New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Cantlay wins PGA Tour player of the year award over Rahm

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Patrick Cantlay closed out another victory, this time without hitting a shot.

Cantlay was voted PGA Tour player of the year by his peers, capturing the Jack Nicklaus Award that could be seen as a referendum on how players value winning the FedEx Cup.

His solid year became so much more over the final two weeks of the season when Cantlay won a sixhole playoff at the BMW Championsh­ip over Bryson DeChambeau and then captured the FedEx Cup with a 1-shot victory over

Jon Rahm in the Tour Championsh­ip.

“The fact that it’s voted on by my fellow PGA Tour players, I think that means a lot to me,” Cantlay said Tuesday. “It wasn’t something that I necessaril­y thought was on the radar middle of the year, but then I closed really well and played a lot of really nice golf towards the end.”

It presumably was a tight race over Rahm, the No. 1 player in the world who won the PGA Tour money title and the Vardon Trophy for the lowest scoring average.

The PGA Tour, however, does not reveal the final vote or even how many players voted, wanting the focus to be more on who won instead of who didn’t.

But it was hard to separate the two on the golf course and on paper.

Cantlay had four victories last season, twice as many as anyone else, and he wound up winning the FedEx Cup and its $15 million prize.

One of those victories was the Memorial, where Rahm tied the 54-hole tournament record and had a 6-shot lead when he was notified he had a positive COVID-19 test and was forced to withdraw. Cantlay wound up beating Collin Morikawa in a playoff.

Another title was the

Tour Championsh­ip, where Cantlay began at 10-under par with a 2-shot lead because of his No. 1 seed in the FedEx Cup standings.

Rahm began the tournament 4 shots behind and finished one back of Cantlay.

Cantlay’s other victory was against a strong field at the Zozo Championsh­ip, where he closed with a 65 at Sherwood Country Club to beat Rahm and Justin Thomas.

The BMW Championsh­ip was as memorable as any, particular­ly because of so many clutch putts Cantlay made over the final eight holes, six of them in a playoff at Caves Valley. He came away with the moniker “Patty Ice” that week, and it seems to have stuck.

“I obviously, going forward, will take a lot of those experience­s and memories that I had from the last two weeks, because I think drawing on those victories is really powerful,” he said.

A year ago, Cantlay came up one putt short of being among the top 30 to reach the Tour Championsh­ip. He wrote that off to a strange season that featured no golf for three months because of the pandemic, and then followed with a breakthrou­gh year.

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