Rahm edges Niemann for LIV season title as Munoz wins at Indy
Munoz birdied the first playoff hole to beat Rahm for the Indy title after both finished on 22-under 191 through all 54 holes at Chatham Hills in the Saudi-backed series' last individual event of the year.
"First time I've ever beat him, so really proud of that and happy I got to go home with the trophy," Munoz said.
But Rahm's result, a second playoff loss in as many weeks, was enough to edge Chile's Joaquin Niemann in the season points chase for the second year in a row, delivering heartbreak on the campaign's last day as he did in 2024.
"Still slightly bittersweet," Rahm said. "I know I'm supposed to be happy. It's a great moment. But it just doesn't feel great to finish the year losing two playoffs.
"I'm sure over time I'll get over that and I really appreciate what I've done this year."
Rahm won the season title without winning any LIV event while Niemann took titles this year in Adelaide, Singapore, Mexico City, Virginia and Britain.
"It sucks," Niemann said. "I started playing my best golf on the back nine, which I'm proud of, but at the end of the day, the putts didn't drop, and it wasn't enough. It's kind of hard to swallow."
Rahm, a Masters and US Open champion, wasn't overjoyed about a season crown without a win all year.
"To be able to win the season without actually winning a tournament, I know eventually I'll be proud of that. Right now it's slightly more something I'm going to suffer over a little bit more, and it may never be replicated," Rahm said.
"You need a lot of coincidences to go on exactly with the year Joaquín had. He's won five times. He has played incredible golf. One could argue he was probably the more deserving guy to win this. But we have the points system we have and somehow, I don't know how, I managed to pull through and get it done."
Rahm captured $18 million for claiming the season crown with Niemann taking $8 million for his runner-up season finish after sharing fourth at Indy on 196 with a closing 66.
Munoz, who battled two-time major winner Dustin Johnson for the lead most of the day, birdied the 17th and 18th holes in regulation and the 18th again in the playoff to win his first title since the 2019 PGA Tour Sanderson Farms Championship.
"We came today to try and take care of business," Munoz said. "Of course Jon shot 10-under so you go from one legend to another one. It was pretty cool. Awesome experience. Making birdie two times in a row (at 18), it's undescribable."
Munoz battled for the victory after firing a 59 on Friday, only the third sub-60 round in LIV history.
"I feel really proud of myself," he said. "It has been a long time coming, six years since my last win, and it's awesome right now."
A severe overnight storm toppled trees and swamped fairways, delaying the shotgun start by 55 minutes, with players using lift, clean and place rules on the rain-softened course.
- Englishmen avoid drop -
England's Lee Westwood and Ian Poulter avoided being dumped from LIV for 2026, finishing in the season's top 48 in points to escape the relegation zone.
Westwood birdied four of his first five holes while Poulter birdied four of his last five to avoid the drop, each finishing on 201.
Sweden's Henrik Stenson was dropped, however, after missing a birdie putt at the 18th that would have seen him avoid relegation at Poulter's expense.
Niemann's Torque won the Indy team title, it's first triumph since 2023, but Rahm's Legion XIII holds the top seeding for next week's LIV Team Championship.
