Simpson claims first PGA event
Published 12:00 am Sunday, August 21, 2011
By Joedy McCreary
Associated Press
GREENSBORO ó Webb Simpson shot a 67 on Sunday to claim his first PGA tour win, a three-stroke victory in the Wyndham Championship.
The Raleigh native and former Wake Forest standout finished at 18-under 262 and collected $936,000.
George McNeill (64) was at 15 under, with Tommy Gainey (69) another stroke back at the final event before the PGA Tour playoffs.
Carl Pettersson (69), Vijay Singh (65), Jerry Kelly (65), Kyung-tae Kim (66) and Charles Howell III (67) each finished at 13 under.
Simpson turned in a steady, bogey-free round and gave himself plenty of breathing room with consecutive birdies on Nos. 15 and 16.
After taking the lead during Round 3 with a late five-hole stretch of four birdies and an eagle, Simpson opened his final round with eight straight pars before moving to 16 under with a birdie on the par-4 No. 9.
He stayed there until late in the day. Birdies on the par-5 15th and the par-3 16th gave him a three-shot lead with two holes to go.
McNeill made a late charge, with the former Florida State player moving to 15 under with a birdie on No. 17, his sixth birdie of the round. But all he could do after that was hope for a few late bogeys from Simpson.
ěHonestly, I thought it was going to be a lot lower,î McNeill said of the winning score. ěI can only control myself. I canít control what everybody else does. Iím very happy with the way I hit it, the way I played, the way I putted.î
Several players with strong Atlantic Coast Conference ties played pivotal roles during the fourth round at the country club where the ACC was founded in 1953.
Simpson was the ACCís player of the year for the Demon Deacons in 2008. McNeill was an all-conference player for the Seminoles in the late 1990s.
And Pettersson grew up in Greensboro, played at North Carolina State, serves on this tournamentís board of directors, won it in 2008 and made the daily 70-mile commute from his home in Raleigh.
ěIím disappointed. Iím a competitor,î Pettersson said. ěI wanted to win this one badly, but Webb outplayed us all.î
Pettersson turned in perhaps the most remarkable birdie of the tournament on the par-4 first hole. After sending his drive well wide of the fairway and into a flower pot, he wound up chipping in from about 55 feet.
Gainey, a South Carolina native known as ěTommy Two Glovesî because he wears them on both hands, led or shared the lead after each of the first two rounds. After falling off the pace with two bogeys and a double bogey midway through the round, he reeled off four consecutive birdies on Nos. 12-15 to climb back in it.
The focus this week wasnít solely on the leaders, but on the names moving up and down the FedEx Cup points list.
The Wyndham annually marks the last chance for players to claim spots in the playoffs, and some big names came to Greensboro hoping to play their way in.
Padraig Harrington, who called off a family vacation so he could try to escape the playoff bubble, finished at 6 under and jumped from No. 130 to No. 124. The top 125 qualify for The Barclays later this week in New Jersey.
Ernie Els, who entered at No. 126, made it into the playoff field despite shooting a final-round 72. His 8 under finish pushed him to 118th.
ěYou donít know in these playoffs,î Els said. ěIíve got to play good golf though. I played really good the first two days. Iíd like to get that back.î
Among those who didnít make it: Justin Leonard missed a 13-foot putt on the 18th, and that left him at No. 126.
ěTo try and wait until this week to make it through is just ó you know,î Leonard said. ěI mean, come on. I had 25 other weeks to play like this.î