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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Sony Open co-leader Grayson Murray injured his back in unusual way and didn’t touch a club for a month

“I actually got hurt holding the trophy.”

HONOLULU — Winning the Simmons Bank Open for the Snedeker Foundation in Nashville was a weight off Grayson Murray’s back, as it clinched his ticket back to the PGA Tour.

Just don’t ask him to hold the trophy for his triumph there in September.

During his post-round press conference at the Sony Open in Hawaii, where he’s the 54-hole co-leader after shooting 6-under 64 on Saturday, he noted, “I had a little back issue there for about a month or so that I didn’t touch a club.”

That begged the question: how exactly did he injure his back?

“I actually got hurt holding the trophy,” he later said. “I have a herniated bulging disc. It’s fine, I got two shots, and it helped, just taking Aleve now. It’s something to monitor.”

Murray has slimmed down since becoming sober eight months ago, but he’s still no shrinking violet. So about the trophy, a guitar with a strap, which just happens to be one of the coolest in golf …”It was 45 pounds, and I was holding it for like an hour for pictures and stuff,” he said.

Murray has one PGA Tour title to his credit, the 2017 Barbasol Championship. If he wins the Sony Open on Sunday, perhaps he should consider having his caddie hold the trophy for him.

Carl Yuan owes Jon Rahm, birthday birdies for Austin Eckroat among 5 things to know from second round of Sony Open in Hawaii

Here’s what you need to know from the second round.

Carl Yuan shouldn’t be at the Sony Open in Hawaii.

However, this PGA Tour season and golf world in general are unlike anything before it. So, he is. And he’s taking advantage.

Yuan finished last season No. 126 in the FedEx Cup standings, which meant he wasn’t supposed to be fully-exempt on Tour in 2024. He wasn’t going to get in with his limited status to play in the Sony Open in Hawaii or have full status on the PGA Tour.

Thanks, Jon Rahm.

Yuan shot 5-under 65 on Friday in the second round, moving to 9-under 131 for the tournament. He’s in the field because Rahm moved to LIV Golf and was suspended, which shuffled Yuan up a spot to retain his PGA Tour card.

And in his first tournament of 2024, Yuan is taking full advantage. He’s tied for the lead heading to the weekend in Hawaii.

Sony Open: Photos

“Hopefully not,” Yuan said when asked whether he thinks he’ll be known as the last guy in. “Hopefully I have my score and performance will kind of cover that part. Yeah, I mean, just looking forward to another year on Tour. With all the learning experience from my rookie year, definitely feel like I’m more prepared for being out here.”

He started his day with a birdie at the first and then bogeyed the third. However, Yuan made birdie on three of his next four holes to turn 3 under and added two more on the home stretch to sign for his 65. At 9 under, Yuan is tied with Austin Eckroat and Byeong Hun An for the lead.

The 26-year-old had two top-10 finishes coming last season, both in the fall at the Sanderson Farms Championship (T-6) and the Butterfield Bermuda Championship (T-4). At the Sanderson, he finished one shot out of a playoff.

WATCH: Smylie Kaufman calls golf shots from a kayak

“I had a couple chances last year being the final two groups, have a shot on the weekend,” Yuan said. “Yeah, I feel like I just got to do what I did last two days: be patient and stay committed, know exactly what I’m going to do before I hit a shot and see how it turns out.”

Here are four more things to know from the second round of the 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii.

Watch: Smylie Kaufman calls golf shots from kayak in Pacific Ocean at Sony Open in Hawaii

Sit back, relax and enjoy this hilarious clip.

Seven years ago, Smylie Kaufman and Jordan Spieth had a rough time on a kayak in the Pacific Ocean.

Following their first round of play in the 2017 Sony Open in Hawaii, the duo took a kayak out on the water near Waialae Country Club in Honolulu to do some fishing. However, the waves had a different idea.

