Austin Eckroat’s wife made a deal to fly in late, and she saw a life-changing moment in person

Austin was asked what Sally said when she ran to him: “I couldn’t understand her. She was still crying.”

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Florida — Austin Eckroat had never won a PGA Tour event entering the Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches.

But he and his wife, Sally, who was home last week in Edmond, Oklahoma, meeting with contractors, made a deal: She would fly to Palm Beach County if Austin were in contention entering the weekend.

“After his Friday round he texted me, ‘Do you have a flight booked yet?’ ” Sally said.

Sally hopped on a plane, arriving in time Saturday for her husband’s back nine. Austin went from one shot out entering the weekend to tied for the lead after 54 holes, where he remained through a stormy Sunday that turned into Monday.

But with conditions much calmer, Eckroat started on No. 8 Monday and never relinquished that lead. In fact, he made it so comfortable he was able to play a stress-free 72nd hole, completing a 67 and four-day total 17-under 267 for his first professional win.

“I’m really not sure how I feel yet,” the 25-year-old former Oklahoma State All-American said after making his 50th start on the PGA Tour. “Been waiting for this moment my whole life.”

Winning on a Monday, with modest crowds, was appropriate for a man whose dad, Steve, says he’s so even-keeled and low-key that if he has a bad day on the course dinner “is not going to suck that night. He’s still pleasant.”

But, added, don’t misconstrue that for not having that passion. “He’s got a fire in him,” Steve said.

More: How much did each player make at the Cognizant Classic?

Eckroat, who shot a 65-67-68-67 and broke the Champion Course record for this event by three strokes, said he was the second most excited person “in the world” Monday — behind his dad.

Actually, Austin might have been the third most excited after watching Sally hurry to the green to give her husband a big hug and a kiss.

Austin was asked what she said.

“I couldn’t understand her,” he said. “She was still crying.”

Austin Eckroat and his wife Sally hold the trophy after winning the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches at PGA National Resort & Spa on March 4, 2024 in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida.

That celebration came in front of a modest gallery surrounding the green and near-empty grandstands, the result of the first Monday finish on the PGA Tour in 13 months.

“Everything happens for a reason,” Sally said about the subdued celebration. “It was supposed to be this way. It felt very calming with less people out here. I think it was a blessing.”

Sally’s tears were understandable given how much a PGA Tour victory means these days, especially for golfers in Eckroat’s class.

Eckroat, who entered the weekend ranked No. 101 in the world, now is eligible for the remaining signature events this season, including this week’s Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill, the Masters and the PGA Championship.

Not to mention he receives a $1.62 million winner’s check. Eckroat earned just more than $2.86 million in his first 49 career starts.

Eckroat was asked soon after hoisting the first-ever Cognizant Classic crystal trophy what he was looking forward to most.

“I’m looking forward to this afternoon and evaluating my schedule and seeing what the rest of the season is going to hold,” he said. “It’s just a great opportunity upcoming with what the win does for me. The job security I gain from that, as well. There’s a lot that this got for me.”

Eckroat’s only previous flirtation with victory on the Tour was the 2023 Byron Nelson. He was tied for the lead after 54 holes before shooting a 65 and finishing tied for second.

That weekend, though, was an invaluable experience.

“I didn’t really know what to expect, what the feeling would be,” Austin said. “I knew finishing second was heartbreaking.”

Eckroat could have become unnerved early when he missed a 7-foot birdie put on No. 10, his third hole of the day. And Steve, who played college golf at Oklahoma City University and has been Austin’s swing instructor, wondered how his son would react.

Steve was feeling pretty good watching Austin’s early iron play but got a bit nervous when his putts were not falling, wondering if “he was going to start pressing” after a slow start on the greens.

Those nerves calmed after Austin made consecutive birdie putts at Nos. 12 and 13, both from around 7 feet.

That gave him a cushion – even with his lone bogey of the day at No. 14 – entering the daunting Bear Trap. But a par on the par-3 No. 15, the toughest hole over the tournament’s four days, and a birdie on No. 16 helped for what he called “the scariest tee shot of the year” at the par-3 No. 17.

But that tee shot came with a three-shot lead over Erik van Rooyan, who finished Sunday at 14-under, and Min Woo Lee.

Making the final hole as stress-free as it can get for a champion.

“Just tried to keep a calm demeanor,” said Austin, who added he was a lot less calm on the inside. “I think I do pretty well at that in all aspects, whether I’m playing bad or good.

“It just comes natural. I’m that way in everyday life, not just on the golf course. Just pretty stoic, never too high, never too low. I think it’s a blessing in golf, though.”

Why did PGA National play so easy during the 2024 Cognizant Classic? Here are a few reasons

The mighty Champion Course at PGA National appears to have lost its cutting edge.

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Florida — The mighty Champion Course at PGA National appears to have lost its cutting edge after recent efforts to produce a gentler course for professional golfers.

