The redemption of Grayson Murray: Clutch birdie seals 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii via three-way playoff

The win is the second of Murray’s career and first since 2017.

HONOLULU – On the first hole of a three-man playoff at the Sony Open in Hawaii, Grayson Murray faced a 40-foot birdie putt. Both of his competitors – Byeong Hun (Ben) An and Keegan Bradley – were well inside him, with An 4 feet from possibly his first win. Murray figured one if not both of them would make their birdie putts, so he knew he had to give his putt a chance. Did he ever.

His left-to-right breaking putt straightened out as it neared the hole and disappeared, center cut. When neither An nor Bradley converted their birdie putts, Murray was a champion again on the PGA Tour for the first time in six years, five months and 22 days.

“I kept telling Jay, (his caddie), we’re hitting good putts, we’re hitting them right where we want, and we’re going to have one drop today, and it’s going to be big… and it might be for the win.”

Murray closed in 3-under 67 on Sunday at Waialae Country Club, including a clutch birdie at 18 in regulation to force his way into the playoff with a 72-hole total of 17-under 263.

That he returned to the winner’s circle in Hawaii of all places is fitting as it was site of one of his lowest points. Three years ago during this tournament, Murray was involved in an incident at a hotel bar where many of the players stayed, and the Tour placed him on probation.

“Why was I drunk?” he posted on social media. “Because I’m an alcoholic that hates everything to do with the PGA Tour life and that’s my scapegoat.”

Nevertheless, Murray showed great promise on the course, winning the 2017 Barbasol Championship despite drinking during tournament week and admitting on Sunday that he played three days hungover when he won.

“Best thing and worst thing that ever happened to me was winning my rookie year,” he said. “I think the alcohol brought a side out of me that wasn’t me. It was kind of the monster in me in a way.”

But the early success proved to be short-lived. He struggled to make cuts and conceded he was jealous of the players he grew up competing against, who were having greater success. Along the way, he had a Twitter spat with a fellow player, suffered a scooter accident in 2022 in Bermuda, and threatened to quit on multiple occasions. Murray also dealt with anxiety and depression, and said there were days he didn’t want to get out of bed.

2024 Sony Open in Hawaii
Grayson Murray celebrates with Akshay Bhatia after winning the 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

“I just thought I was a failure,” he said. “I thought I had a lot of talent that was just a waste of talent.”

Murray eventually entered rehab and said he’s been sober for eight months.

“It was by choice,” he said. “It was time.”

He regained exempt status on the PGA Tour this season after winning twice on the Korn Ferry Tour last year and set out to treat his return to the big leagues as a new beginning.

“I said, ‘Hey, look, I have an opportunity here,'” Murray recounted. “Probably haven’t reached my prime yet. I can get on a good solid 10-year run, and that’s what I plan on doing. I’m in such a good spot right now where I don’t want to change anything I’m doing.”

His caddie, Jay Green, called the change in Murray “night and day,” and added, “What I knew of him was off Twitter and his off-course issues. He’s got a lot of support now and he’s living a disciplined life.”

Murray is engaged to be married on April 27, and his fiancée, Christiana, walked the final holes and the playoff with fellow pro Tom Hoge’s father. Murray met her three years ago at the American Express, the week after his incident during the Sony Open.

2024 Sony Open in Hawaii
Grayson Murray and fiancee Christiana pose with the trophy winning the 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, Hawaii. (Photo: Michael Reaves/Getty Images)

“I can’t wait to do life with you,” she said when asked what she wanted to say to Murray after the win. “That’s going to be our wedding song.”

Murray shot 64 in the third round to share the 54-hole lead with Bradley. Before the final round, Josh Gregory, his short-game coach, tried to downplay the task at hand, saying playing well might do something for his golf career but it wouldn’t change his life. “I just used that mentality,” Murray said.

He stayed patient, making eight straight pars to start the final round before birdies at Nos. 9 and 10. With the final group on the 14th hole, there were five players tied for the lead at 16 under. At 18, Murray flighted a wedge from 78 yards inside three feet to match Bradley’s 67 and tied An (64), who two-putted for birdie ahead of him to get to 17 under.

