Montreal Gazette

No doubting Thomas after three-shot victory at Dell

24-year-old bolsters his credential­s for player of the year with season’s fifth win

- DOUG FERGUSON

NORTON, MASS. The victories keep piling up for Justin Thomas, and all that does is make him want more.

In a Labour Day finish that was harder than the final margin suggested, Thomas kept his patience when Jordan Spieth shot out to a brief lead and Marc Leishman built a two-shot lead at the turn. Keeping his mistakes to a minimum, Thomas outlasted them both by closing with a 5-under 66 for a three-shot victory in the Dell Technologi­es Championsh­ip.

He started the PGA Tour season at No. 34 in the world with all of one PGA Tour victory.

Thomas won for the fifth time Monday, including his first major three weeks ago at the PGA Championsh­ip. He is No. 4 in the world.

Barring Spieth running the tables the rest of the FedEx Cup playoffs, the 24-year-old Thomas would seem to be a lock to be voted PGA Tour player of the year.

“I have two events left. I have two more opportunit­ies to win,” Thomas said. “And I’d love to make it six or seven wins.”

Mackenzie Hughes of Hamilton and Adam Hadwin of Abbotsford, B.C., were the low Canadians at 8-under and tied for 13th.

Hughes shot up the leaderboar­d after a 67 while Hadwin, who started the day two shots back of the lead, struggled to a 73. Nick Taylor (72), also of Abbotsford, finished 2-over and Graham DeLaet (70) of Weyburn, Sask., was 7-over.

Thomas made only two bogeys all week, the last one putting him in a three-way tie with seven holes to play.

He won on the back nine at TPC Boston with a sand wedge he gouged out of the rough to six feet on No. 13, a gap wedge to four feet on No. 15 for another birdie, and a six-foot par save that kept him two shots clear.

Spieth wasted a start that riled up the New England crowd — birdie-eagle-birdie-birdie — by missing the 14th green with a five-iron for bogey.

Needing an eagle to stay in the game on the par-five 18th, Spieth pushed a four-iron into a tough lie in the bunker, blasted over the green and made bogey for a 67.

Spieth was a runner-up for the second straight week in the FedEx Cup playoffs. He lost a three-shot lead to Dustin Johnson on Long Island last weekend. There wasn’t much Spieth could have done to stop Thomas, his best friend in golf since they were teenagers.

“Came out firing, like I said we had to do,” Spieth said. “Eight through 14 is the meat of the golf course. You want to get through even.

“I got through over par and didn’t get any coming in when I hit some good putts.”

Spieth still moved to No. 1 in the FedEx Cup with one more event before the US$10-million prize is decided at the Tour Championsh­ip.

Leishman shot 30 on the front to build a two-shot lead, only for it to vanish quickly. He had to save bogey on No. 10 after an errant drive. He three-putted from long range for bogey on the 11th. He found a bunker on the 12th for a third straight bogey. Then he closed with two bogeys that only cost him money. Leishman shot 70.

Johnson, the No. 1 player in the world coming off his fourth victory of the season last week, started the final round three shots behind and was one of the few players who was never in contention.

He took two to get out of a fairway bunker and made bogey on the par-5 second hole, and he closed with a 73 to finish 10 behind.

Spieth was simply dynamic at the start. He didn’t need to make a putt longer than 12 feet to go 5 under for the opening four holes and briefly take the lead. Leishman, who won at Bay Hill in March, kept stride with six birdies on the front nine to match Spieth’s 30 and move in front.

Thomas did his part to stay in the game. He could hear the crowd celebratin­g Spieth’s short birdie on the fourth hole, and then Thomas belted a low slider of a drive that barely cleared the deep bunker, hit into the shaggy collar and hopped onto the fringe. He holed that 30-footer for an eagle, and the race was on.

The final round was so tight that Thomas, Spieth and Leishman were tied for the lead with seven holes to play. But then it all changed when Spieth missed the green at No. 14, did well to hit a flop shot to 15 feet and narrowly missed his par putt.

Thomas steadied himself after his lone bogey on the par-three 11th. Equipped with a one-shot lead because of Spieth’s bogey, Thomas hit a sand wedge to four feet on the 15th for a birdie and a two-shot lead.

I have two events left. I have two more opportunit­ies to win … And I’d love to make it six or seven wins.

 ?? ANDREW REDINGTON/GETTY IMAGES ?? Justin Thomas plays a shot from the 17th tee at the Dell Technologi­es Championsh­ip on Monday in Norton, Mass.
ANDREW REDINGTON/GETTY IMAGES Justin Thomas plays a shot from the 17th tee at the Dell Technologi­es Championsh­ip on Monday in Norton, Mass.

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