
Ludwig Aberg set a Tiger -like show to win the Woods tour at Torrey Pines.
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Of course, Tiger Woods tour, which moved to Torrey Pines this year due to fire recovery in Los Angeles, would go down THAT knife
The Cup on the 18th of the 18th Sunday was not in the exact place as Woods’ famous hit in the 72nd US Open hole of 2008 was about a cup on the left, according to Woods. But it was close enough to light memories of that iconic Woods moment when Ludwig Aberg approached his 6-foot, 9-inching of the bird-around Woods’ length in 2008-that he had to be killed to win genesis Invitational of 2025.
Aberg began day two shots behind the leader of 54 holes Patrick Rodgers but looked at Maverick McNealy made eight birds in 11 holes to rage on the manager’s board and capture the position of Pole along La Jolla, Calif., Coast.
Aberg made the turn on 8-nine-par and found himself four shots behind McNaaly when he stayed in the Tee box in the 12th hole of the 12th. With McNealy in cruise control, Aberg looked like a offspring (television broadcast did not show his blow for more than an hour.)
But the 25-year-old hanged fiercely as he fought one of the most difficult courses on the tournament. He made a premature parcel at no. 12 This kept it inside the length of the McNaaly wing and then dropped a switch starting at par-5 13. He reached the green in two and made a light bird as it almost held an eagle blow of 48 meters. He gripped his approach to No. 14 to five meters for another bird and then drained a 25 -meter bird blow to no. 15 to connect mcnealy for the superiority in the 11th.
With McNealy at home and finished, Aberg needed one more bird to avoid a play -off and win the player’s tour, and almost everyone in PGA Tour, idolized.
He made a slight principle at 16 and barely lost a bird blow to no. 17
Needing a bird in the 72nd hole, ribbed ABERG a 317-Oborre car below the center of the road and then exploded a tree 7 in the green back, leaving itself 68 treacherous feet in cup. Aberg’s eagle point kept a lot of speed to die as he reached the ridge and went left from the hole. Six feet, nine inch left from the hole.
New Sweden surveyed Putt and gave a safe strike. The ball left Aberg’s putter’s face and went immediately to the center of the cup, leading to an euphoric shout and a fist pump to catch the signature event victory.
Aberg was the model of deadly durability in Torrey Pines.
He won 5.4 strokes in access this week, 2.85 off tee and 2.31 in greens. He won over 10 Tee-in-green strokes during the week. He finished week 9 in par 3S, which, according to Justin Ray, is the best performance in par 3S in Torrey Pines at a PGA Tour event in history. The previous best was 7th by Peter Jacobsen in 1995.
“It was great,” Aberg told Amanda Ballionis of CBS after his victory. “It was a great war. Of course, the golf course is harsh, but I felt like I was in checking my ball flight all day. I’m really proud of how I finished. It was really cute. “
be tamed lost nearly 10 pounds in two days Due to the illness that hit him the last time, the tour was in Torrey Pines. He held the lead with 36 holes and the land to finish the tour, but eventually fell on the management chart at the weekend.
He arrived at Torrey Pines wanting golf revenge and to get it to the Woods event makes it much sweeter.
“He’s goat,” Aberg told Woods. “It is very good. Everything he has done. All those who idolize it growing. I was the same thing. I was watching Tiger’s videos on YouTube and watching every tour I could. He means a lot about our game. Winning his event is quite surreal. “
There will never be another tiger. But it was appropriate that with the 15-year-old gaze of the great champion, Aberg did what Woods has done so many times during his eight career wins in Torrey Pines.
He hanged in the war. He made a big blow to continue his round. He did not withdraw from loose shots or a bad break.
Then, when the trophy was possible, the best ball striker on the field went into a hail of bird ahead of the new career.

Golfit.com editor
Josh Schrock is a writer and reporter for golf. com before entering Golf, Josh was the interior of Chicago Bears for NBC Sports Chicago. He previously covered 49ers and Warriors for NBC Sports Bay Area. A native Oregonian and Uo alum, seduces and spends his free time walking with his wife and dog, thinking about how the ducks will break his heart again, and trying to become half a professor into pieces. A true romantic for golf, Josh will never stop trying to break the 90 and will never lose the belief that Rory Mcilroy’s main drought will end. Josh can be reached in josh.schrock@golf.com.