ISCO Championship playoff format: Harry Hall wins on third extra hole
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Harry Hall chips in to win in sudden-death playoff at ISCO Championship
8:15 p.m. ET update: England's Harry Hall earns his first TOUR title in dramatic fashion, chipping in for birdie on the third playoff hole, the par-3 ninth, to win the ISCO Championship.
Pierceson Coody and Matt NeSmith cannot hole their shorter birdie chips from just beyond the green, and Hall is a PGA TOUR winner. Hall and his wife Jordan are expecting their first child next week, making the moment all the sweeter.

Harry Hall chips in to win in sudden-death playoff at ISCO Championship
7:59 p.m. ET update: All three remaining competitors make par on the second playoff hole. They'll head to the par-3 ninth for the third extra hole, looking to determine a winner in a marathon ISCO Championship finish.
Pierceson Coody's tee shot finds the water hazard to the right of the fairway, but he catches a good break with the tides and is able to play the shot; he wedges to 22 feet and two-putts for par. Harry Hall two-putts from 17 feet, and Matt NeSmith has 13 feet to win (his second straight hole with the closest birdie look) but it slides off to the right.
7:45 p.m. ET update: And then there were three. Matt NeSmith, Pierceson Coody and Harry Hall advance to the second playoff hole, again the par-4 18th at Keene Trace, with pars on the first extra hole.
NeSmith has the best chance to win, but his 8-foot birdie try slides off to the right. Coody two-putts for par from 26 feet, while Hall gets up-and-down from a greenside bunker.
The ISCO Championship is headed to a sudden-death playoff.
Matt NeSmith, Zac Blair, Pierceson Coody, Harry Hall and Rico Hoey all carded 22-under 266 at Keene Trace Golf Club outside Lexington, Kentucky, requiring overtime to determine a winner on a chaotic Sunday in the Bluegrass State.
The playoff format is as follows: 18, 18, 9, 18, 9, 18. (Holes 9 and 18 would continue to be played in rotation until a winner is determined.)
The par-4 18th measures 423 yards, with a pond down the hole’s right side and bunkers down the left. The par-3 ninth measures 209 yards, played across a water hazard.






