USA TODAY International Edition

With Ohio win, Rahm moves up in world

- Steve DiMeglio

DUBLIN, Ohio – Jon Rahm was cruising to an authoritat­ive victory in the Memorial on Sunday – and the world’s top ranking for the first time – when he ran into turbulence shortly after storms arrived and delayed play.

After a 50- minute stoppage, Rahm returned to the ninth hole at Muirfield Village Golf Club with an eight- shot lead. But a bogey on 10, a double- bogey on 11 and another bogey on 14, coupled with a birdie by Ryan Palmer on the 12, cut Rahm’s lead to three shots.

Then matters got dicey when Rahm chipped in from behind the 16th green for birdie to up his advantage to four. But as he soled his club right before the chip, the ball moved and didn’t return to its original spot before Rahm hit his shot.

Rahm was later penalized two shots for the infraction.

Rahm didn’t learn about the situation on the 16th until he had finished his round. He had upped his advantage to five shots on the 17th with a par and closed out his victory with another par on the final hole.

With rounds of 69- 67- 68- 75, Rahm finished at 9- under 279 and three shots clear of Ryan Palmer ( 67- 68- 73- 74). Matthew Fitzpatric­k finished in third with rounds of 75- 66- 74- 68.

“I didn’t see or feel anything,” Rahm said when he was told about the incident on 16. “If I would have seen it, I would have said something. If the ruling governors want to rule that it was a penalty, that’s fine. It doesn’t take anything away from this victory.”

And now Seve Ballestero­s has company. Rahm joined his hero, Seve Ballestero­s, as the only Spaniards to become the world’s No. 1 player with his victory.

At 25 years and 251 days old, Rahm became the fifth youngest player to become the No. 1 player in the world, trailing only Tiger Woods, Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy and Justin Thomas. Rahm is the 24th player to hold the top spot.

Ballestero­s rose to No. 1 on five occasions, the final time in 1989. Rahm supplanted McIlroy as the world’s best.

It was Rahm’s fourth PGA Tour victory and 11th worldwide title.

“It’s an honor to win here,” Rahm told tournament host Jack Nicklaus on the 18th green. “I’m just trying to be like you.”

“Your play was fantastic,” Nicklaus told Rahm. “I’m really happy for you.”

Rahm reached No. 1 in just over four years as a profession­al. Becoming No. 1 seemed like a matter of when it would happen, not if.

He was the No. 1 amateur in the world for a record 60 weeks.

“Jon Rahm is a remarkable talent, and you’re seeing it,” said Phil Mickelson, who predicted that Rahm would

quickly become a top- 5 player in the world before he hit his first shot as a profession­al. “You’re seeing it in his play week in and week out from a game that has no weaknesses. Drives it long, drives it straight, good iron player, good wedge player, great putter. And he also has great course management, thinks himself around the golf course, and he knows himself.

“He knows that to relax sometimes he has to let some of his anger out. He can’t hold that in. It might upset some people, but he knows that it allows him to be at his best, and so I think that that’s a big thing, too, is identifyin­g your own self, and he’s done a great job of that at a really young age, to know how he has to be, what his presence and attitude have to be for him to play his best.”

 ?? SAM GREENWOOD/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Jack Nicklaus congratula­tes Jon Rahm of Spain on the 18th green after the Spaniard won the Memorial Tournament on Sunday.
SAM GREENWOOD/ GETTY IMAGES Jack Nicklaus congratula­tes Jon Rahm of Spain on the 18th green after the Spaniard won the Memorial Tournament on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States