The two-shot victory earned Spaun his first-ever trip to the
Masters in Augusta, Ga. next week, where he will enter play at
No. 10 in the FedExCup standings.
"It's a great feeling to be in the winner's circle and now it's
like a game changer," Spaun said.
"(Heading to the Masters) means the world. You've only dreamed
of playing there, for most of us. To think that we're going to
be heading there tonight or tomorrow is incredible. I'm really
looking forward to it and I can't wait. Hopefully I can have
another good week there, too."
Coming into the day tied for the lead with three other golfers,
Spaun misfired with a double bogey on his first hole, but he
rallied to shoot a calm, collected round after that, making five
birdies and 12 pars.
"I was pretty upset, but the only thing, the saving grace to
that or the thing I learned from that is it's the first hole,"
Spaun said. "Like if I was 2 over through 5, it probably would
have felt different, but I knew because it was only the first
hole, like you've just got to forget about it.
"So I just didn't let it bother me and I just tried to overcome
and I did."
Spaun became the first player to win a tournament despite
starting off the final round with a double bogey since Tiger
Woods at the 2008 U.S. Open.
He finished his day with four straight pars, with no other
golfer able to draw closer. Matt Kuchar (69 on Sunday) and
Australian Matt Jones (66) finished tied for second two strokes
back at 11 under.
Spaun joined the PGA tour in 2017, earning three top-10 finishes
as a rookie. He added four more in 2018, but he hit a rough
patch in 2020.
"I technically lost my card the COVID year, but they gave
everyone that didn't keep their card another year," Spaun said.
"Basically, we were in like a reshuffle category, kind of like
the rookie category I'm in now, or I was. I was just playing
bad, like I was lost. I didn't know where my swing was, I didn't
know what to do. I had been working hard at it, too. That was
the thing, I was putting so much into my game and getting
nothing in return and just playing worse.
"I went to Korn Ferry Finals and fought hard and won it back in
the first tournament. I didn't win, but I got it back finishing
tied for second or second place. I think that's kind of what I
needed maybe."
Jones' final-round 66 (eight birdies, two bogeys) tied for the
best round of the day.
"Yeah, played great today," Jones said. "Had a great playing
partner, great group, so it's always enjoyable."
Canadian Adam Hadwin fired a final-round 67 to forge a
fourth-place tie with Troy Merritt (69), Charles Howell III (69)
and Beau Hossler (72).
Hadwin had three birdies over his first five holes and five
birdies in his final seven.
"Obviously today was an incredible finish," Hadwin said. "It's a
tricky golf course and when the wind blows, the landing areas on
the greens are so small, you've got to be extremely precise."
Hossler had been tied with Spaun coming into the final round,
but a 72 sank his chances.
The other leaders coming into the day, South Africa's Dylan
Frittelli (73) and Brandt Snedeker (75), finished tied for
eighth and tied for 18th, respectively.
Other golfers joining Frittelli in eighth at 9 under included
Keegan Bradley (66), Austria's Matthias Schwab (68), Gary
Woodland (70) and Brendon Todd (70).
--Field Level Media
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