The tee shot at the dog-leg left 18th, the first playoff hole, doesn’t set up well for Murray, a fader, especially with the wind off the left. He tugged it off the tee in the playoff, clipping a palm frond and had no choice but to lay up. He wedged 40 feet left of the hole. During regulation, his caddie watched Sam Stevens leave a putt on the same line short. Murray made sure he didn’t make the same mistake and broke into lusty fist pumps when he canned the putt.

“I love making big-time putts in big-time moments,” he said. “I’m never going to back down from a celebration.”

Bradley had made a clutch 20-foot birdie putt at 15 to assume the lead but played the par-5 18th in two pars.

“This is one of the hardest losses I’ve ever had in my career, if not the hardest,” said Bradley, who missed to the left on his 17-foot birdie putt to extend the playoff. “I played good enough to win. But sometimes it’s just not quite good enough, and that was one of these weeks.”

An shoved his 4-foot putt that would have forced another hole with Murray to the right and it didn’t even touch the cup.

“It’s a shame it ended that way,” An said. “It hurts, but what are you going to do.”

Murray is proud that he’s winning the battle with his demons and his watery eyes were one indication of how rewarding it was to see his hard work paying off.

“It’s not easy, you know. I want to give up a lot of times, give up on myself, give up on the game of golf, give up on life at times,” he said. “Just persevere, and when you get tired of fighting let someone else fight for you.”

That final line was a reference to something Murray believed was said by former North Carolina State men’s basketball coach Jim Valvano but actually is credited to ESPN’s Stuart Scott, who died of cancer in 2015. Regardless, Murray said those word had lifted him up and helped him write this next chapter of his redemption story.

“My story is not finished,” Murray said. “I think it’s just beginning. I hope I can inspire a lot of people going forward that have their own issues.”

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2024 Sony Open in Hawaii odds and picks to win at this week’s PGA Tour stop

Waialae could be the perfect fit for Matt Fitzpatrick.

After a fantastic 2024 opener at The Sentry, the PGA Tour heads to Honolulu for the Sony Open in Hawaii at Waialae Country Club. While it’s not a signature event, this year’s field boasts plenty of star power.

Defending champion Si Woo Kim is joined by Matt Fitzpatrick, Ludvig Aberg, Tyrrell Hatton, Sahith Theegala, Brian Harman and Justin Rose. After a final-round 7-under 66 in Maui, Kim tied for 25th at The Sentry.

Will Zalatoris is also in the field and will be making his first official Tour start since withdrawing prior to the 2023 Masters. He did tee it up at Tiger Woods’ Hero World Challenge in December, finishing last in the 20-man field.

The Sentry winner Chris Kirk will be a name to watch this week. In ’23, Kirk finished solo third, and in ’21 he grabbed a share of second. Overall, Kirk has five top-10 finishes — four of which are top-5s — at the Sony.

PGA Tour pro Ben An suspended for 3 months for violating anti-doping policy

The positive test came from a substance prohibited by WADA contained in a cough medicine.

Ben An will think twice next time he’s buying cough medicine.

The 32-year-old South Korean native has been suspended for three months for violating the PGA Tour’s Anti-Doping Policy.

The Tour announced on Wednesday that An had tested positive for a substance prohibited by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) contained in a cough medicine available over the counter in his native Korea.

An’s suspension officially began on Aug. 31, which means he will be eligible to return to competition on Dec. 1. According to a statement issued by the Tour, he has cooperated fully with the Tour throughout the process and accepted his suspension. As per Tour policy, the Tour said they would have no further comment on the suspension at this time.

An is a former winner of the U.S. Amateur and has won on the DP World Tour but is still seeking his first PGA Tour title. An, who has represented the International Team in the Presidents Cups, lost his card after the 2020-2021 season but won on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2022 and made it to the BMW Championship, the second of three FedEx Cup events this season. At No. 44 in the FedEx Cup standings, he already is exempt into all of the signature events in 2024.

