Straka's bogey-free back nine included birdies at Nos. 14, 16
and 18, the last of which ended up being the difference as he
finished 10-under-par 270 and beat Ireland's Shane Lowry (67
Sunday) by a stroke.
Kurt Kitayama posted a 68 and took third place at 8 under.
Daniel Berger yielded a five-shot lead, the largest 54-hole lead
in tournament history, and shot a 4-over 74 to place fourth at 7
under.
Straka's wife flew in Saturday night to join his mother and
other family at PGA National Resort and Spa's Champion Course.
"I didn't even know Paige was coming down," Straka told the CBS
broadcast. "So this morning, when I walked down the putting
green and saw her there. It was just great to have all of them
here to celebrate with me."
Berger started the day at 11 under, five shots better than
Straka and three others at 6 under. Poor sand play at the par-5
third hole led Berger to make double bogey, and he added bogeys
at Nos. 5 and 6 to give back four shots and open up the
tournament.
Straka played the front nine in 1 under before steadying out for
the back nine, including PGA National's infamous "Bear Trap" of
holes 15-17. At the par-4 16th, Straka made a nearly 19-foot
birdie putt from off the green to tie Lowry for the lead at 9
under.
A heavy rainstorm popped up as Straka and Kitayama walked to
their second shots at the par-5 18th and Berger and Lowry
approached the 18th tee. Through the rain, both Straka and
Kitayama managed to reach the green in two and two-putt for
birdies, which put Straka out in front.
"For a little while there, the wind let down before the rain
started and it was kind of nice," Straka said. "But then on the
last hole, that second shot into the green it just started
pouring rain."
"It was pretty hectic," said Kitayama, who would have needed an
eagle and a Straka par for any hope of making a playoff. "I was
hoping it was going to die down a little bit, but it really
didn't. You know, just kind of had to play to the middle of the
green and two-putt."
Lowry missed his tee shot at 18 badly left. He managed to
recover and reach the green in three shots, but his 42-foot
birdie putt to force a playoff was just off.
Berger could have induced a playoff by eagling the hole, but his
second shot missed the green and landed in the water. He went on
to bogey the hole.
"Yeah, just a poor round. It can happen at any time," Berger
said. "I'm not going to dwell on it too much. Just didn't hit
quality shots at the right time. Probably would've had a chance
to win if I made a few more putts.
"I don't think I made a single putt today. I don't know what
happened. Just didn't feel good over the putter today."
Kitayama entered the week No. 289 in the Official World Golf
Ranking. He has won three events in Europe and Asia, but his
third-place finish marks his best showing on the PGA Tour.
Gary Woodland (67) and Sweden's Alex Noren (68) tied for fifth
at 4 under. Chris Kirk (73) and another Austrian, Matthias
Schwab (68), finished 3 under in a tie for seventh.
--Field Level Media
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