Sam Burns went from kid in the gallery to Charles Schwab Challenge champion. And he’s just getting started

“He’s going to do some unbelievable things in this game of golf.”

As a PGA Tour rookie in 2019, Sam Burns started his season at the Fortinet Championship in Napa, California, and he and wife Caroline and fellow Tour pro Kramer Hickock and his better half were sipping wine at the tasting room of winery Silver Oak when they each decided to buy a double magnum of its iconic cabernet sauvignon. Burns and Hickok made a pact that they’d save it and crack it open as soon as they won for the first time in the big leagues.

“Every time I saw that bottle, I’d think ‘gosh, I really want to open that,’” Burns recalled.

It took 76 Tour starts – until April 2021 at the Valspar Championship near Tampa – but Burns finally claimed his maiden victory and as soon as he got home they celebrated with Silver Oak.

“A bunch of friends came over and helped us finish it off,” Burns said with a smile.

Burns has kept on winning, including the 2022 Charles Schwab Challenge, erasing a seven-stroke deficit with a Sunday 65 to force a playoff and poured in a 38-foot putt on the first extra hole to beat his best buddy, then World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

2022 Charles Schwab Challenge
Sam Burns is congratulated by Scottie Scheffler after winning the 2022 Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo: Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

For those who have followed Burns, his rise in the game isn’t the least bit surprising. Perhaps the one person who didn’t recognize his raw promise was his dear, old dad, Todd, who had to be convinced by the father of a fellow local golfer that his son was good enough to compete on a larger stage outside of their hometown’s city limits.

“There was a local junior tournament in Shreveport (Louisiana) and we signed Sam up for it,” Todd Burns told the Shreveport Times. “The dad of Phillip Barbaree came over to me after the tournament and said, ‘You need to let Sam play in national competitions.’ I said, ‘Really? I don’t think he’s ready for that. He said, ‘Oh, he’s ready for that.’ ”

Ready enough that he would go on to be named the 2014 AJGA Rolex Player of the Year, an early indicator that he was destined to be a PGA Tour winner.

Brad Pullin, a PGA teaching professional and director of golf instruction at Squire Creek Country Club, is the longtime swing coach for Burns. The first time Pullin watched Burns swing, he had one thought: “Don’t screw it up.”

Collin Morikawa has competed against Burns since he was 12 or 13 years old and beat up on him regularly at the junior and amateur level. Burns proceeded to be a Hogan Award semifinalist in 2017 and was chosen as the winner of the Jack Nicklaus Award at LSU.

“He’s always been a stud,” said Morikawa, a three-time Ben Hogan Award finalist and 2020 Charles Schwab Challenge runner-up. “He’s always had a game that I knew was going to be out here on Tour and will be here for a long time.”

One of the earliest indications that Burns had the moxie of a winner was at the 2018 Honda Classic when Burns was paired with Tiger Woods in the final round. When asked if he had ever played with his childhood hero, Burns answered, “Only on the video game.”

“I don’t even remember feeling the club in my hands,” Burns said of his opening tee shot. “And then he became somebody I had to beat.”

2018 Honda Classic
Tiger Woods and Sam Burns walk off the tee on the fifth hole during the final round of the 2018 Honda Classic on Sunday, Feb. 25, 2018, in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. (Photo: Wilfredo Lee/Associated Press)

Burns settled quickly and even had the chutzpah to say to Woods as they walked down the first fairway, “Man, it’s crazy all these people who came out to watch me today, isn’t it?”

That wasn’t the only burn from Burns. He beat Woods straight up, shooting a bogey-free 68 to Tiger’s 70.

Count Billy Horschel, who has partnered with Burns at the Zurich Classic since 2021, as a believer that Burns is made for the biggest moments. Horschel and Burns finished T-4 in their first go-round as teammates in New Orleans, which nearly had Burns breaking open the double magnum of Silver Oak.

“If it was an individual tournament, he’d have won by five,” Horschel said. “I apologized. I said I didn’t hold up my end of the bargain. I said, ‘You’re playing so great right now. If you do what you did this week, you’re going to have a chance to win.’ In my head I was like, he’s going to win next week.”

