Chris Kirk claims Honda Classic title in playoff
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[February 27, 2023]
Chris Kirk made a long-awaited and emotional return to the
winner's circle by beating Eric Cole in a playoff at the Honda
Classic on Sunday at PGA National Resort in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.
After Kirk bogeyed the par-5 18th hole to necessitate the playoff,
he and Cole returned to play the hole again. This time, Kirk stuck
his third shot to 16 inches for what proved to be the winning birdie
tap.
Kirk entered the day with a two-stroke lead and shot a 1-under 69,
while Cole, playing with him in the final group, caught him with a
3-under 67. At 14-under 266, the duo finished two better than
third-place Tyler Duncan, who shot a final-round 66.
Kirk, 37, won for the fifth time on the PGA Tour and the first time
since taking a break from the tour to treat alcoholism and
depression in 2019. His most recent win was at The Colonial in 2015.
"I just have so much to be thankful for," Kirk said on the NBC
broadcast. "I'm so grateful for my sobriety. I'm so grateful for my
family. I'm so grateful for everyone that supported me throughout
the past three or four years, especially."
Kirk arrived at his 72nd hole with a one-shot advantage over Cole.
He took aim at the green on his second shot, but it bounced off a
decorative brick on the edge of the green complex and caromed right,
landing in the water.
Kirk had to take a drop, opening the door for Cole to potentially
win with a birdie. But after overshooting the green on his second
shot, his third shot rolled past the hole and did not stay on the
green.
Cole went on to save par, and Kirk missed his par putt, leading to
the playoff.
Kirk's drive found the rough, forcing him to lay up on his second
shot. Cole's second shot landed in a bunker behind the green, and
Kirk's third wowed the crowd as it threatened to spin into the cup.
"When I missed the fairway on 18, I would have liked to have piped
one down the middle, but I almost liked my chances better with a
wedge into that pin than some of those shots from left or --
everybody saw how difficult Eric's bunker shot was, and he hit a
great second shot," Kirk said.
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"I liked the position I was in there, and then to
be able to hit that great of a wedge shot under those circumstances
felt amazing."
Cole had a longer birdie putt that could have forced a second
playoff hole, and it lipped out.
"I played three really good days of good
ball-striking and then today, especially on the front nine," Cole
said. "My ball-striking wasn't where it needed to be. I felt like I
hung pretty tough, and I was really proud of that. I played as hard
as I could."
Cole had a run of three birdies at Nos. 3-5 to tie Kirk at 14 under.
The putt at the par-3 fifth was a triple-breaker of nearly 70 feet.
But Cole, ranked 330th in the world and seeking his first win on
tour, found the water on the ensuing hole and saved bogey from 20
feet away to drop back a shot. Kirk made a 34 1/2-foot birdie putt
at No. 8 for a two-shot lead.
At the par-4 13th, Kirk was leading by one but bogeyed the hole
while Cole made a 7-foot birdie for a two-shot swing that gave Cole
his first outright lead of the day. Cole gave it back at the par-3
15th, where he failed to get out of a greenside bunker on his second
shot and wound up making bogey.
Ryan Gerard, who made only his second PGA Tour start, shot a
final-round 67 to finish fourth at 10 under.
Five players tied for fifth at 9 under, including defending champion
Sepp Straka of Austria, who wrapped the weekend with a 68. Joining
him were Ben Martin (68), Justin Suh (71), Irishman Shane Lowry (70)
and England's Ben Taylor (70).
--Field Level Media
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