There’s some epic video of the two being tossed around, losing a lot of the gear and personal items they had on the kayak. Nevertheless, they were laughing the whole time and it made for incredible footage.

On Friday during the second round of the 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii, Kaufman had his chance at redemption. He got back into a kayak, with a microphone in hand on the Golf Channel during live coverage, and called golf shots on the par-3 17th, which runs next to the ocean.

Sit back, relax and enjoy this hilarious clip.

PGA Tour rookies Adrien Dumont de Chassart, Chan Kim took different paths to Sony Open in Hawaii

Two rookies separated by a decade in age and several thousand miles from each other grew up with the same dream.

HONOLULU — Reigning British Open champion Brian Harman made his PGA Tour debut at the 2012 Sony Open in Hawaii. Now 36 and entering his 13th year as a Tour member, he was asked Tuesday how he realized when he reached veteran status.

“I think when you start showing up to this tournament and you don’t recognize anyone that’s here,” he said during a pre-tournament press conference. “That’s when you know you’ve been out here a while. You’re looking and you’re like, ‘Man, someone letting their kid out there putting?’ No, that guy is a rookie. ‘OK, here we go.’”

This week, that fresh face for Harman could be that of Belgian Adrien Dumont de Chassart, who Wednesday was voted 2023 Korn Ferry Tour Rookie of the Year by his peers. The 23-year-old Dumont de Chassart enjoyed a fifth year at University of Illinois, where he was a three-time Big Ten Player of the Year, and graduated with a degree in business management. Belgium isn’t exactly a golfing hotbed and yet his path into golf had as much to do with geography as anything.

“I lived a mile away from a golf course, so my dad and my brother always brought me with them when I was very young, and that’s how I get started,” he said.

After finishing third in the 2023 PGA Tour University ranking, Dumont de Chassart won in his pro debut on the Korn Ferry Tour. He finished second the following week and hardly slowed down, recording six consecutive top-10s and assured a rapid rise to the PGA Tour this season.

Sony Open: Photos

“I think that’s a dream that every kid back home wants to accomplish one day,” said Dumont de Chassart, who joins fellow Belgian and Illini grad Thomas Detry in the big leagues.

That’s something the young Belgian and Chan Kim, who took a more circuitous route to the Tour, share in common. Kim is a 33-year-old rookie who said his body’s aches and pains make him feel more like a 43-year-old.

“Well, would’ve loved to be a rookie at 23. Sometimes that doesn’t work out,” he said. “Just to be here, to have this experience, know that this is – it’s been a lifelong goal.”

Kim grew up not far from Waialae Country Club, host of the tournament since 1965, from age 3 to 16 and attended the Sony Open as a kid every year. He would wake up at 4:30 a.m. and wait for a tee time at Ala Wai Golf Course, one of the nation’s busiest municipal courses, and use his junior pass, which gave him 20 nine-hole rounds for $20.

“So, a dollar per nine holes,” he said. “Just can’t get that anywhere else.”

After turning pro, he spent eight years playing on the Japan Golf Tour, winning eight times. He still remembers trying to figure out how much his first check amounted to in U.S. dollars.

“I was running around telling people I’m a millionaire in Japanese yen,” he said.

With the top 30 on last season’s Korn Ferry Tour points list graduating to the PGA Tour for this season – up from 25 – Kim called it “a no-brainer” to try his luck on the developmental circuit, and he won twice and finished second in the season-long points list.

Two rookies separated by a decade in age and several thousand miles from each other grew up with the same dream. That’s not all they share in common. Asked to write three words on a sheet of paper to describe himself, Dumont de Chassart chose “Never Give Up,” his motto ever since he rallied to win a match from five down with five holes to go in the quarterfinals of the French Boys’ under 18, and went on to win the title. It’s a motto that could just as easily describe Kim’s long and winding road to his rookie debut just 10 minutes from his where his dream to be a pro golfer was born.

“To be a PGA Tour member and come back here, to kick everything off pretty much in my hometown,” he said, “yeah, it’s a treat.”