Burns did just that and he’s been winning in bunches ever since. He tacked on his fifth career PGA Tour title in March at the WGC Dell Technologies Match Play Championship, besting Scheffler again in extra holes – this time in the semifinals – before dusting Cameron Young in the final by a score of 6 and 5. In doing so, Burns became one of only six players with five victories in the last three years on the Tour. It’s pretty good company to be mentioned in the same breath with Scheffler, Patrick Cantlay, Rory McIlroy, Max Homa and Jon Rahm.

“I think you go from hoping that you can win or thinking that you can win to believing it when it actually happens,” Burns said.

For Burns, it doesn’t get much sweeter than winning at Colonial Country Club, a victory that held great significance since he had attended the tournament on multiple occasions as a kid. That included joining David Toms and his family on a trip to Fort Worth and witnessing the 13-time PGA Tour winner’s final victory in person at the 2011 Charles Schwab Challenge. Burns still hasn’t forgotten leaning against the rope line and craning his neck as Toms holed a wedge for eagle at the 11th hole.

“That was pretty cool to see,” Burns said. “As a 14-year-old kid watching any PGA Tour player, much less a guy that you knew, that was just a really special moment.”

On his way to victory last year, Burns looked up in player dining and smiled at the sight of the wedge Toms used for his hole-out eagle mounted on the wall. Their connection continues with Burns crediting Toms as a mentor he leans on for advice. And in a neat twist of fate, the same day in March that Burns claimed the Match Play in Austin, Toms won on PGA Tour Champions.

“Growing up, I can remember sitting on the back of the range and just watching him hit golf balls. It’s still one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen, just the way he could hit it. So straight and just like his tempo is amazing. Still is,” Burns said. “But, yeah, to be able to win on the same day is really cool.”

Burns broke into the top 10 in the world not long ago and winning major championships are next on his agenda, but as long as he plays it will be hard to top his Sunday surge at Colonial. His seven-stroke comeback matched Nick Price in 1994 for the biggest in a final round to win at Hogan’s Alley.

“I kind of joked with him at the end, he ruined all the fun making a 40-footer,” Scheffler said. “It was definitely good to see him win. He’s obviously a great player and he’s got a bright future ahead.”

Burns went on to qualify for a second straight Tour Championship and made his debut on the U.S. Presidents Cup team at Quail Hollow Club in Charlotte. He and Scheffler should have a few more back-nine tussles and it wouldn’t surprise anyone for them to require extra holes once again to settle the score.

“He’s going to do some unbelievable things in this game of golf,” Horschel said. “I’ve been a cheerleader on the side with my pompons trying to tell everyone how great he is and to watch out for this guy.”

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2022 Charles Schwab Challenge prize money payouts for each player at Colonial Country Club

Sam Burns won for the third time this season at the Charles Schwab Challenge and jumped to third on the 2021-22 PGA Tour money list.

Sam Burns won for the third time on the PGA Tour on Sunday at the 2022 Charles Schwab Challenge. His first-place check was good for $1,512,000, bringing his season total to $6,145,981, which moved him to third on the PGA Tour’s 2021-22 season money list.

Burns started the final round seven strokes back but tied for low round of the day. He also tied Nick Price, who in 1994 set the mark for the largest final-round comeback by a winner in tournament history.

Burns beat good friend Scottie Scheffler in a playoff but Scheffler still walked away with $915,600, which brings his season total to $11,215,187.

Brendon Todd’s solo third was good for $579,600.

Take a look at the complete final money list from the Colonial.

