13th, a 5-iron to 15 feet that set up a two-putt birdie on the next hole and then a perfect pitch from behind the green on the reachable par-4 15th for a tap-in birdie.

Staked to a two-shot lead going down the 18th, he took a safe bogey from the greenside bunker to secure a one-shot win over resurgent Nick Watney and PGA Tour rookie Cameron Young.

Watney, coming off his worst season in more than a decade, closed with a 65 and had his best finish in more than three years.

Young’s hopes began to fade on the 14th with a clunker out of the rough into a fairway bunker that led to him having to make a 4-footer for bogey.

Still, he made a slick up-and-down from off the 18th green for par that gave him a 68 and a share of second, which sets him up well for the season.

That starts with playing next week in Las Vegas instead of having to go through Monday qualifying.

“I love being in contention, I love feeling the nerves, so it was fun today. I enjoyed it, even though it might not have looked like it,” Young said.

“I knew Sam was ahead of me and I had to make a couple and just didn’t, but I will another time.”

Sahith Theegala, the California rookie who began the final round with a one-shot lead, had control of the final round until he reached the back nine.

He failed to get up-anddown from a greenside bunker on the par-3 10th, missing a 7-foot putt. With a 7-iron in his hand for his second to the par-5 11th, he leaked the shot to the right and into the water, and missed a 4-foot putt to take bogey.

Two holes later, he three-putted from 18 feet for bogey. From there, it was about limiting the damage. He played the final five holes in 1 under for a 71.

Theegala tied for eighth, which gets him into the field next week in Las Vegas.

For Burns, the 25-yearold from Louisiana is just starting to cash in.

He won the Valspar Championsh­ip at Innisbrook in the spring and has had more chances than that throughout the year, losing a playoff in a World Golf Championsh­ip in August and coming up one shot away from a playoff at Riviera in February.

Burns did well enough to earn some serious considerat­ion from Steve Stricker as a captain’s pick for the U.S. Ryder Cup team.

And now with his second win of the year — in his first start of the new season — Burns moves into the top 20 in the world ranking for the first time in his career.

He ended a trend in which six of the last seven winners of the Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip captured their first PGA Tour title.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Sam Burns watches a drive during Sunday’s final round at the PGA Tour’s Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip on Sunday. Burns earned a one-shot win.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Sam Burns watches a drive during Sunday’s final round at the PGA Tour’s Sanderson Farms Championsh­ip on Sunday. Burns earned a one-shot win.

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