The Palm Beach Post

Poulter’s lucky break leads back to big time

Clerical oversight discovered to help keep his tour card.

- By Doug Ferguson Associated Press

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLA. — Ian Poulter is back among the top 100 in the world. He has gone over $1.25 million for the year. He doesn’t have to worry about keeping his PGA Tour card next year.

Poulter never imagined all this two weeks ago.

He was playing on a major medical extension from a foot injur y last ye ar and had 10 tournament­s to earn enough money or FedEx Cup points to keep full status. Poulter fell short when he missed the cut in his 10th start at the Texas Open, and he figured he would be stuck asking for exemptions the rest of the year.

That’s when a clerical oversight — discovered by Brian Gay — saved him.

The PGA Tour changed its FedEx Cup points distributi­on that mainly affected the middle of the leaderboar­d, but players on medi- cal extensions are supposed to play under the same set of rules as when injury sidelined them. Poulter not only got his card back, but the extra points put him in The Players Championsh­ip.

The Englishman took it from there.

He was the only player to seriously challenge Si Woo Kim on the back nine Sunday at the TPC Sawgrass, and his incredible bogey save from the woods on the 18th hole gave him a 1-under 71 and a tie for second with Louis Oosthuizen.

The points make him virtually a lock for the FedEx Cup playoffs this year, and the $940,000 was his second-highest paycheck behind his victory in the Match Play seven years ago.

“It’s been a big week,” Poulter said. “To have two, three weeks ago been in a position where I wasn’t playing The Players and potentiall­y didn’t have a card to play and was looking to write nice letters to Jack (Nicklaus) for Memorial and all of those great tournament­s that I’d like to play in, things change pretty quick with good golf, and that’s what I’ve done this week. I’ve played good golf. I think I’ve still got some work to do. The putter is not quite doing what I would like.”

Poulter went 39 consecutiv­e holes without a bogey and he was tied for the lead until Kim made a 25-foot birdie putt on No. 7. Poulter closed within one shot with a birdie on the 11th, but his chances began to slide when he played it safe off the reachable 12th hole. His wedge came up well short, and his long putt from just off the green ran 6 feet by the cup. He missed the par putt, and only had one really good look at birdie the rest of the way.

His best hope was a mist ake from Kim, who was bogey-free and won by three.

Even so, Poulter’s outlook sure is different.

“I t wasn’t l ooki ng l i ke a great summer,” he said, referring to the prospect of trying to get PGA Tour invitation­s when he t ypically spends most of his summer in England with his family. “For that all to turn around the way and for me to be sitting here in a slightly different situation, it’s pleasing.” leading,” he said. “I just focused on the middle of the green.”

He landed safely and twoputted from 45 feet, and then he smashed another drive down the middle of the 18th fairway.

The only drama at the end came from Ian Poulter, who was happy just to be here.

Two weeks ago, Poulter thought he had lost his PGA Tour card until officials realized a cleric al oversight that restored his status and even gave him a spot in The Players Championsh­ip. He was the only player to seriously challenge Kim until he ran out of holes, and then it was a matter of finishing second.

Poulter shanked his second shot from the right rough on the 18th, and it bounced of f hospi t a l i t y t e nt s , down a c a r t pat h and into a palmetto bush. He took a penalt y drop, and then hit wedge over the trees and nearly holed it, tapping in for bogey.

He closed with a 71 and tied for second with Louis Oosthuizen, who shot 73.

“It was a big shock to the system to hit one of those nas t y shanks when I ’ ve hit it as good as I have all week,” Poulter said. “But the fourth shot was pretty special — from one of the worst shots I’ve ever hit to one of the very best.”

The bogey on the 18th was only the second for Poulter over the final 46 of the tournament. As tough as the Players Stadium Course played, his best chance was waiting for Kim to make a mistake, just like so many other players. Remarkably, Kim never did.

“As good as he played yesterday, he’s obviously gone out there today and played even better,” Poulter said. “He’s gone clean out there today, which is extremely impressive under that pressure. … You have to respect some good golf, and that’s exactly what he’s done.”

Oosthuizen, who fell out of the lead for good with a fairway bunker shot into the water for double bogey on No. 4, watched it all day playing alongside Kim.

“If you’re on your game and playing well, that the things you do,” Oosthuizen said. “You just don’t give shots away. If you can do that around this golf course, you c an outscore everyone. And he played like someone that was doing it for five or six years, like it was just another round of golf. It just shows you how good a player he is and how cool and calm he is. Never once did he look flustered at all.”

The exc itement, good and bad, came from everyone else.

R a f a C a b r e r a B e l l o o f S p a i n h i t 8 - i r o n t h a t bounded off the side of a bunker and into the cup for an albatross 2 on the par-5 16th. He followed that with a birdie on the 17th, and then holed a long par putt from just off the 18th green. That gave him a 70 and a tie for fourth with Kyle Stanley, a co-leader after 54 holes who shot 75.

The other co-leader was J.B. Holmes, and it was a horror show for the Kentuckian.

Holmes shot 40 on the front nine and still had hope until bogeys on the 14th and 15th holes. And then it turned ugly. He hit too shots into the water on the 17th and make a quintuple-bogey 8, then finished with a double bogey to close with an 84, the worst finish by a 54-hole leader at The Players.

Holmes wasn’t a l one. D e f e n d i n g c h a m p i o n Jason Day closed with an 80, keeping very much in tact the streak of no winner ever repeating in the Players. Rickie Fowler, who won the year before, closed with a 79.

As for the winner? That was rarely in doubt for Kim, who finished at 10-under 278

Kim said he wasn’t nervous bec ause of hi s victory last year in the Wyndham Championsh­ip, which gave him a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour. This victory comes with perks beyond the $1.89 million first prize. He gets a fivey e a r e xe mpt i o n o n t h e PGA Tour, and a three-year exemption to the Masters.

The previous youngest champion of The Players was Adam Scott, who was 23 when he won in 2004.

Just over four years ago, Kim came over to America to play the final version of PGA Tour’s qualifying school. He earned a card at age 17, but he could not become a PGA Tour member until he turned 18 the following June. That card effectivel­y went to waste, and Kim spent the next two years on the developmen­tal tour until earning hi s c ard back to the big leagues.

Now he’s here to stay for at least the next five years, and based on hi s game, probably much longer.

 ?? WARREN LITTLE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Ian Poulter is back in the top 100 after his closing 71 and a 281 total, which tied the Englishman for second place at The Players Championsh­ip.
WARREN LITTLE / GETTY IMAGES Ian Poulter is back in the top 100 after his closing 71 and a 281 total, which tied the Englishman for second place at The Players Championsh­ip.
 ?? JAMIE SQUIRE / GETTY IMAGES ?? J.B. Holmes takes a drop on the fifth hole en route to a brutal closing round of 84. With a final day that included a quintuple bogey, Holmes went from three-round coleader to a 3-over finishing total.
JAMIE SQUIRE / GETTY IMAGES J.B. Holmes takes a drop on the fifth hole en route to a brutal closing round of 84. With a final day that included a quintuple bogey, Holmes went from three-round coleader to a 3-over finishing total.

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