KIM WINS IN SCOTLAND, MCILROY CLOSES WITH A 64

South Korea’s Tom Kim with the trophy after winning the Genesis Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club. (Photo: DP World Tour/Getty)

South Korea’s Tom Kim with the trophy after winning the Genesis Scottish Open at The Renaissance Club. (Photo: DP World Tour/Getty)


Tom Kim produced a links masterclass at The Renaissance Club to claim a convincing victory in the Genesis Scottish Open where Rory McIlroy closed his week with a fine 64 as all attentions turn to The Open at Royal Birkdale.

The South Korean was flawless, being the only one of the 71-strong field not to drop a single shot in the testing winds of the final round.

Six birdies in total saw him post a closing 64 for a 17 under par total, two shots clear of Australian Min Woo Lee who carded a 67, and four clear of a group of four players: England’s Matt Fitzpatrick, American Johnny Keefer, Japan’s Keita Nakajima and Scotland’s Robert MacIntyre.

It was the 24-year-old from Seoul’s first victory on the DP World Tour and his fourth triumph in total on the PGA TOUR in this, a co-sanctioned event between the two Tours.

Starting the final round one shot off the pace, Kim made his intentions clear early with a birdie four on the opening hole and further gains at the fourth and seventh saw him to the turn in 32 to edge in front.

Several challengers threatened from the pack but birdies at the tenth and 12th reaffirmed his control and when an excellent approach to six feet at the 16th yielded another birdie three, the title was firmly in his grasp.

He gave Lee – waiting in the final group in the 18th fairway behind him – a slight glimmer of hope when he pushed his approach shot through the green at the last, but a nerveless up and down finally closed the door on any hopes the Australian was harbouring. 

Masters champion McIlroy shared seventh on 268 with American Michael Thorbjornsen and although current Race to Dubai champion matched Kim’s closing 64, the damage to his title credentials came via a third round 73 which left the Northern Ireland golfer too much ground to make up in the final round.

“It's nice to sign this week off with a good score but I know I need to do a bit of work between now and Thursday to feel really comfortable with my game. But I don't feel like it's too far away - there's definitely some positive signs,” said McIlroy.

Earlier in the day, hopes had been high for a home triumph courtesy of MacIntyre who returned in the early morning to complete his third round which was disrupted on Saturday night by fading light and did so in style, storming into a tie for the lead with Lee and Fitzpatrick entering the fourth and final round. 

A birdie at the opening hole had the Scottish galleries dreaming of a repeat of the Ryder Cup player’s win in the event in 2024, but a run of four bogeys in seven holes from the fourth put paid to his chances.

The 29-year-old from Oban did have the consolation, however, of claiming the Jock MacVicar AGW Memorial Award given to the leading Scot in the tournament in memory of the legendary Scottish journalist who passed away in 2021.

Other players taking something from the week were the Americans Keefer and Thorbjornsen alongside Frenchman Victor Perez, who all claimed spots in next week’s Open Championship at Royal Birkdale through the final event in the current Open Qualifying Series.

Noerthenr Ireland’s Tom McKibbin tied 30th on five under after a closing 70. Shane Lowry and Pádraig Harrington both missed the cut.

Player quotes

Tom Kim: It's awesome. It's been a while since I lifted a trophy up. I forgot how heavy it was.

This is where it all started for me. Gave me status and I finished third year. It got me almost temporary status and I secured it next week at the British and I went on to play two times that year and played in The Presidents Cup.

I've had some heartbreaks here. I finished third. I played in the final group when Rory won. I've been close here a couple times. To be able to just kind of finish it off today and really win an event like this, it's really cool for me.

No, it's really cool. Obviously I was trying to win a golf tournament. There's always pressure. There's always nerves. But I think the experience I've built over the last few years, I really leaned on it, and I trusted my practice, all the work that I put in to try to put myself back in these positions. Today was a really cool day for me.

I've had to taste a lot of patience the last couple years. I think golf and just life in general, patience goes such a long way. I've gotten to really understand, the last couple years, no matter how good you do, things might go your way. Things might not go your way and you just have to accept that.

I guess that comes with maturity, comes with time, comes with growing, and links golf is the perfect way to really describe certain things. Just you have to, you might hit a really good drive and have a really bad bounce and go in the bunker.

And bunkers here are not easy. They are not like in the States where if it's in the bunker, you're able to make par, birdie. Sometimes you might go up on the lip and sometimes you might be in the mid of the bunker. It's very luck dependent, and you just have to kind of take it in and whether it goes your way or doesn't go your way, you just have to kind of keep going and links golf is exactly like that.

