Los Angeles Times

Johnson finishes where he started — on top

No. 1-ranked golfer finally wins Tour Championsh­ip as well as the $15-million FedEx Cup’s first prize.

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ATLANTA — Dustin Johnson hit his stride at just the right time, and it paid off in a big way.

Johnson finally won the FedEx Cup on Monday by holding his nerve, hitting just enough fairways and making a few key putts when his lead began to shrink. He tapped in for birdie on the last hole for a two-under-par 68, giving him a three-shot victory over Justin Thomas and Xander Schauffele in the Tour Championsh­ip.

Johnson won the $15-million prize, the biggest in golf. Equally important was getting his name etched on that silver FedEx Cup trophy alongside some of the best from his generation, starting with Tiger Woods and most recently Rory McIlroy.

“This is a tough golf course. No lead is safe,” Johnson said. “The guys gave me a good fight today.”

He became the first No. 1 seed at the Tour Championsh­ip to win the FedEx Cup since Woods in 2009.

Johnson was staked to a fiveshot lead at 19 under par — nine under on his own score and starting the tournament at 10 under as the No. 1 seed in the FedEx Cup. He finished at 21 under.

Schauffele, who tends to bring his best to big moments, and Thomas each got within three shots on the front nine. They both closed to within two shots deep on the back nine at East Lake.

Johnson gave the lightest fist pump — that’s big emotion for him — when he holed a 20-foot par putt on the 13th hole that kept his lead at three. He made nothing but pars on the back nine until the outcome was no longer in doubt.

Thomas made bogey from a wild tee shot to the right on the 17th. Schauffele also had to scramble on the 17th, escaping with par after a tee shot into the bunker. And on the par-five 18th, Johnson unleashed a drive that started left along the pine trees and faded toward the middle of the fairway.

That set up a birdie from the front bunker, a hug with brother Austin, his caddie, and a trophy he long wanted.

Schauffele had the lowest score over 72 holes at 15-under 265, but without a victory this year, he started at No. 14 in the FedEx Cup, spotting the world’s No. 1 player seven shots.

Schauffele and Thomas tied for second, each earning $4.5 million.

Jon Rahm, the No. 2 seed, closed with a 66 to finish fourth and earn $3 million. Scottie Scheffler had a 66-65 finish and was fifth for a $2.5-million payoff.

 ?? Kevin C. Cox Getty Images ?? DUSTIN JOHNSON gives a gentle fist pump in his victory.
Kevin C. Cox Getty Images DUSTIN JOHNSON gives a gentle fist pump in his victory.

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