Boston Herald

All in Day’s work

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Jason Day has plenty of rivals at the moment, but very few peers.

Day’s runaway victory yesterday in the BMW Championsh­ip vaulted him to No. 1 in the world ranking, backing up a boast the then little-known Australian made during a conference call with reporters in 2007 — and for which he was roasted on more than one occasion since.

“I remember sitting on my mom’s bed and thinking that (predicting he’d be No. 1 someday) might not go over too well,” laughed Day, who turns 28 next month. It didn’t. “I expected to get a little bit (of criticism), but not the response that I got from practicall­y everyone,” Day recalled, another championsh­ip trophy poised within arm’s reach. “But it’s good to sit in this chair right now.”

His 2-under, final-round 69 and 22-under total at Conway Farms in Lake Forest, Ill., was good for a 6-shot victory over rookie Daniel Berger. Scott Piercy finished third, 7 strokes back.

The win was Day’s fifth on tour this season and his second in the FedEx Cup playoffs. In addition to leap-frogging Jordan Spieth and Rory McIlroy to claim the top spot in the world ranking, it made him the front-runner in the 30-man field heading to East Lake in Atlanta next weekend for the series finale.

“Whatever Jason Day is doing, or which course he’s playing, it’s ridiculous,” said Danny Lee, who’s at No. 19.

That was hardly an exaggerati­on here.

Day zoomed out to a big lead by shooting 61 and 63 in the first two rounds and was never seriously challenged. If he manages a win in Atlanta, it could make the race for Player of the Year — an award Spieth appeared to lock up by winning the Masters and U.S. Open earlier in the summer — closer than anyone would have anticipate­d just six weeks ago.

But Day has been on an incredible run since narrowly missing at the British Open. In his six starts since, he has won four times — the Canadian Open, PGA Championsh­ip for his first major and the two FedEx Cup events — and played at a sizzling 101-under par clip.

“I think it might change some people’s minds about (player of the year) if I go ahead and win next week,” he said. “But we can’t deny what Jordan has done in the in the major championsh­ip this year. For a 22-year-old kid to accomplish what he’s done . . . that has been an amazing ride.

“I still think,” Day added a moment later, “it’s him.”

His fellow players aren’t so sure. When Rickie Fowler was asked to pick between the two, he replied, “I’m glad it’s not my decision” — forgetting that he’ll have to cast a ballot at season’s end.

But the battle for No. 1 wasn’t the only drama hanging over the tournament. The quest to make the 30-man field heading to East Lake produced its own share.

Berger will be the only rookie and Harris English shoe-horned himself into the 30th spot with a birdie at the 18th.

On the downside, Daniel Summerhays finished 31st after dunking a tee shot at the par-3 11th, and Justin Thomas lost his chance when Dustin Johnson birdied the final two holes.

Karlberg clips Kaymer

Rikard Karlberg won the Italian Open for his first European Tour title, beating Martin Kaymer with a birdie on the second hole of a playoff in Monza, Italy.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? UNSTOPPABL­E? Jason Day poses with the trophy after his 6-shot victory at the BMW Championsh­ip in Lake Forest, Ill. He leads the FedEx Cup field into the season’s final event, the Tour Championsh­ip.
AP PHOTO UNSTOPPABL­E? Jason Day poses with the trophy after his 6-shot victory at the BMW Championsh­ip in Lake Forest, Ill. He leads the FedEx Cup field into the season’s final event, the Tour Championsh­ip.

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