Tube4vids logo

Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!

Hideki Matsuyama wins PGA Tour's $20m FedEx St. Jude Championship - just days after London robbery

PUBLISHED
UPDATED
VIEWS

Hideki Matsuyama survived a shaky back nine to shoot even-par 70 Sunday at the FedEx St. Jude Championship and win the opening leg of the PGA Tour's season-ending playoffs at TPC Southwind.

The Japanese golfer clung on down the home stretch to finish at 17-under thanks to back-to-back birdies at the 17th and 18th holes.

The former Masters Champion finished two strokes better than World No. 2 Xander Schauffele and defending FedEx Cup champion Viktor Hovland to claim the $3.6million prize at the Tour's $20million tournament in Memphis. 


The triumph was made all the more impressive by the turbulent week Matsuyama has been forced to endure. 

It was revealed earlier this week that Matsuyama, fresh off winning the bronze medal at the Paris Olympics, was robbed in London during a layover. 

Hideki Matsuyama survived a shaky back nine to win the FedEx St. Jude Championship

Hideki Matsuyama survived a shaky back nine to win the FedEx St. Jude Championship

Matsuyama, his caddie Shota Hayafuji and coach Mikihito Kuromiya were enjoying dinner at a restaurant in the English capital before he was due to fly to America for the tournament when they realized they had been robbed. 

While Matsuyama was able to make it to Memphis with his passport and Olympic medal untouched, the same couldn't be said for Hayafuji and Kuromiya. 

The pair were forced to return to Japan after their passports were taken during the incident, leaving Matsuyama to battle TPC Southwind with stand-in bagman, Taiga Tabuchi,.

With Tabuchi by his side,  Matsuyama carried a five-stroke lead into Sunday -- the largest 54-hole advantage of his career -- but he faltered down the stretch. 

After playing his first 11 holes at 2 under, he came unraveled. He endured a bogey-par-bogey-double bogey stretch from Nos. 12-15 to allow Schauffele and Hovland to briefly pass him.

But Matsuyama recovered with a clutch 26-foot birdie putt on 17 and a 6-footer at 18, the toughest hole on the course.

Hovland had back-to-back birdies at 15 and 16 to get to 16 under par and surpass Matsuyama, who enjoyed a five-stroke lead at the turn.

Matsuyama, seen with Tommy Fleetwood (left) and Scottie Scheffler (center) captured a bronze medal in Paris

Matsuyama, seen with Tommy Fleetwood (left) and Scottie Scheffler (center) captured a bronze medal in Paris

The Japanese player was forced to use stand-in caddie Taiga Tabuchi after the robbery

The Japanese player was forced to use stand-in caddie Taiga Tabuchi after the robbery 

Schauffele was at 8 under -- nine strokes behind Matsuyama -- to begin the round. He made a charge with a bogey-free round and nearly chipped in off the green on 18 to make the final hole tougher for Matsuyama. Schauffele's chip from 75 feet struck the flag.

'It was a head-down day, just hit as many good shots as you can,' Schauffele said. 'You're so far back (to start).'

Matsuyama earned the 10th PGA Tour title of his career.

Schauffele made an early run up the leaderboard and kept the pressure on. Starting the round nine strokes back, Schauffele birdied four of the first six holes and moved in a tie for second at 12 under.

At the turn, Matsuyama had the five-stroke advantage he began with, needing only a 38-foot birdie putt on No. 8 to maintain the huge cushion. Matsuyama parred the other eight holes on the front side and was at 18 under.

Hovland and rookie Nick Dunlap were the closest to Matsuyama at the turn, each at 13 under par. Hovland had back-to-back birdies on Nos. 8 and 9 to move into second place.

When Schauffele and Hovland got within four strokes early on the back nine, Matsuyama calmly sank another birdie putt, a 19-footer on No. 11, to go to 19 under. Schauffele, with his sixth birdie through 13 holes, had moved to 14 under before Matsuyama's putt.

Matsuyama finished two shots ahead of Viktor Hovland (pictured) and Xander Schauffele

Matsuyama finished two shots ahead of Viktor Hovland (pictured) and Xander Schauffele

Schauffele was at 8 under - nine strokes behind Matsuyama - to begin the final round

Schauffele was at 8 under - nine strokes behind Matsuyama - to begin the final round

Then the struggles began for Matsuyama.

The opening tournament of the season-ending playoffs featured the top 70 in the FedEx Cup points standings. The top 50 in the standings advance to the next round, the BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club in Colorado. Dunlap qualified with a par on 18, completing his move from No. 67 in the standings to No. 48.

The Tour Championship will be played Labor Day weekend at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta.

Those who finished Sunday ranked in the top 50 not only move on to Colorado but are eligible for each of the eight PGA Tour signature event in 2025.

Comments