Vancouver Sun

Kaymer survives wild finish to win Players

- DOUG FERGUSON

PONTE VEDRA BEACH, Fla. — Martin Kaymer produced one of the most unlikely pars on the 17th green at the TPC Sawgrass without ever going in the water. It carried him to a one- shot victory Sunday in The Players Championsh­ip that was emotional in so many ways.

Kaymer nearly blew a threeshot lead after a 90- minute rain delay until he holed a 30- foot par putt on the famous island green. He got up- and- down with his putter from short of the 18th green for one last par and a 1- under 71.

Jim Furyk closed with a 66 — he had to wait after the rain delay to rap in a 3- foot par putt — and it looked as though it might be enough to force a playoff, or even win outright when the 29- year- old German began to crumble. Furyk had to settle for a runner- up finish for the second straight week.

Jordan Spieth, tied with Kaymer going into the final round, made his first bogey of the tournament on the fifth hole, and plenty more followed. He closed with a 74.

The typical stress that Sawgrass brings on Sunday was contained to the final hour, and it was almost more than Kaymer could take. The German made double bogey from an aggressive play behind a pine tree on the 15th. He nervously chose putter from a collection area on the par- 5 16th that cost him a chance at birdie.

Nothing could top the 17th hole, the most exciting on the Stadium Course.

Kaymer had a one- shot lead. His tee shot cleared the water and landed on a mound just over the bunker, but it mysterious­ly spun hard back toward the front of the green and looked as if it might go into the water until it settled into the clumpy collar a foot from the bulkhead. His chip was weak, and he still had 30 feet down a ridge with a sharp swing to the right. He made the putt, pumping his fist in a rare show of emotion.

His putt from the fairway on 18 settled 3 feet behind the hole, and Kaymer was as much relieved as excited when he knocked it in.

A former world No. 1 and major champion, Kaymer nearly choked up when asked about winning on Mother’s Day. His mother, Rina, died of cancer in 2008 shortly after Kaymer won the BMW Internatio­nal Open in Germany.

He has a sunflower — her favourite flower — on his golf bag.

“My mother was always there to be affectiona­te and show us love,” Kaymer said in a taped interview with NBC Sports. “When my mom passed away, that stopped. We had enough when we were younger. Mother’s Day is always a nice day. I hope a lot of kids show their mothers we love them.”

Interviewe­d on the 18th green, so dark that the clubhouse was glowing from the outdoor lights, Kaymer said brother Phillip sent him a text that morning which he described as “very emotional.”

“It’s a good day for all of us,” he said.

 ?? RICHARD HEATHCOTE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Martin Kaymer hits his tee shot on the 17th hole, the emotional and deciding hole during his Players Championsh­ip win.
RICHARD HEATHCOTE/ GETTY IMAGES Martin Kaymer hits his tee shot on the 17th hole, the emotional and deciding hole during his Players Championsh­ip win.

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