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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Lucas Glover overcomes yips to win 2023 Wyndham Championship

“I got to a point with putting, I needed a whole new brain function, a whole new method.”

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GREENSBORO, N.C. – Lucas Glover was at the end of his rope.

The yips, the involuntary wrist spasms that occur most commonly when golfers are trying to putt, had plagued Glover for the better part of a decade.

“I had no control over my faculties sometimes,” he said. “I could just lose all feelings over a 10-inch putt. It was frustrating. I fought it for a long time.”

But thanks to a long putter and a split-handed putting grip, he has regained his confidence on the greens and he holed enough putts on Sunday to win the Wyndham Championship and earn his fifth career PGA Tour title.

“It’s been a revelation for me,” Glover said.

He closed with a 2-under 68 at Sedgefield Country Club and finished with a 72-hole total of 20-under 260, one stroke better than Russell Henley and Ben An.

Glover points to a 4-putt on the fifth green at Colonial Country Club  in the first round of the Charles Schwab Challenge a decade ago as the start of the dastardly affliction. The winner of the 2009 U.S. Open among his four previous titles had tried just about everything, including putting with his eyes closed. The stats tell the ugly story of his steep decline: he was 180th in Strokes Gained: Putting this season entering this week. But he’s been downright putrid on the shortest of putts. In the 2020-21 season, Glover missed 24 putts from 3 feet and in (863 for 887), a miss rate of 2.71 percent that ranked 196th on Tour. In 2021-22, he missed 27 shorties (193rd). The 43-year-old was struggling so mightily this season – already 26 misses from short range through July – and his confidence was so dented that he considered a switch to putting left-handed or with a long putter.

“I just tried the long putter first,” he said. “I had two weeks off before Memorial and just ordered [a new putter] and taught myself how to use it and been kind of sticking to that.” He added, “If you ever want a Tour player to practice more, you give them a new club because they’ve got to get used to it, figure it out. That’s kind of how it’s been.”

Last month, at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, Glover switched to a broomstick-style putter with a mallet head, the L.A.B. Mezz.1 Max, and ranked fifth in Strokes Gained: Putting that week, registering his first top-10 finish of the season.

“Making all your tap-ins is nice,” said Glover, who ranked 15th in SG: Putting this week. “When my speed’s good, I seem to make a lot of putts.”

Glover ranked 189th in the FedEx Cup when he taught himself his new split-handed grip, where the left hand hovers away from his chest and his right hand is separated and positioned farther down the club in a claw-style grip, in his garage ahead of the Memorial in early June. In July, he reeled off three straight top 10s — a T-4 at Rocket Mortgage Classic, a T-6 at John Deere Classic and a T-5 at the Barbasol Championship — and after a missed cut last week, he climbed back into the trophy hunt at Sedgefield CC, where he made his 19th career start, the most of any player since 2004, after rounds of 66-64-62. Beginning the week at No. 112 in the FedEx Cup Playoffs, he needed to finish no worse than a two-way tie for second to have a chance to qualify and did better than that, vaulting to No. 49 in the season-long points race.

In the final round, Glover, who shared the 54-hole lead with Billy Horschel, got off to an inauspicious start with a three-putt bogey from 27 feet. But he knocked his approach from 141 yards to 4 inches at the fourth and tapped it in. He drained a 7-foot birdie at No. 8 and 15-footer at No. 11 to reach 20 under. He and Henley were tied for the lead when play was suspended due to inclement weather for 2 hours and 3 minutes.

When play resumed, Henley, who has done everything but win this tournament the last four years, grabbed the lead with a 2-putt birdie at 15 but proceeded to bogey his final three holes to shoot 69 and suffered another disappointing result.

“Felt a little jittery out there, just never got into a good sync with my swing, felt kind of rushed from the top of my swing, just didn’t do a good job of handling the restart,” Henley said.

