The Commercial Appeal

Fowler rallies to capture Deutsche Bank

- Associated Press

NORTON, Mass. — Rickie Fowler delivered all the right shots Monday at the Deutsche Bank Championsh­ip, and then he delivered some champagne.

He stood near the wood railing overlookin­g a dozen rows of reporters, hoisting an empty bottle in one hand and a microphone in the other.

“Let’s finish off the year right,” Fowler said.

He certainly showed he is capable after a tense win over Henrik Stenson at the TPC Boston.

Trailing by three shots early on the back nine, Fowler rolled in a 40-foot putt on the 14th hole to pull within one and then seized control when Stenson hit a towering tee shot that came down short and into the water for double bogey on the par-3 16th.

That combinatio­n sent Fowler to another big win. He closed with a 3-under 68 for a one-shot victory that assured him of a spot in the top five at the Tour Championsh­ip and a shot at the $10 million bonus in the FedEx Cup.

Fowler won The Players Championsh­ip in a three-hole playoff in May. He won the Scottish Open with three birdies on the last four holes.

“Being in those positions before, I definitely felt very calm out there,” he said. “I knew what I was trying to do. Knew what I had to do. And was very much ready to do it.”

Fowler moved to No. 5 in the world, not quite part of the “Big Three” this year of Jordan Spieth, Rory McIlroy and Jason Day, but on the cusp.

“They’ve clearly played the best out of anyone over the past few months to couple of years,” Fowler said. “So I’m trying to be a small fourth thrown in there. But there’s a lot of other really good young players playing well right now, as well.”

Stenson was a runnerup in a FedEx Cup playoff event for the second straight week.

He holed a 15-foot birdie putt on No. 10 for a threeshot lead. And when Fowler hit a 5-wood to 10 feet for birdie on No. 11 for a twoshot swing, the Swede answered with a 35-foot birdie on the 12th to restore the margin to two shots.

It all changed quickly and dramatical­ly on the par-3 16th.

“I obviously pulled the wrong club on 16 and was trying to get the most out of a 7-iron into the wind and ballooned that one a little bit, and that was the crucial mistake. Making double there was really a killer,” Stenson said. “I tried to get those two shots back or at least one to force a playoff on the last two holes and couldn’t manage to do it.”

The final hour was tense. Fowler didn’t make any birdies after his long putt on the 14th, but he didn’t have to. Where he thrived was off the tee and with his iron play into the greens. Swinging freely, he was never really out of position until he went just long of the green on the par-5 closing hole with his second shot.

He played it safe with a putter to 10 feet, putting pressure on Stenson to the very end.

Fowler finished at 15-under 269 and moved to No. 3 in the FedEx Cup behind Day and Spieth, with Stenson at No. 4 and Bubba Watson at No. 5.

Charley Hoffman bounced back from a 76 to close with a 67 and finish alone in third.

Hunter Mahan closed with a 70 to tie for fourth, moving from No. 91 to No. 52. Mahan is the only player who has never missed a FedEx Cup playoff event since this series began in 2007.

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rickie Fowler (right) took control on the back nine to pass Henrik Stenson (center) to win the Deutsche Bank Championsh­ip on Monday in Norton, Mass. Stenson was a runner-up in a FedEx Cup playoff event for the second straight week.
MICHAEL DWYER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Rickie Fowler (right) took control on the back nine to pass Henrik Stenson (center) to win the Deutsche Bank Championsh­ip on Monday in Norton, Mass. Stenson was a runner-up in a FedEx Cup playoff event for the second straight week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States