As the top-ranked player in the field at No. 48 in the world, Seamus Power played with the knowledge that he was the favorite in a PGA Tour field for the first time. It didn’t bother him one bit.
Power poured in a 25-foot downhill birdie putt at No. 14 and withstood a couple of late bogeys to notch a one-stroke victory at the PGA Tour’s Butterfield Bermuda Championship.
Power, the 54-hole co-leader, closed with a 1-under 70 on Sunday at Port Royal Golf Course in Southampton, Bermuda, for a 72-hole total of 19-under 265 to beat Belgium’s Thomas Detry (67).
In windy conditions that must have reminded the 35-year-old Irishman of home, Power earned his second Tour title by making three birdies in his first seven holes and hanging on as the conditions worsened.
“It was a challenge on every putt, every tee shot,” said Detry, who holed a bunker shot at the last for birdie to secure solo second. “It was a commitment out there.”
Ben Griffin, who just 21 months ago had quit the game and had been working as a mortgage officer, made six birdies on his first 11 holes to stake himself to a two-stroke lead before his game unraveled. The second nine is more exposed to the wind and Griffin’s game was blown away by the howling gusts and the growing pressure of trying to close out his first win. He made four consecutive bogeys and a double bogey to shoot 1-over 72 and tumble into a three-way tie for third. (It marks his best career result.)
“They talk about trying to win for the first time or the second time, usually the guys who’ve been there before when the door is open, they smell it,” Golf Channel’s Curt Byrum said. “They stand there and they walk right through that opening.”
Power did just that at the par-4 14th after Griffin hooked his tee shot into trouble and made bogey. That two-stroke swing gave Power the lead and he never let go of it.
Clutch with the putter.@Power4Seamus takes the lead @Bermuda_Champ pic.twitter.com/51lsYDzaXn
— PGA TOUR (@PGATOUR) October 30, 2022
Power gave a stroke back at 15, then took three putts from 70 feet at 16, but bounced back with a birdie at 17 and needed the cushion because he bogeyed the last. Power relied on the confidence in his game that he gained from winning a six-hole playoff last summer at the Barbasol Championship for his maiden victory.
“Just close your eyes and just picture some of those shots,” Power said. “That’s where some of your practice and your training comes in, when you know what to do when those thoughts do come.”