2022 Charles Schwab Challenge prize money

Pos Player Score Earnings
T1 Sam Burns -9* $1,512,000
T1 Scottie Scheffler -9 $915,600
3 Brendon Todd -8 $579,600
T4 Tony Finau -7 $353,500
T4 Davis Riley -7 $353,500
T4 Scott Stallings -7 $353,500
T7 Cameron Davis -5 $246,540
T7 Kevin Na -5 $246,540
T7 Mito Pereira -5 $246,540
T7 Patrick Reed -5 $246,540
T7 Jordan Spieth -5 $246,540
T12 Matt Jones -4 $178,500
T12 Pat Perez -4 $178,500
T12 John Huh -4 $178,500
T15 Christiaan Bezuidenhout -3 $132,300
T15 Tyler Duncan -3 $132,300
T15 Sung-jae Im -3 $132,300
T15 Chris Kirk -3 $132,300
T15 Russell Knox -3 $132,300
T15 Andrew Putnam -3 $132,300
T21 Beau Hossler -2 $98,700
T21 Viktor Hovland -2 $98,700
T23 Daniel Berger -1 $77,700
T23 Max Homa -1 $77,700
T23 Zach Johnson -1 $77,700
T23 Danny Lee -1 $77,700
T27 Talor Gooch E $56,333
T27 Bill Haas E $56,333
T27 Denny McCarthy E $56,333
T27 Chad Ramey E $56,333
T27 Chez Reavie E $56,333
T27 Webb Simpson E $56,333
T27 Alex Smalley E $56,333
T27 Harold Varner III E $56,333
T35 Tommy Fleetwood 1 $41,832
T35 Dylan Frittelli 1 $41,832
T35 Lee Hodges 1 $41,832
T35 Adam Long 1 $41,832
T35 Patrick Rodgers 1 $41,832
T40 Luke Donald 2 $30,660
T40 Lucas Glover 2 $30,660
T40 Kurt Kitayama 2 $30,660
T40 Collin Morikawa 2 $30,660
T40 Ryan Palmer 2 $30,660
T40 Ian Poulter 2 $30,660
T40 Adam Svensson 2 $30,660
T40 Michael Thompson 2 $30,660
T48 Lucas Herbert 3 $22,092
T48 David Lipsky 3 $22,092
T48 Sebastian Munoz 3 $22,092
T48 Nick Taylor 3 $22,092
T52 Max McGreevy 4 $20,009
T52 Cheng-Tsung Pan 4 $20,009
T52 Rory Sabbatini 4 $20,009
T52 Martin Trainer 4 $20,009
T52 Mark Hubbard 4 $20,009
T57 Rickie Fowler 5 $18,984
T57 Troy Merritt 5 $18,984
T57 Matthew NeSmith 5 $18,984
T57 Matthias Schwab 5 $18,984
T57 Brandt Snedeker 5 $18,984
T57 Sahith Theegala 5 $18,984
T63 Joel Dahmen 6 $18,228
T63 Emiliano Grillo 6 $18,228
T63 Austin Smotherman 6 $18,228
66 Charley Hoffman 7 $17,892
67 Jason Kokrak 8 $17,724
68 Aaron Rai 9 $17,556
69 Harry Higgs 15 $17,388

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Sam Burns buries long putt to beat his buddy Scottie Scheffler in a playoff, taking Charles Schwab Challenge title

The LSU product dropped a 38-foot putt from off the green to capture his third PGA Tour victory of the season.

FORT WORTH, Texas — With his longtime coach Randy Smith eyeing each swing, Scottie Scheffler spent a little extra time on the range at Colonial Country Club on Sunday working through low knockdowns, something the world’s top-ranked player hadn’t done particularly well through the tournament’s first three days.

Looking for his fifth win in his last 10 starts — and to become the first player to win five PGA Tour events before June 1 since Tom Watson turned the trick in 1980 — Scheffler knew the final round of the Charles Schwab Challenge would be more about standing strong in the wind than sprinting toward the lead.

With consistent winds in the 30 mph range making the small greens at Colonial even tougher than usual to hit, Scheffler’s strategy was spot on — and nearly worked.

But as he and others fought to keep their heads afloat, Sam Burns found an even better plan of attack — get out early, play well and wait for the pack to come back to him.

Burns earned his third victory of the PGA Tour season by posting an early 65, then waiting as others struggled to deal with the wind.

He then beat Scheffler — his buddy, with whom he shared a house at this year’s Masters — by dropping an incredible, winding 38-foot putt from off the green on the first playoff hole.

For the few hours before Burns’ heroic putt, however, he wasn’t even in the conversation.

At one point on the back nine, five players all sat at 10 under as Scheffler, Davis Riley, Brendon Todd, Harold Varner III and Scott Stallings found themselves all tied. Meanwhile, Burns sat in the clubhouse at 9 under.

Riley, who briefly held the lead, was the first to fade away, dropping a shot on No. 13 and then knocking a drive on the next hole out of bounds through a chain-link fence.

Todd, who considers Colonial his favorite course on Tour, dropped strokes at Nos. 11 and 12. Varner then had a stretch of triple bogey-double bogey-triple bogey on Nos. 12-14.

