Our Clients:

Field Level Media - Professional sports content solutions | FLM

Sep 5, 2021 9:13 pm

Patrick Cantlay edges Jon Rahm to win Tour Championship

Patrick Cantlay

Patrick Cantlay said he enjoys the pressure in golf.

He got a chance to display what he can do in such situations in Sunday’s final round of the Tour Championship.

Cantlay matched Jon Rahm’s birdie on the final hole at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta to win the PGA Tour’s season finale and the 2021 FedEx Cup.



“Felt like a huge win and it was,” Cantlay said. “I played great today. It hasn’t even sunk in yet. I just kept telling myself to focus and lock in and I did a great job of that.”

The birdie gave Cantlay a round of 1-under-par 69 to cap a riveting finishing stretch between the two golfers.

Rahm’s birdie on the hole meant he finished the round with 68, pushing his tournament score to 20 under. Cantlay checked in at 21 under.

Defining Win For Patrick Cantlay

Cantlay won back-to-back tournaments to complete the PGA Tour season. He’s the FedEx Cup champion for the first time.

“I enjoy pressure golf because it’s everything I’ve practiced to do,” Cantlay said earlier in the weekend. “And so getting in that moment is exactly why I’ve practiced for all those hours growing up and all those hours my whole life, and so getting to do it when it’s important.”

Cantlay said winning the tournament was more important than the $15 million top prize.

“The internal drive to win golf tournaments is really what drives me, and so the external factors are not as much of a factor for me,” he said.

Patrick Cantlay
Adam Hagy-USA TODAY Sports

Under the format the tour has used for three seasons, Cantlay began the tournament at 10 under, putting him four shots clear of fourth-place Rahm. He needed every one of those strokes to hang on.

“It was definitely different than any other week. It was the longest lead I’ve ever held,” Cantlay said. “But I just tried to stay, day after day, in the present, and I did an amazing job of that this week because the last couple days I made some mistakes I don’t usually make and I was able to really center myself and hit a lot of good shots when I needed to.”

Jon Rahm Struggles To Capitalize

Rahm, the U.S. Open champion from Spain and the No. 1-ranked golfer in the world, had 16 pars in the last round. He also birdied the fifth hole.

Rahm didn’t convert enough with his chances.

“That stretch of (Nos.) 10, 11, 12, I was in position to put a little bit of pressure and I just didn’t,” Rahm said. “But at the same time, I shot my lowest score ever for four days on this golf course, which has usually been a challenge for me.”

Jon Rahm
Adam Hagy-USA TODAY Sports

Cantlay never trailed Sunday, but he sure made it interesting. He was up by two strokes after a birdie on the 16th, but he gave that back with his third bogey of the round on the next hole.

Cantlay notched birdies on both par-5 holes.

Rahm also was contending with a well-disciplined player in Cantlay. On Saturday, Rahm praised his opponent’s well-rounded game, saying he had no weaknesses.

“I think you can say he won this,” Rahm said. “He played amazing golf.”

Ryder Cup Preview?

Rahm opened the tournament with two rounds of 65 before catching up to Cantlay early in Saturday’s round. Rahm ended up with 68 in the third round and entered Sunday’s play two shots back, so the top duo was paired together again.

“I thought it felt very similar to where we had distanced ourselves from the field and it was like a one-on-one match play feel,” Cantlay said. “And I think it will be great practice for the Ryder Cup.”



Kevin Na shot 67 to finish at 16 under for third place. Justin Thomas, the 2017 FedEx Cup champion, was fourth at 15 under after a final-round 70, slipping one spot from the beginning of the round.

“I couldn’t have played any better,” Na said. “I had one bogey for 27 holes, last three rounds bogey-free.”

Xander Schauffele matched Daniel Berger’s 64 for the best round of the day. That put Schauffele tied for fifth place with Norway’s Viktor Hovland (65) at 14 under.

The 64s were the lowest rounds of the tournament.

“Overall, just happy,” Schauffele said. “Birdieing the last four holes is always a good thing.”

–Field Level Media (@FieldLevelMedia)

You may also like

Apr 27, 2022 8:57 am

Giants go for 2-game sweep of crosstown rival A’s

The San Francisco Giants will look to further close the gap in their all-time rivalry with the visiting Oakland Athletics when they seek a second straight win Wednesday night in…

Apr 27, 2022 8:42 am

Guardians, slumping Franmil Reyes take on Shohei Ohtani’s Angels

The Cleveland Guardians and Los Angeles Angels will play the third game of their four-game series Wednesday night in Anaheim, Calif., as the Guardians try to rediscover their offense. Cleveland’s…

Apr 27, 2022 8:35 am

Playoff-bound Kings seek to keep Kraken reeling

The Los Angeles Kings are playoff-bound for the first time since the 2017-18 season. The Kings (43-27-10, 96 points) punched their postseason ticket Tuesday night when Dallas defeated Vegas in…

More Archive News

Apr 27, 2022 8:57 am

Giants go for 2-game sweep of crosstown rival A’s

The San Francisco Giants will look to further close the gap in their all-time rivalry with the visiting Oakland Athletics when they seek a second straight win Wednesday night in…

Apr 27, 2022 8:42 am

Guardians, slumping Franmil Reyes take on Shohei Ohtani’s Angels

Apr 27, 2022 8:35 am

Playoff-bound Kings seek to keep Kraken reeling

Apr 27, 2022 8:17 am

Six-man rotation kicks in as Astros, Cristian Javier face Rangers

Apr 27, 2022 8:08 am

Jason Robertson, Stars can lock up playoff berth vs. Coyotes

Read all
fb-post
advertisment
title-icon

Upcoming events

See all odds