Regina Leader-Post

Walker squanders lead, hangs on for win

- DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — The finish wasn’t what Jimmy Walker wanted. The result is what he’s come to expect.

Walker led by as many as six shots Sunday in the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, only for it to be decided by his final putt. He ran his birdie attempt five feet by the hole, and had to make that for par to close with a 2-over 74 and a oneshot win over Dustin Johnson and Jim Renner.

“It’s drama, man,” Walker said on the 18th green. “It was too much for me.”

But it was a familiar outcome for Walker, a 35-yearold Texan who only four months ago was regarded as one of the best players to have never won on the PGA Tour. This was his third win of the PGA Tour season, a streak that began in October about an hour away at the Frys.com Open.

Walker joined some exclusive company. He is only the fourth player in the last 20 years to win three times in his first eight starts to a season. The others are Tiger Woods (who has done it eight times), Phil Mickelson and David Duval.

For a brief moment, it looked as though Walker might have a chance to join Greg Norman and Sergio Garcia as players to lose a six-shot lead in the final round.

He was never seriously challenged until Johnson, and then Renner, put together a strong finish. Johnson, a two-time winner at Pebble Beach, closed with a 66 on a card that included three bogeys. Renner, who had yet to make a cut all year, made five birdies on the back nine for a 67.

Walker made a 10-foot birdie on the 11th hole and was seemingly on his way.

But he hit a poor chip on the par-3 12th for a bogey. He three-putted the 13th for a bogey. He settled down for three pars and was two shots clear with two to play. Walker three-putted the 17th, missing a 3 1/2-foot par putt. He tried to play it safe on the 18th with an iron off the tee that found the right rough.

From 25 feet above the hole, he hit the birdie putt too hard and had one anxious moment.

“I hate three-putting,” Walker said. “I had two of them back there, and definitely didn’t want another one on the last.”

Walker finished on 11-under 277 and earned $1.188 million, expanding his lead in the Ryder Cup standings to more than $1 million over Mickelson in second place. The Ryder Cup is based on PGA Tour earnings, though there are still four majors (which count double), three World Golf Championsh­ips and The Players Championsh­ip remaining.

For now, the stars are aligned for Walker better than anything he sees through his high-powered telescope.

“I just go out and play golf,” Walker said. “This is what I want to do and I’ve worked really hard to do it, to be here, and to be in this position and it’s really cool.”

Jordan Spieth had to return Sunday morning to complete his third round, which ended with his sixth three-putt of the round for a 78. He faced Pebble at its most vicious throughout the third round, though he bounced back with a bogeyfree 67 to at least tie for fourth with Kevin Na (69).

And he hasn’t lost his sense of humour.

“Yesterday was a day where you want to play Pebble Beach in that weather once in your life,” Spieth said. “You just don’t want it be Saturday when you’re in the lead.”

Chalk it up to another learning experience for Spieth, who said his 36 putts were more a product of not having the speed than the less-than-smooth quality. “I felt like I needed birdies when I didn’t,” he said.

Another strong finish belonged to Graeme McDowell, returning to Pebble for the first time since his U.S. Open title in 2010. He closed with a 67.

The two Canadians entered, Mike Weir and Brad Fritsch, missed the cut.

 ?? JEFF GROSS/Getty Images ?? Jimmy Walker reacts after making a birdie putt on the 11th hole during final round action at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro
Am golf tournament in Pebble Beach, Calif. on Sunday.
JEFF GROSS/Getty Images Jimmy Walker reacts after making a birdie putt on the 11th hole during final round action at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro Am golf tournament in Pebble Beach, Calif. on Sunday.

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