And Stallings tried to stay above water but lost single strokes at 12, 14 and 17 to fall off the chase.

Scheffler, who failed to make a birdie through 18 holes, made knee-knocking par putts of nine, six and eight feet in the final four holes to force the playoff. His only previous appearance in a playoff was when he captured his first Tour victory, as he beat Patrick Cantlay on the third hole at the WM Phoenix Open.

Scottie Scheffler lines up his putt on the first green during the final round of the Charles Schwab Challenge golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-USA TODAY Sports

But Burns, who already had victories this season at the Sanderson Farms Championship and the Valspar, posted the day’s best round, including a 30 on the front nine. Burns teed off nearly 90 minutes before Scheffler, and the LSU product took advantage of beating the afternoon gusts, although the world’s 10th-ranked player did play the final seven holes at even par.

He admitted that he wasn’t even thinking about the leaders as he made his way through his final round.

“I never really did, to be honest. When you start the day seven back, I knew Scottie was at 11, I mean, the way that guy is playing right now, who would have ever thought that you’d have a chance seven back?” Burns said. “But I mean, with the wind we had today and the way the golf course is set up, to go out and shoot the score that I did today was really good.”

When the playoff started, the nearly two-hour delay didn’t seem to faze Burns, as he piped a drive well past Scheffler on the first playoff hole and then calmly drained the 38-footer for the victory. Scheffler followed by just missing his putt from 37 feet away.

For Burns, this has become a huge season. The 25-year-old from Shreveport, Louisiana, has eight top-10s in 17 starts on the year and now is only behind Scheffler (four) in terms of Tour wins on the season.

And while the two are extremely close, Burns knows his buddy was not taking it easy on him.

“Yeah, we’re probably best friends,” Burns said. “But at the same time I can assure you, he wanted to beat me more than anybody else and I wanted to beat him more than anybody else, and it just happened to be the two of us at the end.

“It’s going to be a fun story that we’ll get to have for the rest of our careers, and fortunately, I got the better end of it this time, but hopefully, we’re at the beginning of these situations in the future.”

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Reigning champ Jason Kokrak flies through final round at Charles Schwab, but did he set a record?

Jason Kokrak entered this week glowing about the truck he won last year. He ended the week by motoring.

FORT WORTH, Texas — Jason Kokrak entered this week at the Charles Schwab Challenge glowing about the truck that came with his victory at Colonial Country Club in 2021, noting that he recently took his kids to school in the renovated, light blue 1946 Dodge Power Wagon.

He ended the week by motoring.

Off alone as the first player out of the gate on Sunday, the reigning champion flew through his round and when he tapped in for bogey on the 8th hole in front of the few fans already assembled at the Kokrak Ultra Athletic Club named in his honor, only 61 minutes had elapsed.

Kokrak didn’t pull out the pin on No. 8, and it was obvious he’d become frustrated after posting four bogeys in six holes after opening his round with an eagle and a birdie.

After recording a double on No. 15 and a bogey on 16, Kokrak finished the day with a 72 and was 8 over for the tournament, ending his Sunday round in 133 minutes. He didn’t finish last of those who made the cut, however, as Harry Higgs used four doubles to finish well behind Kokrak.

Quite the contrast from a year ago, when his hot putter helped Kokrak win a duel with Jordan Spieth on Sunday to claim his second PGA Tour title. He followed that with a victory at the Hewlett Packard Enterprise Houston Open just six months later.

Although Kokrak hustled through his round, he didn’t break any records in the process.

Last September, Joaquin Niemann toured East Lake Golf Club in one hour, 53 minutes at The Tour Championship, which is the official record for the fastest round on Tour — although officials have never been one to tout the achievement since ultra-fast play isn’t encouraged. Kevin Na had played the final round of the 2016 Tour Championship in 1 hour, 59 minutes.

The unofficial record was set by Wesley Bryan, who played the 2017 BMW Championship in one hour, 29 minutes.

Even though he didn’t fare well this week, Kokrak — a North Bay, Ontario, native — insists he’s still keen on the Lone Star State and mentioned earlier in the week that he wouldn’t rule out eventually living here.

