Scot now third in US Tour money table with earnings of $2,851,400
Luke Donald, Russell Knox joint 2nd
behind South African Grace
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HILTON HEAD ISLAND, South Carolina -- Branden Grace has had his share of big moments. He believes winning the RBC Heritage is his biggest by far. The
27-year-old South African had won 10 times overseas, finished in the
top five last year in the U.S. Open and USA PGA Championship, and gone 5-0
for the International team at the Presidents Cup. On Sunday, he shot a
5-under 66 to overtake Luke Donald for his first title on the US PGA Tour. "This really puts the cherry on top of the cake," Grace said. "And I'm excited for things to start." Grace
has already fashioned an accomplished career. He's 14th in the world
ranking, and three of his seven career wins on the European Tour have
come since 2015. "I can tick this one off the box and head into
the next couple of majors trying to win it," he said. "I have one notch.
I've done it before, and I can do it again." Grace trailed leader
Luke Donald by three shots when the round began, but by the turn, he
had wiped out that deficit with five birdies. Grace took the lead for
good with consecutive birdies on 12 and 13. He overcame a final
challenge on the 16th hole by rolling in a 12-foot par putt to maintain a
3-shot lead. A hole behind, Donald lipped out a birdie try. He could
get no closer. Grace finished at 9-under 275, two shots ahead of Donald and Russell Knox. Donald shot a 71, and Knox had a 67. Inverness-born Knox is now lying third in the US Tour money table for the current season. Only Adam Scott and Jason Day are ahead of the Scot who has amassed a total of $2,851,400 with most of the season still to come! Grace
earned $1,062,000 and a PGA Tour exemption through the 2017-18 season,
which he said was a weight off his mind and will allow him to
comfortably contend without worrying about keeping his tour card.
Grace
became the latest to rally past hard-luck leader Donald at Harbour Town
Golf Links. The Englishman has finished second four times and third
twice in the past eight events here. Brandt Snedeker shot a final-round 64 to catch Donald and win in a playoff in 2011. Matt Kuchar shot a 64 in 2014 and overtook Donald for the win with a chip-in from the bunker on the 72nd hole. Donald
said Saturday after taking a 1-shot lead that he would need to be
aggressive and make birdies. That did not happen. He settled for pars on
the opening six holes, and Grace moved in front with four birdies on
the same stretch. Donald got to 8 under with a birdie on the
seventh hole, then quickly gave it back on No. 8, when he drove in the
water and took bogey. He caught Grace one final time with a ninth-hole
birdie but could not keep up with the South African. "I think I've got to put myself three or four behind on Sunday," Donald said. "Leading doesn't seem to be working out for me." Donald earned $519,200 and moved past five-time RBC Heritage champion Davis Love III for second in tournament winnings, with $3,063,520. Bryson DeChambeau,
the former SMU star who won the NCAA and U.S. Amateur last year, tied
for fourth in his first event since turning pro, at four shots behind
Grace after a 68. Kevin Na was tied with DeChambeau after a 69. Top-ranked Jason Day
rebounded from a season-worst 79 on Saturday for a 68 to tie for 23rd
at 1 under. He gets a week off before returning to play at the Zurich
Classic of New Orleans, beginning April 28. He said he'll use the time
to refresh his mind and improve his fitness, which he said got a bit
loose during this latest run of tournament golf. Not that it hurt him on the course. In the past month, Day won the Arnold Palmer
Invitational and the World Golf Championship's Dell Match Play event.
He tied for 10th at the Masters and shared the 36-hole lead at Harbour
Town until his third-round blow up. His finish was his third round in the 70s this week. "A
lot of positive stuff" at the tournament, Day said. "I've just got to
get back, just rest my mind, rest my body and try and get back in the
swing of things." Divots: No 9s on this card: Ernie Els
closed with a 66, his lowest round since he finished the final round of
the 2013 WGC-HSBC Champions event with the same score. ... Jason Bohn closed with a 77 and finished 11 over in his first event since his heart attack in February.
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