Albany Times Union

Thomas rallies, wins in playoff

Matches record at PGA Championsh­ip by erasing 7-shot deficit

- By Doug Ferguson

Justin Thomas is a major champion when he least expected it.

Thomas matched a PGA Championsh­ip record Sunday when he rallied from a sevenshot deficit at Southern Hills, and then saved his most exquisite shot-making for a threehole playoff to defeat Will Zalatoris.

He closed with a 3-under 67, matching the low score of a final round made more difficult by nerves than the wind. He seized control in the playoff with a 3-wood to 35 feet on the 301yard 17th hole for a two-putt birdie.

He tapped in for par and stood erect with a smile, a mixture of joy and disbelief.

“I was asked early in the week what lead is safe and I said, ‘No lead,’” Thomas said. “I can’t believe I found myself in a playoff.”

Thomas needed plenty of help, and Mito Pereira provided it in a tragic finish. The 27-year-old from Chile, playing in only his second major, took a one-shot

lead to the final hole and drove into a creek to make double bogey.

It was the first time since Phil Mickelson at Winged Foot in the 2006 U.S. Open that a player lost a one-shot lead in the final hole to lose a major.

Zalatoris looked like he had thrown away his chances for a first major — and first PGA Tour victory — when he three-putted from just outside 20 feet on the 16th hole. But he responded with a birdie from the bunker at the 17th and holed an 8-foot par putt on the 18th for a 71.

He joined Thomas at 5-under 275, and they played on when Pereira faltered.

Thomas, who had gone 14 months since his last victory at The Players Championsh­ip last year, now has a PGA Tour victory in each of his last eight years and moves to No. 5 in the world.

John Mahaffey in the 1978 PGA Championsh­ip at Oakmont was the other player to come from seven shots behind on the final day. He also won in a playoff over Tom Watson and Jerry Pate.

Thomas was still seven shots behind when he made his remarkable run, a mixture of key birdies and keeping mistakes off his card. It started with a 65-foot birdie putt from just short of the green to a back pin on the par-3 11th. He edged closer with an 18-foot birdie on the next hole.

He was lurking, while the leading pack behind him was leaking oil.

Zalatoris and Cameron Young each caught Pereira, ever so briefly. But all of them found trouble in the rough and in the sand.

Thomas missed a 10-foot birdie on 18 but got a reprieve from Pereira, who was on the cusp of becoming Chile’s first major champ until it all came undone with one swing.

 ?? Ross Kinnaird / Getty Images ?? Justin Thomas captured his second major title and 15th career PGA Tour victory on Sunday.
Ross Kinnaird / Getty Images Justin Thomas captured his second major title and 15th career PGA Tour victory on Sunday.

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