The Record (Troy, NY)

Best shots, and personal favorite, of majors

- By Doug Ferguson

Jordan Spieth won the British Open with a flourish at the end. Justin Thomas hit 7-iron that had to be perfect for him to seal his first major at the PGA Championsh­ip.

Both wonder if they would have been in position to win on Sunday if not for key shots earlier in the week.

It’s like that just about every year. There is a signature shot from a major, the one that gets replayed more than the others. And there is another shot — or one moment, as was the case for Masters champion Ser- gio Garcia — that is just as meaningful to them.

MASTERS

For all the Sunday drama at Augusta National, Sergio Garcia made only one birdie on the back nine in regulation. The signature shot of this Masters, however, led to eagle. After smashing a drive on the par-5 15th, Garcia hit 8-iron that nicked the pin and set up a 15-foot eagle putt to tie Justin Rose for the lead.

“One of the best shots I hit all week,” Garcia said.

Just as meaningful to him was the 15th club in his bag — the space between his ears.

Garcia had every reason to believe this major would turn out like so many others when he began the back nine with two bogeys to fall two shots behind, and then watched his tee shot on the 13th bounce off a tree into the hazard .

“Funny enough, most other weeks I would have been thinking, ‘ Here we go. What’s going on?”’ Garcia said.

Instead, he was determined to make par. After a drop, he hit a baby hook with the 9-iron down the fairway and was in position from 89 yards to save par.

“The most important thing was that I felt calm throughout the whole thing,” he said. “That calm- ness gave me confidence. I was like, ‘It’s OK. You’re doing everything right. You’re playing great. It’s your time.”

And it was.

U.S. OPEN

Brooks Koepka pulled away at Erin Hills with four straight one-putts — a par save on the 13th and three birdies. The clinching moment was his birdie on the par-3 16th, where his 9-iron came back to the front section of the green for a putt that allowed him to go four shots ahead.

“We thought it might be up top, and it was a relief to see it at the bottom and have a putt at it,” Koepka said. “I just remember saying, ‘Get it there.’ I started it on line, and I was looking at it with disbelief that it’s going in. In my mind, you are in complete control at that point. The only thing you can do from here is mess it up.”

Koepka knew he was in control a few holes earlier, a shot that he recalled without any hesitation.

“The tee shot on the par 5, No. 14,” he said. “We could hit 3-wood and get to the bunker, but driver was no good because we couldn’t carry it or we had a 20-yard fairway. We actually had to cut this 3-wood up into the wind. We had to take a lot off it. It only wound up 4 yards short of the bunker. We were walking up and I said, ‘I think we can go for that par 5 in two.”’

He put it in the greenside bunker and got up-anddown for birdie.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this April 9photo, Sergio Garcia, of Spain, right, reacts after putting in for an eagle on the 15th hole during the final round of the Masters golf tournament, in Augusta, Ga.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this April 9photo, Sergio Garcia, of Spain, right, reacts after putting in for an eagle on the 15th hole during the final round of the Masters golf tournament, in Augusta, Ga.

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