The Sun (Malaysia)

Thomas gets his wish at St Jude

…as he outduels Koepka at WGC to reclaims world No. 1 ranking

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JUSTIN THOMAS reclaimed the world No. 1 ranking yesterday by outdueling defending champion Brooks Koepka down the stretch to win the WGC St Jude Invitation­al by three strokes.

Thomas, who began the day four shots off the lead, fired a 5-under 65 final round to thwart Koepka’s repeat bid and take the title at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, on a 72-hole total of 13-under 267.

“It means a lot, especially with how I felt like I did it,” Thomas said. “In the past, I struggled with coming from behind. I got wrapped up in how far I was behind and how many people.”

The 27-year-old American became the third-youngest US PGA Tour player in the past 60 years to reach 13 career wins, behind Tiger Woods and Jack Nicklaus and just ahead of Rory McIlroy.

Koepka, who seeks a third consecutiv­e PGA Championsh­ip victory this week in San Francisco, closed with a double bogey after finding water off the 18th tee and slid into sharing second on 270 with US compatriot­s Daniel Berger and Phil Mickelson and England’s Tom Lewis.

Thomas, the 2017 PGA Championsh­ip winner, jumped from third past McIlroy and top-ranked Spaniard Jon Rahm to retake world No. 1, a spot he held for four weeks in 2018.

“It was a hardfought day, but it meant a lot,” Thomas said.

Three weeks ago, Thomas squandered a three-stroke lead with three holes to play, two bogeys dropping him into a playoff with Collin Morikawa that he lost.

“I feel like I learned a lot from that,” he said. “I just didn’t get ahead of myself anytime those last two, three holes, where I felt like my mind was kind of wandering and maybe thinking about winning.

“I basically just told myself to shut up and figure out what you’re doing because I could lose that tournament just as easily as I won it.

“I was really proud of myself to stay in the moment and get it done,” he said.

A back-nine shootout saw Americans Koepka, Thomas, Berger and 54hole leader Brendon Todd deadlocked with Lewis for the lead on 11under, while Australian Jason Day, American Chez Reavie and England’s Matthew Fitzpatric­k were on

10under. Koepka sank a birdie putt from just inside 10 feet at the par-4 13th to seize the lead at 12under.

Thomas found the left rough at 15 but blasted his approach to six feet and made the birdie putt to match Koepka for the lead.

Thomas then sent his tee shot way right at the par-5 16th, but recovered by blasting to the low rough just left of the fairway and dropped his approach three feet from the cup, tapping in a birdie to claim the lead alone at 13-under.

“I got unbelievab­ly lucky,” Thomas said. “Somehow, that calmed me down. You usually only get lucky like that when you win the tournament.

“Luckily, I hung on and stayed patient and

positive.” – AFP and Verona coach Ivan Juric followed him for his protests. Verona’s Sofyan Amrabat and Genoa’s Francesco Cassata were also redcarded for clashing off the ball in stoppage time.

“Safety was our primary goal. We worked hard for this and we won all the direct clashes (against struggling sides),” said goalkeeper Mattia Perin.

“We clinched 28 points since the coach (Davide Nicola) arrived (with 21 matchdays left). Genoa is a glorious club and we are happy to have kept it in Serie A.”

Remaining action saw Udinese edge Sassuolo 1-0, Fiorentina beat SPAL 3-1 and Bologna coach Sinisa Mihajlovic tallied his 300th Serie A game as his side drew 1-1 with Torino. – dpa

 ??  ?? Justin Thomas poses with the trophy with his father, Mike Thomas, after winning the World Golf Championsh­ip FedEx St Jude Invitation­al. – AFPPIX
Justin Thomas poses with the trophy with his father, Mike Thomas, after winning the World Golf Championsh­ip FedEx St Jude Invitation­al. – AFPPIX

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