Murray felt like a renewed person even before starting the
season in Hawaii. He says he has been sober for eight months and was in a
better frame of mine.
The victory not only gets him in the Masters for the first
time, Murray now has a spot in the $20 million signature events the rest of the
season.
As big as the win was for Murray, it was a tough loss for
Byeong Hun An and Keegan Bradley.
An was short of the par-5 18th green in the
playoff in thick rough and pitched on to 4 feet, giving him the best chance at
winning. But after Murray made his 40-footer, and Bradley missed his 18-foot
birdie putt, An missed the short putt.
An had birdied the 18th in regulation for a 64.
Bradley broke out of a five-way tie with a 20-foot birdie
putt on 15th hole. But he had pars the rest of the way for a 67,
missing the fairway on the 18th in regulation and hitting a sand
wedge some 20 feet short of the pin that took away a good birdie chance.
EUROPEAN TOUR
Tommy Fleetwood took advantage of Rory McIlroy’s two big
back-nine errors on win the Dubai Invitational.
McIlroy had already three-putted from 2 feet at No. 14 by
the time he reached the 18th tee with a one-shot lead and pulled his drive into
the water.
Fleetwood followed that by driving into the middle of the
fairway and sent his approach to 16 feet, well inside McIlroy.
McIlroy missed his winding putt up the hill and Fleetwood
made his own to a 4-under 67 and finish at 19-under 265. He was a stroke clear
of McIlroy (67) and Thriston Lawrence (64) in the first European tour event of
the year.
PGA TOUR OF AUSTRALASIA
Matt Griffin completed a wire-to-wire victory in the
Heritage Classic, closing with a 3-under 69 to finish six shots ahead.
Griffin opened with an 11-under 61 and finished at 24 under
for his first victory since the 2016 New Zealand Open.
Amateur Quinn Croker (68) and Jak Carter (70) tied for
second.