DeChambeau wins a dramatic duel with McIlroy
Toronto Star|June 17, 2024
The best sporting events — whatever the sport — are those in which opposing teams or individuals battle to the bitter end.
JASON LOGAN
DeChambeau wins a dramatic duel with McIlroy

Bryson DeChambeau

Whether it be great Game 7s or phenomenal five-setters, the theatre is most riveting when rivals go basket-for-basket, save-for-save or winner-for-winner for the duration of the contest, meaning the outcome is in question until the last second or shot.

One of golf’s great duels was the 1999 U.S. Open, in which Payne Stewart outlasted Phil Mickelson at Pinehurst No. 2 with a gutsy final-frame par. Sadly, Stewart passed away just months later. And surprisingly, Mickelson never atoned for that close call in the one major he’s never won. Pinehurst delivered another beauty on Sunday and the last two men standing made for perfect foes.

There was overnight leader Bryson DeChambeau, an early LIV defector and an all-time sourpuss during his time on the PGA Tour. Not long ago the big-hitting and brash Californian was a guy golf fans loved to ridicule; now he’s someone they are behind, as proven by their support at the PGA Championship he nearly won a month ago, and the “U-S-A, U-S-A” chants at Pinehurst, the home of American golf.

His challenger was Rory McIlroy, the popular PGA Tour loyalist who took more pot shots at LIV Golf than anyone — regretfully, he has said recently — and someone who arrived in Pinehurst nearly 10 years removed from his last major triumph. As he made his final-round charge, the fans began roaring his name, as they have so many times in the past.

And both guys put on a show.

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