Sepp Straka’s dream to win on the PGA Tour became reality at the 2022 Honda Classic

Straka became the first Austrian-born winner on the PGA Tour.

During Sepp Straka’s junior season at the University of Georgia in 2013-14, he struggled so mightily that he failed to qualify for the men’s golf team. A bad case of the chipping yips forced him to take a redshirt season.  Making the PGA Tour, let alone becoming a tournament winner, seemed a longshot at best.

“I wasn’t very good,” Straka said. “I never really thought I’d make it as a pro. It was more of a dream.”

That dream became reality and in late February of 2022, Straka played inspired golf, erasing a five-stroke deficit entering the final round with three birdies on his last five holes to win his maiden Tour title at the Honda Classic. In doing so, Straka became the first Austrian to win on the PGA Tour.

“You try to believe that you can win, but until you actually get it done, it really is hard to believe,” he said.

Believe it or not, this story begins at Golf Club Gut Altentann, 10 minutes outside Salzburg in the heart of the Salzburg Alps, where Straka’s mother, Mary, ran the golf shop at the Jack Nicklaus designed course. Later, she took a similar role at Fontana Golf and Country Club, south of Vienna on the edge of the spa town of Baden. This is where Straka learned the game from his father, Peter, and at age 11, Straka and his fraternal twin brother – Sam is 2 minutes older – participated in a golf summer camp. Until this time, Straka was devoted to soccer, starring as a goalie, but after the camp Sam made the executive decision that the brothers were going to take golf seriously going forward.

The Straka family moved from Austria to the U.S. to be closer to his mom’s side of the family in Valdosta, Georgia, when he was 14. Georgia coach Chris Haack signed the brothers as a package deal. Finally, in Straka’s senior season, after overcoming a 7-8 month stretch during which he felt as though he couldn’t hit a green, Sepp’s game clicked into a higher gear and he turned pro in 2016. Yet he was so discouraged by his poor start to the 2018 Korn Ferry Tour  season that he had already registered for Q-School again in July. Ye of little faith, Straka won the following week at the KC Golf Classic and secured his PGA Tour card for the 2018-19 with a T-3 at the KFT Tour Championship.

Straka qualified for the FedEx Cup Playoffs in each of his first three years on Tour but his claim to fame as a pro probably was being the first-round leader at the 2020 Tokyo Summer Olympics. He realized his practice lacked structure and, in an effort to make the leap to becoming one of the top 50 players, he enlisted the help of noted swing instructor John Tillery in the Fall of 2021. Straka was ranked 213th in the world at the start of 2022.

“I had to spoon feed him when we first started because I didn’t want to shock the system,” Tillery said. “Every little bit he gets better, I get to give him a little more.”

Sepp Straka hits out of the gallery on the 14th holeduring the third round of the 2019 U.S. Open. (Photo: Michael Madrid/USA TODAY Sports)

Straka has progressed quickly, improving to 83rd in the world with the win at Honda and with a pair of playoff losses at the FedEx St. Jude Championship in August and the Sanderson Farms Championship in October, he’s shot up to a career-best of No. 25 as of January 15, 2023.

Back at the 2022 Honda Classic, Tillery sensed a breakthrough was imminent. Every practice session that week on the range with his broad-shouldered pupil, who is affectionately called Ox, was better than the one before it.

“The last session before I left was a joke,” Tillery said. “I told him, ‘You need to change your perspective a little bit and realize how good you are.’ I said, ‘I’ve done this a long time, worked with a lot of great players and no one in this field is playing is better than you. Nobody can beat you this week unless you let them.’ ”

Straka opened with a ho-hum 1-over-par 71 at PGA National, which turned out to be the highest start by a Tour winner since Rory McIlroy at the 2021 Wells Fargo Championship (72). But Straka surged into contention by shooting a tournament-low 6-under 64 on Friday.

“I felt pretty confident after that one,” he said. “The game felt really good.”

Straka tacked on a 69 on Saturday. However, the final round began with American Daniel Berger holding a five-stroke advantage, matching the largest 54-hole lead in the tournament’s 49-year history. Straka could’ve been discouraged about the ground he needed to make up on Berger, but he was not.