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5 sleeper picks for the 2023 BMW Championship

Keep an eye on these 5 players this weekend.

The FedEx Cup Playoffs roll on this week in Illinois at Olympia Fields’ North Course for the BMW Championship.

After lifting another piece of hardware in Memphis, Lucas Glover owns the No. 4 spot in the points standings, trailing only Rory McIlroy (No. 3), Scottie Scheffler (No. 2) and Jon Rahm (No. 1).

Although Patrick Cantlay is technically the defending champion of this event, Rahm is the last player to win at OFCC for the BMW, taking down LIV Golf’s Dustin Johnson in a playoff back in 2020.

On the odds sheet, there’s clear separation between the top four players — McIlroy (+650), Scheffler (+700), Rahm (+900) and Cantlay (+1000) —and the rest of the field, but that doesn’t mean someone can’t shock the world.

Here are five sleeper picks for the BMW Championship.

BMW: Odds, picks to win | Thursday tee times, how to watch

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5 sleeper picks for the 2023 FedEx St. Jude Championship

It’s time to make a run in Memphis.

The top 70 in the FedEx Cup standings have made their way to Memphis, Tennessee, for the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind, this season’s first playoff event.

It’s no surprise to see world No. 1 Scottie Scheffler as the heavy betting favorite at +650. Rory McIlroy and Jon Rahm, Nos. 3 and 1 on the points list, respectively, are next in line at +900 to win. The Spaniard tied for fifth in Memphis last season while the other two missed the cut.

There’s plenty of star power in the field this week, but that doesn’t mean someone further down the odds list can’t make a run at the title.

Here are five sleeper picks to keep an eye on at the FedEx St. Jude Championship.

FedEx St. Jude: Odds, picks to win

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Rory McIlroy in the mix among takeaways from first round of 2023 Genesis Scottish Open

Catch up on Thursday’s action here.

The opening round of the Genesis Scottish Open is in the books, and there’s just one thing to say: it’s tough to beat coffee golf.

Byeong Hun An had himself a day at The Renaissance Club, posting a bogey-free 9-under 61 to take the outright 18-hole lead. Looking for his first win on the PGA Tour, An leads Davis Riley, who’s alone in second, by two shots.

Riley is already a winner on Tour this season, teaming up with Nick Hardy to win the Zurich Classic in April. The University of Alabama product was able to keep the scorecard clean Thursday, signing for a 7-under 63. His round included a stretch of five straight birdies on Nos. 3-7. This is Riley’s first appearance at The Renaissance Club.

If you missed any of the action Thursday, no worries, we have you covered. Here’s everything you need to know from the opening round of the Genesis Scottish Open in North Berwick, Scotland.

Scottish Open: Leaderboard | Friday tee timesPhotos

Justin Lower’s rollercoaster ride of emotions continues and Danny Willett hires ‘a tall Yoda’ among the 5 things we learned during the third round of the Fortinet Championship

“I’m sure I’ll be nervous, for sure…I mean, it’s why we play.”

Justin Lower’s rollercoaster ride of emotions continues.

The 33-year-old journeyman pro bogeyed two of his first seven holes but rallied with five birdies, including one at the last to sign for 3-under 69 at Silverado Resort’s North Course in Napa, California. It was good enough to improve to 13-under 203 and take a one-stroke lead over defending champ Max Homa and former Masters champ Danny Willett heading into the final round of the Fortinet Championship.

“It was tough out there today, it was a little breezy, greens getting firmer and firmer,” Lower said. “I just really just tried to keep it in the fairway and give myself as many birdie looks as possible.”

Some of those birdies even have come from off the green. Lower chipped in for birdie for the third time in three rounds at the fourth hole on Saturday.

Lower has taken one circuitous journey to his first final-round pairing on the PGA Tour. He attended Q-School six times, missed earning his card by a single shot in 2018, and needed to pitch to a foot from 30 yards to save par at the final hole at the 2021 Korn Ferry Tour Championship in Indiana to secure his playing privileges for the first time. Lower still wasn’t sure if he’d done enough to earn the last card until his fellow pros and caddies showered him with beer and champagne. When he finally grabbed hold of his coveted PGA Tour card, Lower said, “It’s heavier than I thought it would be.”

