Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Cantlay looks to ride putting to $15 million

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ATLANTA – How alarmingly good was Patrick Cantlay’s putting last week in the BMW Championsh­ip at Caves Valley Golf Club in Maryland?

“If he putts the way he putted last week for the rest of his career we have no chance,” Rory McIlroy said with a laugh.

Then again, McIlroy may have been serious.

Cantlay set a PGA Tour record since data collecting began in 2004 with a mark of 14.57 strokes gained putting as he rolled in 537 feet worth of putts in regulation to finish at 27 under with Bryson DeChambeau.

Then Cantlay capped his epic sixhole playoff victory by burying one final 17-footer for birdie. That dagger to DeChambeau’s heart followed mustmakes from 9 feet on the 16th for par, 8 feet on the 17th for par and a 21-footer for birdie on the 18th in regulation.

“He’s like a silent killer,” said Collin Morikawa, who played the first two rounds with the mellow, unhurried Cantlay last week.

“He was making everything, he was hitting it well, driving it well off the tee and it’s hard to catch.”

The 29 others in the field at The Tour Championsh­ip beginning Thursday at East Lake Golf Club will have to run down Cantlay. By winning his fifth PGA Tour title last week, he is armed with a two-shot lead heading into the first round of the FedEx Cup Playoffs finale, which has $15 million awaiting the winner.

He’ll start at 10 under due to the staggered scoring format, with Tony Finau at 8 under, Bryson DeChambeau at 7 under, Cameron Smith at 5 under and the other 25 players starting at 4 under down to even par.

“It’s different than almost any other golf tournament you could possibly play in,” Cantlay said Wednesday at East Lake. “I don’t know another format even remotely close to this.

“So I’m going to do my best to throw that out the window and try and treat it like any other golf tournament because at the end of the day the best chance for me succeeding is shooting the lowest score possible.”

What was different last week was Cantlay being called “Patty Ice,” likely referring to his measured pace and the ice in his veins that is one of the highlights of his demeanor.

Cantlay had never been called “Patty Ice” before last week.

“I’ve had people tell me that it’s hard to come up with a nickname for me. This is the first one that seems to have stuck a little bit,” Cantlay said. “Before this, the only thing I’d ever get is ‘PC.’

“I like it. I think it’s great. I think it’s cool when people are getting to know me a little bit and that maybe this moniker maybe has some traction because it maybe rings true.”

Cantlay said he doesn’t have to tinker with anything this week but needs to concentrat­e on getting enough rest after playing 78 holes last week, nearly every one of them while in contention. And he needs to get a better handle on East Lake – in three starts here he’s never finished better than a tie for 20th.

But he’s learned a few things that will help.

“I think controllin­g your golf ball and staying below the hole and hitting a bunch of fairways is a recipe for success around this golf course,” he said.

And in times of trouble, he can call upon the good memories of last week.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP ?? Patrick Cantlay chips onto the fourth green during the third round of the BMW Championsh­ip on Saturday in Owings Mills, Md.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP Patrick Cantlay chips onto the fourth green during the third round of the BMW Championsh­ip on Saturday in Owings Mills, Md.

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