“I knew I had a chance,” he said. “It’s kind of a crazy golf course with water everywhere. So, five shots are a lot if there’s a bunch of guys ahead of you, but there was only Daniel. I knew if I could shoot a low one, I could still have a good chance.”

It didn’t hurt that Berger, the hometown hero, faltered with four bogeys and a double bogey to shoot 74 and slipped to fourth place.

“Just a poor round. It can happen at any time,” Berger said. “I’m not going to dwell on it too much.”

Straka got off to an inauspicious start of his own, making a 3-putt bogey, including missing from 2 feet for par. But he bounced back with birdies at the second and third and made up for a bogey at the eighth with a birdie at the ninth.

“I just kept my head down and played some good golf,” he said.

No shot was bigger than fading his approach from 176 yards to a hole tucked in the back right corner of the green at the par-4 14th. The ball ended up inside 10 feet and Straka sank the birdie putt to leapfrog Berger into second, one stroke behind leader Shane Lowry. Straka wasn’t done yet. He tied Lowry with a 14-foot birdie at 16 and then made the biggest birdie of his life at 18 to earn his first Tour title in his 95thcareer start.

Honda Classic
Sepp Straka of Austria reacts to his putt on the 18th green during the final round of The Honda Classic at PGA National Resort And Spa on February 27, 2022 ,in Palm Beach Gardens, Florida. (Photo by Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

Straka hammered a 334-yard drive into the fairway at the par-5 finishing hole before the skies opened up. He had 199 yards to the hole and due to the downpour he decided to take an extra club. Straka credits Tillery with improving his iron play more than any other part of his game and it came in handy in crunch time. He had been the best ball-striker all week, ranking first in Strokes Gained: Off the tee and fourth in average approach, and in the biggest moment drew a 6-iron that stopped 46 feet from the hole.

Two putts from there and he signed for a final-round 4-under 66 and a 72-hole total of 10-under 270 at PGA National’s Champion Course.

All that was left for Straka to do was to wait and see if he had done enough. Lowry still could catch him with a birdie of his own at the last, but he had to play the hole in the worst conditions and left himself a 43-foot putt to tie that missed short right.

“I felt I played good enough golf to win the tournament,” said Lowry, who was seeking his first win since the 2019 British Open. “That bad weather came in just as we were hitting our tee shot on 18, which was as bad a break as I’ve got in a while.”

Straka, with a Diet Coke in his right hand, celebrated with his mother and wife, Paige, who had driven to South Florida on Sunday morning. Keith Mitchell, Chris Kirk and Brendon Todd were among his college teammates who waited to congratulate him on becoming the 11th Georgia Bulldog product to win on the PGA Tour. Straka went on to qualify for the Tour Championship and finish seventh in last year’s FedEx Cup standings.

The Honda trophy is displayed proudly in a cabinet in his home office. He’s come a long way from battling the yips and needing a redshirt year in college. Now he’s thinking about making the European Ryder Cup team and adding more trophies to his cabinet. But he’ll never forget his first win at the Honda when he stepped up and didn’t let a sudden rainstorm keep him from believing that it was his time to shine.

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Hero World Challenge: Viktor Hovland’s eagle, Sepp Straka’s whirlwind week replacing Tiger, newlywed Collin Morikawa and Tom Kim ‘officially meets’ Tiger

The four-way tie for the lead in The Bahamas is the most after any round in tournament history.

NASSAU, BAHAMAS – Hero World Challenge defending champion Viktor Hovland picked up where he left off, shooting 3-under 69 on Thursday at Albany Golf Club to share the opening-round lead with a trio of players. The four-way tie for the lead is the most after any round in tournament history.

On a warm, windswept day, Hovland continued his magic at the drivable par-4 14th, registering his fourth eagle of the hole in five attempts – and noted the one time he didn’t make eagle was a bogey.

“That green obviously is not the biggest green, but with how soft it is, if you land it on the green, you can keep it on the green whereas if it was really firm, you kind of have to land it up in the slope and stuff,” said Hovland, who nearly aced the hole.

Hovland had never held the 18-hole lead or co-lead in an official stroke-play event on the PGA Tour. The Norway native clearly enjoys playing golf in warm weather, having won the Puerto Rico Open, the Dubai Desert Classic and the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba twice in addition to his Bahamian conquest.