His rookie season had more lows than highs, beginning with a missed cut in Napa at last season’s kick off event.

“I left this course last year kind of in shock, honestly. I was like, God, if this is how the Tour is, I need to get a lot better very quickly,” he recalled.

In August, at the Wyndham Championship, he needed to two putt from 61 feet at the final hole to make the FedEx Cup playoffs and keep his card. He took three putts and gave a teary-eyed interview afterwards.

But when six players defected to LIV Golf, Lower was granted exempt status for next season. So far, he’s taking advantage of it. He shot a career-best 63 on Thursday and has the 54-hole lead at a Tour event for the first time. He could crush his best Tour finish to date — a T-10 at the Zurich Classic of New Orleans, the two-man team event — but there also are nine players within four shots of his lead.

“I’m sure I’ll be nervous, for sure, but just part of it,” Lower said. “I mean, it’s why we play. Yeah, it’s just, I don’t know, playing on the PGA Tour with a chance to win, it’s pretty cool.”

FortinetPGA Tour on ESPN+ | Leaderboard | Sunday tee times

Sam Harrop stars as perfect lyrical parodist in golf’s social media realm

Singing about Bryson, Brooks, Phil and more has led to a level of notoriety for this witty English golf fan.

When Sam Harrop first sat down in front of his piano to figure out how to convert pop songs into brain worms for golf fans, he never imagined it would lead to a putt-putt contest with a PGA Tour-quality player.

But after good-naturedly calling out Ben An’s stroke with a song set to the Beatles’ “Penny Lane,” – with lyrics such as “Benny An, he putts like he has got glass eyes. Please, just get some tips from Larry Mize.” – then playing said tune on the baby grand in the lobby of An’s home club at Lake Nona near Orlando, the Korn Ferry Tour player responded with a friendly challenge on Twitter.

“I saw he was in town, precisely in Lake Nona, so I tweeted half-jokingly, we need to have a putting contest,” said An, who would break a six-year winless slump with a Korn Ferry Tour victory two weeks later, “and Sam came up with an idea to have a putt-putt match. And I won, by the way.”

For a self-described “golf nerd” such as Harrop who records his tunes at home in the south of England, it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience despite the 3-and-1 loss at one of the Pirates Cove Adventure Golf locations in Orlando. And it’s all due to his clever golf lyrics in songs about PGA Tour, DP World Tour and LPGA players that led the Times of London to dub Harrop golf’s premier parodist.

“That’s completely nuts, the kind of thing that’s almost like a dream,” the 40-year-old Harrop said.

And it was a perfect illustration of how his songs have achieved must-see status for a die-hard contingency of Twitter-obsessed golf fans. Bryson DeChambeau, Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson, Louis Oosthuizen and plenty of other pros have been in Harrop’s lyrical crosshairs, and for many of the younger tour players, it’s a badge of honor to have Harrop include them in verse.

“I thought it was very funny,” the 30-year-old An – who has spent more than a decade bouncing around the PGA Tour, Korn Ferry Tour and recently rebranded DP World Tour – said of the song that made fun of his putting. “I knew it wasn’t personal, and everyone on my team thought it was funny. Even my wife did, too. It definitely is. You know you made it when he makes a song about you. And he only makes the songs to somewhat ‘nice’ guys who aren’t going to take it personally.”

DeChambeau and Mickelson might not feel the same after having been targets of parody, but the fans eat it up. Harrop has amassed a following into the tens of thousands on Twitter and Instagram, all eager for the next song. Even the pros are listening – and frequently responding. And while there have been other singers tackle golf in comedic fashion – think former PGA Tour player Peter Jacobsen and his group, Jake Trout and the Flounders – it’s Harrop’s uncanny social media ease and timing that have garnered so many views.

