USA TODAY International Edition

Lee closes with 63 to repeat Byron Nelson

- Adam Schupak

McKINNEY, Texas – On the 17th green at TPC Craig Ranch, staring over a 12foot par putt to maintain a one- stroke lead at the AT& T Byron Nelson, K. H. Lee was so nervous that he did something he does on special occasions: He asked for divine interventi­on.

“I know that that’s a very important putt, so I pray over there,” he said. “Sometimes, like I need to believe in myself, but just need a, ‘ Oh, God, like, please.’ ”

Lee’s prayers were answered, and on a hot, sultry afternoon he shot a careerbest 9- under 63 to win the AT& T Byron Nelson for the second straight time.

“It feels like a dream again,” said Lee, who has won both editions of the tournament since it moved to this suburban Dallas layout.

Lee, 30, became the first player to successful­ly defend his title at the AT& T Byron Nelson since Tom Watson in 1978- 1980 and joined exclusive company with a couple of other Hall of Famers: Sam Snead in 1957- 58 and Jack Nicklaus in 1970- 71 are the only other past champions to do so.

Lee got off to a dream start on Sunday, canning a 51- foot birdie at the second hole and holing out from the fringe at the third for what amounted to five birdies in his opening nine holes. He manhandled the four par- 5s in 5 under en route to shooting a 72- hole total of 26- under 262 and holding off Jordan Spieth by one stroke.

“That score this afternoon, especially the last closing stretch of holes, is just a phenomenal score,” said Spieth.

As golf stats guru Justin Ray noted, no player in PGA Tour history had won the same 72- hole stroke- play event in back- to- back years with a score of 25 under par or lower before Lee did so.

Lee showed he wouldn’t surrender his title without a fight, firing 64 in the first round and after scores of 68 and 67 he was four back of Sebastian Munoz heading into Sunday.

Lee hadn’t won in the year since bagging his first tour victory and his slump included three straight missed cuts before snapping that skid a week ago at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip.

Lee vaulted into the lead with an eagle at 12 after he ripped his second shot from 238 yards at the par- 5 to within 5 feet. He drained a 15- foot birdie putt at No. 13 and birdie the 18th. Lee gained more than three strokes on the field on the greens and that was the difference. On 17, Lee had an awkward stance in a greenside bunker and blasted out past the hole, praying before making his clutch par putt.

Spieth bogeyed two of his first three holes but ran off four birdies in a fivehole stretch starting at the fifth. His undoing was a three- putt bogey from 7 feet at the 10th, and birdies at 12, 14 and 18 coming home for a final- round 67

weren’t enough.

 ?? RAYMOND CARLIN III/ USA TODAY SPORTS ?? K. H. Lee successful­ly defended his AT& T Byron Nelson title with a one- shot win over Jordan Spieth.
RAYMOND CARLIN III/ USA TODAY SPORTS K. H. Lee successful­ly defended his AT& T Byron Nelson title with a one- shot win over Jordan Spieth.

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