Min Woo Lee: To be honest, I was kind of in my own world out there. Obviously Tom played great. I thought I was playing really solid. Didn't make too many mistakes and holed the putts when I needed to. I don't know, it was, whatever, 50 holes or something that he didn't make a bogey, so that's very impressive and that's how you win tournaments. But no, I'm just happy with the week and obviously a win would have been nice. But it was one of the first weeks that I was very -- just happy with myself mentally.

A lot. I don't think I missed too many shots out there which was great to see. Of course, you're nervous on some shots but I seem to get on the better side of it and I think that's a lot of maturity and a lot of good stuff with technique. So I'm really excited for next week.

Robert MacIntyre: The week overall was a good week. I've got to look at the positives in that third-place finish, having a chance, went out today, having a chance going into the back nine today. I know it was a bad start. Wasn't to be.

But yeah, again look at the positives and try to take the positives. It's a good week, third place. Yeah, good signs.

The guys put a lot of effort into it, into the golf course, and the hospitality, the players. I know I might be being biased but I think this is one of the best hospitality that we get anywhere in the world, if not the best. 

The fans have been incredible. I am being biased but best fans in the world. They showed that in Boston, as well. Yeah, coming home here, playing the Scottish Open, having a chance to win with the whole crowd behind you is unbelievable. Just walking up that par three is special. Just a shame I couldn't give them something.

Final scores

 263 T KIM (KOR) 65 66 68 64,

 265 M LEE (AUS) 66 66 66 67,

 267 K NAKAJIMA (JPN) 67 66 67 67, J KEEFER (USA) 68 68 64 67, M FITZPATRICK (ENG) 67 65 66 69, R MACINTYRE (SCO) 67 66 65 69,

 268 R MCILROY (NIR) 65 66 73 64, M THORBJORNSEN (USA) 66 68 65 69,

 269 V PEREZ (FRA) 69 64 70 66, S KIM (KOR) 70 67 66 66,

 270 K ROY (USA) 67 68 65 70, C GOTTERUP (USA) 68 65 66 71,

 271 V HOVLAND (NOR) 68 70 69 64, P REED (USA) 68 67 68 68, T FLEETWOOD (ENG) 67 70 66 68, W CLARK (USA) 67 67 66 71,

 272 F MOLINARI (ITA) 68 69 67 68, J LUITEN (NED) 67 66 70 69, T HATTON (ENG) 70 66 67 69, A DEL REY (ESP) 72 66 65 69,

 273 C DAVIS (AUS) 70 66 70 67, C JARVIS (RSA) 68 68 68 69, M SCHMID (GER) 68 69 67 69, J SMITH (ENG) 68 63 72 70, D WILLETT (ENG) 67 67 67 72,

 274 N TAYLOR (CAN) 70 67 69 68, N H?JGAARD (DEN) 68 66 70 70, R GERARD (USA) 68 67 68 71, M ARMITAGE (ENG) 68 67 67 72,

 275 A SULLIVAN (ENG) 68 68 69 70, R FOX (NZL) 71 65 69 70, A ECKROAT (USA) 70 66 69 70, T MCKIBBIN (NIR) 67 71 67 70, K VILIPS (AUS) 70 64 68 73, M MEISSNER (USA) 71 67 64 73,

 276 S NORRIS (RSA) 68 70 71 67, B HARMAN (USA) 70 68 70 68, R H?JGAARD (DEN) 65 73 70 68, M GREYSERMAN (USA) 69 69 69 69, N ECHAVARRIA (COL) 68 70 69 69, J RAHM (ESP) 73 65 68 70, O LINDELL (FIN) 66 69 69 72, R NEERGAARD-PETERSEN (DEN) 68 68 65 75,

 277 K KITAYAMA (USA) 66 72 71 68, R CASTILLO (USA) 70 66 70 71, D VAN DRIEL (NED) 70 65 70 72, C HILL (SCO) 67 69 69 72, M LINDBERG (SWE) 69 68 68 72, J SPAUN (USA) 68 70 67 72,

 278 L CANTER (ENG) 69 68 70 71, J THOMAS (USA) 69 67 69 73,

 279 E CHACARRA (ESP) 70 68 73 68, M BRENNAN (USA) 67 71 71 70, C CONNERS (CAN) 67 70 71 71, A PUTNAM (USA) 71 65 70 73, N VON DELLINGSHAUSEN (GER) 69 64 72 74, J SVENSSON (SWE) 70 68 67 74, S YELLAMARAJU (CAN) 68 65 69 77,

