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Morikawa clutch in finish, playoff to prevail in Ohio

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saw the result.

That covered a lot of territory. Morikawa never looked like the winner until it was over.

Thomas had 10 straight one-putt greens, the last one a 25-foot eagle putt on the par-five 15th for the three-shot lead with three holes to play. And while he made two bogeys for a 69 that allowed for a playoff, he had reason to think it was over when he made a 50-foot birdie putt from the back of the 18th green.

“I never assumed it was over,” Thomas said. “Percentage­s would say that it heavily is close to being that way .... I just tried to keep my head down and think he’s going to make it, but hoping he’s not, selfishly, but he did.”

Thomas missed a 10-footer for par in regulation, and a putt close to that same line for birdie on the second extra hole. He was done in by a tee shot on No. 10 that wound up in the rough behind a tree, forcing him to pitch out 102 yards short of the green. He missed his 15-foot par putt, leading to Morikawa’s two-putt par and the win.

It was a wild ride for Thomas, too. He started with a two-shot lead, trailed by three after just five holes, made four straight birdies and was ahead by three shots 10 holes later, and ultimately lost in a playoff.

“It’s completely unacceptab­le to give up a three-shot lead with three to go,” Thomas said. “I’m upset, I’m disappoint­ed in myself. But at the end of the day it’s over with now, and I just need to take some time this afternoon and tonight to build on it and figure out what I can do better going into next week.”

They return in four days for the Memorial on a Muirfield Village course expected to be as fast as a US Open.

This was a big win for the 23-year-old Morikawa, who in his 13 months since graduating from Cal already has establishe­d a reputation for a high level of consistenc­y. His only victory was at an opposite-field event last summer. He beat a field at the Workday Charity Open that featured five of the top 10 in the world.

“This is a huge kind of stepping stone,” said Morikawa, who goes to No. 13 in the world, one spot ahead of Tiger Woods. “We got No. 1 out of the way. We got No. 2. Let the gates just open and let’s keep going.”

AP

 ??  ?? IT’S a big win for the 23-year-old Collin Morikawa, who in his 13 months since graduating from Cal already has establishe­d a reputation for a high level of consistenc­y.
IT’S a big win for the 23-year-old Collin Morikawa, who in his 13 months since graduating from Cal already has establishe­d a reputation for a high level of consistenc­y.

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