At 18, Glover caught a fortuitous break when he pulled his drive left. It appeared to be headed into tree trouble but bounced off a golf cart and closer to the fairway. Glover opted to lay up and got up and down for a closing par, fittingly sinking an 8-foot putt. When it dropped, Glover held his trusty long putter and smiled with glee.

“It’s what I needed,” he said of his putting technique. “This is a completely different motor skill and just a way to rewire my brain. … When you struggle as long as I have, or had, it just happened to be what happened to be the answer.”

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Billy Horschel, Lucas Glover scripting remarkable comeback stories among 5 thing to know at Wyndham Championship

Just two months after Billy Horschel opened with an 84 at the Memorial, he shares the 54-hole lead at the regular-season finale.

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GREENSBORO, N.C. — Just two months after Billy Horschel opened with an 84 at the Memorial and said through tears during his post-round press conference that his confidence “is the lowest it’s been in my entire career,” Horschel grabbed a share of the 54-hole lead at the Wyndham Championship.

One day after shooting 62 at Sedgefield Country Club, the low round of his career, Horschel backed it up with a bogey-free 7-under 63 on Saturday to tie Lucas Glover at 18-under 192. With time to kill at the end of the broadcast window, CBS re-aired the clip of Horschel’s emotional press conference, which included him saying, “I’m close.”

“That interview, that moment, as I’ve talked about a while, it was sort of like a release. I don’t fully understand why it happened then and there, because I had shared some of that with my team and my family before leading up to that, but right then and there it just happened,” he said. “From that moment I’ve been in a better head space, the game’s been going in the right direction since then.”

It doesn’t hurt that the putts have been dropping like old times. Last week, Horschel switched to an Odyssey putter and it’s been a game-changer this week. He ranks first in the field in Strokes Gained: Putting, gaining more than nine strokes on the greens and registered seventh straight under-par round.

“Just felt like needed a new look,” he said. “We sort of messed around with a Ping putter earlier this week and we thought we were going to use that, but I had a little hard time with longer putts, judging the speed with it, so we went back to this Odyssey and it’s working well.”

2023 Wyndham Championship
Billy Horschel sets to putt on the 8th green during the third round of the Wyndham Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: David Yeazell-USA TODAY Sports

Indeed, it is. Horschel, the 2014 FedEx Cup champion has qualified for the playoffs in each of the last 10 seasons but he entered the week at No. 116 in the point standings. He enters the final round projected to jump 63 spots and move on to Memphis next week, but he can’t finish worse than a two-way tie for second. The way he’s rolling the rock, his eighth win of his career is well within his sights.

“I’m happy where my game is, I’m happy where things are trending, I’m happy where mentally I’m heading,” he said. “So hopefully it’s just another day of moving forward, it’s another steppingstone. I haven’t been here in a while, but I’m prepared for whatever, however I may feel, whatever comes tomorrow.”

Here are four more things to know from the third round of the Wyndham Championship.

Russell Henley leads at Wyndham, Billy Ho’s back and JT still has life

Russell Henley is turning back the clock – just a bit, to 2021.

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GREENSBORO, N.C. — Russell Henley is turning back the clock – just a bit, to 2021.

That was the year he raced out of the gate with a 62 and 64 to grab the 36-hole lead, but he sputtered on Sunday and missed out on a six-man playoff. This week, he posted another 62 in the opening round and followed it up on Friday with a 66 at Sedgefield Country Club to grab a one-stroke lead over Billy Horschel at the midway point of the regular-season finale.

Henley’s goal is to avoid as Yogi Berra once said, déjà vu all over again. In other words, don’t fold like the Sunday paper on Sunday.

“I was in control of the tournament. Had a couple three-putts, missed a couple short ones and a couple bad swings on the back and missed out on the playoff by one shot. Definitely stings to kind of lose it right there because I played so well the first however many holes, 60 holes,” Henley said of blowing the lead here in 2021. “But again, you know, it’s why I’ve got to play all 72 holes. It’s just hard to do, hard to finish it off, but I’m excited hopefully for another good weekend.”

Here are four more things to know about the second round of the 2023 Wyndham Championship.

