Corey Conners places 3rd at World Golf Championships with victory over Dustin Johnson
Scottie Scheffler claims title with win over Kevin Kisner
Canada's Corey Conners redeemed himself after a semifinal loss to Kevin Kisner, by defeating Dustin Johnson to finish third at the Dell Technologies Match Play in Austin, Texas on Sunday.
The Listowel, Ont., native won the first three holes besting Johnson, three and one.
In the final, Scottie Scheffler proved he is the hottest player in golf and now has the ranking to prove it.
Six weeks after his first PGA Tour victory, Scheffler won the final for his third title in his last five starts, this one enough to move him to No. 1 in the world.
"I never got that far in my dreams," Scheffler said in the trophy ceremony before choking up and wiping away tears, a rare show of emotion for the 25-year-old Texan. "I just play golf. I love competing. I'm happy to be out here, you know?"
WATCH | Conners takes 3rd place:
One year after losing in the championship match, Scheffler never trailed against Kisner, building a three-up lead through six holes and giving him no chance to catch up. Scheffler closed him out with a par on the 15th for a four-and-three victory.
Scheffler never trailed in the semifinal win over Dustin Johnson or against Kisner — he went the final 57 holes at Austin Country Club without trailing — and he was so solid in the championship match that Kisner didn't win a hole.
So much was going Scheffler's way that on the par-five 12th, with Kisner looking at a six-foot birdie, Scheffler didn't hit his eagle chip hard enough and it rolled down a slope into a bunker. And then he holed the bunker shot for a birdie.
Right when Kisner looked as though he would win his first hole and cut the deficit to two down with seven to play, he had to made the six-footer to keep from losing more ground. But a bogey on the 14th spelled the end for Kisner.
WATCH | Scheffler swings his way to title besting Kisner:
'I'm pretty worn out right now'
Scheffler, so even-keel on the course, was caught up in the moment when it was over. He won at Austin Country Club, where the Texas Longhorns occasionally practiced. Scheffler earned a business degree in four years without summer school.
Winning should now be familiar. Getting to No. 1? That might explain the tears as he hugged every family member around him.
And then he had nothing to say, laughing as he searched for words.
"I'm pretty worn out right now," he said.
WATCH | Conners falls shy of world finals in semifinal thriller:
Scheffler won the Phoenix Open six week ago, and followed that with a win at Bay Hill to move to No. 5 in the world. He needed help from Jon Rahm to get to the top. Rahm, who had been No. 1 since July 18, lost in the fourth round in 19 holes to Brooks Koepka. That paved the way for Scheffler to replace him by winning the Match Play.
He is the sixth-youngest player to reach No. 1 since the world ranking began in 1986.
Scheffler joined Kisner as the only players to win the Match Play the year after losing in the championship match.
That championship match was never in doubt.
Kisner, who outlasted Corey Conners of Canada in 18 holes in the morning, began with a wedge to three feet for birdie. Scheffler followed with a shot to eight feet and the Texas crowd roared when he made the putt to match birdies.
Kisner lost the second hole with a bogey from a tough lie in the bunker, Scheffler went two up with a 15-foot birdie putt on the par-3 fourth and hit a beautiful chip from behind the green on the par-five sixth to go three up.
They halved the next seven holes, each one moving Scheffler closer to the title. He earned $2.1 million US for the win and heads to Augusta National as one of the leading favourites.