The Guardian (USA)

‘Power of positive thinking’: Jon Rahm rebounds from Covid to win US Open

- Bryan Armen Graham at Torrey Pines

Jon Rahm was in the form of his career earlier this month when he was forced to withdraw from the Memorial golf tournament at Muirfield Village due to a positive coronaviru­s test while leading by six strokes after 54 holes. A period of self-isolation that limited his preparatio­ns for the US Open did nothing to change that.

On Sunday, the fiery 26-year-old whose temperamen­t at times has obscured his ample talent became the first Spaniard to capture America’s national championsh­ip with a pair of heart-stopping birdie putts on the 71st and 72nd holes, winning by one shot over perennial bridesmaid Louis Oosthuizen while living up to oddsmakers’ billing as the pre-tournament favourite on a frenetic afternoon at Torrey Pines Golf Course.

“This is the power of positive thinking,” said Rahm, whose first major title will return him to No 1 in next week’s world rankings. “I was never resentful for anything that happened, and I don’t blame anybody. It’s been a difficult year and unfortunat­ely Covid is a reality in this world and has affected a lot of people.

“I had the best possible hand because nobody in my family got sick, I barely had any symptoms. But we have lost lots of people back home. I know some people may say [what happened at Memorial] was unfair, but it had to be done. We have to be aware of what is happening in this world.”

The world No 3 started Sunday’s final round as one of 13 players within four shots of the lead, a logjam filled with rising ingenues and proven winners. As one contender after another fell out of contention, Rahm played steady, effective golf up and down the 7,685-yard South Course until moving to strike in the final reel.

Trailing Oosthuizen by one shot, Rahm curled in a left-to-right downhill putt from 25 feet on the 17th hole for birdie. Then he got up and down from a greenside bunker on the par-five 18th, sinking an 18-foot birdie putt for a oneshot lead on the same green where he made a 60-footer for eagle to win his first PGA Tour title four years ago.

An agonising wait followed as Rahm decamped to the practice range to stay warm for a potential two-hole playoff. But when Oosthuizen bogeyed the 17th after sending a tee shot into the canyon to fall two shots adrift, then failed to chip in for eagle from 69 yards on the 18th fairway, Rahm could finally celebrate with wife Kelley and threemonth-old son Kepa on a Father’s Day he won’t soon forget.

“I feel like coming in here without having practiced much relaxed me a little bit,” said Rahm, who spent the morning watching a Call of Duty League match before arriving at the course for his 12.22pm tee time. “I thought, you know what, in case I play bad, I have an excuse. I have a bailout in case. I can convince myself, hey, I had Covid.

“But I feel like it relaxed me a little bit, and ever since the Sunday at the PGA, I felt a bit of a shift on the golf course mentally. I still had that grit, but almost like each miss bothered me less. I couldn’t tell you why.

“I believe it’s because I really set out myself to be an example for my son that he would be proud of, and I’ve done some stuff in the past on the golf course that I’m not proud of, and I wish I could eliminate it.”

The US Open’s return to Torrey Pines was always going to suffer by comparison­s to the first and only other time it was staged on this oceanside track in 2008, when Tiger Woods outduelled Rocco Mediate in a 19-hole play-off while playing on a double stress fracture and torn anterior cruciate ligament that required surgery the next week.

The atmosphere for this year’s contest was at least partially neutered by the reduced attendance of about 13,000 spectators each day, roughly a quarter of the turnout from 13 years ago, despite California’s wholesale rollback of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns on crowd gatherings earlier this week. And aside from a handful of

compelling human-interest stories – the fairytale emergence of English journeyman and improbable halfway leader Richard Bland, the young Matthew Wolff’s return to major contention amid a uncommonly public grappling with mental health – there was little particular­ly memorable about the golf itself through most of the first three days, prompting familiar grumblings among the sport’s chattering class over Torrey Pines’ fitness as a US Open venue.

That all turned in the dying stages of Saturday’s third round when Canada’s Mackenzie Hughes made a 60foot eagle putt on the 13th hole and Oosthuizen sank a 50-foot eagle putt on the 18th, setting off roars that evoked Woods’ eagles on the same holes all those years ago while moving them into a three-way tie for the 54-hole lead alongside Russell Henley, the rocksteady 32-year-old from Georgia who swore off Torrey Pines seven years ago but may now be reassessin­g his decision.