“My cousin used to live in Houston and he always jokes that I should move to Texas because I’ve had so much success here,” he said. “You never know; I might become a Texan later on in life.”

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Scottie Scheffler is back in Texas and back atop a leaderboard, this time at Charles Schwab Challenge

The Texas winds are coming. Scottie Scheffler knows it. And the best way to prepare for stress is by taking it easy for a bit.

FORT WORTH, Texas — The Texas winds are coming. Scottie Scheffler knows it. And the best way to prepare for stress is by taking it easy for a bit.

So the fact that Scheffler — who has never sparkled at Colonial Country Club, even though it’s a PGA Tour home game for him — could exhale a little on Friday at the Charles Schwab Challenge and still put himself at the top of another leaderboard is something to behold.

Scheffler, the world’s top-ranked player, was smooth as silk in posting a 65 in the second round and now owns a portion of the 36-hole lead with fellow University of Texas product Beau Hossler and Scott Stallings. All three are at 9 under.

With a windy forecast for the weekend, Scheffler said he was happy to ease his way through Colonial on Friday, and has yet to make bogey in the tournament.

Scottie Scheffler plays his shot from the sixth tee during the second round of the Charles Schwab Challenge golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Jim Cowsert-USA TODAY Sports

“Yeah, I love that stat. It’s a lot of fun,” he said of the mark. “I kept the stress off myself for the most part. My lag putting was really good, and really the only long par putt I made was on No. 7, and outside of that, I really didn’t put much stress on myself, which is good. A four-day event having a day where I can take the stress off, especially when the conditions are going to be so hard the next two days is important.”

Charles Schwab: LeaderboardPGA Tour streaming on ESPN+ | Photos

Although he failed to make the cut at the PGA Championship last week at Tulsa’s Southern Hills, Scheffler is still playing with a different level of bravado than he’s previously brought to Colonial. He missed the cut last year and failed to get into the top 50 in his 2019 debut.

But with some fine-tuning in his iron and wedge game and a different sense of purpose, Scheffler is not only eager to show he can place at this event, he thinks the difficult conditions will help his cause.

“I think it’s going to be challenging. The greens, actually for Colonial having bentgrass, they’re pretty firm for the summertime here, and with the way the winds are going to blow, it’s going to be a very challenging day,” Scheffler said. “These fairways aren’t wide, and when it starts blowing like that, it can create some big gusts and awkward angles around this place, so it’s going to be a challenging weekend for sure.”

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How does Matthias Schwab feel about the car prize at Colonial? Like it’s got his name written all over it

One of the traditions at Colonial Country Club is the additional prize of a snazzy vehicle to the victor.

FORT WORTH, Texas – One of the traditions of the yearly PGA Tour event at Colonial Country Club is the additional prize of a snazzy vehicle to the victor.

In recent years, Kevin Na won and gave a glacier-blue 1973 Dodge Challenger to his caddie, and Jason Kokrak has since raved bout driving his kids off to school in the renovated, light-blue 1946 Dodge Power Wagon he won in 2021.

This year’s car is another beauty: a fully restored and modernized 1979 Firebird Trans Am with the word Schwab inscribed in multiple places, including throughout the interior. The car is in homage to sponsor Charles Schwab, and the year is significant because it was when the firm made a major technology investment.

But all that is irrelevant to Matthias Schwab. The 27-year-old Austrian who played collegiately at Vanderbilt knows just one thing about the vehicle – it literally has his name written all over it.

Schwab – who has three top-10 finishes on Tour this season, including a T-8 at the Valero Texas Open down the 35 from this week’s stop – admitted that he noticed the car, which is plopped prominently off to the side of the 10th hole at a busy thoroughfare. And after an opening-round 69, he’s pretty comfortable in the surroundings at the iconic club.

“I have noticed the car, yeah,” Schwab said. “It looks really cool. I have nothing but positive vibes out here. Obviously, the name of the tournament is great for me, also, and I’ve been out here before. I have a bunch of friends here from my college times. Nothing but positive vibes.”

Colonial sets up well for Schwab, who is one of the top putters on Tour but who lags on distance. The course is immaculate and loved by many of the players on Tour, but unlike TPC Craig Ranch – home of the AT&T Byron Nelson two weeks ago – it’s not a driving contest.

