Japanese star Hideki Matsuyama delivered a grandstand finish in a playoff against a luckless Russell Henley to lift his career eighth title at the Sony Open in Hawaii on Sunday and equal K.J. Choiā€™s record of total victories by an Asian golfer on the PGA TOUR.

The 29-year Matsuyama rallied from five strokes back with nine holes remaining at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu to tie overnight leader Henley on 23-under 257 in regulation play, and then thumped a spectacular three wood approach from 276 yards on the 18th hole to inside of three feet for his winning eagle in extra time as Henley struggled home with a bogey.

Matsuyama, who signed for a final round 7-under 63, couldnā€™t see his approach which soared into the skies and against a setting sun but the roars of approval from the crowds around the green was enough indication to know he had delivered the knockout punch.

ā€œTo be honest I didn’t even see it,ā€ said Matsuyama. ā€œBut everybody started cheering and I knew it was good.ā€

His third victory in nine months ā€“ Matsuyama won the Masters Tournament for his first major title last April and the ZOZO CHAMPIONSHIP at home in October ā€“ pushed him to top spot in the latest FedExCup standings, and made him only the second Japanese winner at the Sony Open after Isao Aokiā€™s historic feat in 1983. He is projected to move up to 10th place on the Official World Golf Ranking, the first time back amongst the top-10 since 2018.

After Henley found a fairway trap in the playoff hole, Matsuyama seized his moment with a perfect drive that split the fairway and then followed up with a precise second to close the deal. ā€œIt was a perfect number for me for a cut 3-wood, 276 yards left to right, follow wind. I knew the green was soft enough to hold it, and I was able to pull it off,ā€ he said.

ā€œRussell was playing so beautifully the front nine, but at the turn I was thinking, he can’t keep this up, can he? I was able to birdie 10 and then a two-shot swing at 11 and then the game was on again. I was five back but I just put my head down and I was playing pretty well; I was 3-under at the time, so I figured, well, if I could make a few more birdies maybe I can get back into it.ā€

He credited the strong support he received from the galleries, which included a large number of Japanese fans, for pulling him through when he had his back against the wall. ā€œYeah, even at the turn when I was five back, I could hear the cheers from my countrymen. That really spurred me on,ā€ said Matsuyama.

ā€œI feel great. To be able to win back-to-back with ZOZO and here with at the Sony, and especially on a course that I haven’t really played that well. It’s a tough golf course for me. So I’m extra excited, extra happy because of that.ā€

Winning a historic first Masters title last year ā€“ his first win in nearly six years on TOUR and the first Japanese to wear the green jacket ā€“ eased the weight on his shoulders and Matsuyama said he has been able to free-wheel his game since the breakthrough. ā€œIt has because the pressure of not winning a major has been gone,ā€ said Matsuyama.

His success on the world-famous holiday isle was largely due to him enjoying a career best putting week where he gained 7.264 strokes over the field as he took his place alongside Korean legend Choi as Asians with most wins on TOUR. Choiā€™s eighth title was achieved in 2011.

ā€œI’ll have my share of sake tonight,ā€ he said with a smile.

Henley, who held the second and third round leads, seemed to be in control in his quest for a second Sony title and fourth PGA TOUR victory following a brilliant outward 29 with four birdies and one eagle. However, the birdies dried up on the inward stretch and a bogey on 11 left the door ajar for Matsuyama to barge right through. Henley still had a chance to win outright on the 72nd hole but missed his 10-foot birdie chance as he posted a final round 65.

ā€œI thought I’d won the tournament. Thought I hit a great putt,ā€ said a disappointed Henley, who was victorious at the tournament in 2013. ā€œHe just played incredible golf today. I wish I could have put some more pressure on him. Tough to beat 3-wood to two feet on 18.ā€

Final-Round Notes ā€“ Sunday, January 16, 2022

Weather: Partly cloudy. High of 79. Wind E 4-8 mph.

Final-Round Leaderboard

Hideki Matsuyama* 66-65-63-63ā€”257 (-23)

Russell Henley 62-63-67-65ā€”257 (-23)
Kevin Kisner 68-64-65-64ā€”261 (-19)
Seamus Power 63-68-65-65ā€”261 (-19)

*Wins with an eagle-3 on the first playoff hole (No. 18)

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