The Denver Post

JOHNSON WINS

No. 1 golfer finishes 20 under

- By Bill Pennington

AUGUSTA, GA. » For 10 years, Dustin Johnson’s chase for career- defining, major titles was tinged with ruthless angst, misfortune and calamitous setbacks.

He grounded a club in an unobserved bunker at the 2010 PGA Championsh­ip to earn a heartless penalty that bounced him from a playoff for the victory. Five years later, at the U. S. Open, a three- putt on the final hole cost him another major championsh­ip playoff berth. Riding a hot streak that made him the prohibitiv­e favorite at the Masters three years ago, Johnson slipped on the stairs at his rental house on the tournament’s eve and withdrew with a back injury.

Even as he won the 2016 U. S. Open, he was saddled with the ignominy of a penalty assessed after his celebratio­n on the final hole.

But on Sunday, with verve and nerve, Johnson comfortabl­y secured the validating breakthrou­gh achievemen­t he has long sought with a runaway, five- stroke victory at the 2020 Masters. It is a championsh­ip that separates Johnson, one of golf’s most talented players, from the gaggle of nearly 150 golfers with one major title and brightens the path to the game’s pantheon of heroes.

Johnson, 36, hopes to find his way there.

“It feels good to get past one major, especially when the second one is the Masters, which I always dreamed of winning as a kid,” said Johnson, who grew up in Columbia, S. C., about an hour’s drive from Augusta National Golf Club. “I dream of winning a lot of majors. Hopefully, this one will help give me a little spring.”

Johnson, whose unshakable stoicism on the golf course has become his best- known trait, broke down in tears while being interviewe­d after the final round behind the 18th green.

“It still feels like I’m dreaming,” he said, wiping his eyes.

Johnson’s closest pursuers were Sungjae Im of South Korea and Cameron Smith of Australia, who each finished the tournament at 15- under par. They narrowed Johnson’s lead after he made consecutiv­e bogeys on the fourth and fifth holes, but Johnson rallied with two birdies in his next three holes and then extended his lead from there.

Johnson’s 4- under- par 68 in the final round gave him a tournament score of 268, or 20- under par, which broke the 72- hole Masters record of 270 previously held by Tiger Woods and Jordan Spieth.

Woods, the defending champion, began Sunday 11 strokes behind Johnson, but never mounted a run at the lead. At the par- 3 12th hole, he hit three balls into the creek protecting the green and registered a score of 10, his highest score on any hole in his PGA Tour career.

Johnson’s victory also concluded a bizarrely atypical Masters, which was postponed to November from its customary spot in early April because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. An event known for its traditions, the 84th Masters was contested for the first time without fans, who are normally an essential part of the visual and auditory experience. Augusta National was so quiet that only the chatter between player and caddie rose above the chirping birds. The final round, a theatric staple of the worldwide sporting calendar, was held four hours earlier than its standard time to account for the diminished amount of sunlight in the fall.

Finally, Johnson was presented with the green jacket that goes with his victory less than five months before he will have to defend his title in April 2021.

 ?? Jamie Squire, Getty Images ?? Dustin Johnson is applauded after winning the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on Sunday in Augusta, Ga.
Jamie Squire, Getty Images Dustin Johnson is applauded after winning the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on Sunday in Augusta, Ga.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States