Russell Henley loves Sedgefield, Matt Wallace definitely does not among 5 things to know at Wyndham Championship

Catch up on Thursday’s action here.

GREENSBORO, N.C. — Russell Henley has unfinished business at the Wyndham Championship.

The 34-year-old Georgia grad has finished in the top 10 at Sedgefield Country Club the last three years, including in 2021 when he raced out of the gate with a 62 but blew the lead on the final hole and missed a six-man playoff by a stroke.

“I think about it a lot,” he said. “I mean, I was leading by three going in the final round a couple years ago and was leading the tournament by a few going into No. 11 the last, or a couple years ago and didn’t get it done. That’s a good learning experience, you know, and feel like I’ve gotten better as a player because of it.”

On Thursday, Henley made an eagle and six birdies and shot another opening-round 8-under 62 to take a one-stroke lead over Canadian Adam Svensson and South Korea’s Ben An and two better than fellow American Andrew Novak.

Henley, who played in the afternoon wave, benefited from better scoring conditions after a steady morning rain stopped.

“The first little bit of the front nine it was raining and felt like, man, this could be a tough day, especially if it picks up a little bit,” he said. “So just kind of hoping it would slow down a little bit. And it did on the back nine, so we were fortunate.”

Henley, the winner of the World Wide Technologies Championship in November, led the field in Strokes Gained: Tee to Green in the first round. His bogey-free 62 was his eighth score of 63 or better since the start of the 2020-21 season, tied for the most of any players on the Tour during that span with Patrick Cantlay, Jon Rahm and Xander Schauffele. Henley opened with a round in the 60s for the seventh time in as many starts at Sedgefield and improved his first-round scoring average to 66.14. But Henley has never converted one of his hot starts into a victory — he’s 0-for-7 converting the first-round lead/co-lead to victory, including the 2021 Wyndham. Unfinished business, indeed.

Here are four more things to know from the first round of the Wyndham Championship.

2023 Wyndham Championship odds, course history and picks to win

Is this the week McCarthy finally gets in the winner’s circle?

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The final event of the PGA Tour 2022-23 regular season is here as a field of players hoping to earn an invitation to TPC Southwind has arrived at Sedgefield Country Club for the Wyndham Championship.

Justin Thomas, the biggest name in the field, is fighting for more than just a playoff spot — he’s hoping to make a final impression on United States Ryder Cup captain Zach Johnson. Thomas comes into the week in Greensboro, North Carolina, ranked 79th in the FedEx Cup standings. The top 70 get into the FedEx St. Jude Championship in Memphis next week.

Adam Scott, Shane Lowry and Gary Woodland are just three of the other big names hoping a good week at Sedgefield can propel them into the postseason.

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Golf course

Sedgefield Country Club | Par 70 | 7,131 yards | Donald Ross design

Sedgefield Country Club
Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina. Photo by Streeter Lecka/Getty Images

Course history

Betting preview

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2023 RBC Heritage odds: 3 sleeper picks to win including Justin Rose (75/1)

Rose is coming off a top 20 at the Masters and finished 14th at Harbour Town in 2020.

After the year’s first major, the PGA Tour is headed to Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, for yet another designated event. The RBC Heritage is boasting one of the best —if not the best — fields it’s ever had.

World No. 1 and green jacket-wearing Jon Rahm, Scottie Scheffler, defending champion Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa and more are all set to tee it up come Thursday morning.

The third-ranked player in the world, Rory McIlroy, withdrew from the field on Monday. He missed the cut at the Masters last week.

Here are three sleepers to keep an eye on at Harbour Town, starting with a player who has already won on Tour this season.

More RBC Heritage: Expert picks to win | Yardage book

Listen to this week’s betting preview below:

2023 Genesis Invitational longshot picks: Does Tiger Woods have any chance at Riviera sitting at 150/1?

Tiger Woods is +150 to make the cut this weekend.

The year’s second full-field designated event is here, as 23 of the top 25 players in the Official World Golf Ranking have made their way to Riviera Country Club for the Genesis Invitational.

