Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Abraham Ancer comes out on top of three-man playoff at St. Jude Invitation­al.

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MEMPHIS — When Abraham Ancer glanced at the scoreboard midway through his final round of the St. Jude Invitation­al it was hard to imagine he’d be celebratin­g his first PGA Tour victory in a few hours.

Third-round leader Harris English was at 20 under. Ancer, playing the 10th hole, was five strokes behind at TPC Southwind.

“I said to [my caddie], ‘Harris is running away with it, I’ve got to make some birdies, I’ve got to make a move,’ ” Ancer said.

The 30-year-old Mexican player didn’t run off a string of birdies, but he played steady, bogey-free golf and won his first title — in his 121st start — beating Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama and Sam Burns with a 6-foot birdie putt on the second hole of a playoff.

“It was a dream come true to win on the PGA Tour,” Ancer said.

Ancer won the World Golf Championsh­ips event after Burns’ 5 1/2-foot putt — on the same line as Ancer’s — lipped out.

“This is surreal,” said Ancer, a former University of Oklahoma player who was born in McAllen, Texas. “I felt I left so many shots out there on the back nine, but you never know.”

Ancer, who finished second at the Wells Fargo Championsh­ip in May, played more aggressive­ly on the second extra trip down the par4 18th.

“I went right at it and the shot played perfectly in my mind and it came out just how I pictured it,” he said.

English, the leader after each of the first three rounds, faltered on the back nine to give Ancer, Burns and Matsuyama a chance.

English made a double-bogey 5 at No. 11 after hitting his tee shot in the water.

“I played good on the front nine and just kind of hit a road bump on 11,” he said. “I got the wind [reading] wrong and it kind of went downhill from there.”

Ancer closed with a 2-under 68 to match Matsuyama and Burns at 16-under 264. Matsuyama shot a 63, and Burns had a 64. English, the 2013 champion at TPC Southwind, was a stroke back after a 73.

On the first extra hole, Ancer, Burns and Matsuyama, coming off a bronze-medal playoff loss in the Tokyo Olympics, made decent runs at birdies. Matsuyama had the shortest attempt — from 20 feet — and it nearly went in the cup before lipping out.

“It’s tough to lose in a playoff,” Matsuyama said. “But I wasn’t able to hit the fairway with either tee shot [in the playoff]. I did my best.”

English was seeking the fifth title of his career — and third this season — but collapsed on the back nine. Ahead by two strokes at 20 under at the turn, he played the back nine in 5 over. He missed a 13-foot birdie putt on 18.

Ancer only made one birdie on the back nine.

“It was definitely a surprise to win,” Ancer said. “I couldn’t believe I was tied for the lead on [No. 16]. I thought I was four behind. But you never know in golf.”

Bryson DeChambeau, two strokes behind English after a thirdround 63, had a 74 to tie for eighth at 12 under. He missed the Olympics after testing positive for covid-19.

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 ?? (AP/John Amis) ?? Abraham Ancer earned his first PGA Tour victory Sunday after winning a playoff at the WGC-St. Jude Invitation­al at TPC Southwind in Memphis.
(AP/John Amis) Abraham Ancer earned his first PGA Tour victory Sunday after winning a playoff at the WGC-St. Jude Invitation­al at TPC Southwind in Memphis.

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