Team Thomas wins PNC championship
Justin ORLANDO, FLA. — Thomas and Tiger Woods traded text messages on the eve of the final round at the PNC Championship, their teams tied for the lead and in contention. Neither mentioned winning.
Thiswas aboutWoods getting to play alongside 11-yearoldsonCharlie, watchinghim twirl the club after a good drive and yes, even deliver a fist pump in his red shirt on Sunday. For Thomas, it was about competing with his father Mike, a longtime club professional inKentucky and the only coach he’s ever had.
TeamThomas birdied the opening seven holes and the fatherdelivereda5-footbirdie putt on the 18th hole that gave them a 15-under 57 in the scramble format and a one-shot victory over Vijay Singh and son Qass.
They won theWillie Park Trophy. It only felt like the other 19 teams won a participation trophy.
“Memories we’ll have for our entire lives,” Woods said after he and Charlie posted another 62 to finish seventh. “He’s not going to appreciate this at 11 years old. I didn’t when I was with my dad. As the years go by, you start appreciating it more.”
Woodsandhis son dressed in his traditional Sunday red with black trousers. Charlie’s mother, Elin Nordegren, walkedthe final roundatThe Ritz-Carlton Club at Grande Lakes, her first time at a golf tournament since the 2009 Presidents Cup at Harding Park.
The Woodses played the final six holes in6-under par, too late by then to do anything about Thomas and his father. Thomas, a former world No. 1 and PGA champion, has grown close to the Woods clan and talked in the days leading up to this
event about howbadly Charlie wants to beat him.
Mike Thomas said young Woods took $1 off him on the putting green Saturday afternoon and said with a laugh, “I’ll show him what I got here.” Mike Thomas specializes in working with juniors and spends timewith Charliewhen he’s in Florida.
Thomas, whohasmultiple PGATour titles in each of his last four years, wasn’t about to compare this with with his PGA Championship, World Golf Championships or any other of his 13 tour victories. Even so, he called the PNC Championship “100 percent the most enjoyable.”
Whenhis father holed the birdie putt, he said he knew there were 10 teams still on the course and it still felt as though the tournament was over.
That’swhat Alastair Johnston, the vice chairman at IMG, had in mind when he created this tournament 25 years ago. It started as the Father-Son Challenge. It since haschangedintomajorchampions and Players Championship winners competing with a family member — son, daughter, father-in-law, grandson.
The ideawas that golf fans
would be curious to see the children of great players. Throwinthe11-year-oldsonof golf’s biggest star, and interestsurgedtonewlevels. Charlie Woods delivered a great show, unfazed by the 250 spectators (mostly sponsor guests) or the national TV spotlight.
Ko wins LPGA’s season-ending CME Group title
Jin Young Ko NAPLES, FLA.— missedmostoftheLPGATour season and stillwonthe yearlong money title.
That’s what a $1.1 million check does.
Ko, the No. 1 player in the world, put an emphatic capper on her truncated year Sunday by shooting a finalround 6-under 66 and winning the CME Group Tour Championshipbyfive strokes over Hannah Green and Sei Young Kim.
“I still can’t believe it, that I’m here, that Iwonthis tournament,” Ko said.
With a birdie on the final hole, the LPGA’s final putt of the season, Ko finished at 18 under for her seventh career LPGA win. Green’s final-round 67 — on her 24th birthday — helped push her into the second-place tie.