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Hovland edges McCarthy in Memorial

• Norwegian cracks his biggest PGA Tour victory

Agency Staff Level Media Field

Viktor Hovland made a huge birdie putt at the 17th hole and saved par on his first playoff hole to defeat Denny McCarthy and win the Memorial Tournament on Sunday in Dublin, Ohio.

The 25-year-old from Norway earned his fourth and biggest PGA Tour win and a handshake with tournament host and golf legend Jack Nicklaus at Muirfield Village Golf Club.

“It’s a bit surreal right now,” Hovland said. “Playing Jack’s course and playing his tournament and winning it, and for him to be able to see it, he just shook my hand and gave me a couple words of encouragement. That’s pretty awesome.”

On a day when some of the world’s elite golfers struggled to score and the lead crept down a few strokes, McCarthy was on the path to his first PGA Tour title thanks to a red-hot putter.

But he bogeyed the final hole and tied Hovland at 7-under 281, one stroke ahead of Scottie Scheffler.

Hovland and McCarthy each shot two-under 70 in wildly different ways. Hovland made five birdies and three bogeys, with the all-important birdie at No17 falling from 27½ feet away

the only birdie made at that hole all day.

“It’s fun to win one of these things without just ball-striking it to death. Now I can rely on some other strengths as well,” Hovland said.

McCarthy made three early birdies before a long string of pars helped him outlast threats from the likes of Rory McIlroy. McCarthy, who led the field in strokes gained putting this week, was at eight under and had a two-stroke lead for parts of the afternoon.

After 10 straight pars at No 817, McCarthy’s drive at the parfour 18th found thick rough left of the fairway and he could only punch out into the fairway. His third shot landed 23 feet from the cup, and his long par try whizzed past the cup, leading to a five-foot bogey and the playoff.

Replaying the 18th for the playoff, McCarthy’s drive this time sailed far right. He missed a 14-foot putt for par, while Hovland lagged a long putt from 58 feet away before saving par from about seven feet.

Hovland was a threat on Sunday at some of the biggest tournaments in golf this season, tying for third at The Players Championship, tying for seventh at the Masters and tying for second in May’s l PGA Championship. “I just played smart, played my game and came up clutch this time,” Hovland said. “It feels even better after a few close calls the last few months.”

“I battled really hard,” an emotional McCarthy said. “Heartbroken right now, but a lot of positives to take from this week. Just played really well. I would say my putter kept me in it when I was a little shaky.”

Scheffler made the cut on the number before following up a 68 on Saturday with a 67 on Sunday. It was enough for the world No1’s 12th top-10 of the season and his fourth top-five in a row.

The three co-leaders through 54 holes were McIlroy of Northern Ireland, Si Woo Kim of South Korea and David Lipsky, but all three had forgettable afternoons. Kim shot a 73 and finished fourth at five under, McIlroy posted a 75 and tied Adam Schenk (71) for seventh at three under and Lipsky shot a 77 to fall into a tie for 12th at one under.

McIlroy came apart due to seven bogeys, including three straight at No 12-14 that took him out of contention. He threeputted the 13th hole thanks to a missed par putt from three feet, eight inches, and his shot from out of a greenside bunker at the 14th missed the green altogether.

Jordan Spieth shot a 71 and Andrew Putnam fired a 70 to tie for fifth at four under. /

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2023-06-06T07:00:00.0000000Z

2023-06-06T07:00:00.0000000Z

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