The Spaniard posted a 2-under-par 69 to finish at 17-under 267,
one shot better than Brandon Wu, Tony Finau and Kurt Kitayama.
Wu and Finau shot matching rounds of 8-under 63 early in the day
at Vidanta Vallarta to shoot up the leaderboard and put pressure
on Rahm. The world no. 2 had one bogey and three birdies on the
day, the last coming on a left-to-right 11-foot putt at the
par-5 14th.
Rahm held at least a share of the lead after all four rounds. He
has now won at least one event in six straight seasons.
Though Rahm entered the week as the heavy favorite, his victory
broke a nearly 11-month title drought dating to the U.S. Open
last June.
"I don't look at bets. I like to think every time I tee it up I
can win," Rahm said. "It was a pretty stressful weekend. But I
got it done at the end."
Rahm had a scare at the par-5 18th when his drive missed left
and he had to punch out. Faced with 143 yards to the hole on his
third shot, he landed it on the fringe and two-putted for par.
Kitayama played with Rahm and posted three birdies on a
bogey-free front nine to make a push. But bogeys at Nos. 10 and
14 held him back, and a birdie at the last hole gave him a
3-under 68 to land in the tie for second.
Finau carded a blazing 31 on the back nine with a
birdie-eagle-birdie stretch at Nos. 13-15. His second shot at
the par-5 14th was just short of the green, but his downhill lag
putt hit the back of the cup and dropped.
Finau credited adjustments in his iron play he made before the
Masters.
"I'm really happy with my round today, that's what I'll say,"
Finau said. "I haven't had a great season and just sometimes
it's just how it goes. It's the game that we play. I really
wanted to put together a nice week and I was able to do that
this week and gave myself a chance to do something special right
at the end."
Like Finau, Wu avoided bogey on Sunday and carded one eagle with
six birdies. His eagle came at the par-3 sixth on a 14-foot
putt. It was Wu's career-low round and best finish on the PGA
Tour.
"Tried to keep it easy, that was kind of the game plan with me
and my caddie," Wu said. "Hit a lot of greens, hit a lot of
fairways. The conditions were kind of tough especially towards
the middle and the end of the round, there's some tough holes
with the wind, but yeah, I just tried to play my game and it was
good."
Davis Riley (68) finished alone in fifth at 15 under. Aaron Wise
(64), David Lipsky (64), Alex Smalley (68) and Cameron Champ
(70) tied for sixth at 14 under.
It marked the first season that Mexico's national open was a PGA
Tour-level event. Abraham Ancer and Alvaro Ortiz posted the best
finishes among Mexican players at 6-under 278. Carlos Ortiz
signed for a 5-under 279.
--Field Level Media
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