Not bad for a father of two young children in England who markets sheet music for a living.

“That’s honestly one of the best things about it,” Harrop said. “You have to realize, I came from basically being just a big golf fan, right, and a golf nerd just watching the golf every week. So going from that to having interactions with these players, with them either liking my videos or commenting on them or retweeting them, and these names flashing up saying something like ‘Nick Faldo just liked your video,’ it’s crazy. I just never really would have expected that.”

He knows his audience

Harrop is no novice when it comes to music, even though for most of his life it didn’t have anything to do with golf. He started piano lessons when he was 8 and also can play a mean cello, and he sang in choruses near home in England as a child. He studied music at the University of Southampton and played in bands and in bars throughout much of his 20s. He still is part of an acapella group in London that has been sidelined during COVID.

And he’s in no way new to social media. One of the bands in which he played keyboard, named RedBoxBlue, in 2008 became the first group to ever stream online gigs via Facebook. The band didn’t make it far, but that ingenuity is still evident in how Harrop approaches social media. He knows his audience, because really, he is a part of that same Twitter fan base that enjoys a fair amount of mostly lighthearted and entertaining snark.

“I sort of knew the small audience that I had would be receptive to those kinds of ‘in’ jokes, those little things that if you’re just a casual golf fan who just watches the majors, you probably wouldn’t understand a lot of it,” said Harrop, who used to write a golf betting blog. “There are always some niche references in there that I think only the real golf aficionados would appreciate.”

Things took off for Harrop in February of 2020 when he wrote “When Will Tony Finau Win Again,” set to the tune of REO Speedwagon’s “Can’t Fight This Feeling.” Finau was on a streak of not winning despite a run of close calls, but he got a kick out the song and retweeted at Harrop, asking for a remix if he ever managed to climb back into the winner’s circle. With more than 180,000 followers on Twitter, Finau’s retweet earned Harrop a following.

“The week after I did the song, Tony was interviewed on Sky Sports over here, and they asked him about the song,” Harrop said. “And he said something like, ‘Oh, I loved it, I was watching it with my uncle and we laughed the whole time.’ And I thought that was just really cool for him to be asked about the song and for him to respond about it so positively. That really kicked off the whole thing. It lent credibility to the reason I was doing the whole thing.”

Harrop lived up to his end of the bargain, rewriting his lyrics into “The Day That Tony Finau Won Again” after Finau’s victory in The Northern Trust on the PGA Tour in 2021.

After that early surge following Finau’s tweet, Harrop came up with songs about the DeChambeau/Koepka feud of 2021 that led to the Tour trying to calm down the man-spat – parody gold, it turned out. The lyrics were observant and sharp without ever diving into mean-spirited territory – and honestly, they were hilarious so long as you weren’t Bryson or Brooks.

His most recent song, “Growing the Game” set to America’s “Horse With No Name,” has been lauded by his fans – the song makes reference to players who have considered playing for a upstart Saudi-backed golf league and who frequently say they only want to grow the game internationally and aren’t in it for the money.

That song came shortly after Harrop briefly questioned Mickelson’s comments and plans to play for the proposed Saudi league – and he was added to a growing list of fans who were blocked on Twitter by the six-time major winner, though Harrop is quick to point out the song had been in development for weeks before he was blocked.

“I just put it on Twitter that as someone who basically grew up following Phil and being a big fan of his, that he keeps making comments now that make me question my allegiance,” Harrop said. “And apparently that was enough to get blocked. It seems like a lot of people have been blocked. I didn’t even tag him in my post, so it must be him or one of his team going through and searching his name and blocking anyone who posts anything even vaguely negative or challenging, which seems a bit extreme.”

A left-hander himself, Harrop had grown up as a major Mickelson fan. He grew interested in golf watching the European Tour and PGA Tour with his dad most weekends. The family would occasionally play a local pitch-and-putt, though full-size 18-hole rounds were rare. After not following the game as much in college, Harrop again became a fan and occasional player when teeing it up with roommates between musical gigs around London.

