The last man into the field at the BMW Championship was No. 1 on the leaderboard when it was all said and done on Sunday.
Keegan Bradley shot a final-round even-par 72 at Castle Pines Golf Club to win his seventh career PGA Tour title on Sunday in Castle Rock, Colo. Sam Burns closed in 7-under 65, the low round of the day, to finish second along with Ludvig Aberg (71) and Adam Scott (72), one stroke back.
“Oh, man, I was shaking over that last putt,” Bradley said. “We did it. It was a battle all day.”
Bradley called last Sunday’s final round of the FedEx St. Jude Championship “one of the toughest afternoons of my PGA Tour career,” after sneaking into the BMW’s field as the 50th and final player to qualify for the second leg of the playoffs.
“It just shows you why you have to grind it out every week because you never know how fast it can switch,” he said. “Now I go to Atlanta with a chance to win the FedEx Cup.”
Bradley, who won the BMW in 2018, took the title for the second time, and won for the first time with his father, Mark, a PGA professional in attendance.
Bradley opened with 66 to take the lead and trailed Scott by three strokes at the midway point after a 68. Bradley shot a roller-coaster ride 2-under 70 on Saturday with eight birdies mixed with six bogeys. He sank a 9-foot birdie putt at 18 and pumped his fist as he grabbed the 54-hole lead.
On Sunday, he wedged from 94 yards to 3 feet at the first for a birdie but lost his solo lead as Scott tied him with an eagle. But Scott, who was looking to end more than a four-year winless stretch, made three bogeys in a row beginning at the 10thto give Bradley as big as a three-stroke cushion. Bradley reeled off 13 straight pars until making a bogey at No. 15. With his lead cut to one, Bradley lofted a 5-iron from 227 yards over the front green side bunker at the par-5 17th to 16 feet and made birdie. He made a three-putt bogey at the last but it was immaterial. He finished with a 72-hole aggregate of 12-under 276, and vaulted to fourth in the playoffs heading into next week’s Tour Championship.
Bradley, who was named the 2025 U.S. Ryder Cup captain in July, added intrigue to the idea that he could be the first American playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963.
“To be named Ryder Cup captain and still be a full-time player is strange. I don’t know anyone knows how to handle this situation,” Bradley said. “So I’m doing the best I can. The only thing I can keep doing…
..
Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Golfweek…