Winner Rahm Rules The World As Korean Kim Shows He Is Latest Young Star
Jon Rahm re-iterated that he is the hottest golfer in the world and Tim Kim showed that he is indeed the man from Asia.
Jon Rahm re-iterated that he is the hottest golfer in the world and Tim Kim showed that he is indeed the man from Asia.
Even as Rahm won his fourth title in last six starts and second straight one on the PGA Tour - he won the Sentry Tournament of Champions two weeks ago - Kim, 20, enjoyed his third top-10 of the season at The American Express on Sunday as Rahm claimed a second victory in three weeks.
Rahm rose to the top of the FedEx Cup standings and Kim was second behind him.
Xander Schauffele made an albatross on the par-5 fifth hole and posted 10-under 62 to finish T3.
Scottie Scheffler finished at 22-under and T-11. He missed a birdie putt from 21 and a half feet on the 18th hole that would have elevated him back to No. 1 in the Official World Golf Ranking
Kim maintained his consistent form with a closing 5-under 67 at PGA West Stadium Course to finish tied sixth on 23-under 265, four behind the winner. Rahm, who closed with a 68. Rahm fought all day with rookie Davis Thomson before pulling ahead with a pivotal nine-foot birdie on 16 for an eventual one-stroke victory on 27-under. It was his ninth career PGA TOUR victory.
Kim, who won the Wyndham Championship and Shriners Children's Open last year to announce his arrival on the global stage, fell short of his ambitious bid to emulate Tiger Woods in reaching a third PGA TOUR victory in what was his 23rd start. However, his strong finish has pushed him up to second place on the latest FedExCup standings behind Rahm.
The day clearly belonged to Rahm as the 28-year-old Spaniard made it back-to-back wins following his triumph at the Sentry Tournament of Champions in Hawaii two weeks ago. The American Express victory was also Rahm's second following his success in 2018.
"Heck of a start. Heck of a start. Obviously, Sentry and this one are very, very different golf courses and very different golf. You still have to go low in both of them. So luckily the mentality is the same," said Rahm, who has won four times in his last six starts worldwide, including twice on the DP World Tour.
"Body's been feeling great. My swing's been feeling really, really good. And it shows. Even when I'm saying I may not be as comfortable as I would like, I'm shooting 64s because everything is just firing when it needs to.
"I'm, in a weird way, glad that today went the way it went. I've enjoyed some runaway victories, I've enjoyed some comebacks, but today was certainly a struggle. Out of the five birdies I made, one, two, three of them were tap-ins and the other two were basically 6-footers. So that tells you the story," added Rahm, who moved up the No. 1 spot on the FedExCup for the first time in his career.
Starting the day five back, Kim birdied three of his opening five holes to stay in contention but his good run came to a halt after he dropped two bogeys on Holes No. 6 and 7. He responded swiftly with a fourth birdie on the par-5 8th hole when he fired his third shot to 21 inches. Kim picked up three more birdies on his inward nine.
Compatriot Sungjae Im was Asia's next best performer at T18 following a final round 69 for 20-under while Sony Open in Hawaii winner Si Woo Kim and Byeong Hun An closed with a 66 and 69 for T22 and T41 respectively. China's Marty Dou signed off with a 70 for a share of 62nd place.
Starting the day five back, Kim birdied three of his opening five holes to stay in contention but his good run came to a halt after he dropped two bogeys on Holes No. 6 and 7. He responded swiftly with a fourth birdie on the par-5 8th hole when he fired his third shot to 21 inches. Kim picked up three more birdies on his inward nine.
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