Argentina’s Emiliano Grillo on Sunday made a perfect start to his career as a PGA Tour member when he beat the US’ Kevin Na in a playoff at the Frys.com Open in northern California.
After missing a three-footer that would have won it at the first extra hole, Grillo made amends at the next, the par-five 18th, with an eight-foot birdie to edge Na at the Silverado Country Club in Napa.
A day after almost hitting Rory McIlroy with his drive at the reachable par-four 17th, Grillo became the sixth Argentine player to win on the US circuit, joining Roberto de Vicenzo, Jose Coceres, Angel Cabrera, Andres Romero and Fabian Gomez.
It is the second successive victory for the 23-year-old, who won the Web.com Tour Championship on the secondary circuit two weeks ago.
Grillo sank a 25-foot birdie at the final regulation hole to earn a spot in the playoff, but almost threw away the first event on the 2015-2016 PGA Tour season when he lipped out his short putt, which would have secured him victory at the first extra hole.
The putt was eerily similar to one he missed at the 72nd hole that would have won the Puerto Rico Open in March, although Grillo claimed that this time he did not hit a bad putt.
“The difference is I hit this one good,” he said in a greenside interview. “I don’t know what happened, [but] I stayed positive. This is awesome.”
After Na made a mess of the second extra hole, Grillo had the luxury of two-putting for victory, but he needed only one, ensuring he would be remembered for more than being the guy who nearly hit McIlroy.
Earlier, Grillo (69) and Na (70) finished at 15-under-par 273, one stroke ahead of US golfers Jason Bohn and Justin Thomas and South Africa’s Tyrone van Aswegen.
Bohn held the sole lead with three holes left, but chunked a pitch shot at the par-five 16th and made bogey.
Van Aswegen barely made his tee time after waking up dizzy and going to the hospital in an ambulance.
“I was not in good shape,” he told the Golf Channel. “They filled me with two bags of fluid and said I had severe dehydration and vertigo.”
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