js/bb

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Indianapolis Star
an hour ago
- Indianapolis Star
Jon Rahm loses playoff at LIV Golf Indianapolis to Sebastian Munoz but wins season title
WESTFIELD – Earlier this week, Jon Rahm hinted at a milk celebration if he crossed the finish line victorious during the LIV Golf Indianapolis tournament at The Club at Chatham Hills. The Legion XIII captain almost got his wish. The defending LIV Individual Champion shot his lowest round of the season at 11 under 60 on Sunday in Westfield and forced a playoff tiebreaker on the 18th hole with Torque GC's Sebastian Munoz before coming up short by one stroke. However, Rahm left with a significant consolation prize by overtaking Torque GC captain Joaquin Niemann to repeat as LIV's individual points standings champion. Rahm entered Sunday's round tied for ninth on the leaderboard. He needed a strong regular-season finale to best Niemann, who carried a slim 12.27 points advantage into the event in hopes of becoming the league's fourth different individual points winner. Yet, Rahm's 10 birdies overall, an eagle on 13 and four straight birdies to cap regulation at 22 under moved him atop the leaderboard and into a playoff with Munoz, who completed the individual and team sweep with a birdie putt on 18. 'I was trying not to worry too much about Joaquin. I was trying to keep my mind on the individual title,' Rahm said. 'If he didn't finish second, I was going to get it done, and that was the task at hand.' Rahmbo, as he's known on social media, had a locked in mindset after shooting 4 under on Friday and 7 under on Saturday. 'For anybody that understands competitive Call of Duty, we're going to call it scrap time,' Rahm said. 'It's really about not directly thinking about moments like this, but it's truly what I would say is my MO as a competitor. It's 54 holes, so just because you had a rough first 36 doesn't mean it's over. You can get it done.' Last week in Chicago, Rahm, the 2023 Masters champion, lost a three-man tiebreaker playoff to Stinger GC's Dean Burmester, and he didn't win a single tournament this LIV Golf season. But the Spanish golfer didn't place any worse than 11th either and had eight top five finishes to win the points battle between the two for a second year in a row. 'It's always been in my DNA to fight as hard as one can until the end of the tournament,' Rahm said. 'I think I've said it many times, 32nd is better than 33rd. I think with that mentality, I've been able to have a lot of really good Sundays and put myself in position and keep adding points. Slow and steady, I guess in this case won the race.' Rahm accumulated 226.16 points, while Niemann tallied 223.68. The 2.48-point margin of victory this year was closer than last season's 235.17-219.20 individual standings difference, which also sealed the title for Rahm over Niemann. Niemann tied for fourth overall on Sunday with Torque GC's Carlos Ortiz, Stinger GC's Branden Grace and Fireballs GC's David Puig at 17 under. Torque GC won the tournament with a league record 64-under. Legion XIII was second at 54 under. 'I could have played better today, this week or probably last week. I could have played a little bit better, but John just proved himself, how good he is and how good he is in these moments,' Niemann said. 'Just like he did last week.' Niemann won five tournaments this season, but his 17th placement in Chicago and Rahm's epic push on Sunday kept the race going until the end. 'It may never be replicated. You need a lot of coincidences to go along with the type of year Joaquin has with five wins. He's played incredible golf. One could argue he was probably the more deserving guy to win this,' Rahm said. 'But we have the point system that we have. I don't know how I managed to pull through and get it done. Extremely proud of that.' Rahm achieved the feat by turning in a pair of 30s, including a back nine run that began with an eagle on 13 followed by a bogey on 14. Four birdies erased the mistake, and he nearly dropped another eagle on 15 as his approach shot rolled to the lip of the cup. A fist pump after his second shot on 18 setup a birdie putt and echoed his dominance through regulation. Munoz converted two birdie putts on 17 and 18 to tie Rahm at 22 under at the end of regulation by finishing the round 6 under 65. In the playoff, Rahm struck the flag stick on 18 on his second shot, but he could only par after missing his birdie putt attempt. Munoz sank a birdie putt on 18, again, after suffering a double-bogey on the same hole during Saturday's round. A pair of tee shots that sailed into the gallery lingered for Munoz momentarily. 'Honestly. I kind of beat myself up a little bit for that tee shot yesterday,' Munoz said. 'I was kind of mad at myself, but there was a lot of support around me.' After carding a 12 under 59 on Friday, the league's third sub-60 round in history, and tying 4Aces GC's Dustin Johnson for the lead on Saturday, Munoz shot seven birdies to keep pace. The win was Munoz's first this season in LIV Golf and first since winning the Sanderson Farms Championship on the PGA Tour in 2019.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Scheffler rallies to win BMW for 5th PGA Tour victory of year. Rahm takes LIV points title
OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Scottie Scheffler erased a four-shot deficit in five holes and then delivered a haymaker on the daunting par-3 17th by chipping in from 82 feet for birdie that carried him to victory Sunday in the BMW Championship for his fifth PGA Tour title of the year. Scheffler closed with a 3-under 67 for a two-shot victory and became the first player since Tiger Woods (2006-07) to win at least five times on the PGA Tour in consecutive years. Robert MacIntyre didn't make a birdie until the 16th hole but stayed in the game after losing his big lead, mostly when Scheffler began missing short putts. MacIntyre pulled within one shot of the lead going to the 17th, the toughest hole at Caves Valley, with a back right pin on a crispy green that sloped to the right toward the water. Scheffler went just left in the rough, the ball sitting up nicely but the shot still scary. He landed it some 60 feet short and watched it trickle, and then roll, and then slow again until it dropped into the cup. MacIntyre could only look at him and stare at the world's No. 1 player making other-worldly shots in another extraordinary season. MacIntyre, who made 18 birdies in the first 45 holes of the tournament, made only two over the last 27 holes. He shot 73. It's not over for Scheffler, who leads the 30 players who advanced to the Tour Championship at East Lake with a chance to become the first repeat FedEx Cup champion since the series began in 2007. All 30 players at East Lake can win the $10 million first-place check. LIV Golf League WESTFIELD, Ind. (AP) — Jon Rahm successfully defended his LIV Golf season points title without winning an event all year, closing with an 11-under 60 before losing a playoff to Sebastian Munoz on the first extra hole in the Indianapolis event. Munoz won two days after becoming the first player to shoot 59 with a double bogey. The Colombian player —with Rahm hitting balls on driving range — birdied the final two holes in regulation for a 65 to match Rahm at 22 under at The Club at Chatham Hills. Rahm also lost on the first extra hole last week outside Chicago, falling to Dean Burmester in a three-way playoff that included Josele Ballester. On Sunday, Munoz beat the Spanish star won with a birdie on the par-4 18th in the playoff. Rahm took the season points title from Joaquin Niemann, a five-time winner this season. Niemann shot a 66 to tie for fourth at 17 under, his first top-10 finish of the year that he didn't win. Munoz led Torque GC to the team event championship. Torque finished at 64 under to break the LIV record of 53 under. LPGA Tour PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Akie Iwai joined twin sister Chisato as a rookie LPGA Tour winner at Columbia Edgewater, closing with a 6-under 66 for a four-stroke victory in The Standard Portland Classic. Akie Iwai capped the bogey-free round with birdies on the final two holes, running in an 18-footer on the last before Chisato rushed on the green and sprayed her with champagne. The 23-year-old Japanese player broke through in her first season on the LPGA Tour after winning six times on the JLPGA Tour. She had second-place finishes in Thailand in February and Los Angeles in April, then watched her sister win at Mayakoba in May in Mexico. On Sunday, Chisato Iwai shot a 64 to tie for third, five strokes back. The winner finished at 24-under 264 on the tree-lined course. She opened with consecutive 67s, then shot a 64 on Saturday to take a two-stroke lead into the final round. American Gurleen Kaur was a career-best second, closing with a 65. Amateur Kiara Romero shot a 64 to tie for seventh at 16 under in her first tour start. The University of Oregon player won the 2023 U.S. Girls' Junior and 2025 Big Ten title. European Tour COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) — Marco Penge of England tapped in for birdie at the 18th hole for a 4-under 67 to win the Danish Golf Championship by one shot over Rasmus Hojgaard, who missed a chance to climb into the automatic qualifying position for the Ryder Cup. Hojgaard looked on course for the title in his home country when he powered into a four-shot lead midway through his front nine, only to drop four strokes in four holes from No. 10 and allow Penge to take the lead. Trailing by two on the par-5 closing hole at Furesø Golf Klub, Hojgaard made a 10-foot eagle. Penge missed the green to the left, chipped to 3 feet and made the birdie putt for his second European tour title this year. Hojgaard (69) was