Matthias Schwab of Austria lines up a putt on the seventh green during the first round of the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club on May 26, 2022, in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Schwab hopes his friends in the area will come out en masse this weekend, especially if he’s in the hunt for a vehicle with a name that seems tailored to him.

“Most of them had to work (Thursday),” he said of his friends, “so not many of them were out here, but I hope to have a pretty good crowd (Friday) afternoon and then as the week goes on.”

His tee time Friday is 1:01 ET, and he’ll play with Christiaan Bezuidenhout and Taylor Moore.

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Charles Schwab Challenge, live stream, featured groups, time, TV channels, streaming info, how to watch

The Charles Schwab Challenge will get underway with Round 1 on Thursday morning from Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

The Charles Schwab Challenge will get underway with Round 1 on Thursday morning from Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas.

With over 120 golfers ready to take the course we have six of the top 10 players in the world that will be competing this weekend. Last week’s PGA Championship winner Justin Thomas, Jordan Spieth, Scottie Scheffler, and Collin Morikawa will tee off on Thursday.

This will be a great weekend of golf, here is everything you need to know to follow the action with PGA TOUR LIVE which is available exclusively on ESPN+.

Charles Schwab Challenge

  • When: Thursday, May 26
  • Time: 8:00 a.m.  ET
  • TV Channel: ESPN
  • Live Stream: ESPN+ (watch now)

Featured Groups, Thursday Afternoon

Marquee Group:
Justin Thomas, Scottie Scheffler, Jason Kokrak (10th tee)

Featured Groups:
Billy Horschel, Sam Burns, Talor Gooch (10th tee)
Collin Morikawa, Webb Simpson, Patrick Reed (10th tee)

Featured Holes: No. 4 (par 3), No. 8 (par 3), No. 13 (par 3), No. 16 (par 3)

PGA Tour Odds and Betting Lines

PGA Tour odds courtesy of Tipico Sportsbook. Odds were last updated Thursday at 9:00 a.m. ET.

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Justin Thomas puts PGA Championship celebration on hold as he eyes title at Colonial Country Club

“I was eight back. I was eight back with 10 holes to go. That’s unfathomable.”

Justin Thomas took an unusual approach to celebrating his stunning, come-from-behind victory in last week’s PGA Championship.

He reveled as little as possible.

“I have a golf tournament this week, and I’m just trying to perform and play as well as I possibly can,” Thomas said Wednesday at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas, home to the Charles Schwab Challenge.

“Hopefully give us something else to celebrate.”

So there was no quick trip to Las Vegas following his three-hole playoff win against Will Zalatoris, no over-the-top party long into the following night despite winning his second major title Sunday; it was his 15th PGA Tour triumph, which put him alongside Jack Nicklaus, Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy, Johnny Miller and Tom Watson as the only players since World War II to win at least 15 PGA Tour titles and two majors before turning 30.

Instead, the world No. 5 kicked up his heels at every opportunity.

Charles Schwab: LeaderboardPGA Tour streaming on ESPN+

“Obviously the last couple days have just been filled with rest and just trying to kind of recoup and get my mind and body back and ready to go come tomorrow morning,” Thomas said. “Had a nice early morning this morning, but I’ll just relax this afternoon and be good to go tomorrow (for the first round).

Justin Thomas of the United States poses with the Wanamaker Trophy after putting in to win on the 18th green, the third playoff hole during the final round of the 2022 PGA Championship at Southern Hills Country Club on May 22, 2022 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

“Obviously I want to enjoy it and I don’t want to just act like it didn’t happen because it did, but at the same time I have a week next week off potentially to just enjoy it and have some good times with my family and friends if we choose to.”

When Thomas does get around to celebrating this victory, part of the fun likely will include watching the TV coverage of the final day, when he stormed back from eight shots back with four birdies in his final 10 holes before toppling Zalatoris by one shot in the three-hole aggregate score playoff.

“I haven’t had a chance to watch like the full coverage on Sunday, which I’d like to, but I did happen to see when I was putting on nine, I was eight back. I was eight back with 10 holes to go. That’s unfathomable,” Thomas said. “If I was looking at leaderboards, I probably would not have thought I even had a chance to win. It’s a huge learning lesson for me. You’ve got to play golf. Those majors and in golf tournaments, anything can happen.

“I just kind of kept plugging along, and somehow it happened.”

