Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Rahm’s the man; Brooks struggles

Only two players have reached the summit quicker than the Basque country-raised Rahm, who becomes the second Spaniard after Seve Ballestero­s in 1988 to get to number one

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HONG KONG (AFP) — It would be a fair assumption that not many golfers have won a US PGA Tour event by three shots after carding 41 on the back nine in the final round. And certainly none have done it to rise to world number one.

But that’s exactly what Spain’s Jon Rahm did in brutal conditions at Jack Nicklaus’s Memorial Tournament at Muirfield Village in Ohio, on Sunday.

In the process he became the third fastest player to reach the top ranking — four years and 27 days after turning pro.

Only two players have reached the summit quicker than the Basque country-raised Rahm, who becomes the second Spaniard after Seve Ballestero­s in 1988 to get to number one.

Jordan Spieth managed it in two years and 245 days in 2015, a year in which he won three of his four majors.

He returned to action last month claiming the three-month coronaviru­s shutdown had allowed extensive rehab and that he was fully fit once more.

But that was a slow crawl compared to Tiger Woods who turned pro in August 1996 and 290 days later, on 16 June 1997, reached the pinnacle of the sport he would dominate.

One sobering thought for the 25-year-old Rahm is that he will need to remain at number one until September 2033 if he is to spend more time at the top than Woods, who has enjoyed a monumental 683 weeks — 13 years and 49 days — at the summit.

Battle of wounded knee

Brooks Koepka has won the US PGA Championsh­ip for the past two seasons but the chances of the big hitter notching an unpreceden­ted hat-trick next month at the reschedule­d event at San Francisco’s Harding

Park do not look great.

Koepka, then world number one, limped out of his defence of the PGA Tour’s CJ Cup in South Korea after two rounds in October with left knee trouble and it is clear that all has not been well since.

He returned to action last month claiming the three-month coronaviru­s shutdown had allowed extensive rehab and that he was fully fit once more.

But Koepka has managed just one top 10 since the restart, a seventh place at the RBC Heritage, and has slid to sixth in the world rankings.

Koepka tied for 62nd at the Memorial Tournament last weekend after an ugly Sunday 80 and then admitted that an MRI scan on the troublesom­e knee showed, worryingly, “nothing has changed.”

No player has won the US P GA Championsh­ip three years in a row since it became a stroke play event in 1958, a record that looks likely to remain intact.

The great Walter Hagen won it four years in a row when it was a match play event from 1924-27.

The only other modern player to win it two years running is — no prizes for guessing — Tiger Woods. But he’s done it twice: 1999 to 2000 and 2006 to 2007.

Health or major?

One player who will be missing from the year’s delayed first major is England’s former world number one Lee Westwood, who was in top form before the covid shutdown.

The 47-year-old won the Abu Dhabi Championsh­ip in January and tied fourth at Honda Classic in the US on 1 March.

Westwood will host the British Masters in Newcastle beginning Wednesday, the first of six events dubbed the “UK Swing” on the revamped European Tour schedule.

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