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Former champions may make Colonial their swan song

Former champions may make Colonial their swan song

NBC Sports21-05-2025
Rex Hoggard reports from Colonial Country Club, where former champions Corey Pavin and Oline Brown may be playing their last PGA Tour event at the Charles Schwab Challenge.
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Scottie Scheffler rallies to win BMW Championship for 5th victory of the year
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OWINGS MILLS, Md. — The numbers Scottie Scheffler is compiling have been drawing comparisons with Tiger Woods. The world's No. 1 player had a Tiger-like moment with the trophy on the line and a club in his hand Sunday in the BMW Championship. His 82-foot chip on the 17th — the hardest hole in the final round at Caves Valley — landed about 60 feet short and rolled the rest of the way, picking up speed, losing speed dropping on the final turn. The birdie all but wrapped up another win, his fifth PGA Tour title this year. It was reminiscent of Woods delivering magic to overshadow his sublime skill, his chip-in from behind the 16th green at the Memorial, his chip-in for eagle in the World Cup in Japan. Scheffler already had erased a four-shot deficit against hard-luck Robert MacIntyre in five holes. He was clinging to a one-shot lead on the 17th, a daunting par 3 with a back right pin and water right. Scheffler was in the left rough, the safe spot, facing a shot that a dozen players had chipped over the green. 'I knew it was just going to be really fast, and do my best to get it down there and give myself a good look for par,' he said. 'When it came out, it came out how we wanted to and then it started breaking and it started looking better and better. 'And yeah, it was definitely nice to see that one go in.' Scheffler closed with a 3-under 67 for a two-shot victory and became the first player since Woods — there's that name again — in 2006 and 2007 to win at least five times on the PGA Tour in consecutive years. 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 when Scheffler worked his magic and had to settle for another runner-up finish to a memorable shot, just like he did at Oakmont when J.J. Spaun holed a 65-foot birdie putt to clinch the U.S. Open. MacIntyre was in the scoring room when he watched Spaun and applauded it. He was alongside Scheffler at the BMW Championship, staring in disbelief but angry at his poor play off the tee that cost him the big lead early. 'When he's pitched that in on 17 and then he's hit the perfect tee shot on 18, it's pretty much game over just then. You're playing for second place at that point,' MacIntyre said. 'He's the better player on the day. I'm just really pissed off right now,' he said. 'Right now I want go and smash up my golf clubs, to be honest with you.' MacIntyre made 18 birdies in the first 45 holes of the tournament and only two over the last 27 holes. He closed with a 73 and got some consolation prizes that didn't mean much in the moment. He cracked the top 10 in the world for the first time, going to No. 8. Scheffler's chip-in elicited the loudest cheer of the day. 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Relive the best moments from the final round of the BMW Championship — the second event of the PGA Tour's FedExCup Playoffs — at Caves Valley Golf Club in Owings Mills, Maryland. SAN FRANCISCO — Georgia teenager Mason Howell capped a productive summer before his senior year of high school by winning the U.S. Amateur at The Olympic Club on Sunday just two months after competing in his first U.S. Open. The 18-year-old Howell raced out to a big lead over Tennessee teenager Jackson Herrington on the opening 18 holes and went on to win the 36-hole final, 7 and 6, to become the youngest U.S. Amateur champion since Byeong Hun An won at age 17 in 2009 at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Howell won it with a par to tie the 30th hole, ending the most-lopsided final since Bryson DeChambeau also beat Derek Bard, 7 and 6, in 2015. The win earned Howell invitations to the Masters, U.S. Open and The Open next year. This was the first U.S. Amateur final featuring two teenagers since Matt Fitzpatrick bested Oliver Goss in 2013, and Howell showed the composure of a much more experienced golfer by repeatedly making clutch putts while Herrington made repeated mistakes. Howell won 11 holes, eight of them with pars. He also responded after all four holes he lost, winning the following hole each time. Howell burst onto the scene when he qualified for the U.S. Open this year with rounds of 63-63 from the Atlanta sectional. He failed to make the cut at Oakmont but used that experience this week at The Olympic Club. He was one of 17 players to advance from a 20-man playoff to make the match play portion of the tournament, where he won all six matches. Howell won five of six holes on the front nine of the opening 18 holes — including an eagle at No. 7 — to take a four-hole lead. He increased the lead to five with a birdie on the par-5 16th hole as his steady putting helped keep Herrington at bay. Herrington closed the first 18 with a birdie on the par-5 18th to get back within four. But he then bogeyed the first three holes after the lunch break to fall down by six and never really threatened the rest of the way. Howell now gets ready for his senior year of high school before he is set to start college at the University of Georgia in 2026. The 19-year-old Herrington is about to start his sophomore season in college at Tennessee. This is the fourth U.S. Amateur to be held at The Olympic Club. Charles Coe (1958), Nathaniel Crosby (1981) and Cole Knost (2007) won the others.

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