The Oklahoman

Burns’ rise hasn’t come as a shock

- Adam Schupak Golfweek USA TODAY Network

As a PGA Tour rookie in 2019, Sam Burns started his season at the Fortinet Championsh­ip in Napa, California, and he and wife Caroline and fellow Tour pro Kramer Hickock and his better half were sipping wine at the tasting room of winery Silver Oak when they each decided to buy a double magnum of its iconic cabernet sauvignon.

Burns and Hickok made a pact that they’d save it and crack it open as soon as they won for the first time in the big leagues.

“Every time I saw that bottle, I’d think ‘gosh, I really want to open that,’” Burns recalled.

It took 76 Tour starts — until April 2021 at the Valspar Championsh­ip near Tampa — but Burns finally claimed his maiden victory and as soon as he got home they celebrated with Silver Oak.

“A bunch of friends came over and helped us finish it off,” Burns said with a smile.

Burns has kept on winning, including the 2022 Charles Schwab Challenge, erasing a seven-stroke deficit with a Sunday 65 to force a playoff and poured in a 38-foot putt on the first extra hole to beat his best buddy, then World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

For those who have followed Burns, his rise in the game isn’t the least bit surprising. Perhaps the one person who didn’t recognize his raw promise was his dear, old dad, Todd, who had to be convinced by the father of a fellow local golfer that his son was good enough to compete on a larger stage outside of their hometown’s city limits.

“There was a local junior tournament in Shreveport (Louisiana) and we signed Sam up for it,” Todd Burns told the Shreveport Times. “The dad of Phillip Barbaree came over to me after the tournament and said, ‘You need to let Sam play in national competitio­ns.’ I said, ‘Really? I don’t think he’s ready for that. He said, ‘Oh, he’s ready for that.’”

Ready enough that he would go on to be named the 2014 AJGA Rolex Player of the Year, an early indicator that he was destined to be a PGA Tour winner.

Brad Pullin, a PGA teaching profession­al and director of golf instructio­n at Squire Creek Country Club, is the longtime swing coach for Burns. The first time Pullin watched Burns swing, he had one thought: “Don’t screw it up.”

One of the earliest indication­s that Burns had the moxie of a winner was at the 2018 Honda Classic when Burns was paired with Tiger Woods in the final round. When asked if he had ever played with his childhood hero, Burns answered, “Only on the video game.”

“I don’t even remember feeling the club in my hands,” Burns said of his opening tee shot. “And then he became somebody I had to beat.”

Burns settled quickly and even had the chutzpah to say to Woods as they walked down the first fairway, “Man, it’s crazy all these people who came out to watch me today, isn’t it?”

That wasn’t the only burn from Burns. He beat Woods straight up, shooting a bogey-free 68 to Tiger’s 70.

Count Billy Horschel, who has partnered with Burns at the Zurich Classic since 2021, as a believer that Burns is made for the biggest moments. Horschel and Burns finished T-4 in their first goround as teammates in New Orleans, which nearly had Burns breaking open the double magnum of Silver Oak.

“If it was an individual tournament, he’d have won by five,” Horschel said. “I apologized. I said I didn’t hold up my end of the bargain. I said, ‘You’re playing so great right now. If you do what you did this week, you’re going to have a chance to win.’ In my head I was like, he’s going to win next week.”

Burns did just that and he’s been winning in bunches ever since. He tacked on his fifth career PGA Tour title in March at the WGC Dell Technologi­es Match Play Championsh­ip, besting Scheffler again in extra holes — this time in the semifinals – before dusting Cameron Young in the final by a score of 6 and 5. In doing so, Burns became one of only six players with five victories in the last three years on the Tour. It’s pretty good company to be mentioned in the same breath with Scheffler, Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy, Max Homa and Jon Rahm.

“I think you go from hoping that you can win or thinking that you can win to believing it when it actually happens,” Burns said.

For Burns, it doesn’t get much sweeter than winning at Colonial Country Club, a victory that held great significance since he had attended the tournament on multiple occasions as a kid. That included joining David Toms and his family on a trip to Fort Worth and witnessing the 13time PGA Tour winner’s final victory in person at the 2011 Charles Schwab Challenge. Burns still hasn’t forgotten leaning against the rope line and craning his neck as Toms holed a wedge for eagle at the 11th hole.

“That was pretty cool to see,” Burns said.

Burns broke into the top 10 in the world not long ago and winning major championsh­ips are next on his agenda, but as long as he plays it will be hard to top his Sunday surge at Colonial. His seven-stroke comeback matched Nick Price in 1994 for the biggest in a final round to win at Hogan’s Alley.

“I kind of joked with him at the end, he ruined all the fun making a 40-footer,” Scheffler said. “It was definitely good to see him win. He’s obviously a great player and he’s got a bright future ahead.”

Burns went on to qualify for a second straight Tour Championsh­ip and made his debut on the U.S. Presidents Cup team at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte. He and Scheffler should have a few more back-nine tussles and it wouldn’t surprise anyone for them to require extra holes once again to settle the score.

 ?? ?? Sam Burns tees off on the 16th hole during a practice round for the PGA Championsh­ip on May 16 at Oak Hill Country Club. ADAM CAIRNS/USA TODAY SPORTS
Sam Burns tees off on the 16th hole during a practice round for the PGA Championsh­ip on May 16 at Oak Hill Country Club. ADAM CAIRNS/USA TODAY SPORTS

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