Check the yardage book: Waialae for the 2024 Sony Open on the PGA Tour

StrackaLine offers a hole-by-hole course guide for the Sony Open in Hawaii and Waialae Country Club.

Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, site of the 2024 Sony Open in Hawaii, originally was designed by famed golden-era architect Seth Raynor and opened in 1927 alongside Kāhala Beach.

The private course has undergone multiple reconstructions, mostly in the 1960s as a hotel was added to the property. Architects Robert Trent Jones Sr., Desmond Muirhead and Rick Smith made changes to the course over the decades, and most recently Tom Doak has worked to restore some of Raynor’s original design concepts.

The layout, which first hosted the PGA Tour in 1965, will play to 7,044 yards with a par of 70 this year. Of note: The standard routing is altered for the Sony Open, with the nines reversed to better take advantage of the scenic sunsets. The nines are presented below in the order in which they are played during the Tour event.

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

Check the yardage book: Waialae Country Club for the PGA Tour’s 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii

StrackaLine offers hole-by-hole maps for Waialae Country Club and this week’s Sony Open in Hawaii.

Waialae Country Club in Honolulu, site of the 2023 Sony Open in Hawaii, originally was designed by famed golden-era architect Seth Raynor and opened in 1927.

After the PGA Tour started its year at the mountainous Kapalua Plantation Course last week, Waialae offers a much flatter test – the course features only about 10 feet of elevation changes – while still providing ocean views to get many of us stuck on the mainland tuning in.

The private course alongside Kāhala Beach has undergone multiple reconstructions, mostly in the 1960s as a hotel was added to the property. Robert Trent Jones Sr., Desmond Muirhead and Rick Smith made changes to the course over the decades. In recent years Tom Doak has worked to restore some of Raynor’s original design concepts.

The layout will play to 7,044 yards with a par of 70 this year. Of note: The nines are reversed for the Sony Open to better take advantage of the scenic sunsets.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the pros face this week. Check out the maps of each hole below. Worth noting: The nines are presented below in the order in which they are played during the Tour event.

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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Hideki Matsuyama defeats Russell Henley in playoff to win Sony Open in Hawaii

Matsuyama earned his eighth win on Tour with a late Sunday finish.

After two wins last year it didn’t take Hideki Matsuyama long to grab his first victory of 2022.

In the second event of the new year, the defending Masters champion earned his eighth PGA Tour win on Sunday at the 2022 Sony Open in Hawaii in dramatic fashion. Matsuyama shot a 7-under 63 in the final round at Waialae Country Club to match 54-hole leader Russell Henley at 23 under and force a playoff, which he won on the first extra hole.

Henley, who shot a 6-under 65, entered the day with a two-shot advantage and held a five-shot lead with nine holes to play.

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After Matsuyama made birdie on the par-5 18th to better Henley’s par, the pair went back to the tee for the first playoff hole and the drives were the same result as in regulation: Henley found the bunker and Matsuyama the fairway. After a Henley lay-up shot, Matsuyama went pin-seeking with his approach from 270-plus yards to leave a three-foot putt for eagle and the win.

Kevin Kisner and Seamus Power finished T-3 at 19 under, while Michael Thompson and Lucas Glover rounded out the top five at 18 under.

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Ageless Jim Furyk makes ace, grabs Sony Open in Hawaii lead

“Everything was kind of at the hole and on target.”

So what if Jim Furyk is 51.

So what if he won the Sony Open in Hawaii in 1996 and his most recent win on the PGA Tour came in 2015.

So what if he’s playing in next week’s Mitsubishi Electric Championship at Hualalai, the 2022 kickoff for the PGA Tour Champions.

Count him out at this week’s Sony Open at your own peril.

The winner of 17 PGA Tour titles, among them the 2003 U.S. Open, shot an 8-under-par 62 Thursday to grab the early lead in the Sony Open at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu. The second oldest player in the field (Jerry Kelly has him by four years) punctuated his round with an ace on the par-3 17th, which came after making three consecutive birdies.

