USA TODAY US Edition

Dustin Johnson wins in twilight

- Steve DiMeglio

Only Mother Nature stopped Dustin Johnson.

En route to polishing off a thunderous masterpiec­e in The Northern Trust on Sunday at TPC Boston, Johnson had to head for shelter instead of the winner’s circle just after hitting his tee shot on the 71st hole as storm cells moved over Norton, Massachuse­tts.

The carefree Johnson, however, wasn’t shaken. Until then, he was the only feared force on the grounds. And once the foul stuff cleared after an hour, Johnson needed just seven shots to complete his thrashing of the best players in the world.

With an 8-under-par 63, Johnson put the bow on a staggering display of power, precision and touch as he sent all fleeing with rounds of 67-60-64-63 to finish at 30-under 254 to win by 11 shots, the largest margin of victory this PGA Tour season.

Armed with a five-shot lead after 54 holes, Johnson slammed the pedal to the floor with an eagle from short distance on the second and four birdies in a five-hole stretch starting at the fourth. With a birdie on the 12th, he upped his lead to nine and then coasted home. His birdie on the final hole gave him 23 in all,

to go along with five eagles – the most he’s ever made in a tournament – against just three bogeys.

He hit all 18 greens in regulation on the final day and won for the second time this season and for the 22nd time in his career.

“Obviously, this was a really good week,” the understate­d Johnson said. “My ball-striking was really unbelievab­le. I found something on Wednesday. I played some really good golf, and it was a lot of fun. So I’m looking forward to the rest of the FedExCup Playoffs.”

Well, he should. He took over the top spot in the standings and will continue his pursuit of his first FedExCup title – and the $15 million bonus – at this week’s BMW Championsh­ip at Olympia Fields south of Chicago.

Harris English won the race to finish second, his 69 leaving him at 19 under and three shots clear of third place. Daniel Berger birdied the final hole to sign for a 67 and finish in solo third, 12 shots behind. Kevin Kisner and Scott Scheffler, who became the 11th player to shoot 59 on Friday, tied for fourth, 13 strokes back.

“Dustin played unbelievab­le golf,” English said. “It was solid ball-striking, putting, everything. Shooting 30 under on a playoff golf course like this is pretty incredible, and well deserved.”

Johnson was combustibl­e from the get-go with a first-round 67. He brought the lightning in the second round with a prepostero­us stretch of seven birdies and two eagles in his first 11 holes en route to a career-low 60 to grab the lead; pars on his last seven holes kept him from breaking into the 50s.

He kept the electric bursts rolling with a 64 in the third round that included a birdie-eagle finish that left him atop the leaderboar­d at 22-under 191, his lowest 54-hole score by three shots.

His final-round 63 left him just one shot short of tying Justin Thomas’ 72hole record 253 set in the 2017 Sony Open. Johnson also fell one shot short of tying Ernie Els’ 72-hole record in relation to par of 31 under in the 2003 Sentry Tournament of Champions.

“This will be his 22nd win, but this is like as good as it gets,” said Webb Simpson, who tied for sixth – 14 shots behind. “The course might be easier than normal but a 59 is a 59 and 60 is a 60 and 30-under is 30-under.”

With the win, Johnson returned to No. 1 in the official world rankings for the first time since May 2019. And it was his third win in The Northern Trust, each three on a different course.

The bizarre final day was par for the course for Johnson, for his season has been anything but tranquil since the PGA Tour returned after a 13-week break due to COVID-19. He missed the cut in the first event of the return, the Charles Schwab Challenge, then tied for 17th in the RBC Heritage before winning The Travelers Championsh­ip, where he shot a 61 in the third round that was his career best for about two months.

But after a two-week break, he was put through the ringer as he shot 80-80 to miss the cut at the Memorial, then shot 78 a week later in the first round of the 3M Open before withdrawin­g with a back injury.

A week later, however, he finished tied for 12th at the World Golf Championsh­ips-FedEx St. Jude Invitation­al, then nearly won the PGA Championsh­ip the following week, where despite a 6568 weekend he tied for second behind Collin Morikawa. But in doing so, Johnson became the first player to go 0-for-4 in majors with the 54-hole lead.

And now, after a one-week break, he’ll add his TPC Boston rout to the resume and count 12 consecutiv­e rounds in the 60s.

Tiger Woods shot his best round of the week, a 66, but didn’t do much the first three rounds and tied for 56th. That left him at 58th in the projected playoffs standings and he’ll need a top-5 finish in the BMW Championsh­ip to be one of the 30 players moving on to the Tour Championsh­ip at East Lake in Atlanta, the playoff finale. With the U.S. Open two weeks after the playoffs end, Woods could play four tournament­s in five weeks.

“I hit a lot of good shots. My body feels pretty good,” Woods said. “This is going to be a long haul either way. I wish I would have played a little bit better this week to make it a little bit easier on me next week to try to get into East Lake, but this is going to be a busy stretch either way.”

 ?? MARK KONEZNY/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Dustin Johnson watches his tee shot on the 15th hole during the final round Sunday.
MARK KONEZNY/USA TODAY SPORTS Dustin Johnson watches his tee shot on the 15th hole during the final round Sunday.

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