England’s Matt Fitzpatrick defeated world number one Scottie Scheffler in a dramatic play-off to claim his second RBC Heritage title at Hilton Head on Sunday
Matt Fitzpatrick defeated world number one Scottie Scheffler in a dramatic play-off to claim his second RBC Heritage title.
Fitzpatrick entered the final round at Hilton Head with a three-stroke cushion and maintained that margin through to the 15th tee.
However, playing alongside him, Scheffler reeled off birdies at the 15th and 16th holes, while Fitzpatrick’s mishit chip on the 18th resulted in a bogey, forcing a play-off where he appeared the underdog.
Yet Fitzpatrick produced a magnificent four-iron approach to within 12 feet and calmly sank the birdie putt to secure victory after Scheffler had missed the green with his second shot and chipped to eight feet.
“It was a lot of grit,” the Yorkshire golfer told CBS following his fourth PGA Tour victory and second within 28 days, having triumphed at the Valspar Championship last month.
“I knew Scottie was going to make some birdies down the stretch and I kind of had to hang in there a little bit.
“The only chip shot I found into grain all week was in regulation there (18th).”
Fitzpatrick – who admits the RBC Heritage holds special significance as he spent family holidays at Hilton Head during his childhood – drew comparisons to Rory McIlroy’s remarkable Masters victory last week after similarly seeing his advantage eroded.
McIlroy had surrendered a six-shot halfway lead at Augusta before capturing his second Green Jacket in a thrilling final round. Having fallen short in regulation play, Fitzpatrick reflected: “He (caddie Dan Parratt) actually said, ‘go and get to the tee. We would have taken this at the start of the week’.
“I know Rory said that the other week so I jokingly said to Dan, ‘OK here he is, Harry Diamond (McIlroy’s caddie)’.
“We had a good laugh about that, but I felt I was in a good spot and to hit the four-iron there was out of this world.
“This was a tournament I wanted to win growing up before any of the majors and before I understood about the game.
“To win it twice means the world. To go toe-to-toe with Scottie and win it on the 73rd hole is special.”
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