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Harris English falters amid wind, slow-play warning

MEMPHIS, Tenn. – Webb Simpson had just shot 64 and was packing his things in the parking lot when he and his caddie, Paul Tesori, were asked how TPC Southwind was playing. “Harder,” Simpson said. “Really windy,” Tesori added. Indeed, Sunday put the wind in Southwind. That wind, plus a slow-play warning, brought chaos to the conclusion of the World Golf Championships-FedEx St. Jude Invitational. Harris English, who had looked in control after taking a two-shot lead into the back nine, hit tee shots into the water at the par-3 11th and 14th holes, double-bogeyed both, and suddenly there was a five-way tie at the top. He had one last gasp to save the tournament, but after dropping one more shot on 16 failed to birdie the 18th hole and walked away with a 3-over 73, one shot out of a playoff. “Yeah, we were warned on the front nine (to pick up the pace),” said English, who was trying to become the first three-time PGA TOUR winner this season (Sentry Tournament of Champions, Travelers Championship) and came into the week fifth in the FedExCup. “Kind of got behind, felt like we were running pretty much the whole round and never really caught up.” The final twosome was first warned on the fifth hole, English said. Bryson DeChambeau needing a ruling at the sixth didn’t help, and poor play by both players set them back even further. A left-to-right wind exacerbated anything that leaked right on 14, and a rushed English took his hand off the club as his tee shot never came close to finding land. It was the killing shot, allowing a handful of players back into the tournament and knocking English for a loop. “You definitely start the day in one rhythm and then you kind of get out of that having to walk faster, having to do everything a little faster because you don’t want to get a bad time,” he said. “It was tough, the wind was swirling obviously coming down the stretch, there was some very important shots in there and it was tough. But I’ve got to learn to slow down, go through my routine and not really worry about being put on the clock.” He missed a birdie try from just over 12 1/2 feet on 18. English was vying to surpass Collin Morikawa at FedExCup No. 1, and to be the third wire-to-wire to winner in this event after Tiger Woods (2000) and Stewart Cink (’04), both of whom accomplished the feat at Firestone South. Now he’ll move forward knowing that 63 really good holes were wiped out by a back-nine 40. “It’s just tough to rush like that,” he said. “We were getting warned on the front nine and it’s tough to catch up. I made double on 11, Bryson made triple, and you can’t catch up doing that. From 12 on I felt like we were running. “And it’s tough out there,” he continued. “The wind’s picking up. Obviously, there’s some really good pins out here. You’re trying to win a championship and it’s hard. I don’t really like speeding up like that or feeling like I’m rushed, but I’ve got to get better at that.”

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Henrik Stenson closes out Hero World Challenge winHenrik Stenson closes out Hero World Challenge win

NASSAU, Bahamas – It must have been a peculiar sight, the man in the blindfold hitting golf shots on the driving range at Emirates Golf Club in Dubai. But for Henrik Stenson, the very object of the exercise was to go without any kind of sight at all. He wanted total darkness, to really feel his mechanics, all the better to rediscover his swing. RELATED: Final leaderboard | What’s in Stenson’s bag? It was the winter of 2002—03, and he was mired in his first of two horrific slumps. “It’s mental, it’s technical— does the chicken or the egg come first?â€� he said in a lengthy interview with PGATOUR.COM a few days before winning the Hero World Challenge at Albany Golf Club on Saturday. “The first five times you’re looking for a provisional when you hit it into the forest or the hazards or out of bounds or whatever, you’re not thinking too much about it. “But you do that enough,â€� he added, “and you stand there and you’re not looking down the fairway anymore. You’re looking at what’s over there and what’s over there, and now it’s a problem.â€� Stenson, 43, shot a final-round 66 to win the Hero on a sun-splashed afternoon at Albany. His topsy-turvy back nine included a 30-foot par save on the par-5 11th hole and a tap-in eagle at the par-5 15th. He made three pars to secure the unofficial victory by one over Jon Rahm (66), marking Stenson’s first trophy of any kind since the 2017 Wyndham Championship. Patrick Reed (66) finished third and was the top American of the 11 U.S. players here whose 8 p.m. charter flight out of Nassau was bound for Melbourne and the Presidents Cup. 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His putter saved him. Unlikely pars on 11 and 14 kept him going, and a long two-putt on 18 salted away the win. Rahm, the European Tour’s recent Race to Dubai winner, was left to lament the close call and said that without scoreboards he didn’t know he was a shot behind coming up the last hole. “I played it 20 feet short of the pin thinking I was at least tied for the lead,â€� he said. Still, if he had to rate this season, Rahm said, he would give it a 9 out of 10. Stenson was not so kind in assessing his own recent play. He finished 90th in the FedExCup last season, and 57th in 2018. (The Hero win comes with no FedExCup points.) “I haven’t played to more than 75% of my capacity in the last couple years,â€� he said. He had an elbow injury, but that only set him back a few months. It just wasn’t clicking, but he kept working at it with his longtime swing coach, Pete Cowen, and mental coach, Torsten Hansson. After a T44 at the European Tour’s season-ending DP World Championship two weeks ago, Stenson decamped for the driving range with Cowen and worked for a couple of hours. Slowly, his tee-to-green game began to come back to him, setting his mind at ease for his trip to the Bahamas. Persistence has always been the Stenson way – through his first slump, which ended with a victory at the 2004 Heritage, a European Tour event at Woburn Golf Club, and his second slump in 2011. Well, almost always. There was one time, he admitted, that he uttered the Q word. As in quit.  “I think we were at the kitchen table at home back in Sweden,â€� Emma said, “but it’s not an option to quit when you have the talent he has. He’s just always had to work hard at it; he’s not like some of the boys who just go out there and it happens for them.â€� Stenson’s work ethic is the stuff of legend. 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