Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Kitayama wins 1st career title

- By Doug Ferguson

ORLANDO, Fla. — Kurt Kitayama only had to look around at the players next to him in the practice area and right below him on the leaderboar­d at Bay Hill to know what he was up against Sunday in the Arnold Palmer Invitation­al.

“You can’t ignore it. You got to know where you’re at and you know who is there and just embrace the whole situation, I guess,” Kitayama said after a final two hours of pure theater for his first PGA Tour win.

He got the result he desperatel­y wanted in a fashion he never imagined.

First came the wild tee shot that sailed out-ofbounds on the ninth hole that led to triple bogey and let an All-Star cast — Rory McIlroy, Jordan Spieth, Scottie Scheffler, Tyrrell Hatton and Harris English — back into the tournament.

And then the 30-yearold California­n, who has played on 11 tours around the world to hone is game, delivered the winner.

Part of a five-way tie for the lead with three holes to play, he drilled a 6-iron to just inside 15 feet on the par-3 17th and holed it for birdie to take the lead. From the rough left of the 18th fairway, he gouged an 8-iron onto the green to 50 feet. Needing two putts to win, the first one stopped an inch from the cup.

The tap-in for an evenpar 72 was the easiest shot he faced all day, giving him a one-shot win over McIlroy and English.

Kitayama was due. Over the last year he finished one shot behind to Jon Rahm in Mexico, to Xander Schauffele in Scotland, to McIlroy in South Carolina.

This time, he beat them all.

“A little bit of luck finally went my way,” Kitayama said. “When it’s that close at the top, that’s what you need. Anyone probably could have won it. Luckily, it just happened to be me.”

He finished the event at 9-under 279 and earned $3.6 million, moving to No. 19 in the world.

McIlroy roared into the mix with four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn, took on a shot he didn’t need because he didn’t realize he was tied for the lead on the 14th, and ultimately missed a 10-foot birdie putt on the final hole and shot 70.

English remarkably went bogey-free on brittle Bay Hill for the entire weekend. He missed an 18-foot birdie putt on the last hole for a 70.

“I know Kurt more from European tour stuff,” McIlroy said. “... He’s persevered and played wherever he could and all of a sudden he’s won one of the biggest events on the PGA Tour. So good for him.”

Scheffler, the defending champion, was a foot away from having a close look at birdie on the 18th and a chance to take the lead. Instead, his ball spun back into the rough, his chip came out weakly and he finished with a bogey for a 73.

Spieth was among six players who had at least a share of the lead over the final two hours. He missed four straight putts inside 8 feet from the 14th through the 17th holes — three of them for par. After taking the lead with a 15-foot birdie putt on the 13th hole, he played his last five holes in 3 over.

Spieth (70), Scheffler (73), Patrick Cantlay (68) and Hatton (72) all finished two shots behind.

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY ?? Kurt Kitayama poses with the trophy Sunday after winning the PGA Tour’s Arnold Palmer Invitation­al at Bay Hill Golf Course in Orlando, Florida.
SAM GREENWOOD/GETTY Kurt Kitayama poses with the trophy Sunday after winning the PGA Tour’s Arnold Palmer Invitation­al at Bay Hill Golf Course in Orlando, Florida.

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