The Commercial Appeal

Rahm is channeling his frustratio­ns

- Doug Ferguson

OLYMPIA FIELDS, Ill. – Jon Rahm is no stranger to wild shifts in emotions, whether it was irritation from an absentmind­ed penalty that led to his only bogey of the weekend or his 65-foot birdie putt that capped an amazing victory at the BMW Championsh­ip.

The difference now is he enjoyed it. All of it. The shot that will be remembered at Olympia Fields was a putt in the playoff Sunday that was just over 65 feet from the hole and had to travel even farther to get there, across the 18th green toward a ridge and then down the slope toward the cup, 11 seconds of watching, hoping and celebratin­g.

Rahm wonders how different it might have been if not for his mental blunder.

That happened on the fifth hole Saturday, when he was five shots behind. He might never be able to explain how he could walk up to his golf ball on the green, pick it up and freeze upon realizing he never marked it. He feared even after a 66 to get back in the mix that one shot could cost him.

“I just hope I don’t lose by one,” Rahm said that day. “I’m just going to say that. I just hope. And if I do, well, my fault.”

He allowed his mind to think back to the penalty while on the range Sunday afternoon after a 64, the best score of the week, and hearing that Dustin Johnson was one shot behind facing a birdie putt just inside 45 feet.

“I was like, that extra-shot cushion would be extremely nice right now, I’m not going to lie,” Rahm said. “But at the same time, it happened. I don’t know if I would have won had it not happened. It kind of made me mad at myself, and I just went on with my focus after that and was able to play amazing golf.

“I can tell you after making that 6footer for bogey, I was like, ‘OK, that’s it. No playing around. Go.’ That’s kind of what mentally did it for me.”

Rahm has always said he needs time to process success and failure, and this one could take a while. Even after it was over, and he posed with the BMW Championsh­ip and Western Golf Associatio­n trophies, part of him still felt like he was on the golf course in a playoff.

He looked like a winner when his tee shot on the par-5 15th sailed into the trees and ricocheted out into the rough, avoiding a penalty, and his third shot was a 6-iron from 218 yards to 10 feet for birdie. He followed that with a 30-foot birdie putt across the 16th green for a two-shot lead.

He feared for the worse when Johnson, down to his last shot, rolled in his improbable birdie putt down the slope on the 18th green for a 67 to force the playoff. That penalty shot looked as though it might be the difference when Johnson’s drive on the 18th in the playoff hit a tree and came back to the fairway, and Rahm’s shot from deep rough rolled out to the back of the green, leaving a putt so difficult that Rahm was hopeful of making par.

“Honestly, I hoped it would be a decent putt for par coming back and have a chance to keep the playoff going,” he said.

It was better than decent. It was perfect. The heart rate never eased up as Rahm watched Johnson’s 30-foot birdie putt track toward the cup until it peeled away by inches and Rahm was the winner.

“I still can’t believe what just happened,” Rahm said. “That stretch of waiting for DJ, him making the putt, going in the playoff, me making the putt, then trying to stay mentally in it just in case he made the last putt, it’s been a roller coaster. But so much fun. … I set out to enjoy even the uncomforta­ble moments we had out there.

“And man, it was fun.”

Johnson took plenty away, too. He twice beat Rahm in 2017 in the span of a month at World Golf Championsh­ips, holding off a Rahm rally in the Mexico Championsh­ip and withstandi­ng another ferocious comeback attempt in the Match Play.

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