Daily Wrap-up: Round 4, Viking Classic

text size
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size
Print This Story RSS

Jul. 17, 2011
By Staff and wire reports

MADISON, Miss. -- After a tap-in putt for a one-stroke victory at the Viking Classic, Chris Kirk picked up his ball, gave a nearly indiscernible fist pump and strode off the course like a man who's done it a hundred times.

Not exactly what you'd expect from a first-time PGA TOUR winner.

"I gave a little bit of a fist pump, I think, didn't I?" Kirk said grinning. "I don't know. I made a three-inch putt to win. That's not exactly an accomplishment. All the other shots I hit were pretty good, though."

They certainly were. Kirk, a 26-year-old rookie, shot a 4-under 68 to beat Tom Pernice Jr. and George McNeill by one stroke at Annandale Golf Club. It ended an impressive week for the Georgia graduate, who tied the tournament record with a 22-under performance over four rounds. The victory earns Kirk $648,000 of the $3.6 million purse and 250 points in the FedExCup race.

Kirk had a one-stroke lead going into the final round and rarely flinched. He never trailed, breaking a tie with McNeill on No. 17 by hitting a 140-yard approach over water to within five feet of the hole for an easy birdie putt.

The bold shot looked risky. But Kirk calmly surveyed his options and said he never thought twice.

"People sometimes make more of it than what it is," Kirk said. "It was 140 yards and it was a 9-iron, so I was aiming right at the pin and nowhere else. That was my only thought."

Kirk played his first PGA TOUR event at the Viking Classic in 2007, receiving a sponsor's exemption just weeks after turning pro. But he missed the cut, and on Sunday marveled at how much things have changed in four years.

Winner's Spotlight
Chris Kirk climbed to No. 27 in the FedExCup standings with his victory at the Viking Classic.
• Latest standings

"It's pretty amazing to think back to then, how far I've come from," Kirk said. "My game isn't that much better than it was then, but just the comfort level that I have now to be able to go out for 18 today and feel one hundred percent comfortable in my own skin."

Annandale received more than 4.5 inches of rain over the past week, and the soft fairways and greens led to plentiful birdies throughout the tournament. But the final round proved to be the toughest, with scores rising slightly as the course dried out and wind picked up.

Sunghoon Kang, another rookie, and McNeill started the day one stroke behind Kirk, but couldn't keep pace.

Pernice fell just short in his bid to become the second-oldest winner in TOUR history and the first over-50 player to win since Fred Funk in 2007. Sam Snead was 52 when he won the Greater Greensboro Open in 1965.

Pernice started the day two strokes back, but fired a 67 for the third straight day to stay in contention. He put his approach shot on No. 18 within 10 feet of the hole, but his birdie putt slid to the left at the last second. McNeill also missed a birdie putt on No. 18.

"I just needed to make a good firm stroke, maybe just outside the right edge and all that good stuff," Pernice said. "But it looked like I pulled it."

Pernice said Kirk's victory wasn't surprising considering his consistency throughout the season.

"The young guys are getting bigger and stronger and they're able to compete right away," Pernice said.

Kirk is the fifth rookie to win on the TOUR this season -- just the second time that's happened since 1970. He's been consistent all season, ranking 51st on the money list coming into the Viking Classic, and just missed his first career win after finishing second to Phil Mickelson at the Shell Houston Open.

Annandale: Round 4
EASIEST HOLE TOUGHEST HOLE
The par-5 18th hole was the easiest with a final round scoring average of 4.595.
EAGLES: 4 BIRDIES: 28 PARS: 38 BOGEYS: 3 OTHER: 0
The par-3 2nd hole was the toughest with a final round scoring average of 3.203.
EAGLES: 0 BIRDIES: 7 PARS: 45
BOGEYS: 22 OTHERS: 0
About the leader
• 26-year-old Chris Kirk, fresh off back-to-back top-25 finishes (T8/AT&T National and T22/John Deere Classic), carded a final-round 4-under 68 to claim his first win on the PGA TOUR (30 starts) by one stroke over George McNeill and Tom Pernice, Jr. His previous best-finish on TOUR was T2 behind Phil Mickelson at the Shell Houston Open.
• Kirk has made 11 of 21 cuts on TOUR this season and leads all rookies with four top-10s.
• Kirk became the fifth rookie to win on TOUR this season (Jhonattan Vegas/Bob Hope Classic, Charl Schwartzel/Masters, Brendan Steele/Valero Texas Open and Keegan Bradley/HP Byron Nelson Championship). Since 1970, there has only been one season when five-or-more different rookies won on TOUR (2004-Todd Hamilton, Zach Johnson, Vaughn Taylor, Andre Stolz and Ryan Palmer).
• The 2010 Nationwide Tour graduate picked up the 311th PGA TOUR victory by a former Nationwide Tour player. Kirk won twice on the Nationwide Tour last year (Fort Smith Classic and Knoxville News Sentinel Open).
• Kirk became the seventh player to make the Viking Classic his first win. The following players made the Viking Classic their first win on TOUR: Chris Kirk (2011), D.J. Trahan (2006), Luke Donald (2002), Cameron Beckman (2001), Willie Wood (1996), Ed Dougherty (1995) and Brian Henninger (1994).
• Kirk's only other lead on TOUR was after the second-round at the Shell Houston Open earlier this year. Kirk finished T2 behind Phil Mickelson in Houston. He led after the third round this week.
• Kirk becomes the ninth first-time winner on TOUR this season.
• Chris Kirk became the 13th winner of the Viking Classic to post all four rounds in the 60s and first since Heath Slocum in 2005.
• Kirk made his professional debut at the 2007 Viking Classic (MC).
• Kirk led the field in birdies with 23.
   Print This Story   RSS
SHOP.PGATOUR.COM
PGATOUR shop

Shop your favorite brand name golf equipment and accessories at SHOP.PGATOUR.COM

FANTASY

Click Here
© 1995-2012 PGA TOUR, Inc. | Turner Sports Interactive, Inc. All Rights Reserved. PGA TOUR, Champions Tour, Nationwide Tour and the swinging golfer logo are registered trademarks.
Turner PGATOUR.com is part of Turner Sports Digital, part of the Turner Sports & Entertainment Digital Network