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Bradley in late season surge

BRIDGESTON­E WIN GIVES AMERICAN TIMELY BOOST FOR PGA CHAMPIONSH­IP DEFENCE

- —Reuters

There is something about the latter half of the golf season that suits in-form Keegan Bradley to a tee and he plans to use that to his advantage for his PGA Championsh­ip title defence this week.

Twelve months ago, the-then PGA Tour rookie clinched his first major title with a play-off victory over fellow American Jason Dufner, the highlight of a storming finish to his maiden campaign on the US circuit.

Bradley ended his 2011 season with seven top-15 places in 28 starts, five of them — including two wins — coming in the last five months. He also triumphed at the elite four-man PGA Grand Slam of Golf in October.

The Vermont native has already recorded seven top-15s in 2012, the most recent a stunning one-shot victory at the WGC-Bridgeston­e Invitation­al on Sunday, which has given him the perfect build-up to the year’s final major championsh­ip.

“I’m trying to do the exact same stuff as last year,” Bradley said of his preparatio­ns for tomorrow’s opening round on the ultra-long Ocean Course at Kiawah Island Golf Resort.

Everything constant

“The biggest key is to keep everything constant, what I’ve always done, and I feel as though I’m doing that.

“About this time last year is when I really started to get it rolling. I went on a sevenmonth stretch of great golf. I love these golf courses at the end of the year. I love the atmosphere of major championsh­ips.”

At last year’s PGA Championsh­ip, Bradley became the first player to claim a grand slam crown in his maiden major start since fellow American Ben Curtis at the 2003 British Open.

“It does seem sometimes like a dream,” Bradley said while reflecting on his breakthrou­gh victory at the game’s highest level. “I’m not able to watch the replays of the PGA. I get too nervous.

“Part of me is amazed that it happened. I think back on it and about how different my life would be if I didn’t win that PGA or if I lost that playoff. It’s kind of a brutal thing to think about.”

While Bradley’s status as a golfer has soared since that heady afternoon a year ago at a sun-splashed Atlanta Athletic Club, he says his private life has remained exactly the same.

“It’s not changed at all off the golf course with my buddies and my friends,” the 26-year-old added. “I enjoy all that comes with winning major championsh­ips and tourna-

PGA champion

ments, but I try to keep everything the same.

“There are specific things that have changed dramatical­ly, but I try to keep my life the same. I’m the same kid that grew up in Boston and Vermont that I am now.”

If the allure of winning major titles can be like a drug for the game’s best players, Bradley has certainly become an instant addict. “The feeling of winning a major is something that’s the most unbelievab­le feeling, and as a player, you crave that,” said the slender American, a nephew of LPGA great and World Golf Hall of Famer Pat Bradley.

“So I really want to focus in on contending and winning majors. This was a tough year for me because of playing in my first Masters, US Open and British Open but now I’ve got that behind me.

“I think the next go-around of all those majors, I’ll be able to really start focusing in on contending and playing well, because I think they all suit my game pretty well.”

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 ??  ?? Way to go Keegan Bradley celebrates after making a par putt on the 18th hole to win the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al golf tournament at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio, on Sunday.
AP
Way to go Keegan Bradley celebrates after making a par putt on the 18th hole to win the Bridgeston­e Invitation­al golf tournament at Firestone Country Club in Akron, Ohio, on Sunday. AP

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