Nico Echavarria birdied two of the final three holes to shoot 3-under 67 at Accordia Golf Narashino Country Club on Sunday to secure his second PGA Tour title at the Zozo Championship.
When he won for the first time last year at the Puerto Rico Open, he said the victory proved to himself that he was better than what he thought. Asked what this second win means, he smiled and said, “Proves it a little more now.”
He added: “I don’t think I would’ve gotten this win without the victory in Puerto Rico. I took a lot from that and kept myself calm,” he said.
With just one top 10 this season and three missed cuts in his last four starts, Echavarria was the surprise of the tournament, racing into the lead with a pair of 64s and a 65 to set the 54-hole tournament scoring mark and a two-stroke lead.
Tied for the lead at the 72nd hole, Echavarria reached the par-5 18th in two, leaving himself a 40-foot eagle putt. He lagged to 3 feet and converted the clinching stroke, finishing with a tournament record 20-under 260, to edge Justin Thomas and Max Greyserman by one shot.
Echavarria, a 30-year-old from Colombia, started the final round two ahead and made birdies at Nos. 2 and 7 before a bogey at No. 8 dropped him back into a tie. He reclaimed sole possession of the lead at No. 13, planting his tee shot to 13 feet and canning the downhill, right-to-left breaking birdie putt. He pumped his right fist but one hole later, there was a two-shot swing as he made a sloppy bogey at the par 5 and Greyserman canned a 29-foot birdie putt at No 13. Echavarria answered with another 13-foot birdie at the par-3 16th. Echavarria and Geyserman, who had been partners this season at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans and finished T-4, remained tied until the 72nd hole.
Greyserman missed the fairway at 18 and had to lay up and his birdie putt brned the right edge. He closed in 65 and unlike at the Wyndham Championship where he blew a four-stroke lead with five holes to go, he had no reason to hang his head after earning his third runner-up finish in his last five starts. He topped the field in Strokes Gained: Putting, and made over 100 feet of putts in each round.
“It wasn’t like Wyndham where I gave it away, I felt good out there the whole time. I mean, super comfortable. It was like I was playing at home,” Greyserman said. “Didn’t quite execute down the stretch when I needed to. I mean, Nico stepped up there and he hit a great second shot. He earned it.”
Thomas closed with a bogey-free 66 but after sinking three birdies in his first six holes, his putter went cold. Before the tournament began, he switched back to a trusty mallet that he’d used in many of his 15 previous Tour titles but it let him down when it mattered most. He burned edges and lipped out putts, making 11 consecutive pars before a birdie at the last. He ranked 66th in SG: Putting in the 78-man field on Sunday and lost strokes with the short stick for the week.
“It’s a mixture of obviously bummed and disappointed, but I played so well,” said Thomas, who made just one bogey all week and led the field in multiple statistical categories, including scrambling. “I played plenty well enough to win the tournament.”
Rickie Fowler shot a bogey-free 6-under 64 and finished fourth. It marked his first top-10 finish in 23 starts this season and best result dating to his last win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic last July.
Echavarria, who had missed the cut in three of the four previous FedEx Cup Fall events and hadn’t recorded a top-10 finish in a stroke-play tournament all season, had endured his share of doubts this season, but victory, which includes a trip back to the Masters, made the hard times worth it.
“Moments like this are the ones that make everything better,” he said.
Source: Golfweek https://ift.tt/Qh0eix2