The Mercury News

Ted Potter Jr. outlasts No. 1 Johnson to win at Pebble.

- By Doug Ferguson

PEBBLE BEACH >> For one day at Pebble Beach, Ted Potter Jr. was better than the best in the world.

Look back even further, and his three-shot victory in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am is even more remarkable.

He played so many minitour events that he lost track of how many he won, some of them only two-day tournament­s that paid enough for a week’s worth of food and gas. His biggest paycheck was $33,000. More recently, Potter was out of golf for two years recovering from a broken ankle that required two surgeries — one to insert 12 screws and two plates, another to remove all that hardware. There was no guarantee he would make it back.

Potter started the final round Sunday tied with Dustin Johnson, the No. 1 player in the world for the last year. Throughout the day, Phil Mickelson and Jason Day each made a run at the 34-year-old Floridian who had 46 missed cuts and only four top 10s in his previous 83 starts on the PGA Tour.

Potter beat them all. He was the one chatting with Clint Eastwood and posing with the crystal trophy that comes with a $1,332,000 check and a return to the Masters.

“I’m so happy right now to get it done today, especially against the world No. 1, playing with him today,” Potter said. “The win here at Pebble is just unbelievab­le.”

Just don’t call it a fluke. Potter closed with a 3-under 69 and didn’t drop a shot after a threeputt

bogey on the opening hole. Making it tougher was playing in a threesome behind a foursome in the pro-am format, having too much time to think about the stage, the contenders and the opportunit­y. He never flinched. The key moment came behind the green on the par-3 seventh, the most picturesqu­e at Pebble Beach. He and Johnson were side-by-side in light rough to a firm green that ran away from them. Johnson chipped nicely to 4 feet. Potter put a little more loft on his shot and holed it for a birdie and a two-shot lead.

No one got closer the rest of the way.

He won by three shots over Johnson (72), Mickelson (67), Day (70) and Chez Reavie (68).

Potter stepped awkwardly

off a curb at the Canadian Open in 2014 and broke his ankle so badly that he didn’t play another tournament until Canada two years later. He wound up having to work his way back to the PGA Tour through the developmen­tal tour last year.

The 18th hole gave him plenty of time to consider how far he had come.

Day, trying to make eagle for his only chance at winning, hooked a driver off the deck over the sea wall. He found the ball on a mixture of sand and pebbles and played it off the beach , over the sea wall, over the green and into a bunker. Troy Merritt hit his shot into a cypress tree in front of the 18th green and it stayed up there, meaning he had to go back and play another shot.

Potter waited patiently,

tapped in for a par to finish at 17-under 270 and only then did he show how much it meant. His voice choked with emotion.

“It’s been a struggle,” he said. “You break your ankle and you don’t know what’s going to happen with your swing, with your career. It’s unbelievab­le right now . ... This has been a blast this week.”

It was another disappoint­ment for Johnson going into the final round. He now won only five out of 12 times when he took at least a share of the 54-hole lead into the final round. He fell back Sunday with a tee shot so bad on the par-3 fifth that it sailed over the edge of the cliff and he did well to escape with bogey, and then a shot he misjudged in a tough wind on No. 8 that went into the back bunker for another bogey.

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 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Surprise winner Ted Potter Jr. follows his shot from the fourth tee of the Pebble Beach Golf Links Sunday. He closed with a 3-under 69 to turn back golf’s big names.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Surprise winner Ted Potter Jr. follows his shot from the fourth tee of the Pebble Beach Golf Links Sunday. He closed with a 3-under 69 to turn back golf’s big names.

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