Steve Stricker wins John Deere Classic for 3rd straight year
By Len Ziehm Special to Sun-Times Media July 10, 2011 8:02PM
SILVIS, IL - JULY 10: Steve Stricker celebrates making a birdie on the 18th green to win the John Deere Classic at TPC Deere Run on July 10, 2011 in Silvis, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Cohen/Getty Images) R:\Merlin\Getty_Photos\118760376.jpg
Updated: July 20, 2011 11:15AM
SILVIS, Ill. — Steve Stricker had 10 wins on the PGA Tour, but none had quite the flair of Sunday’s three-peat at the John Deere Classic.
Stricker, now the 20th player to win a PGA Tour event three consecutive years since World War II, had a five-stroke lead entering the back nine, only to see Kyle Stanley, playing in the twosome in front of him, make five birdies in six holes. Coupled with two bogeys of his own, Stricker found himself two strokes down with two holes to play.
‘‘An unbelievable week, and an unbelievable finish,’’ Stricker said. ‘‘I felt no momentum going my way most of the day. I just tried to hang in there, and I feel very fortunate to have won.’’
A 12-foot birdie putt at the 17th hole pulled Stricker to within a shot.
After saving par on the 17th, Stanley carded a bogey on the 18th that included a tee shot into the trees and a nine-foot putt that lipped out.
Stricker’s tee shot on 18 wasn’t much either, winding up in a bunker 184 yards from the green with trees and a pond affecting his next shot. He also had an awkward stance, with one foot in the bunker and one out. Making a last-minute club change, to a 6-iron, Stricker managed a great second to the back fringe 25 feet from the cup.
Two putts from there would have put him in a playoff, but Stricker did better, rolling in the birdie putt and sending the standing-room-only gallery into a frenzy.
‘‘I probably had a one- or two-out-of-10 chance of pulling off the shot from the bunker,’’ Stricker said, ‘‘and then the putt — I don’t know what to say about that. I was trying to make it, but you don’t expect those to go in. I’m just glad that one did.’’
His 69 in the final round gave him a 22-under-par 262 for the tournament and an $810,000 payday.
Stanley, a Clemson graduate who played on the Nationwide Tour last year, didn’t land his first win, but he did get a consolation prize — a berth in this week’s British Open as the highest-finishing non-qualifier among the JDC’s top five finishers. He heard the roar for Stricker’s final putt while sitting in the scorer’s trailer.
‘‘That was a great birdie from where he was,’’ Stanley said. ‘‘I’m excited to go play [the British], but it’s difficult calming down from that round. I know I have the game to win out here. I just don’t know when it’ll be.’’






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