The all-Australian Ripper GC team held a pre-season training camp in January on the Blue Monster at Trump National Doral. The weather was cold, misty and windy. The 10th fairway was inaccessible. The conditions were brutal – but the payoff came on Sunday at LIV Golf Miami.
The Rippers won the battle of survival under the harshest scoring circumstances in league history, with popular veteran Marc Leishman claiming his first LIV Golf individual title after shooting the week’s only bogey-free round.
His Rippers won the team title with a cumulative four-over total, the first time any team has won with an over-par score.
“It kicked our butts when we were here in January for the training camp, and it did the same again this week,” Leishman said. “I guess it kicked our butt less than everyone else.”
Leishman conquered the Blue Monster on Sunday by posting the only bogey-free round by any player this week, five 5-under 67 to finish at six under, one stroke better than Stinger GC’s Charl Schwartzel. Fireballs GC Captain Sergio Garcia was another stroke back in solo third.
It’s the 14th time in LIV Golf history that a team has swept both trophies. And it’s the first win of any kind in four years for the 41-year-old Leishman, who had three runner-up finishes and five other top 10s since joining LIV Golf with his captain Cameron Smith in the middle of the inaugural 2022 season.
“It’s been a long time coming for Leish,” Smith said. “He’s knocked on so many doors, and at times has felt probably unlucky. Even for me as a mate, I’ve felt like he’s been unlucky.”
Marc Leishman of Ripper GC won his first-ever LIV Golf individual title at Trump National Doral on Sunday, April 06, 2025 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Jon Ferrey/LIV Golf)
In the previous LIV Golf tournament in Singapore last month, Leishman tied for 51st, his worst result in LIV Golf. But on a demanding course toughened by wind gusts and firm greens, Leishman produced a masterpiece of steady, patient play.
“It was pretty disgusting how I played there,” Leishman said of Singapore. “To come back on a golf course like this where there’s trouble around every single corner, I think playing so bad in Singapore helped me today just not letting my guard down at all.”
Leishman started Sunday three shots off the lead but quickly moved up the leaderboard with birdies in two of his first four holes. He shared the lead with Rd. 2 leader Bryson DeChambeau through eight holes, but the Crushers GC captain went bogey-double bogey around the turn to effectively end his chances.
Leishman’s final birdie of the day at the par-5 10th gave him a three-shot cushion and he nursed it with eight consecutive pars to end his round, never providing his challengers with an opening.
Even so, several players made a charge on the back nine.
Stingers GC’s Charl Schwartzel reeled off four straight birdies to climb into contention, while teammate and fellow South African Dean Burmester, the defending LIV Golf Miami champion, also made noise before a disastrous final two holes.
Fireballs GC Captain Sergio Garcia, seeking his second win of the season, was three under during a 11-hole stretch. His birdie at the 17th after a brilliant approach shot moved him within a shot of Leishman’s lead.
Leishman, playing in the group ahead of Garcia, found the trees with his tee shot at the 18th and had to punch out. His third shot left him 13 feet above the pin, but he knocked in the clutch par putt to keep the lead.
“I wanted this one pretty bad, especially having a two-shot lead teeing off 18,” Leishman said. “Probably the worst hole in the world to have – two shots is nothing on that hole.”
Garcia ultimately bogeyed the 18th, hitting his tee shot into the trees, then finding the water with his approach.
“I had an opening there with a 3-iron, and then I just needed three or four more feet, and it would’ve been great,” Garcia said of his second shot.
Leishman was on the practice green, watching on the videoboard when he saw Garcia’s ball in the water. That’s when he knew the championship was his, a well-deserved victory on a course that wasn’t so friendly a few months earlier.
“I’ve played well in a lot of LIV events,” Leishman said. “I’ve had chances to win, haven’t won. You wonder if you’re going to win again … I doubted myself but that just made it all so much sweeter today.”
Photo: Jon Ferrey/LIV Golf