USA TODAY International Edition

Now ‘ People’s Open’ champ, heartbreak drove Fowler

Several near- misses in Phoenix Open golf tournament had frustrated 2019 champ.

- Steve DiMeglio ROB SCHUMACHER/ ARIZONA REPUBLIC

Champagne is for celebratio­ns but can double as the perfect elixir to wash away sorrows, the bubbly mindful of good times while providing the ideal rejection of past disappoint­ment.

Thus it was for Rickie Fowler when he popped the bottles in the media center after the conclusion of last year’s Waste Management Phoenix Open at TPC Scottsdale. Fowler toasted to his long coveted victory and drank away the memory of excruciati­ng frustratio­n at The People’s Open.

“I finally got the job done at a place I love,” Fowler said of his fifth PGA Tour title.

It was love at first sight for Fowler when he saw TPC Scottsdale and played in front of the massive crowds in the Phoenix Open. The tournament isn’t for everyone, but for Fowler, the energy pulsating from the first tee to the 18th hole gives him a charge.

“The crowd can get a little hectic at times. But for that one week of the year, it makes for a pretty damn great tournament,” Fowler said.

Try as hard as he did and playing as well as he did, he just couldn’t win the pretty damn great tournament. He finished second in his rookie year of 2010. Tied for fourth in 2017. Was the 54- hole leader in 2018 before a 73 sent him reeling to a tie for 11th.

But it was the painful loss in 2016 that haunted him, when he squandered a two- shot lead with two to play and subsequent­ly lost in a playoff to Hideki Matsuyama. That loss left him in tears as he was trying to win on the PGA Tour for the first time in front of his dad, Rod, and grandpa, Taka, who taught him the game.

Then more heartbreak seemed to be in the offing in 2019. After a pair of 64s and a 65, Fowler led by four shots after 54 holes.

“A lot of things stand out for me when I think back to last year’s win,” Fowler said during a practice round at the Farmers Insurance Open at Torrey Pines. “Going out and getting myself into a very comfortabl­e lead stands out. And then also to have something significant happen in the final round and then going head- to- head down the stretch knowing what needed to be done after I had come back to the field.”

The significant something? Fowler doesn’t want to talk about it. Who can blame him?

With a five- shot lead, Fowler came to the par- 4 11th hole and then met golf horror. With rain picking up and after missing the green with his approach shot, Fowler’s chip to the green skidded on the wet surface and raced off the green into a water hazard. After taking a penalty drop, he walked up to the green to survey the situation and then saw his ball roll back into the water.

He had to take another penalty drop and made a 17- footer for a bizarre tripleboge­y 7. Just ahead on the 12th hole, Branden Grace made a 50- foot birdie putt and Fowler’s lead was gone. Then Fowler fell behind when he bogeyed the 12th.

“And then we made a scratchy par on the par- 5 13th, which is very birdieable,” said Joe Skovron, Fowler’s caddie. “From that point on, and with what was happening and with what happened in the past like in ’ 16 and ’ 17, for him to step up and hit the quality second shot he hit on 15, the quality drive he hit onto the green on 17, was just really impressive to see. To see his resolve and how he handled it to get the job done was impressive.

“We’ve wanted to win that tournament so bad. I live there. We’d been so close. His family was there, we’d had heartbreak­ers there, so, with all that, it meant a lot to both of us. That one was a big one for us.”

After falling behind, Fowler birdied two of the final four holes – the par- 5 15th and the par- 4 17th – and made a solid up- and- down par on the finishing hole to top Grace by two shots. Shortly after the final putt dropped, Fowler embraced his wife, Allison, and then Skovron. Then he found his dad and mom, and grandpa and grandma, who got the winning golf ball.

It was Fowler’s first win in front of his grandparen­ts, first win in front of his father, first win as a married man, first win in front of Skovron’s parents.

“A lot of boxes were checked,” Fowler said. “It’s hard to put into words.”

Returning to Arizona this week, Fowler said everything is good on and off the golf course. He’ll chase that elusive major championsh­ip win again this year. He’ll eye making the USA team for the Ryder Cup and the Olympic teams.

But his focus always will be on the present.

“The big thing for me is focusing on what we’re currently working on. And getting better tee to green and getting tighter with my irons,” he said.

“I would have liked to have more wins by now. But it’s not the easiest thing to do, win out on the PGA Tour. It’s always great to defend a title. There are always good memories.

“I haven’t successful­ly defended, so it would be nice to change that. And I can go to Phoenix and win there again.”

 ??  ?? After near- misses, Rickie Fowler won the Waste Management Phoenix Open in 2019.
After near- misses, Rickie Fowler won the Waste Management Phoenix Open in 2019.

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