The Denver Post

REED GETS HOT LATE

Wins Mexico Championsh­ip

- By Doug Ferguson

Patrick Reed made it hard M EX I CO C I TY» for anyone to question his moxie.

A week that began with Brooks Koepka saying he thought Reed cheated when he was penalized for swiping sand in the Bahamas ended with Reed delivering clutch moments down the stretch Sunday to win the Mexico Championsh­ip.

Then again, Reed always seems to be at his best when it feels as though the world is against him.

Two shots behind with four holes to play, Reed ran off three straight birdies to overtake a faltering Bryson DeChambeau, closing with a 4-under 67 for his second World Golf Championsh­ips title.

Reed made it interestin­g in the end with a wild tee shot into the trees on the 18th hole at Chapultepe­c Golf Club, forcing him to chip back to the fairway. He had to two-putt from 35 feet for eighth victory of his PGA Tour career.

In a wild final round in which five players had a share of the lead — and four were tied heading for the back nine — DeChambeau appeared to seize control with five birdies in a six-hole stretch starting at No. 9.

Everyone around him faltered — Justin Thomas, Rory McIlroy, Jon Rahm, Erik van Rooyen — everyone but Reed, who played bogey-free until he only needed a bogey to win.

DeChambeau failed to birdie the par-5 15th, missed the green on the 16th with a pin in a bowl that made birdies accessible, and then three-putted from long range on the 17th. He shot 65.

Reed never flinched with so much going on around him, on and off the golf course.

He has yet to shake whispers on the tour and heckling from the gallery over the Hero World Challenge in December, when video caught him twice swiping away sand behind his ball in a waste area in the Bahamas. Reed accepted the two-shot penalty and said a different camera angle would have shown his club wasn’t as close to the ball as it looked.

Koepka became the strongest voice during an interview Monday with SiriusXM in the Bay Area while he was previewing his title defense at the PGA Championsh­ip in May.

Radio host Sway Calloway asked Koepka if Reed was cheating.

“Uh, yeah. I think, yeah, yeah,” Koepka said, known for speaking his mind. “I mean, I don’t know what he was doing, building sand castles in the sand. But you know, you know where your club is. I mean, I took three months off and I can promise you I know if I touched sand.

“If you play the game, you understand the rules,” he said. “You understand the integrity that goes on. I mean, there’s no room for it.”

Asked about it Saturday after his round, Reed said, “At the end of the day, you can’t listen to what other people are saying. All you can control is what you do.”

All he did Sunday was win.

“To come back and win my second World Golf Championsh­ip, especially with how I had to finish from basically 15 onwards ... last hole was ugly but it was what I needed just to get the job done,” Reed said.

He finished at 18-under 266 and moved to No. 8 in the world.

DeChambeau walked back across the bridge to the 18th green to congratula­te Reed. DeChambeau can appreciate heavy criticism, his variety for his pace of play.

McIlroy was within one shot until going nine straight holes without a birdie.

 ?? Rob Carr, Getty Images ?? Patrick Reed celebrates his birdie on the 17th green Sunday during the final round of the World Golf Championsh­ips Mexico Championsh­ip at Club de Golf Chapultepe­c in Mexico City.
Rob Carr, Getty Images Patrick Reed celebrates his birdie on the 17th green Sunday during the final round of the World Golf Championsh­ips Mexico Championsh­ip at Club de Golf Chapultepe­c in Mexico City.

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