Rory McIlroy, Shane Lowry team up
to win Zurich in playoff
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[April 29, 2024]
Irish eyes smiled upon TPC Louisiana on Sunday, as Rory
McIlroy and Shane Lowry prevailed in a playoff to win the Zurich
Classic of New Orleans in McIlroy's debut at the team tournament in
Avondale, La.
McIlroy, the four-time major champ from Northern Ireland, and Lowry,
his friend, fellow major winner and former Ryder Cup teammate from
Ireland, put the Zurich on their schedule hoping to use it to jump
up the FedEx Cup standings. They'll each receive 400 FedEx Cup
points after defeating Chad Ramey and France's Martin Trainer on the
first playoff hole.
It marked McIlroy's 25th PGA Tour win and Lowry's third; Lowry had
not won on U.S. soil since August 2015. McIlroy dubbed his first
trip to New Orleans "absolutely amazing."
"To win any PGA Tour event is very cool," McIlroy said, "but to do
it with one of your closest friends, we've known each other for a
long, long time, probably like over 20 years, so to think about
where we met and where we've come from, to be on this stage and do
this together, really, really cool journey that we've been a part
of."
After starting the day seven shots off the lead, Ramey and Trainer
fired a 9-under 63 in Sunday's round of foursomes (alternate shot)
to head to the clubhouse at 25-under 263. Other teams in the
25-under range soon wobbled and fell back -- including McIlroy and
Lowry, for a brief time, before they rebounded from a bogey at No.
17 with a birdie at the par-5 18th hole to force the playoff.
They returned to the 18th tee to begin the playoff, and Ramey's
second shot hooked left over the gallery. Trainer couldn't hit his
third shot hard enough onto the green. Meanwhile, Lowry put his team
in the bunker on the second shot but McIlroy made a nice recovery
shot -- similar to his pitch shot on the 72nd hole that set up
Lowry's 5-foot birdie that forced the playoff.
Lowry's birdie try in the playoff came to rest inches right of the
cup, but Trainer pushed his short par putt that would have extended
the playoff.
"You seen the drive (McIlroy) hit up the 18th, the 72nd hole," Lowry
said. "When you've got him doing that, it's pretty easy to play golf
from there for me. I made it look hard at times, but no, it was
amazing. We went out there, we had loads of fun and we won the
tournament. You couldn't ask for a better week."
The Irish team recovered from a bogey-birdie-bogey start to finish
with seven birdies, including four in a five-hole span at Nos. 7-11.
They also had the advantage of rolling straight into the playoff,
while Ramey and Trainer had to wait and stay loose while the rest of
the field finished.
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"I feel for Martin and Chad a little bit," McIlroy
said. "They played an unbelievable round of golf. To shoot 63 out
there in those conditions in foursomes is super impressive. Yeah, to
be sitting around and not really knowing -- they might be in a
playoff, they might not be, and then I'm sure they obviously had
time to warm up and everything, but still, it's different than us
just coming straight back off the golf course and straight back into
it."
Ramey and Trainer, each of whom has just one win in their tour
careers, were 1 under through six holes before they birdied Nos. 7
and 8. They carried that momentum onto the back nine and rolled in
five straight birdies from Nos. 10-14; they finished with 11 birdies
and two bogeys before the playoff.
"Obviously disappointed we didn't come out with the win," Ramey
said. "Like I told somebody earlier, there's a lot of really good
things to take from this week, and that's what I'm going to do. Solo
second finish in the end is still pretty good."
Ryan Brehm and Mark Hubbard shot a 69 and finished one shot out of
the playoff after closing with four straight pars. Brehm missed a
must-have birdie at No. 18.
The team of Zac Blair and Patrick Fishburn also had their chances
after shooting 60 on Saturday to take the 54-hole lead. Blair and
Fishburn were done in Sunday by a pair of double bogeys at the par-3
ninth and 17th holes to drop them from the co-lead at 25 under to 23
under.
They shot 72 and tied for fourth at 23-under 265 with the teams of
Sam Stevens and France's Paul Barjon (64); South African Garrick
Higgo and New Zealand's Ryan Fox (65); and Max Greyserman and
Colombia's Nico Echavarria (69).
--Field Level Media
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