Thomas, who has been No. 1 on two different occasions, had
fallen to No. 9 entering last week. His come-from-behind victory
at Southern Hills in Tulsa, Okla., snapped a 14-month winless
drought.
"I just think it's just so hard to win," Thomas said on Sunday.
"Like, it is. I legitimately think it's harder to win now than
it was when I first came out on (the PGA) Tour just for the sake
of the depth of the tour.
"I clearly haven't won the amount of times that a lot of guys --
not a lot; a handful of guys have this year. But I feel like
I've played just as well as anybody on tour this year. I just
haven't had the trophies to show, and I'd fallen in the World
Ranking, and that just kind of shows how strong it was or how
strong the game of golf is."
Will Zalatoris rose 16 spots to a career-high 14th in the world
after falling to Thomas in a three-hole playoff. Zalatoris is
still seeking his first career PGA Tour victory.
So, too, is Mito Pereira, the Chilean who double-bogeyed the
72nd hole while needing a par to win and a bogey to be part of
the playoff. Pereira did vault 51 spots in the rankings to No.
49, climbing inside the coveted top 50 positions that qualify
players for most every major worldwide event.
Thomas, 29, now has a pair of Wanamaker trophies on his resume
along with the 2021 Players Championship. That had been his most
recent victory before erasing a seven-shot deficit with a 67 on
Sunday.
"I think it's easy to start letting some doubt creep in and just
kind of like, 'all right, what's going to happen, when is it
going to happen, is it going to happen?'" Thomas said.
"I'm very fortunate right now that although there might be
people ranked higher than me in the World Ranking, but at least
in my eyes, I'm on top of the golfing world right now. And I'm
very, very proud of that."
--Field Level Media
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