When asked on Wednesday for his reaction to Mayakoba’s El Camaleon Course deciding to host a LIV Golf tournament in February, Hovland didn’t see why it couldn’t continue to host a PGA Tour event too.

“If not, then I’ll try to find other places that I can win on,” he said.

No better place than in the Bahamas.

 

Sepp Straka makes most of Tiger Woods’ withdrawal, tied for lead after opening round at Hero World Challenge

There’s a four-way tie at the top, including last year’s champion.

NASSAU, BAHAMAS – Hero World Challenge defending champion Viktor Hovland picked up where he left off, shooting 3-under 69 on Thursday at Albany Club to share the opening round lead with a trio of players.

While it is no surprise to see Hovland, who shot 18 under en route to victory a year ago, get off to another good start, Austrian-born Sepp Straka wasn’t even in the 20-man unofficial event until Monday around lunchtime when Tiger Woods withdrew with a foot injury. Straka was about to tee off at Shoal Creek in a three-day Ryder Cup-style match back home in Birmingham, Alabama, when he was informed he was the next man up.

“I got the call, so I had to change my schedule up,” he said.

Straka had other plans to scratch, too. He was supposed to attend the Friday wedding of fellow PGA Tour pro J.T. Poston – “which was unfortunate but he understood. It was a huge opportunity and just awesome to be here,” Straka said – and the former Georgia golfer was headed to Atlanta on Saturday to watch his top-ranked Bulldogs play in the SEC Championship game.

“Just have to watch that from here,” he said.

Did he have plans for Sunday, too?

“That was going to be recovering from that game,” he said.

Straka arrived in time to play only 15 holes in Wednesday’s pro-am, which was cut short due to inclement weather, but it didn’t seem to bother him on Thursday.

“I really didn’t know what to expect, I didn’t play much last week just trying to recharge the batteries a little bit,” he said.

Straka is guaranteed a minimum of $100,000 – last-place money – but could make a whole lot more if he keeps playing like he did in the first round, making six birdies against three bogeys. For one day, he played a bit like the man he replaced in the field.

“I mean, the iron game wasn’t as good as his,” Straka said of Woods, “but maybe rubbed off a little bit on me, so yeah, that was nice.”

Collin Morikawa, who got engaged in the Bahamas during this tournament a year ago and married last week, also shot 69 along with South Korea’s Tom Kim. Two years ago at the 2020 PGA Championship, Kim asked Woods to take a photograph with him, which Kim’s caddie snapped. But he counts talking with Woods this week as their first “official” meeting.

“We didn’t talk about anything serious, it was just a lot of small talk,” Kim said. “I told him we really would have loved it if he played this week, and we’re really going to miss him. He was like, he was really trying to prepare hard for it and unfortunately he couldn’t make it. But it was really nice, it was the first time I officially got to meet him and talk to him a little bit. It was really cool, I have to kind of pinch myself a little bit.”

Hovland continued his magic at the drivable par-4 14th, registering his fourth eagle of the hole in five attempts – and noted the one time he didn’t make eagle was a bogey.

“That green obviously is not the biggest green, but with how soft it is, if you land it on the green, you can keep it on the green whereas if it was really firm, you kind of have to land it up in the slope and stuff,” said Hovland, who nearly aced the hole.

Hovland, a Norway native, clearly enjoys playing golf in warm weather, having won the Puerto Rico Open, the Dubai Desert Classic and the World Wide Technology Championship at Mayakoba twice in addition to his Bahamian conquest. When asked on Wednesday for his reaction to Mayakoba’s El Camaleon Course deciding to host a LIV Golf tournament in February, Hovland didn’t see why it couldn’t continue to host a PGA Tour event, too.

“If not, then I’ll try to find other places that I can win on,” he said.

No better place than in the Bahamas.

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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

Mackenzie Hughes beats Sepp Straka on second playoff hole to win Sanderson Farms Championship, earn second PGA Tour win

It came down to the wire.

Mackenzie Hughes had plenty of motivation coming into the Sanderson Farms Championship.

Last week, he sat at his home in Charlotte, North Carolina, as the Presidents Cup was going on at Quail Hollow Club across town. Hughes, the 31-year-old Canadian, didn’t make the International team, so he was forced to watch from home. He wanted to make sure he did whatever he could to make the team when the competition returns to Montreal in 2024.

He’s off to a great start.