the runner-up and will remain outside the six automatic qualifying spots, just behind No. 6 Sepp Straka, in the race to get into Europe's team. Qualifying ends next week at the British Masters. PGA Tour Champions CALGARY, Alberta (AP) — Richard Green of Australia won the Rogers Charity Classic for his first PGA Tour Champions title, birdieing the par-5 18th hole for a 5-under 65 and a one-stroke victory. Green held off Ricardo Gonzalez, the Argentine player who birdied the final two holes at Canyon Meadows for a 65 of his own. The 54-year-old Green won in his 91st start on the 50-and-over tour. He finished at 18-under 192 after opening with rounds of 65 and 62. Charles Schwab Cup leader Miguel Angel Jimenez of Spain, the second-round leader after consecutive rounds of 63, had a 68 to finish third at 16 under. He leads the tour with four victories this season. Korn Ferry Tour BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Emilio Gonzalez of Mexico won the Albertsons Boise Open for his first Korn Ferry Tour title, shooting a 10-under 61 for a one-stroke victory over Jeffrey Kang. Gonzalez played a late three-hole stretch in 4 under with a birdie on the par-4 15th, an eagle on the par-5 16th and a birdie on the par-3 17th. He finished at 22-under 262 at Hillcrest Country Club. Kang birdied two of the last three in a 65. Other tours Kazuki Higa closed with a 7-under 65 and won the ISPS Handa Explosion in the Summer with an eagle on the second playoff hole to defeat Ren Yonezawa, who shot 64. Higa won for the first time in three years and now has seven titles on the Japan Golf Tour. ... David Law closed with a 4-under 68 for a two-shot victory in the Vierumaki Finnish Challenge, his second win of the season on Europe's Challenge Tour. The victory move him to the top of the points list. ... Cory Crawford shot 7-under 65 and won by two shots at the PNG Open on the PGA Tour of Australasia. ... Herman Loubser closed with a 3-under 69 and defeated Yurav Premlall in the Vodacom Origins of Golf on the Sunshine Tour. ... Asuka Kashiwabara closed with a 4-under 68 for a one-shot victory over Sayaka Teraoka in the NEC Karuizawa 72 on the Japan LPGA. ... Jungmin Hong shot 7-under 65 to complete a nine-shot victory in the Mediheal Hankookilbo Championship on the Korea LPGA. ___ AP golf:
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Scottie Scheffler leads 6 qualifiers for US Ryder Cup team
OWINGS MILLS, Md. (AP) — Bryson DeChambeau is returning to the Ryder Cup for the first time since 2021 as none of the Americans moved past him in the standings Sunday in the final week of qualifying for the six automatic spots on the U.S. team. DeChambeau will be the second LIV Golf player in as many Ryder Cups for the Americans, following Brooks Koepka as a captain's pick in 2023. U.S. captain Keegan Bradley had indicated DeChambeau was going to be on the team either way. The U.S. Open champion a year ago, he earned big points by playing in the last group with Rory McIlroy at the Masters, where DeChambeau tied for fifth, and finishing as a runner-up in the PGA Championship five shots behind Scottie Scheffler. DeChambeau wound up at No. 6 in the standings. Harris English moved past him with his tie for 12th in the BMW Championship to finish at No. 5, qualifying for his first team on his own. English was a captain's pick for the 2021 matches at Whistling Straits. The leading six players for the Americans were Scheffler, J.J. Spaun, Xander Schauffele, Russell Henley, English and DeChambeau. All those spots — except for DeChambeau — were practically set going into the final qualifying event. Justin Thomas would have needed to finish around the top 10 to supplant DeChambeau. Instead, he will need to rely on a captain's pick for the second straight Ryder Cup. The Ryder Cup is Sept. 26-28 at Bethpage Black. Bradley will announce six captain's picks on Aug. 27, the Wednesday after next week's Tour Championship. 'Most years it seems very obvious,' Scheffler said of the U.S. team. 'Once we continue to keep playing next week, it will become more obvious. Right now, I think a couple of spots are still up for grabs.' The Tour Championship in some ways becomes a final audition for Bradley, who is considering taking himself as a pick after finishing 11th in the standings. Thomas was No. 7 followed by Collin Morikawa, Ben Griffin, Maverick McNealy, Bradley, Brian Harman, Andrew Novak, Cameron Young and Patrick Cantlay. All of the potential captain's picks will be at East Lake next week for the Tour Championship. Europe's qualifying ends next week at the British Masters — players like Shane Lowry at the Tour Championship and Tyrrell Hatton at LIV Golf are not eligible for points. That makes Hatton at No. 5 a lock to be on another team. Lowry, who replaced Straka at No. 6, can only be passed by Rasmus Hojgaard next week. Luke Donald also has six captain's picks. ___ AP golf: