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Higgo’s maiden PGA Tour win underlines his rare talent as US Open looms

Higgo’s maiden PGA Tour win underlines his rare talent as US Open looms
Garrick Higgo of South Africa poses with the trophy after winning on the 18th green during the final round of the Palmetto Championship at Congaree on June 13, 2021 in Ridgeland, South Carolina. Higgo will be among nine South African players competing alongside American Phil Mickelson at the US Open at Torrey Pines this week. (Photo: Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

South Africa’s Garrick Higgo gave further notice of his prodigious talent and bright future with a one-shot victory at the Palmetto Championship on the PGA Tour on Sunday.

Winning golf tournaments on the world’s biggest tours is hard. Tiger Woods, one of the two greatest golfers of all time, “only” wins about one in five tournaments he plays.

That’s actually a remarkable statistic in golf terms. Woods’s 82 PGA Tour wins from 368 starts leaves him joint top with Sam Snead in terms of tournament victories. But it also means that Tiger doesn’t win about 80% of the time he plays a tournament, underlining how difficult it is to get over the line.

The next most prodigious winner in golf currently, Phil Mickelson, is some way back of Tiger. Mickelson, who sensationally became the sport’s oldest major winner yet when he won last month’s US PGA Championship at the age of 50, has 45 PGA tour victories in 645 tournaments – winning once every 14 starts. It’s a fantastic record, but it again underlines the difficulty in winning.

How about this one? Garrick Higgo, in only his second start on the PGA Tour, has as many wins (one) as fellow South African Louis Oosthuizen, who has played 199 tournaments.

Louis Oosthuizen of South Africa during day 4 of The South African Open Championship hosted by the City of Joburg at Randpark Golf Club on January 12, 2020 in Johannesburg. (Photo: Gordon Arons/Gallo Images)

And Oosthuizen’s PGA Tour win actually came in Scotland at St Andrews where he won the 2010 Open Championship. Majors and some other events are co-sanctioned by all the world’s golf organisations, including the European Tour. Oosthuizen has never actually won a PGA Tour event on US soil.

Higgo’s breakthrough PGA Tour win at the Palmetto Championship on 13 June was a reward for consistency. He was the only player in the field to score in the 60s every round – shooting 68, 69, 68, 68 – which earned him $1.3-million (R17.3-million) and, more importantly, years of exemptions into the biggest tournaments and massive respect from his peers.

The left-handed Stellenbosch native started the final round six shots behind leader Chesson Hadley, who has been on tour for seven years and was still searching for his first win since his rookie year in 2014.  For Higgo to have any chance with that deficit, he needed to post a low number and hope the players ahead of him came backwards. He fulfilled his end of the bargain and the rest of the third-round leaders fulfilled theirs by going backwards.

Hadley imploded with a final round 75, which contained six bogeys, including the last three holes. He missed the winning score by one shot. Even world No 1 Dustin Johnson couldn’t match Higgo, only managing a 70 and ruining his chances with a triple bogey seven at the par-four 16th.

Sure, Higgo needed some help to bag the win, but he showed nerves of steel under pressure, just as he did on the Canary Islands swing on the European Tour last month.

The 22-year-old played the final six holes in one-under par while everyone else in the field went the other way. It wasn’t a spectacular barrage of birdies, but steady, mistake-free golf. That’s more often how tournaments are won.

Higgo is also the youngest winner on the PGA Tour since Sungjae Im at the 2020 Honda Classic (21 years, 11 months). And his victory from six strokes behind at the start of the final round is the largest 54-hole deficit overcome by a winner since Bubba Watson made up six strokes to win the 2018 Travelers Championship.

“I’m proud of the way I hung in there. It was tough all the way from the start,” Higgo told the media after the tournament. “I definitely didn’t have my A game off the tee, but I like that sometimes. I enjoy scrambling and making a couple putts, which I did, which was awesome.

