Martin Kaymer wins the PGA Tournament, but everyone is talking about Dustin Johnson

Did any of you catch Dustin Johnson’s final hole? If not, I highly recommend you check out the highlights. You can find an online feed of it here on TSN. I was trying to watch it on the muted TV in Nevada Bob’s Golf in Market Mall and couldn’t really figure out what had happened at first until they replyed it a hundred times afterwards. I feel so bad for Dustin Johnson. What a tough way to get eliminated for the Tournament playoff after playing four solid rounds of golf at a Major. I had no idea it was considered a sandtrap either. Congrats to Martin Kaymer for coming out on top after the playoff.

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. — Martin Kaymer’s name is etched on the side of the Wanamaker Trophy.

A far more compelling image from this PGA Championship was Dustin Johnson taking one last look at his scorecard Sunday before turning over his pencil to use the eraser on his final hole.

The 5 turned into a 7.

It kept Johnson out of a playoff, which Kaymer won over Bubba Watson, all because of a tiny patch of sand well right of the 18th fairway where Johnson gently placed his four-iron behind the ball, unaware that it was part of a bunker.

“It never crossed my mind that I was in a sand trap,” Johnson said.

The resulting two-stroke penalty for grounding his club in a bunker — outside the ropes, where thousands of fans had been walking all week — turned a thrilling final hour into a controversial finish that will be debated for years.

In a strange season of golf, from Tiger Woods’ sex scandal to unlikely winners in the majors, this one topped them all.

Whistling Straits has so many bunkers — more than 1,000 — that not even architect Pete Dye can count them all. Perhaps it was only fitting that one of them played such a pivotal role in the season’s final major.

“It was very tough to see what is a bunker and what is not a bunker,” said Kaymer, who won the three-hole playoff with a tap-in bogey. “I think it’s very sad he got two penalty strokes. He played great golf. He’s a very nice guy.”

Kaymer won his first major in a PGA Championship that will be remembered as much for the guy who tied for fifth.

It was the cruelest end to a major since Roberto de Vicenzo signed for a higher score than he actually made in the 1968 Masters, which kept him out of a playoff against Bob Goalby.

Johnson had no excuses. The peculiar rule about every bunker being treated the same had been posted in the locker-room all week. And he offered none when a PGA rules official stopped him walking off the green and said, “We’ve got an issue.”

His first reaction when told he might have grounded his club in a bunker: “What bunker?”

Johnson didn’t even bother going to the TV truck to study the replay. He knew he grounded the club. He just didn’t know that he was in the edge of a bunker, figuring it was grass that had been killed under so much foot traffic.

“The only worse thing that could have happened was if I had made the putt on that last hole,” Johnson said.

Thinking he had a chance to win, Johnson missed a seven-foot par putt on the 18th to seemingly slip into a three-man playoff. Instead, the two-shot penalty turned his 71 into a 73, and instead of going to a playoff for redemption from his U.S. Open meltdown, Johnson tied for fifth and headed home.

Click here to read the full article from TSN.

 

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