A US Open curiously devoid of excitement was suddenly bursting with possibilit­y, setting the stage for a final round as wide open as the yawning canyon separating the South and North Courses. Thirteen players were separated by four shots as the final group teed off on Sunday afternoon – and eight of them within three – a star-studded peloton that included five major champions.

None of the overnight leaders at five-under-par were considered favorites to claim the winner’s share of roughly $2.25m (£1.59m) from a $12.5m purse, the highest among profession­al golf’s four bedrock events: not Oosthuizen, the 2010 Open champion who can boast runner-up finishes at the other three majors, including last month’s US PGA Championsh­ip; not Hughes, the unheralded Canadian who entered the tournament on a run of five straight missed cuts; not Henley, the 10year PGA Tour veteran who has won three titles on the circuit but none since 2017.

And it wasn’t long before each of them dropped strokes on the front nine, only intensifyi­ng the crowding atop the leaderboar­d. After early charges by former major champions Bryson DeChambeau, Rory McIlroy and Collin Morikawa, no fewer than nine players were in the lead at four-under or one stroke back – formidable scores at a tournament in which anything under par is often enough to win.

Others in the mix included Rahm and the Cheltenham-born Paul Casey, who both made up ground on their front nines to move within one shot of the pace. They were joined by the hardchargi­ng Brooks Koepka, the two-time US Open champion who had gone five shots behind with a third-round 71, but got in on Sunday’s fun with birdies on the first, eighth, ninth and 13th holes.

The thinning out began abruptly on the back nine, where almost en masse the glut of contenders began moving in the wrong direction. No hole piled on more punishment than the 222-yard par-three 11th, the most difficult on the South Course, where more than half of the pack was derailed. That’s where things went pear-shaped for Hughes, who carded a double-bogey after his tee shot became lodged in a tree, and

McIlroy, who three-putted to fall three shots off the lead (before double-bogeying the 12th to seal his fate).

Same for the defending champion DeChambeau, less than a half hour after he’d moved into sole possession of the lead at five-under by nearly acing the par-three eighth hole, who ended a streak of 30 straight holes a par or better with a bogey on the 11th. Any lingering hopes of a title defense were dashed with another bogey on 12th followed by a double on 13th – where a streaker briefly interrupte­d play on the fairway before getting lit up by San Diego’s finest. The stunning meltdown was complete long before his tripleboge­y eight on the 17th.

Wolff three-putted on the 12th to drop to one-over and out of the running. Morikawa made a mess of things after finding a thick patch of rough on the par-five 13th, then watched a 12foot putt lip out for a double-bogey seven. Koepka dropped out of contention with bogeys on the 15th and 18th. The carnage benefitted the American Harris English, tied for 14th entering the final round and barely mentioned all day, who was in the clubhouse after making seven birdies in a final-round 68 to go three-under for the week. He finished third.

By the time Oosthuizen made his first birdie of the day on the 10th to move six-under and open a two-stroke lead as Rahm escaped the perilous 11th and 12th holes unscathed, it was an effective two-man race. But for 38year-old from South Africa, a six-time runner-up at the majors since his breakthrou­gh win at the 2010 Open at St Andrews, it was not to be.

“I’m second again,” Oosthuizen lamented. “Look, it’s frustratin­g. It’s disappoint­ing. I’m playing good golf, but winning a major championsh­ip is not just going to happen. You need to go out and play good golf. I played good today, but I didn’t play good enough.

“I feel like I had my shots, I went for it, and that’s what you have to do to win majors. Sometimes it goes your way, and other times it doesn’t.”

 ??  ?? Martin Kaymer tees off on the fourth hole during the final round. Photograph: JD Cuban/ Aflo/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Martin Kaymer tees off on the fourth hole during the final round. Photograph: JD Cuban/ Aflo/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ?? Rory McIlroy reacts on the 18th green. Photograph: Sean M Haffey/Getty Images ??
Rory McIlroy reacts on the 18th green. Photograph: Sean M Haffey/Getty Images

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