The 2024 Cognizant Classic set a new standard for low scoring on the vaunted course: Champion Austin Eckroat shot 17-under, the best by an event winner on the Champion Course, while a record 27 total golfers shot 10-under or better.

In the 17 previous years of the event at PGA National, just 11 golfers shot 10-under or better with 11 tournaments producing no golfers double-digits under par.

Last year, Chris Kirk and Eric Cole went to a playoff at a record 14-under in the final Honda Classic. Only two other players shot 10-under or better in a tournament that was arguably the lowest scoring at the event site to date.

Even though Eckroat ultimately won by a comfortable three-stroke margin Monday, the former Oklahoma State star was well aware he was tailed by a pack of golfers capable of cashing in on scoreable conditions.

“I look at the leaderboard when I’m playing. I’m not afraid to look at them,” Eckroat said. “I noticed that those guys were close and then on No. 15 I noticed Min Woo Lee had gone to 14-under. I knew I wasn’t clear then and there were a lot of guys still in the event with the Bear Trap coming.”

Golfers feast on redesigned No. 10

The Champion Course at PGA National has developed a challenging reputation among professional golfers due to its plentiful water, unpredictable winds and tricky hole designs.

In the 2020-21 season, the course was rated the third-most difficult on the PGA Tour, a fact that reportedly drove some top golfers away when combined with its usual late February, early March schedule.

In recent years, efforts to ease the course’s difficulty have included cutting the 4-inch rough in half as well as shortening the yardage on the Bear Trap’s notorious par-3s.

This year, tournament officials also converted hole No. 10 from a par-4 to a par-5, a change that immediately made it the easiest hole on the course: Golfers combined for 28 eagles and 283 birdies over the tournament with no player scoring worse than bogey, just 14 times.

“For me, obviously, a longer hitter, [hole No. 10] actually shaped to my liking a bit more,” said Min Woo Lee, who finished tied for second at 14-under. “If I hit it straight [now] it’s okay where before with the forward tees I could hit it straight and it might run through.”

Lee, who shot 4-under at the event last year, played No. 10 at 6-under for the tournament with two eagles and two birdies.

2024 Cognizant Classic
Heavy rains postponed play as puddles form on the 18th green complex during the final round of the Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports

Monday finish a rare challenge

While the course may not have offered the usual hazards that stymy golfers, Mother Nature still had its say with Sunday’s driving rains that pushed the tournament to its first Monday finish since 2015.

“It was hectic but I just had to keep my head in the game,” Lee said. “I don’t really have that many Monday finishes or where I’ve been included … It was tough to regroup and lock in.

“Last night, I was just on my phone for a couple hours and I was like, ‘What am I doing? I need to sleep,’ It felt like the end of the tournament but we had another 12 hours of golf to play.”

Shane Lowry and David Skinns, who co-led after 54 holes with Eckroat, struggled to build momentum Monday morning, both shooting 1-over to finish tied for fourth.

Lowry’s struggles were visible and the former British Open champion smashed his club into the ground in frustration on hole No. 15 after hitting his tee shot into the water and failing to put his third shot close enough to avoid a double bogey.

Skinns, who bogeyed two of his first three holes Sunday after the rain delay, was better Monday but ultimately not good enough to keep pace with Eckroat.

“Yeah, yesterday that was a strange day, waiting around as much as we did,” Skinns said. “I thought I’d be pretty calm, but yesterday I was pretty apprehensive. I wasn’t feeling great.

“Came back today with a totally different outlook, and I’m pleased with the way I played today. There was a couple of iffy shots, but I put my best foot forward today I felt like, and I was more comfortable.”

Skinns entered the tournament ranked 289th in the world ranking and his payout for tying for fourth place ($344,250) will more than double his career PGA Tour earnings.

Erik Van Rooyen was likely the most apprehensive player not at PGA National on Monday.

The South African shot a tournament-best 63 in a final round finished Sunday to enter the clubhouse at 14-under. He chose to take part as scheduled in the prestigious pro-member event at Seminole Golf Club, though he reportedly had a car waiting in the event he backed into a playoff.

Eric J. Wallace is deputy sports editor for The Palm Beach Post. He can be reached at ejwallace@gannett.com.

PGA Tour golfers 10-under or better at PGA National

2024 — 27

2023 — 4

2022 — 1

2021 — 1

2020 — 0

2019 — 0

2018 — 0

2017 — 1

2016 — 0

2015 — 0

2014 — 0

2013 — 0

2012 — 3

2011 — 0

2010 — 1

2009 — 0

2008 — 0

2007 — 0

Check the yardage book: PGA National’s Champion Course for the 2024 Cognizant Classic on the PGA Tour

StrackaLine takes you through the Bear Trap and the rest of PGA National’s Champion Course.