Twitter notoriety

These days, it’s fair to say Harrop’s best swings come via piano and not on the golf course. He’s happy to make a few pars, and he’s thrilled that his Twitter notoriety has earned a few tee times at top-tier courses, such as the round at Lake Nona before he played the baby grand and sang about An. Playing with rental clubs on the home course to many Orlando-based Tour pros, Harrop lost more balls than he made pars, but he smiled his way around the course before capping the round with a tee-ball blast straight down the middle on the 18th hole.

“There used to be a time when I would get angry on the course, and now I accept that I will never really be very good,” Harrop said. “And that has lifted a burden, and I’m just out to hit a few good shots and maybe make a couple pars and enjoy my friends.”

So as a golfer, Harrop is a very good piano player. It sometimes takes weeks to develop his lyrics, while other times he feels a time crunch based on current events.

“The song kind of has to match the player or the narrative, if you like,” he said. “If I’m doing a song that’s just about a player, I’ll do a bit of research about their background, like what college they went to, any sort of big wins they have, that sort of thing. Trying to make it into a story, in a kind of way.

“But then if it’s more of a reactionary song, like Finau winning again or the Brooks and Bryson feud or the Saudi ‘Growing the Game’ one, its looking through articles about that sort of topic. (Golfweek columnist) Eamon Lynch, for example, I went through a couple of his articles when I was putting together that Saudi song and picked out a few highlights and things that he quotes. I make a short list of reference I want to get into the song and then just kind of find a way to tie them in.”

What’s next for Harrop remains further up in the air than any 9-iron he might ever hit. He has performed songs for the U.S. Golf Association and Sky Sports, and he was in Orlando to play the opening of the PGA Merchandise Show in January. He hopes to keep singing about golf, and there could be a new podcast or online video program with him commenting on golf from home – he’s open to ideas, and his enthusiasm for the game is as catching as one of his tunes.

“It’s all slightly pinch-yourself kind of stuff, really,” he said. “It’s almost become slightly surreal, because I’m just a guy with a normal job and I just have this sort of little hobby.”

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Despite bogey on 18, Byeong Hun An wins Lecom Suncoast Classic on Korn Ferry Tour

He twice previously lost a playoff on the PGA Tour but now he has a win on the Korn Ferry Tour.

He’s played in the Olympics (2016) and a Presidents Cup (2019). He was close to winning twice on the PGA Tour before falling short in a playoff. He does have three international wins but on Sunday, Byeong Hun An broke through with a win at the Korn Ferry Tour’s Lecom Suncoast Classic, his first win anywhere in seven years.

An carded a final-round 69 which included a bogey on the final hole at Lakewood National GC Commander in Lakewood Ranch, Florida. His four-day total of 17-under 267 (65-66-67-69) was good enough to win by a shot over a foursome of Seonghyeon Kim, Scott Harrington, Ben Griffin and MJ Daffue.

Eight other golfers tied for sixth at 15 under, including Michael Gellerman, whose double-bogey 6 on 18 proved costly. Gellerman started the day with his first 54-hole lead on the Korn Ferry Tour in 65 starts.

The Korn Ferry Tour takes a month off before returning with back-to-back events in Louisiana at the Chitimacha Louisiana Open in Broussard and the Lake Charles Championship.

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Zurich Classic: Notables who missed the cut in New Orleans

Not even the team format and a pairing with World No. 4 Collin Morikawa could turn around the fortunes of Matthew Wolff.

AVONDALE, La. – Not even the team format of the Zurich Classic of New Orleans and a pairing with World No. 4 Collin Morikawa could turn around the fortunes of Matthew Wolff.

They were among the notables to miss the cut at TPC Louisiana.

The field of 80 two-man teams was trimmed on Friday night to the top 33 and ties. That meant it took a score of 6-under 138 (T-24) to play the weekend. Nine teams missed by one stroke and were just three strokes away from being in the top 10 heading into the weekend. It shows just how fine a line it is between success and failure on the PGA Tour – and making a check.

Here are three of the top teams who won’t be playing on the weekend.