Hughes beat Sepp Straka on the second playoff hole Sunday at The Country Club of Jackson in Jackson, Mississippi, to win the 2022 Sanderson Farms Championship. It’s the second career win for Hughes, who last won in 2016 at the RSM Classic. Both of Hughes’ Tour wins have come in playoffs.

“I’m over the moon,” Hughes said. “I had some moments today where I was tested and was able to pull through. It’s kind of my MO a little bit is to scramble and save some pars. I had to do that a little bit today on the back nine. Yeah, did everything I possibly could, just grinded my butt off, and luckily it was good enough.”

Hughes jarred an 8-foot birdie putt on the second playoff hole to secure the win, giving a huge fist pump as the ball dropped in the cup.

“Winning gives you a lot of confidence,” Hughes said. “It validates a lot of work I’ve been putting in. It’s just really hard to win. I know this gets said a lot, but I’ve been close a lot in the last five years, and to finally get one and get that monkey off my back for the second one is just the greatest feeling in the world.”

The duo went to a playoff after finishing at 17 under. Straka shot 5-under 67 in the final round. Straka’s round included birdies on four of his final five holes on the front nine. Hughes recorded a 3-under 69. He was even after eight holes and recorded three birdies and no bogeys in his final 10 holes.

On the first playoff hole, Straka found the green while Hughes’ ball came up in a bunker short of the green. He was able to get up and down from the sand, and Straka’s birdie missed just to the right of the cup.

On the second playoff hole, both players found the fairway, but Hughes stuck his approach shot tight. Straka’s approach leaked a bit long and left of the front left hole location, settling on the fringe. His putt again barely missed the cup, leaving the door open for Hughes to clinch the victory.

“Obviously wanted to get the win, disappointed with that,” Straka said. “But I played really well today. I shot 67 on a Sunday, came from behind and got myself in a playoff. Mac played great, birdieing 18. 18 is not an easy hole. Yeah, happy for him, and looking forward to some more.”

Hughes hit a clutch par putt on the 16th hole to remain at 17 under as the final round winded down. Moments later, Straka had a birdie putt on the 18th come up short. Hughes missed a birdie putt on the 17th hole and got up and down for par on 18 to force the playoff.

It’s the second time in the past three months (and his past four starts) Straka has lost in a playoff, including to Will Zalatoris on the third playoff hole at the 2022 FedEx St. Jude Championship, the first 2022 FedEx Cup Playoff event.

“Just more experience of getting myself in the hunt,” Straka said. “I think that’s huge, the kind of experience you can’t buy. It’s always the goal at the beginning of the week is on Sunday afternoon to have a chance, and I gave myself a chance. Unfortunately, it didn’t work out, but next time it will.”

Rookie Dean Burmester also shot 5-under 67 on Sunday, finishing fourth. Defending champion Sam Burns, the highest-ranked player in the field, finished tied for 30th at 8 under.

Yet the Sanderson Farms Championship belongs to Hughes, and it could be the start of a run to the 2024 Presidents Cup.

“Honestly, probably a little bit of a relief. It’s been a while,” Hughes said. “I’ve had some close calls. Finishing second, while it’s still great, it kind of stings when you’re that close. I just wasn’t going to accept that today.

“Somehow was able to pull through, and it definitely feels a little sweeter than the first one.”

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Golf Equipment: Gear the contenders are using at the 2022 Tour Championship

See what gear Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, Cameron Smith and more are expected to use at East Lake.

The final event of the 2021-22 PGA Tour season and the FedEx Cup Playoffs, the Tour Championship, starts on Thursday at the East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta. By accumulating the most FedEx Cup points heading into the event, Scottie Scheffler will start Friday’s round with a score of 10 under, a two-shot lead over Patrick Cantlay, who will begin at 8 under.

While Will Zalatoris withdrew from the Tour Championship on Tuesday morning and said that he would not be able to play in next month’s Presidents Cup either, the field remains loaded with stars and each of them will be depending on every club in their bag to help them try to win the $18 million first prize.

Below is the list of the equipment the contenders are expected to play at East Lake.

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Watch: What if Will Zalatoris would’ve hit off the rock wall at the FedEx St. Jude Championship?

What if Willy Z would’ve hit off the rocks next to the 11th green.