“I usually am a scoreboard watcher but for some reason today, I didn’t watch it. I was just trying to stay in it. I didn’t really want to try and push. It’s one of those courses where there are a couple of holes that you can definitely make birdie on, so I was trying to capitalise on those.

Garrick Higgo of South Africa plays his shot from the 18th tee during the final round of the Palmetto Championship at Congaree on June 13, 2021 in Ridgeland, South Carolina. (Photo:  Mike Ehrmann/Getty Images)

“When I made eagle on 12, I didn’t have to watch the scoreboard. I knew already I was kind of up there or close enough. It was just whether Chesson was going to run away with it or if we were going to stay up there and have a chance.”

South Africa’s most successful golfer to date, Gary Player, in a phone call to Higgo shortly after his one-shot victory at Congaree Golf Club, said: “I don’t think I’ve ever in my lifetime been more excited about anybody winning a golf tournament. I had tears in my eyes.

“You are beginning to believe it now. I think you’ve got that into your brain now that you believe you can be great. You are destined for greatness.”

Meteoric rise

Higgo claimed the Canary Islands Championship last month for his second European Tour win in three weeks and his third overall. Two weeks before that Higgo won at the Gran Canaria Lopesan Open with a European Tour record-low score of 255.

What made Higgo’s achievements more eye-catching was the way he dominated the field and scored. Across the 12 rounds of the Canary Islands Swing (which included the Tenerife Open), Higgo’s combined total was 68-under par as he sent records tumbling.

After 27 starts on the European Tour, three wins (which includes 2020’s Portuguese Open) constitutes an amazing return. Higgo has now added a PGA Tour win to the already bulging golfing CV. The exemptions to big tournaments that the Palmetto victory in South Carolina brings, have also opened a wide door to the world.

Higgo claimed his first professional victory on the Sunshine Tour when he won the 2019 Sun City Challenge at the Gary Player Country Club.

It’s been a meteoric rise since then for the former member of the GolfRSA National Squad. He followed that up with a second victory in the Sunshine Tour’s Tour Championship in February 2020, and in September 2020 he won his first title on the European Tour in the Open de Portugal.

It was a confidence-boosting breakthrough a week before the season’s third major, the US Open at Torrey Pines, which starts on Thursday. Not that Higgo lacks confidence.

After those Canary Islands wins he qualified for his first major at the PGA Championship at Kiawah Island where he just made the cut and then birdied seven of his first 11 holes in the final round of his debut major.

“It (winning) doesn’t change my expectations. I think I’m good with that. I’ve just gone to another level now,” Higgo said. “So, I’ll just see what my game can do. I enjoy playing and seeing what my game does and where it takes me. I’m going to continue with that. I don’t think there’s any need to put unnecessary expectations on myself.” DM

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Comments - Please in order to comment.

  • Sarel Van Der Walt says:

    Phil Mickleson won the PGA champs last month, not the Masters!! The current Masters champion is Hideki Matsuyama

    • peter pascoe says:

      Mickelson, who sensationally became the sport’s oldest major winner yet when he won last month’s US PGA Championship at the age of 50. Sarel ?? Masters??

  • Nick Griffon says:

    Well done young man!!!
    Great things to come still. Such a talent.

  • Coen Gous says:

    I am the most pathetic golfer ever. Took me a while to realise that, but after shooting my umptieth score well over 100, I hung up my clubs to tackle an easier sport. But I love it, trying to watch all the big ones, which can be a challenge because of the time difference with the US. Not since Ernie Els has South Africa got a potential world no.1 like Higgo, despite great achievements from stars like king Louis, Charl, Trevor and even Brendon. Truly hope so. Getting a bit tired watching other top golfers, but not from my country. Louis came so close at the US PGA, yet again. So kid, no pressure, but we need you, we want you to, for us, not just yourself. Become the Champ, and make us proud again, in something, like the Boks did in 2019, and Wayde at the last Olympics

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