A Front Nine to Forget
Going into the final round one shot behind 54-hole leader Sam Burns, Spaun looked well-placed. Then the wheels came off almost immediately. He bogeyed the opening hole after missing the fairway. At the second, he struck what appeared to be a near-perfect approach — only to watch in horror as it clanked off the flagstick and bounded back off the green, turning a likely tap-in birdie into a demoralising bogey. Three more dropped shots at the third, fifth and sixth followed, and by the time he made the turn his scorecard read a shocking 40 — five over par for the nine.
He had fallen five shots behind Burns. His odds of winning had dipped below two percent. For most players, that is where the story ends.
“As bad as things were going, I just still tried to commit to every shot. I tried to continue to dig deep. I’ve been doing it my whole life.”