What would’ve happened had Will Zalatoris played off the rock wall where his tee shot on the par-3 11th hole ended up?

Zalatoris’ ball bounced off the grass short and right of the pin location before tumbling toward a rock wall encompassing the green. The ball somehow didn’t go in the water, instead bouncing multiple times before settling up against the edge of the grass.

It was the third playoff hole at TPC Southwind in the FedEx St. Jude Championship, the first playoff event of the FedEx Cup Playoffs. Zalatoris and Sepp Straka were going punch for punch after the first two playoff holes, but Zalatoris’ tee shot opened a door for Straka. He didn’t capitalize, as his shot instead bounced off the grass and into the water.

Straka then hit his third shot from the drop zone into a bunker behind the green, and his fourth shot nestled past the hole.

2022 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Will Zalatoris talks with his caddie at the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee. (Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images)

So, what if Zalatoris tried to hit his shot?

We’ll never know. With strokes in hand, he took an unplayable and played his third shot from the drop zone. He flipped a wedge to six feet, drained the putt and captured his first PGA Tour title.

But the folks at TPC Southwind returned to the spot where Zalatoris’ ball sat late Sunday afternoon. They recreated the scene, and though they aren’t PGA Tour golfers, the results show that Willy Z likely made the right decision, a winning one.

Zalatoris is now No. 1 in the FedEx Cup standings heading to the BMW Championship at Wilmington Country Club in Wilmington, Delaware.

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Watch: Sepp Straka finds the water, Will Zalatoris flirts with disaster on third playoff hole at FedEx St. Jude Championship

A couple of shots you’ll have to see to believe.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Will Zalatoris nearly hit his tee shot in the water on the third playoff hole in Sunday’s FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind.

Sepp Straka one-upped Zalatoris by bouncing into the water hazard himself on his tee shot.

What a chaotic third playoff hole on the par-3 11th in Memphis, Tennessee.

Zalatoris’ tee shot wedged between the rough and the rock wall next to the greenside water hazard short and right of the hole, only after bouncing on the rock about five times before settling. Straka then hit his tee shot in a similar spot, bouncing twice off the rock wall before falling into the water.

Zalatoris took several minutes to decide whether he would go back to the drop zone, some 80 yards from the hole. Straka had no choice, and he put his third shot into the back greenside bunker.

Zalatoris eventually decided to use the drop zone, hit his third shot to within six feet and hit the putt for the win, his first on the PGA Tour.

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Will Zalatoris defeats Sepp Straka in wild playoff to win FedEx St. Jude Championship

“It’s kind of hard to say ‘about time’ when it’s your second year on Tour, but about time,” — Zalatoris, who has 3 runner-up finishes this season

When Will Zalatoris opened the FedEx St. Jude Championship with a disappointing 1-over 71, his fiancée, Caitlin Sellers, phoned and innocently asked him, “What are your plans if you don’t make the weekend?”

“She meant that all in good fun,” Zalatoris said on Saturday.

And what did he tell her?

“I told her let’s cross that bridge when we get there,” Zalatoris said.

He did more than stick around for the weekend. After three runner-up finishes, including two at majors and two playoff defeats, Zalatoris was the victor of a sudden-death playoff over Sepp Straka to win his first PGA Tour title and vault into the top spot in the FedEx Cup point standings.

“It’s kind of hard to say ‘about time’ when it’s your second year on Tour, but about time,” Zalatoris said. “Considering all the close finishes that I’ve had this year, to finally pull it off, it means a lot.”

The 25-year-old reigning Tour rookie of the year shot a final-round 4-under 66 at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, and became the second player to win his first tournament in the playoffs, joining Camilo Villegas, who did so at the 2008 BMW Championship. Ranked No. 14 in the world entering the week, Zalatoris already had a fruitful season, which included eight top-10s, the most among players without a win. He had threatened to claim his first Tour victory on several occasions, narrowly missing a birdie putt at the last to force a playoff at the U.S. Open and suffered playoff losses at the Farmers Insurance Open and PGA Championship. This time he was on the right side of the playoff ledger, becoming the first player to win a sudden-death playoff with a bogey since Sean O’Hair did so at the 2011 RBC Canadian Open.