“I’ve always loved being here,” said Furyk, who has three Champions victories, including the 2021 U.S. Senior Open. “I love Sony. It’s a place I had a lot of success. I think I lost in a playoff in ’97. Had a lot of top 10s here. Love the course.

“I’m not hitting the ball far enough to compete out here on a regular basis on a lot of the golf courses. But Waialae is a place I still feel I can get around and shoot under par pretty well and so it’s fun.”

It was Furyk’s 11th ace and he used a 6-iron.

“Caught it just a smidge high in the face,” he said. “And so I loved the line it was on but I wasn’t quite sure I caught enough of it to cover it. And carried on the green probably two or three yards and landed in a perfect spot and then released towards the pin. I guess that’s kind of the line I was looking. You never want to miss that green right. Want to make sure I hit it solid to cover.”

Furyk, the only player in PGA Tour history to shoot two sub-60 rounds and the only player to sign for a 58, shot his lowest total score since shooting 65 in the 2019 World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational.

He last won on the PGA Tour since in 2015 RBC Heritage.

After starting with a 3-putt from 85 feet, Furyk made 150 feet of putts, including birdie putts of 11, 16, 25, 31 and 33 feet, as well as two two-footers.

“Everything was kind of at the hole and on target,” he said.

Among the leaders of those who have finished their rounds were Kevin Chappell, Michael Thompson and Patton Kizzire at 63. Tyler Duncan, J.T. Poston and Ryan Palmer are at 64.

Chappell, who had been bothered by back ailments for years, had microdiscectomy and laminectomy surgery on his back in 2018. In his first start after the procedure, he shot a 59 in the 2019 Military Tribute at the Greenbrier. But he’s struggled since returning; he hasn’t had a top-10 finish in 31 starts since.

“I definitely had some lingering stuff going last year coming from my back, and kind of end of the year I decided, I wasn’t good physically, I wasn’t good mentally and I needed to take some time (off),” Chappell said. “The Tour has been phenomenal with that, supporting me. Really dove into the mental side and believe it or not, the better I got mentally, the better my back got.

“It’s been a lot of hard work, but it’s been great. Every tee shot is still uncomfortable for me, but it’s such a wonderful place to be. I’ve been working my ass off, excuse my language. Like I said, I didn’t expect it, but I’m not surprised. I’ve been seeing some good stuff at home and really proud of the work I’ve done.”

Furyk said he played a practice round with Brent Grant, who was playing in the Korn Ferry Tour at the time, and Grant called him “sir.”

“Later on he asked me what I liked most about the Champions Tour, and I said, ‘No one calls me ‘sir,’” Furyk said. “He said his dad would be angry with him if he didn’t.”

Furyk knows his age will come up when he’s contending on the PGA Tour. So, naturally, he was asked about his good friend, Phil Mickelson, who at 50 became the oldest player to win a major in last year’s PGA Championship, and Bernhard Langer, who won a Champions Tour event last year at age 64.

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“They are both pretty darned incredible,” Furyk said. “I’m not going to weigh which one’s better. I think what was incredible about Phil winning the PGA was that it was on that golf course. That is not a dinker’s golf course. That is a kind of bomb-it type golf course.

“I’ll joke; I’m tired of gushing about Bernhard. It’s amazing what he’s done at 64, to stay that competitive, that fit and to actually have the want and the will and the grind to be that competitive is absolutely amazing.”

The same could be said of Furyk.

“I’ve been practicing at home and hitting balls and working on my game and so some of the things I expected to be a little better maybe could have been better today, and then things, the decision-making, the scoring, the short game, all that was super today and the putting was amazing,” he said. “So you know, really, trying to get ready for this year and what do I look at this week? I want to be competitive. I want to compete and put myself in position in the hunt and also want to get a feel for where my game is.”

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