Oh, and some guy named Tiger Woods is going to be there, too. For all those kids reading, go look him up on YouTube. He was pretty good.

Woods has never won at Riviera and enters the week at 150/1. Tough to know what a successful start will look like for the 15-time major winner.

If you’re looking for more picks, click here to find four of our top selections to win the Genesis.

Now, let’s dive into three longshot picks, starting with Woods.

Russell Henley explains his love for the Sony Open in Hawaii, the site of his first win and last year’s playoff scrap

Russell Henley took fake revenge on Hideki Matsuyama’s 3-wood that cost him another win at Waialae.

It still stings when Russell Henley thinks back to last year’s Sony Open in Hawaii.

Don’t remember what happened? He had a two-shot lead entering the final round, shot a Sunday 65 and had a putt to win but wound up losing to Hideki Matsuyama, who forced a playoff with a back-nine 31. Matsuyama stole the trophy on the first extra hole after he hit a beauty of a 3-wood to two feet from 276 yards out on the par-5 18th.

A few months later, Henley saw Matsuyama at the WM Phoenix Open.

“I just walked up and said, ‘Hey, there, buddy,’ and grabbed his 3-wood and almost broke it over my knee,” joked Henley on Tuesday. “I mean, he played awesome. He shot 63-63 on the weekend and it’s just going to happen in golf where you lose. But no hard feelings obviously. I was just messing around.”

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Eight past champions, including Henley and Matsuyama, are in the field for this year’s Sony Open at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, as well as fan favorites Jordan Spieth and Tom Kim, who is making his Sony debut. Of the 39 players to tee it up at last week’s Sentry Tournament of Champions at Kapalua, 19 have hopped islands to Oahu for the PGA Tour’s Hawaii Double.

Despite last year’s disappointing finish, Henley is back for an 11th crack at the Sony Open and celebrates the 10-year anniversary of his 2013 win, the first of his PGA Tour career.

“Felt comfortable immediately because it seemed like a course that I was familiar with, bermudagrass and wind and warm weather, kind of what I played a lot on in Charleston,” said Henley. “Just had really comfortable pairing playing and Scott Langley, one of my buddies, and we both were playing well and just kind of rode the wave.”

Looking back, Henley remembers his stay in Waikiki at the Holiday Inn Express and his California Pizza Kitchen dinners. He also remembers feeling really good about his game, and for good reason, seeing as he had just won two of his last three tournaments on the Korn Ferry Tour in the fall.

The same could be said for this season following Henley’s win in the fall at the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba.

“Yeah, Mayakoba was awesome,” Henley said with a smile. “Looking back, I feel like I just kept taking what I was struggling with from Jackson [Sanderson Farms] and the CJ Cup and was making adjustments in my game, and started to feel really good with my putter and felt really comfortable on the course.”

Comfort goes a long way for Henley, and it’s an easy feeling to find on the islands. Don’t be surprised if he rides another positive wave this week at Waialae.

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With suspended second round complete, here’s who missed the cut at Cadence Bank Houston Open

Here’s who missed the cut, including the 12th-ranked golfer in the world.

HOUSTON – It’s finally time for the weekend in Texas.

Friday afternoon storms suspended play for good at 3:26 p.m. local time, with no groups who teed off in the afternoon having completed play. That meant everyone had to come back Saturday morning to essentially a different golf course.

The temperature Friday afternoon was 86 degrees. Saturday morning? How about 43. The winds also shifted, blowing out of the north instead of the southeast. It made for a chilly start for those who had to come back and fight to improve their position on the leaderboard and it helped those who may have missed the cut if the conditions remained nice.

Tony Finau, at 13 under, maintains his four-shot advantage with 36 holes to play. Patrick Rodgers and Alex Noren are four shots behind.

Here’s who missed the cut at the 2022 Cadence Bank Houston Open at Memorial Park Golf Course. The cut was even par, and 70 players made it.

Houston Open: PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ | Leaderboard