South Korea’s Kim Joo-hyung became the second-youngest player in PGA Tour history to capture multiple titles by winning the Shriners Children’s Open after a last-hole disaster by Patrick Cantlay on Sunday.
Kim, nicknamed Tom after his boyhood love of Thomas the Tank Engine, fired a five-under-par 66 to finish 72 bogey-free holes at TPC Summerlin on 24 under 260.
That gave him a three-stroke victory over Americans Cantlay and Matthew NeSmith with Chile’s Mito Pereira, American Tom Hoge and South Korean Kim Seong-hyeon sharing fourth on 20 under.
“I played really solid this week,” Kim said. “We had a really good game plan going into the week and it paid off.”
The 20-year-old from Seoul, who won his first PGA Tour title at Greensboro in August, was one month and eight days off the record youngest multiple winner in PGA history – American Ralph Guldahl in 1932.
But Kim did manage his second title a month faster than seven-time Major winner Gene Sarazen and six months younger than 15-time Major champion Tiger Woods.
“I’ve worked really hard and my team has worked really hard,” Kim said. “I’m just really grateful and very fortunate to have an opportunity like this. I’m having fun playing on the PGA Tour. It’s awesome.”
Kim also became the first PGA Tour winner without a bogey over four rounds since American JT Poston in 2019 at Greensboro.
World No 4 Cantlay, the highest-ranked player in the field, and Kim were deadlocked for the lead on 24 under when Cantlay sent his tee shot at 18 into a bush in a dirt area left of the fairway.
“I made a bad swing and it went where it went,” Cantlay said. “After it was kind of in the bush there, I figured the only chance I had to stay in the tournament was to try and get it back in the fairway. I couldn’t get it back in the fairway.”
Cantlay risked blasting out versus taking a penalty drop to try to keep alive his chance to win, but when the ball didn’t come out, Cantlay was on his way to a triple-bogey and Kim en route to victory.
“I figured it was worth the risk because I didn’t think I’d have too much of a chance of getting it up and down from the brush there,” said Cantlay.
A triple bogey on the 72nd hole for Patrick Cantlay to lose by 3.
Winning is hard. pic.twitter.com/e6BDdVWh6N
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) October 10, 2022
Cantlay made a putt from just inside 36 feet to salvage a triple-bogey and his third runner-up result at TPC Summerlin.
“I played well all week for the most part apart from one bad swing at the end,” Cantlay said. “I would have liked to have closed the deal out but sometimes that’s golf. Obviously, the last hole makes the whole week kind of sour.”
Kim won for the second time in four starts and in his first event since playing for the Internationals in a Presidents Cup loss to the United States last month at Quail Hollow.
“I got very lucky on the 18th, I’m not going to lie,” Kim said. “Patrick played awesome and it was an honour to battle with him. To come out on top, I feel very fortunate.”
Cantlay had matched the course record on Saturday with a 60 to share the 54-hole lead with Kim.
Cantlay, last year’s FedEx Cup playoff winner, missed out on his third PGA Tour title of the year after the BMW Championship in August and April’s pairs event in New Orleans with pal Xander Schauffele.
Kim birdied the 4th hole and closed the front nine with back-to-back birdies, a 30-foot birdie putt at the par-three 8th and 10-footer at the par-five 9th. He also made birdie putts of five feet at the par-five 13th and 13 feet at the par-three 14th.
© Agence France-Presse