Good closers are hard to come by (go ask the Yankees).
In golf, getting it done on Sunday is even more difficult. No one has done it better than Tiger Woods (duh). When leading or tied for the lead after 54 holes, he has a remarkable 55-4 record. When leading by himself, golf’s ultimate frontrunner is 43-2, the latest of those conversions coming at the 2018 Tour Championship, where he had a three-stroke cushion going into Sunday and cruised to his first victory in five years.
Leading by three helps of course. Justin Thomas had no such advantage at the CJ Cup @ Nine Bridges in South Korea after making a mess of the par-5 18th hole at Nine Bridges Golf Club on Saturday. He entered the final round tied with Danny Lee but shot a five-under 67 to win by two.
The victory was the 11th of the 26-year-old’s career on the PGA Tour and it put him in rare company. Only Tiger and Jack Nicklaus have compiled more Ws by age 27, with 34 (!) and 20, respectively. Rory McIlroy and Jordan Spieth are next, also with 11.
That’s the list.
Not lost in Thomas’ latest triumph: He’s now eight for 11 when leading or tied for the lead after 54 holes, which brings to mind a question:
Is Thomas the best closer in golf?
When comparing him to his contemporaries, at least, there’s a strong case to be made.
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Let’s start with 30-year-old McIlroy and 26-year-old Spieth. They are seven for 12 and nine for 16, respectively, when it comes to cashing in final-round leads on tour.
The last time McIlroy led going into Sunday was at the WGC-FedEx St. Jude, where he had a one-shot edge over Brooks Koepka and got dusted, shooting a 71 to Koepka’s 65. A month later, McIlroy got the revenge he was seeking, erasing a one-shot deficit to Koepka to win the Tour Championship and FedEx Cup. Still, he has at times struggled to close (see, 2018).
Spieth, who hasn’t won an official tournament since the 2017 Open at Royal Birkdale, has endured missed opportunities, too. In an odd pattern, he failed to convert the first four times in his career that he led or shared the lead, before cashing in nine straight leads/co-leads, and then failing to do so the last three occasions. The most infamous of those came at the 2016 Masters, where he led by a shot going into the last round and led by five with nine holes to play before imploding with a bogey-bogey-quad run on 10, 11 and 12.
Jason Day, who won The Challenge: Japan Skins, an unofficial event, on Monday, followed a similar trend as Spieth early on. He converted just one of his first six leads/co-leads into victory. Since then, however, the 31-year-old 12-time tour winner is six for seven.
Koepka, who has seven career victories on tour, has also proven adept at closing. The 29-year-old four-time major champion is four for six overall, having gotten the job done each of the last four times he has been atop the leader board. The most recent of those came at the PGA Championship in May.
Koepka’s fellow bash bro Dustin Johnson? The 35-year-old with is eight for 17. He also has three additional wins in events that were shortened to 54 holes, having won two of those when leading after 36 holes.
Then there’s Rickie Fowler. He’s just two for seven, though he’s at least trending in the right direction, having won each of the last two times he took a lead into the final round, including earlier this year in Phoenix.
Thomas? He’s had his moments. At the Northern Trust earlier this year, he blew a four-stroke lead in the final round, imploding with a four-over 75 on a wind-whipped Sunday at Riviera.
Hey, no one’s perfect, not even Tiger, whose most infamous 54-hole lead that slipped away came when Y.E. Yang took him down at the 2009 PGA Championship.
Sometimes, someone else simply plays better. Sometimes, a player chokes.
Thomas is proving he doesn’t do much of the latter.
“I don’t think you can ever necessarily call yourself the best closer,” he said after his victory at the CJ Cup. “I’ve only won 11 times. I feel like once I get to 40 or 50 times and I’ve closed a lot of those, then I think that’s kind of different.”
Thomas is off to a good start.
“The biggest thing I think that I’ve gotten a lot better at is just learning, taking experiences and learning from them,” he said. “That’s what I did early in my career. There were a couple times I felt like I should have won the tournament but I did something incorrectly or hit a wrong club or thought how I shouldn’t have, and I was able when I finished to look back at that.
“That’s all I’m trying to do because I feel like if I can just improve a little bit every year, then there’s not really a ceiling that I feel like I can’t reach.”