Reed edges Fowler, Spieth to capture Masters thriller

AFP  |  Augusta 

Fending off epic challenges from three top rivals in a dramatic Masters final round, captured his first title Sunday, out a one-shot victory at National.

The 27-year-old US firebrand showed the same grit he displays in match-play battles, dispatching Jordan Spieth, and in an emotional battle that had spectators roaring.

"Today was probably the hardest mentally a round of can possibly be," Reed said. "I knew it was going to be a dogfight."

Reed, whose breakthrough came in his 17th start, fired a 1-under par 71 to finish 72 holes on 15-under 273, one ahead of Fowler with Spieth third on 275 and Spains fourth on 276.

"Having to shoot under par in the final round to win my first major, it was awesome," Reed said. "It was really satisfying."


In addition to the iconic winners green jacket, Reed pocketed $1.98 million from an $11 million purse.

Reigning champion Spieth, the 2015 Masters champion and twice a runner-up, matched the low final-round in National history with a 64, a closing bogey thwarting his bid for the biggest comeback to win in Masters history.

"I started nine back," Spieth said. "I wanted to shoot a low round and see if something crazy happens."

Fowler, still seeking his first win, birdied six of the last 11 holes. He sank a 7-foot birdie putt on 18 to pull within one and keep Reed under pressure to the 72nd hole.

"We gave our all out there and made P-Reed earn it," Fowler said. "I was happy to make that last putt."

Needing a two-putt par from 25 feet at 18 to win, Reed gently tapped the first putt and saw it race four feet past the cup. He sank the comeback effort and pumped his fist in celebration.

"To have to two-putt the last hole to win my first major, it definitely felt right," Reed said. "I was glad to end the drought."

Reeds last-pair partner McIlroy kept near on the front nine, chasing his dream of a Masters win to complete a career Grand Slam, but managed only one birdie in the last 14 holes.

"I just didnt quite have it," the star said. "When I did have opportunities I didnt take advantage of them.

"Tough day. But Ill be back."

- Kudos from Trump to Reed -

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US congratulated Reed, who won a 2014 WGC event at Trump-owned Doral, although Trump mistakenly cited it as in 2013.

"Congratulations to on his great and courageous MASTERS win!" Trump tweeted. "When Patrick had his amazing win at Doral 5 years ago, people saw his great talent, and a bright future ahead. Now he is Champion!"

Reed, who had never cracked 70 in 12 Masters rounds before this week, became the fourth straight first-time Masters winner and the ninth first-time winner in the past 10 majors.

Reeds approach at the par-5 13th clung to a above Raes Creek, his title bid nestled with it, but he escaped with par to stay deadlocked with Spieth for the lead at 14-under.

Reed sank an eight-foot birdie putt at the par-4 14th to regain a one-lead and parred to the clubhouse to win.

Spieth clipped a tree branch off the 18th tee and needed three to reach the green, where he missed an 8-foot par putt that would have seen him match the 18-hole course record.

Spieth was only the seventh to shoot 64 in the last round, the first since Bo Van Pelt in 2012.

American aced the par-3 16th with a 6-iron, the 20th time the hole has surrendered a hole-in-one, while compatriot birdied six consecutive holes from the 12th to 17th.

fired a 69 to share 10th on 281 and retain his world number one ranking. Spieth, Rahm or could have overtaken him by winning.

- Tiger roars late -

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Tiger Woods, playing his first event since 2015 in a comeback from nagging and spinal fusion surgery, fired a 69, his weeks low round.

"It was possibly the highest score I could have shot today," Woods said. "All in all it was a bittersweet ending."

The 14-time champion sank a 29-foot eagle putt at the par-5 15th and birdied 17 but a closing bogey denied his goal of level par overall.

Woods, a four-time Masters champion, failed to deliver on promise showed in two top-5 tuneup finishes but said he was glad to be back.

"I really missed it," Woods said. "I made too many mistakes. But overall it was a lot of fun. It felt great to be able to compete again.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, April 09 2018. 10:25 IST