He’ll try and do the same this week. Thomas is making his third start in the tournament – he tied for 40th and 10th in 2020 and 2021, respectively. If he needs anything to get his juices flowing, he just has to look around and take in Colonial Country Club, an old-school, tree-lined layout rich in history.

“This course is right in front of you,” he said. “You can play it very conservatively and put the ball in the fairway, kind of play to the doglegs or you can take a lot of drivers and kind of send it over some bunkers or over some doglegs and potentially make it a lot shorter.

“Playing from the fairway is very, very important here. The greens were very soft this morning with the rain last night and I guess into this morning, but with the wind that they potentially have forecasted, it can firm up by the weekend, which makes this place play pretty difficult.”

And if so, Thomas can call on his imagination and creativity and his ability to work shots in different shapes and heights.

“It just puts a premium on ball-striking and playing good golf,” Thomas said. “I just like the old-school designs because this place is a good example of you don’t need length to make a golf course hard. I just like the opportunity to play holes different ways, just putting a premium on hitting the ball in the fairway, putting a premium on just having control of your ball and understanding where you can miss it, where you can’t miss it.

“Because I think a lot of places nowadays is just kind of bomb it, send it as far as you can and just get it somewhere around the green, and the greens are so big that you can usually get up-and-down versus a place like here, they’re so small, have some very subtle undulation, that you just have to be smart around here.”

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Colonial Country Club perfect place for Jordan Spieth to remedy baffling putting mystery

Jordan Speith feels comfortable on the greens at Colonial and is ready for a big putting week on familiar greens.

Go figure.

Last month, Jordan Spieth had one of the worst putting weeks in his PGA Tour career and defeated Patrick Cantlay in a playoff at the RBC Heritage.

“I won this golf tournament without a putter,” he said after averaging -0.636 for the week in strokes gained putting and ranking 60th in the category.

Last week, Spieth said he felt like he putted the best he’s putted all year during the PGA Championship and, after coming in 1-2 in his last two starts, tied for 34th.

“It just doesn’t show on the stats, but it was the most free-flowing strokes I’ve had,” Spieth said.

So, what is in store for the world No. 9 this week in the Charles Schwab Challenge at Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas?

“I think it’s a matter of time before the lid comes off and I start to pour some in,” Spieth said Wednesday at Colonial. “A little disappointing that didn’t happen last week. I misread a lot of putts. Out here, I don’t really have the excuse of misreading putts because I should know where most of them go having played this course 60 to 75 times. I’m excited about that.”

Jordan Spieth with the trophy after winning the Dean & DeLuca Invitational at Colonial Country Club.
Jordan Spieth with the trophy after winning the 2016 Dean & DeLuca Invitational at Colonial Country Club.

Spieth has always been excited to play Colonial. In nine starts, he has a win in 2016, runner-up finishes in 2015, 2017 and 2021 and three other top 10s. Only once has he finished out of the top 15.

“I think the results show that I love this place,” he said. “It seems to, for whatever reason, fit my game really well and I really enjoy playing it. It requires some precision in the wind off the tee, obviously hitting fairways being of huge importance here, given how difficult it is out of the rough.

“But then I’ve putted well here. I love the slopes of the greens and seem to find success regardless of form coming in some years, and some years I’m in form coming in and then play well here.

“I’ve been playing really well, and last week was kind of just a little minor step back,” Spieth added. “I’m looking to try and tighten some things up and get back into contention. I had a few chances to win events, but that was kind of about it this year, even though I’ve played really good golf. So, I’m trying to maybe play a little more consistently in the top 10 on the weekend, and you never know when it goes your way sometimes.”

Check the yardage book: Colonial Country Club for the PGA Tour’s Charles Schwab Challenge

Check out StrackaLine’s hole-by-hole maps of the longtime home course for Ben Hogan.

Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth, Texas – site of this week’s Charles Schwab Challenge on the PGA Tour ­– was designed by John Bredemus and Perry Maxwell and opened in 1936. The layout has been home to a PGA Tour event since 1946 and was Ben Hogan’s home course.

Colonial ties for No. 85 on the 2022 Golfweek’s Best Classic Courses list for layouts built before 1960 in the U.S. It also ranks No. 4 among the best private clubs in Texas.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below.