USA TODAY International Edition

Birdieing Burns rallies to win first PGA Tour title

- Adam Schupak

PALM HARBOR, Fla. – The third time was the charm for Sam Burns.

The 24- year- old had squandered two previous 54- hole leads this season, but he made three birdies on the closing nine holes to erase a one- stroke deficit at the turn and claim his first PGA Tour title at the Valspar Championsh­ip by three strokes over Keegan Bradley.

“I always felt that you had to play perfect golf to win,” Burns said. “I always felt that you had to play your absolute best on a Sunday to win. And after those experience­s I realized that it’s not the case. I was trying to do too much.”

In his 76th Tour start, Burns did more than enough, making six birdies at Innisbrook’s Copperhead Course and signing for a 3- under- par 68 and a 72hole total of 17- under 267, one shy of the tournament record.

Burns, who hadn’t won profession­ally since the Korn Ferry Tour’s 2017 Savannah Golf Championsh­ip, may not have found the winner’s circle as quickly as fellow young guns Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland and Matthew Wolff, but big things have been expected from the former LSU Tiger All- American.

A broken right ankle in July 2019 slowed his progress, but Burns had four top- 10 finishes this season entering tournament week. He blew a five- stroke lead after 36 holes at the Vivint Houston Open in November and was on the verge of winning his first title at the Genesis Invitation­al in February, building a three- stroke lead with nine holes to go but made three bogeys in a four- hole stretch and settled for a third- place finish. He has held the lead for more rounds than any other player on Tour this season with nine and was tied with Jordan Spieth for the most 54- hole leads this season. For all of his immense ability, there were beginning to be questions if Burns could close out a win.

“He’s a young guy who needs to take it to the next level,” PGA Tour Radio’s Dennis Paulson said. “He’s proven that he belongs on the PGA Tour to everybody but I think himself.”

Burns proved his mettle, going toeto- toe with Bradley, the former PGA Championsh­ip winner, in a final- round pairing that felt very much like match play. Hovland, who shot 65, the low round of the day, and Cameron Tringale shared third place at 13 under.

Burns got off to a hot start with birdies at the first two holes to build a twostroke lead, but Bradley refused to back down. When he canned a 16- foot birdie putt from the fringe at the ninth, Bradley held a one- stroke lead at 17 under.

The tournament flipped at two key moments. Burns steered his tee shot left into the trees at the par- 5 11th and was lucky the ball stayed in bounds. He punched back into the fairway, wedged to 15 feet and drained the birdie putt to tie Bradley. “It was definitely a fortunate break,” Burns said. “Sometimes I think it’s just, you got to have a couple of those to win. And that was one of them.”

At the par- 3 13th, Bradley’s hopes sank when he blocked his tee shot to the right and into the pond fronting the green. Bradley leaned on his 8- iron and lowered his head knowing that his chances of ending his nearly three- year winless drought took a serious hit. He made double bogey, shot 71 and settled for his best finish since the 2019 Travelers Championsh­ip.

“I didn’t play my best today, but I hung in there,” Bradley said. “Sam played unbelievab­le and he deserves to win. … I think he’s going to win a lot more tournament­s going forward.”

Burns built as big as a four- stroke lead with birdies at Nos. 14 and 16 and he broke into tears after tapping in his bogey putt at the last hole. “It’s really a dream come true,” he said.

 ?? JULIO AGUILAR/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Sam Burns hoists the Valspar Championsh­ip trophy after claiming his first career PGA Tour title Sunday.
JULIO AGUILAR/ GETTY IMAGES Sam Burns hoists the Valspar Championsh­ip trophy after claiming his first career PGA Tour title Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States