[PHOTO: David Jensen]
With darkness descending on the Wyndham Championship on Sunday night, a few things were crystal clear. First, Matt Kuchar’s streak of 17 straight FedEx Cup playoff appearances was at an end. The 46-year-old had reached golf’s postseason every year it was held, dating back to 2007, and coming into the Wyndham, it seemed impossible that he could keep the streak going; nothing but a win would give him the points he needed. But to Kuchar’s credit, he gave it a go. On a marathon Sunday, when everyone had to play 36 holes and some at Sedgefield Country Club in Greensboro, North Carolina – like Kuchar – played a handful more, he was close to the lead. As the day went on, however, Kuchar faded, and by 8:20pm local time, in a tie for 12th, he no longer had a chance to win. His playing partner Max Greyserman, however, had a great chance; he established a four-shot lead with an eagle on the 13th, and even after a disastrous quadruple-bogey on 14 and a double on 16, he came into the 18th trailing Aaron Rai by just a shot.
That’s when things got weird.
With Rai and his playing partners still in the fairway waiting to hit their approach shots, and the last remnants of light fading, Kuchar walked, teed up and hit his drive. His shot drifted into the left rough, which was fortunate because otherwise it may have landed in Rai’s vicinity. Greyserman and Chad Ramey waited to hit their drives until the fairway was clear, Rai went on to make the tournament-winning birdie with Greyserman watching in the fairway, and then it got even weirder: Dottie Pepper reported that Kuchar “won’t play any more golf today”.
He had marked his ball in the left rough, picked it up and opted to finish his round the next morning. Here’s how he explained that decision to Golf Channel’s Todd Lewis, as relayed on air:
“I was trying to set an example for Max,” Kuchar was quoted as saying. “We were so far past when we should’ve stopped playing [given the light]. We saw what Max did on hole 16; they should’ve blown the horn there. I feel bad, the poor kid should’ve won this tournament. By me not playing, it may show Max he has an important shot to hit.”
There is some logic to that statement, but only some – as Brandel Chamblee pointed out on Golf Central moments later, it didn’t seem to mesh with Kuchar’s decision to rush his tee shot, which might have been designed to ensure they would get to play the last hole. (No horn was ever blown – a rules official explained to the final group that it was past sunset, and they had the option to stop.) As Chamblee’s colleague, Paige Mackenzie, noted, Greyserman – though a tour rookie – is still 29 years old and capable of making his own decision.
As it happened, Greyserman had no intention of waiting to play his approach (it’s unclear if Rai’s birdie may have had some influence on that), and both he and Ramey finished. That means Kuchar returned on Monday morning alone among the 67 players who made the cut to finish his round. There were financial stakes involved; with a par, Kuchar stood to earn $US134,695, while a bogey would reduce his payday to just more than $US77,000. In the unlikely event he made birdie on the tough 18th, that total would have risen to $US223,000.
Still, the inconsistent behaviour on the 18th hole remains a mystery.
“I don’t expect we’re going to be bringing you that coverage tomorrow,” Jim Nantz joked on the CBS broadcast, and indeed, TV did not return for the morning.
Kuchar resumed play at 8am (local time) and made his par to finish in a tie for 12th. That did allow Kuchar to move up 10 spots to 103rd on the FedEx Cup points list, which could turn out to be critical later in the year as Kuchar trieds to make sure he stays within the top 125 and retains his fully exempt tour card.
• • •
Kuchar’s remarks after his Monday ’round’ are now available, and they shed at least some light on his thought process the previous evening.