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Collin Morikawa wins British Open; Utahn Tony Finau ties for 15th place

Former Cal player claims second major championship.

The United States' Collin Morikawa holds the claret jug trophy as he poses for photographers on the 18th green after winning the British Open Golf Championship at Royal St George's golf course Sandwich, England, Sunday, July 18, 2021. (AP Photo/Peter Morrison)

Sandwich, England • Collin Morikawa received the claret jug, thrust it into the air and gave it a kiss, a two-time major champion at age 24.

This time, there were people to cheer him.

The American closed with a bogey-free, 4-under 66 and won the British Open in his debut Sunday, becoming the first player to capture two different majors on the first attempt.

His victory 11 months ago in his first PGA Championship came in the first major with no spectators amid the coronavirus pandemic.

So it was a very different scenario for Morikawa, a mature-beyond-his-years Californian, as he made one of the greatest walks in golf down the 18th fairway at Royal St. George’s, first to applause and then to a standing ovation.

After tapping in for par to win by two shots over Jordan Spieth, he gave a fist pump before applauding the spectators in the huge grandstand around the 18th green, part of a crowd of 32,000 people who enjoyed immaculate weather around the links off Sandwich Bay.

Utahn Tony Finau finishes in the British Open’s top 15

Tony Finau’s Sunday surge was not quite enough to give him another top-10 finish in the British Open, but he may have boosted his credentials for Ryder Cup selection.

The West High School graduate closed with six birdies on the way to a 3-under-par 67 at Royal St. George’s in Sandwich, England. He tied for 15th place at 5 under for the tournament, (70-66-72-67), having reached 6 under before bogeying the par-3 No. 16.

Finau’s strong finish meant he had performed well in three of the four major tournaments in 2021, following top-10 showings in the Masters and the PGA Championship and a missed cut in the U.S. Open. He’s unlikely to automatically qualify for the U.S. Ryder Cup team, but definitely will be considered for one of the six captain’s picks for the September competition vs. Europe at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin.

Finau is entered in this week’s 3M Open in Minnesota. His schedule presumably includes a World Golf Championship tournament in early August in Memphis, Tenn., then the three-event FedEx Cup Playoffs beginning Aug. 19.

Having tied for ninth place in the 2018 British Open and finished third in 2019, Finau made a run at the top 10 in Sunday’s round. He had fallen to a tie for 33rd after making five bogeys and three birdies Saturday, but he got hot in the final round. He birdied the par-5 No. 7 and five pars-4s: Nos. 2, 4, 8, 13 and 15. Finau hit 15 of 18 greens in regulation, just as he did in shooting a second-round 66.

_ Kurt Kragthorpe

“I am obviously very biased being from the U.S., but I’m seeing some of the best crowds I have ever seen out here,” Morikawa said.

They got to witness a player making a historic start to his major championship career.

Morikawa is halfway to the career Grand Slam after eight starts and the first player since Bobby Jones in 1926 to win two majors in so few appearances. He follows Gene Sarazen, Jones, Jack Nicklaus, Seve Ballesteros, Tiger Woods, Rory McIlroy and Spieth in winning multiple majors before turning 25.

His total of 15-under 265 was a 72-hole record in 15 British Opens at Royal St. George’s.

And he did it with style, flushing iron shots for birdies or stress-free pars and getting up-and-down on the rare occasions he found trouble.

Starting the final round one shot behind Louis Oosthuizen, Morikawa was tied for the lead after four holes and then made three straight birdies on Nos. 7-9 to overtake the South African, who hadn’t trailed since the 12th hole of his second round.

Morikawa made key par saves at Nos. 10 and 15, between which he rolled a birdie putt up and over a ridge and into the cup on the 14th to build a two-stroke lead he never lost. Spieth parred his final four holes and also shot 66.

By making par at the last after another perfect drive, Morikawa played his final 31 holes without a bogey on a course that has confounded many great players because of its quirky bounces and undulating fairways.

All the more remarkable was that this was his first major test on a seaside links. Morikawa knew little about this style of golf before playing the Scottish Open last week at The Renaissance Club, which is not a traditional links but featured the kind of tight lies and rolling terrain that prepared him for it.

He even had three new irons in his bag this week.

For Oosthuizen, who was seeking a wire-to-wire win and a second claret jug — he had a runaway victory at St. Andrews in 2010 — it was another near miss in a career full of them. He was runner-up this year at the PGA Championship and the U.S. Open, two of his six second-place finishes at majors.

This time Oosthuizen tied for third with U.S. Open champion Jon Rahm (66) after closing with a 71 — his first round not in the 60s this week. He never recovered from losing his lead with an ugly bogey on the par-5 seventh hole. He caught way too much ball with his third shot from a greenside bunker, which bounced onto the putting surface and landed in a bunker on the other side.

Morikawa made a routine birdie on the hole to move two ahead of Oosthuizen. Spieth had made eagle at No. 7 a few minutes earlier.

Spieth, the British Open champion in 2017 at Royal Birkdale, had his closest call in a major since then. Ultimately, his bogey-bogey finish on Saturday left him too far behind the flawless Morikawa.

“Just the finish yesterday,” Spieth said. “Had I finished par-par, I’d have been in the final group. And if you’re in the final group, you feel like you have control. Obviously, those two strokes were important.”