It was a week for playoffs and close finishes as June weekend arrived in 2023. Three tours went to extra holes, while another was decided by a single stroke. The two-shot margin on the DP World Tour almost felt like a runaway in contrast, except for the shot that the winner had to manufacture at the last. With everything on the line, Tom McKibbin delivered a magical strike. From Ohio to New Jersey to North Carolina in the USA, to Colombia and Germany across international lines, five tournaments crowned worthy winners, and gave us one more reason to run down all the results in this week’s edition of Tour Rundown.
DP World Tour @ European Open: McKibbin takes a bow for Northern Ireland
Tom McKibbin was hoping to share the spotlight with countryman Rory McIlroy, atop two separate podia on two distinct tours. McKibbin got work done in Hamburg, but Roars was unable to comply and match his efforts across the Atlantic.
McKibbin entered the final round in a six-way tie for first with Alexander Björk, John Axlesen, Jordan Smith, David Law, and Julien Guerrier. The first four shared one thing on Sunday: a scorecard with a stroke total of 75. That quadrilateral tumbled to a sixth-place tie, five shots out of first place. Guerrier held on much longer, but was done in by a dearth of birdies. Making but two on the day was enough to keep him under par on Sunday, but not enough to equal McKibbin.
The Northern Irishman, previously without a victory on the big tour, came out like he owned the event. An outward nine of 32 made him look like a runaway victor, but a pair of early bogeys on the inward half returned doubt to the outcome. When many a competitor would have wilted, McKibbin did the opposite. He steadied the ship with two final birdies, at 15 and 18. The one at the closing hole, when the stakes were highest, should be seen to be believed, so have a glance below.
LPGA @ Mizuho Americas Open: Rose rises in her professional debut
From Shakespeare to country music, the metaphors for Rose Zhang’s first name are plentiful, so we’ll let the golf and the composure convey the message. Rose Zhang made her professional debut this week, on the LPGA tour, after winning everything in amateur golf. She was an NCAA individual medalist, a USGA Junior and Amateur champion, and a victor in the Augusta National Women’s Amateur. In team competition, she was member of winning squads in the NCAA, the Pan American games, and twice in the Curtis Cup. Despite a remaining year of college eligibility, it was time for the young Californian to take the next step, and she did, and she did, and she did!
Zhang took her bow not super-far from Broadway’s lights, in Jersey City, New Jersey. Playing on a sponsor’s exemption in the first Mizuho Open, Zhang eased her way up the leaderboard until suddenly, on Saturday evening, she was in the lead. Well, didn’t the golf world go wild! Folks forgot that, just like the final round at Augusta in April, it takes guts and grit to close out a tournament. Just as Zhang fought to a playoff win in Georgia, she would have to do the same in Jersey.
After snatching 14 birdies and an eagle over the first three rounds, Zhang had absolute zero of those on Sunday. Forget A and B games; how do you win a tournament with your C game? Zhang got it done. She kept the bogey total to two on the day, although a five at the last extended her week for another hour. Jennifer Kupcho, the inaugural ANWA champion in 2019, posted 69 on Sunday, making up five shots on Zhang. Kupcho’s slam-dunk eagle (seen above) was the highlight of a round that almost saw her snatch victory from the new kid on the tour.
The playoff saw how match play golf makes a medal play event simultaneously more uncomfortable (for the player) and interesting (for the fan.) Both golfers chopped their way through the first hole, scratching out pars from less-than-stellar shots. The second go-round in overtime was more textbook, but Zhang’s stellar approach rattled Kupcho, who failed to match. Her ensuing three-putt allowed young Zhang to two-putt from ten feet for par, to claim the jar.
PGA Tour @ The Memorial: Hovland moves to mainland USA for fourth Tour victory
Viktor Hovland was one of three heralded amateurs to turn professional in 2019. Matthew Wolfe burned brightest early, with a win in Minnesota. Collin Morikawa ignited with two major title in his first three years among the professional ranks. For Hovland, it seems that a steady climb up the ladder is in the works. The Norwegian first won in Puerto Rico, in 202o. He followed that with two wins in Mexico, in late 2020 and again in 2021. This week, Hovland took another ascended another rung on the ladder, with a title in Ohio, at Jack’s Place.
The 2023 Memorial seemed to be a fitting place for Hovland to make his mark. The annual honoree was Larry Nelson, a two-time major winner in the 1980s. A grinder like Hovland, Nelson quietly clawed his way up the climbing wall of recognition on the PGA Tour. Hovland survived this week as the last man standing, outlasting a game Denny McCarthy in a playoff.
Scottie Scheffler was there for a time, until bogey at the 71st hole did him in. Si Woo Kim mixed a bitter cocktail of birdies, bogeys, and doubles on the inward half, to end his chances. And the aforementioned Rory, tied with Si Woo after 54 holes, had a final-round pratfall, ending in 75 and a tie for seventh. It was left to Hovland and McCarthy to settle matters in extra time. The session was brief.
Hovland found the fairway left, while McCarthy pushed his drive right. He had to pitch out to the fairway, while Hovland reached the putting surface with his second. McCarthy’s third settled 15 feet from the hole, while the Norwegian faced nearly 60 feet of sloping frog hair. His approach putt was barely acceptable, finishing seven feet off the mark. From there, McCarthy missed and Hovland made, and the bow was tied in a neat little knot.
Korn Ferry Tour @ UNC Health Challenge: Fernández-Valdés wins at next level
Jorge Fernández-Valdés stayed home in Argentina for his amateur career. He represented the azul celeste in two Eisenhower international team events, and won a few events around his home city of Córdoba. His professional career began in 2012, and over the first decade of competition, he made his mark. Four wins on PGA Tour Latinoamérica came his way. In 2023, the Platense stepped up a level, winning a first Korn Ferry event, in the Tar Heel state.
The third playoff of June 4th was arranged when Fernández-Valdés and Trent Phillips tied for regulation supremacy at 13-deep. John Augenstein was a stroke back at minus-twelve, and accepted a third-place finish. JFV and Phillips returned to the 18th hole, and Phillips seized control with a drive to the fairway, while Fernández-Valdés found the rough. The Argentine gouged his approach to the green, and drained a massive putt for birdie. Phillips’ matching effort was away, and another winner from South America had joined the pantheon.
PGA Tour Latinoamérica @ Inter Rapidísimo: Myles travels many miles for trophy
Is there a cooler title sponsor than Inter Rapidísimo? So much fun to say. So much fun for Myles Creighton to win. The Canadian from tiny Digby, Nova Scotia, and tiny Radford University, found a home away from home this week, in Bogotá, Colombia. Challenges came from Austin Hitt and the best name in golf (Sandy Scott, and yes, he is from Scotland) but Creighton was up to the challenge.
Everyone trailed George Toone at the start of Sunday’s final round, but the Englishman received the wrong roadmap for Sunday. His 78 relegated him to a tie for sixth position. Scott finished at 17-under par, to post the clubhouse lead. Next came the USA’s Austin Hitt, whose 69 was fine, but not fine enough. He had started the day equal with Creighton, and when the down-easter posted 68, the tournament was his.
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