Wolverhampton's Aaron Rai continues excellent form with top ten PGA Tour finish
Wolverhampton’s Aaron Rai continued his excellent recent form on golf’s PGA Tour as he recorded another top 10 finish in the Rocket Mortgage Classic in the USA.
Rai, 28, finished in tied ninth at Detroit Golf Club on Sunday as he ended the tournament on 18 under par. The former Wolverhampton Grammar School pupil finished the event slightly disappointed having slipped five places down the leaderboard with his final round of 71.
Rai’s latest success comes three weeks after his third place finish in the Canadian Open and a week after a tied 24th place in the Travelers Championship.
Sunday;s event was won by Rickie Fowler, who returned from the golfing wilderness to record his first victory in more than four years after winning a three-man play-off at the Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit.
The 34-year-old’s last victory was 1,610 days ago at the WM Phoenix Open in February 2019 but in the intervening time he had slumped to 185th in the world rankings as recently as last September.
However, his game has been trending in the right direction and after back-to-back top-10s at the Charles Schwab Challenge and the Memorial was followed by a near-miss finishing tied fifth at last month’s US Open, he finally got it over the line with a birdie at the first extra hole to beat Adam Hadwin and Collin Morikawa, who had both outshot Fowler in the final round to negate the one-stroke lead he held heading into the last day.
Fowler’s round of 68 was his worst of the week but he brilliantly birdied the last, hitting his approach to four feet, to get to 24 under and into the play-off with playing partner Hadwin already on that number heading down the last and Morikawa in the clubhouse on the same score.
Morikawa had forced himself into contention with a flawless eight-under-par round of 64.
“It’s hard to really to put it all into words. Wining is great but there is a lot more to life than that,” said an emotional Fowler, cuddling his 20-month-old daughter Maya on the 18th green.
“There’s been a lot of good stuff this year and (I’ve been) playing some really good golf so I knew it was a matter of time.
“I’ve had a couple of tough weekends where I had a chance, the US Open (where he shared the 54-hole lead) I didn’t get it done.”
In his post-match press conference Fowler added: “You definitely learn to appreciate the good times and when you’re playing well.
“You hope the struggles don’t last, but sometimes they last longer than you would hope for.”
Fowler will now cross the Atlantic to play in the Scottish Open and Open Championship at Royal Liverpool with his target refocused on making the United States Ryder Cup team.
“Definitely one of the main goals this year was to win,” he said.
“One of the end goals was to be a part of the Ryder Cup team and that’s still what we’re focusing on right now.”
n Bernhard Langer won a record 46th PGA Tour Champions title with victory in the US Senior Open. The German, 66 in September, overtook Hale Irwin’s mark of 45 which had stood for 16 years with a two-shot victory over Steve Stricker at SentryWorld in Wisconsin to pick up a second US Senior Open 13 years after his first. Langer, for the fifth time, broke his own record as the oldest winner in PGA Tour Champions history at 65 years and 10 months and also extended the record number of senior major titles held to 12, in addition to his two Masters wins on the regular circuit back in 1985 and 1993.