 280 J KRUYSWIJK (RSA) 69 69 69 73, G MIGLIOZZI (ITA) 68 67 70 75,

 281 H DU PLESSIS (RSA) 70 66 75 70, Y KATSURAGAWA (JPN) 71 67 73 70, A NOVAK (USA) 66 71 73 71, A SADDIER (FRA) 72 66 72 71, C KIRK (USA) 70 67 69 75,

 282 A SCOTT (AUS) 69 69 75 69, S THEEGALA (USA) 70 67 74 71,

 283 N ELVIRA (ESP) 69 69 72 73,

 284 D RILEY (USA) 68 70 75 71,

 286 E COLE (USA) 71 67 79 69,

 288 S JAMIESON (SCO) 69 69 76 74,

 **

 139 D PUIG (ESP) 75 64, D BRADBURY (ENG) 71 68, H ENGLISH (USA) 71 68, S STRAKA (AUT) 70 69, J SCHAPER (RSA) 68 71, A ROZNER (FRA) 69 70, L ?BERG (SWE) 68 71, Z BAUCHOU (USA) 67 72, M PENGE (ENG) 70 69, M MCCARTY (USA) 67 72, E FERGUSON (SCO) 70 69, P CANTLAY (USA) 65 74, D FRITTELLI (RSA) 70 69,

 140 D GHIM (USA) 71 69, N N?RGAARD (DEN) 71 69, J HIGHSMITH (USA) 71 69, D BROWN (ENG) 73 67, J GUMBERG (USA) 72 68, S SCHEFFLER (USA) 68 72, E VAN ROOYEN (RSA) 71 69, J LAGERGREN (SWE) 70 70, M MCGREEVY (USA) 69 71, A SMALLEY (USA) 72 68, M KIM (USA) 68 72, G FORREST (SCO) 69 71, B KOEPKA (USA) 66 74, S LOWRY (IRL) 71 69, A POTGIETER (RSA) 70 70, T OLESEN (DEN) 70 70, A AYORA (ESP) 66 74, A MERONK (POL) 69 71,

 141 J VEERMAN (USA) 73 68, P WARING (ENG) 71 70, B HORSCHEL (USA) 74 67, H HALL (ENG) 71 70, J GUERRIER (FRA) 71 70, A FITZPATRICK (ENG) 71 70, M MANASSERO (ITA) 72 69, A HIDALGO (ESP) 68 73, A RAI (ENG) 71 70,

 142 J KNAPP (USA) 72 70, R MANSELL (ENG) 70 72, D NAIDOO (RSA) 70 72, R JOHNSTON (USA) 72 70, M WALLACE (ENG) 70 72, O STRYDOM (RSA) 69 73,

 143 S STEVENS (USA) 68 75, R HOSHINO (JPN) 71 72, J LEE (KOR) 72 71, B WIESBERGER (AUT) 65 78, X SCHAUFFELE (USA) 69 74, P LARRAZ?BAL (ESP) 71 72, K REITAN (NOR) 71 72, H LI (CHN) 68 75, P COODY (USA) 71 72,

 144 M HUBBARD (USA) 70 74, A WU (CHN) 73 71, P HARRINGTON (IRL) 74 70, T LAWRENCE (RSA) 71 73, A NOREN (SWE) 69 75, S CHOI (KOR) 71 73,

 145 S IM (KOR) 72 73, C SYME (SCO) 75 70, K YU (TPE) 75 70, D RODRIGUES (POR) 72 73, C HOFFMAN (USA) 74 71, B SNEDEKER (USA) 69 76,

 146 A OTAEGUI (UAE) 76 70, J PARRY (ENG) 75 71, K KANEKO (JPN) 71 75, M PAVON (FRA) 70 76, A SMOTHERMAN (USA) 74 72, B CAMPBELL (USA) 72 74, D HILLIER (NZL) 75 71, D RAVETTO (FRA) 73 73,

 147 M COUVRA (FRA) 73 74, T MOORE (USA) 70 77, Y PREMLALL (RSA) 71 76,

 148 R STERNE (RSA) 72 76, F LACROIX (FRA) 73 75, M SIEM (GER) 69 79,

 149 B KIM (KOR) 75 74, B CAULEY (USA) 73 76,

 150 T OK (KOR) 72 78,

 153 F SCHOTT (GER) 85 68,

Previous
Previous

EDFORS TO THE FORE WITH OFX IRISH LEGENDS WIN

Next
Next

IRELAND WIN HISTORIC EUROPEAN TEAM TITLE IN ESTONIA