The Champion Course at PGA National – site of this week’s Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches on the PGA Tour – was designed by the team of Tom Fazio and George Fazio and opened in 1981. The course has been renovated by Jack Nicklaus over the past two decades.

Located in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, and home to a stretch of holes dubbed the Bear Trap – Nos. 15, 16 and 17 – the Champion has major history. It was host to the 1983 Ryder Cup, in which the United States beat Europe 14 ½-13 ½, and it hosted the 1987 PGA Championship won by Larry Nelson in a playoff over Lanny Wadkins. Now PGA National is the first stop on the PGA Tour’s annual Florida Swing.

The Champion ranks No. 7 in Florida on Golfweek’s Best list of public-access courses in each state, and it ties for No. 69 on the list of top resort courses in the U.S.

The course will play to 7,147 yards with a par of 71 for the Cognizant Classic. No. 6 plays as a par 5 for resort guests (and is marked as such on the following yardage map), but it counts as a par 4 for the PGA Tour pros.

PGA National Resort is home to six courses, including two nontraditional layouts that include the new Match Course by Andy Staples, which features holes that can be played from a multitude of lengths with no set par, and the new nine-hole, par-3 Staple Course.

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 at PGA National.

First Rickie Fowler, now Rory McIlroy: The Cognizant Classic is off to a hot start in commitments

The Cognizant (formerly Honda) Classic has not featured a golfer ranked among the top two in nearly a decade.

The Cognizant Classic has not featured a golfer ranked among the top two in the world in nearly a decade.

That likely will end in 2024.

Rory McIlroy, a Jupiter, Florida, resident and world No. 2, has committed to the event formerly known as the Honda Classic. McIlroy, the 2012 champion, has not played in the tournament held at PGA National in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, since 2018.

“It’s always good to come back to a tournament where you’ve won and had success before, and even better when it’s a bit of a home game,” McIlroy, 34, said. “PGA National is a great test of golf and the fan support and incredible crowds make for an exciting atmosphere throughout the week for the players.”

Cognizant will be held Feb. 29-March 3.

Cognizant has not had a golfer ranked in the top 10 the week of the event in the past three years and none in the top two since McIlroy was No. 1 in the world when he played in 2015. The 2023 field included four of the top 30 golfers, none higher than 18th.

McIlroy joins fellow Jupiter resident Rickie Fowler, No. 27 in the Official World Golf Ranking, as the first two announced commitments.

CJ Cup 2021
Rickie Fowler (white shirt) and Rory McIlroy walk the first fairway during the final round of the CJ Cup golf tournament. (Photo: Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)

With the PGA Tour adjusting the 2024 schedule to add a week between the West Coast Swing and Cognizant, which is the start of the Florida Swing, the hope is the field receives a boost.

Cognizant signed a six-year deal as the new title sponsor last month and the PGA Tour’s Championship Management division now is running the event.

McIlroy’s ties to the area run deep. He and Tiger Woods launched TGL, a virtual golf league that will be held in Palm Beach Gardens on the campus of Palm Beach State College. The start of the league has been delayed until January 2025 after the venue’s roof collapsed in November.

McIlroy coming off Dubai win

McIlroy is coming off a victory at the Dubai Desert Classic last Sunday, an event he has won a record four times. He won twice on the PGA Tour in 18 starts last season, giving him 24 career tour victories, including four majors.

McIlroy, from Northern Ireland, led the victorious 2023 European Ryder Cup team with four victories. He won his Sunday singles match over Sam Burns, teamed with Tommy Fleetwood for two more wins and Matt Fitzpatrick for another.

McIlroy’s lone loss, in which he was teamed with Fitzpatrick, was filled with drama. McIlroy was angered when Patrick Cantlay’s caddie, Joe LaCava, overdid his celebration after Cantlay drained a long putt that ended up clinching the match. LaCava distracted McIlroy as he was lining up a potential tying putt during a chaotic scene in which the entire U.S. team was waving its caps, a reaction to the fans who had taunted Cantlay the entire day.

Then, as he was leaving the club, McIlroy was yelling and pointing at Jim “Bones” Mackay, Justin Thomas’ caddie and a close friend of LaCava’s. He had to be held back and shoved into a car by Shane Lowry. The scene went viral.

The 2012 Honda was McIlroy’s third PGA Tour win. He carded a 12-under 268 and held off a Sunday charge from Woods, who tied for second two shots behind.

The victory allowed McIlroy to rise to world No. 1 for the first time in his career. He has spent 122 weeks atop the world ranking. McIlroy has been ranked in the top three every week but one since June 2022.

Grounds and hospitality tickets are now on sale for the 2024 Cognizant Classic in The Palm Beaches.

Tom D’Angelo can be reached at tdangelo@pbpost.com. Follow him on social media @tomdangelo44.

[lawrence-auto-related count=1 tag=451203931]