The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

UGA alum Harris English wins Travelers Championsh­ip,

Ex-bulldog outlasts sudden death that ties as 2nd-longest.

- By Jimmy Golen

CROMWELL, CONN. — Former Georgia Bulldog Harris English birdied the eighth hole of sudden death to win the Travelers Champi- onship on Sunday, beating Kramer Hickok after both birdied the final hole of regulation to force the playoff. It matched the second-longest sudden-death playoff in PGA Tour history.

English shot a 5-under 65 to finish the fourth round at 13 under, then made a 5-foot putt on the seventh trip down the 18th hole of the day. Hickok had missed a 36-foot birdie putt and finished the playoff with eight consecutiv­e pars.

T he tour record for a sudden death playoff is 11

holes in the 1949 Motor City Open, when Lloyd Mangrum and Cary Middlecoff were declared co-winners by mutual agreement due to darkness; four other events have reached an eighth playoff hole. The eight-hole playoff was a record for the tour

nament, which went seven holes in 1961 (Ted Kroll) and again in ’62 (Bob Goalby), when it was known as the Insurance City Open.

It was the second win this year and the fourth career victory for English, who finished third at the U.S. Open last week — and fourth in

the pandemic-delayed U.S. Open in September. He won $1,368,000 and 500 Fedex Cup points, moving into sec- ond in the standings.

English sank a 28-footer on the 72nd hole to emerge from a three-way tie and finish at 13 under. Then he headed to the range to stay warm in case Hickock, who was minus-12 with two holes to play, could catch him. The 29-year-old Texan, who had never won on the PGA Tour, couldn’t convert a 39-foot birdie putt on the 17th, but he knocked in a nine-footer for birdie on No. 18 to match English.

They played 18 again — twice — and parred it again — twice. On to No. 17, then 18, then 17, then 18, then 18 again: All pars. Hickok lipped out on two long birdie putts

that would have won it; on the sixth playoff hole, English missed a seven-foot birdie putt to win.

On the final trip down the 438-yard par 4, Hickok put his second shot 28 feet from the pin and two-putted. English landed his approach 16 feet away and made birdie.

Hickok has never won on the PGA Tour. The sec- ond-place finish was his best ever, topping a tie for eighth in the 2018 Bermuda Cham- pionship that was his only other time in the top 10.

Four players were tied at 12 under after Bubba Watson bogeyed the 14th. But the three-time Travelers winner played the last five holes at six

over to drop out of the chase. Watson’s collapse left Hickok — his 54-hole co-leader — on top at 12 under with English and Marc Leishman, who had finished his round with a 64 two hours earlier.

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO/AP ?? Former Georgia Bulldog Harris English reacts Sunday after winning the Travelers Championsh­ip on the eighth playoff hole at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Conn.
JOHN MINCHILLO/AP Former Georgia Bulldog Harris English reacts Sunday after winning the Travelers Championsh­ip on the eighth playoff hole at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Conn.

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