2022 FedEx St. Jude Championship
Will Zalatoris holds the trophy after winning the 2022 FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis. (Photo: Christine Tannous/The Commercial Appeal)

First off, Zalatoris made sure he had weekend plans, rebounding with a bogey-free 63, his lowest round on Tour since the second round of the American Express in January. It didn’t take long for Zalatoris to figure out the reason for his sluggish start.

Zalatoris said he didn’t allow his new caddie, Joel Stock, to read the putts on the first day as they learn to get a feel for each other. Stock served as Zalatoris’s sidekick for the first time since Zalatoris and his longtime caddie, Ryan Goble, parted ways in the middle of last week’s Wyndham Championship.

Zalatoris posted a 65 on Saturday to climb within two strokes of the lead. He birdied the first three holes of the final round, including a 15-footer at the third, to take the lead. Zalatoris made a bogey at No. 7 but regained the lead with a birdie at 10. Straka, 29, who snapped a streak of six missed cuts and hadn’t played on the weekend since the Memorial in early June, made birdie at the 12th to tie Zalatoris for the lead at 14 under.

Both Zalatoris, a Wake Forest product, and Straka, a Georgia grad, converted short birdie putts at the par-5 16th to climb to 15 under. Zalatoris boomed a 310-yard drive at 18 into the right fairway bunker, came up short with his approach, pitched to 10 feet and canned the par putt. After being criticized for his unorthodox putting stroke, Zalatoris celebrated his clutch putt by referencing a Steph Curry line, exclaiming, “What are they going to say now?”

“I actually can’t believe I said that,” Zalatoris said, noting he’s a big Golden State Warriors fan and when Curry said that “it kind of related to kind of my journey so far…At least it wasn’t something worse, but yeah.”

Straka missed a 22-foot birdie putt to win in regulation as they tied at 15-under 265.

It was a wild playoff with Straka having to can a 6-foot par putt at 18 after his 24-foot putt for the win raced by at the first extra hole. Returning to 18 again, both players overcame poor tee shots to salvage par. And then it got really zany at the par-3 11th hole. Zalatoris had the honors and his tee shot bounced on the retaining wall multiple times, avoiding the water and settling between the wall and the rough.

Advantage Straka, except his tee shot bounced into the pond fronting the green. Following a drop, his third flew the green and landed in a bunker. After much deliberation, Zalatoris elected to take a drop, too, rather than risk hitting against the rock retaining wall.

“I couldn’t get the club on the ball,” Zalatoris said. “Considering where Sepp was and he had four feet for 5, there’s no reason for me to try that shot and make it bank right into the grass and go back in the water and all of a sudden I’ve lost the golf tournament.”

Zalatoris’s third shot from 94 yards stopped 7 feet from the hole and he lifted his arms to the sky when his putt dropped in.

With the victory, Zalatoris also earned quadruple points and unseated Scottie Scheffler, who missed the cut on Friday and had held the lead since March. But Scheffler remained World No. 1 as Cameron Smith was docked two strokes before the final round got underway for a penalty he committed on the fourth hole during the third round. Instead of trailing by two heading into the final round, Smith’s deficit bumped to four. He shot even-par 70 and finished T-13, six strokes back.

Lucas Glover, who started the week at No. 121 in the FedEx Cup Playoffs, made birdies at 16 and 17 to tie for the lead at 13 under, but bogeyed the last hole to shoot 66 and tie for third. He vaulted to No. 34 in the points standing and was among the top 70 to advance to the second playoff event at next week’s BMW Championship.

But this week belonged to Zalatoris, who won for the first time in his 56th start after many close calls.

“The first second at the Masters was life changing because it put me in position to play out here as much as I wanted to and put me kind of on the map,” Zalatoris said. “The second at the PGA was kind of affirmation that it wasn’t a fluke of a week, and the third one at the U.S. Open gave me that much more belief that I can win a major, I can win out here. It was just a matter of time and obviously this was my week.”

Zalatoris planned to celebrate, but he also was quick to point out that their was more work left to do.

 “I think I’ve always had the attitude of the job’s not done and as great as it is to pull this off, I still feel like I’ve got some unfinished business going forward,” he said. “It’s obviously very satisfying, but this is the peak season for us obviously for the PGA Tour players and the grind continues.”

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As underdogs thrive at FedEx St. Jude Championship, can a star emerge?

Denny McCarthy and Sepp Straka are just a few of the underdog players at the top of the leaderboard.

MEMPHIS — Denny McCarthy took out a Sharpie, signed his two golf balls and handed them to Lisa Redley and Mike Esposito. They were FedEx St. Jude Championship volunteers who walked with McCarthy the entire second round Friday.

Redley was the scoring marker, having switched with someone to be with this group because she knew the mother of Tennessee resident Scott Stallings. Esposito was the standard-bearer, updating McCarthy’s score for the galleries as he rocketed into TPC Southwind’s consciousness.

Neither had any idea who McCarthy was until about four hours earlier.

“Who knew I’d be with the leader,” Redley said with a laugh after McCarthy entered the weekend at 9-under, a lead that held briefly on another afternoon dominated largely by names only the most dedicated of golf fans had heard of before.

Denny McCarthy waves to the crowd during the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind in Memphis, Tennessee, Friday, August 12, 2022.

The first FedEx Cup playoff event here is set up to produce a wide-open and compelling weekend of action, so long as you’ve got Google ready to search the names of the golfers involved.

For three years of World Golf Championships played in Memphis, the biggest names in the sport littered the leaderboard in Memphis. Brooks Koepka outdueled Rory McIlroy in 2019. Justin Thomas won in 2020. Bryson DeChambeau was in contention on the back nine last year, when Abraham Ancer won his first PGA Tour event.

But this is largely becoming the tournament of McCarthy and Sepp Straka and Brian Harman, with a few notable exceptions.

FedEx St. Jude Championship: PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ | Leaderboard

It could be due to the odd decision by the PGA Tour to allow lift, clean and play conditions despite no rain in the forecast Friday, therefore making scoring conditions ideal. It could be the absence of the LIV Golf series defections like Dustin Johnson, Koepka and DeChambeau. It could be the bigger field and the lack of European Tour golfers due to the tournament’s new designation as a playoff event.

Whatever the case may be, given the threat facing the PGA Tour these days, it’s for the best if the trend changes. If someone the Tour is pushing as one of its new stars to combat this Saudi-funded competition makes a push during the third round and moves into contention for Sunday.

In the three years since the PGA Tour switched its FedEx Cup playoffs format, the eventual winner of the FedEx Cup did not finish worse than a tie for 11th place in the former Northern Trust Open that the FedEx St. Jude Championship replaced on the schedule this year.

But of all years, this is the one the PGA Tour needs a recognizable name holding up its FedEx Cup trophy. To give tangible proof that its product is just fine without the figures who bolted for more money in LIV.

Tony Finau fits the bill. So does Will Zalatoris or Sam Burns or Max Homa.

There is, of course, a certain charm to watching a golfer get his first PGA Tour win, or perhaps his first moment in the spotlight. The stories can be endearing. It happened many times at the old FedEx St. Jude Classic, even if the lack of star power at those tournaments were exactly why FedEx pushed so hard to elevate the Memphis PGA Tour stop beyond its previous status.

Take Trey Mullinax, a Birmingham, Alabama, native in contention as Friday wore on. As he walked onto the practice green before his round, a group of men started shouting loudly for him and not Thomas, a fellow University of Alabama product standing beside him.

Mullinax looked over and waved, until he realized who he was waving at. It was his cousins goofing on him.

“He looked over like, ‘Those idiots again,’” Maddux Mullinax said laughing. “We’ve also been cheering for Brandon Wu in his group. He’s got no fans here and it’s sad.”

Rory McIlroy hits from the fairway during the second-round of the FedEx St. Jude Championship on Friday, Aug. 12, 2022, at TPC Southwind in Memphis.

Rory McIlroy had plenty, though, despite another rocky round at TPC Southwind. As he walked off the 18th green, still with nine holes to play because he began his round on No. 9, a few fans yelled out from the grandstand behind the green, “We love you, Rory.”

The biggest star in golf and the face of the PGA Tour’s fight against LIV Golf then raised his putter in the air to acknowledge them and thanked all the fans who had gathered on the rope line.

It was as if he already knew this would be his last time at No. 18 at this year, a year in which the winner of this tournament might also need an introduction to most of the people watching.

You can reach Commercial Appeal columnist Mark Giannotto via email at mgiannotto@gannett.com and follow him on Twitter: @mgiannotto

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