News

Rickie Fowler melted down — but you should know what he did after that

Rickie Fowler

Rickie Fowler on Saturday on the 18th green at TPC Southwind.

Getty Images

The scorecard shows a nine. But the kid won’t remember it. 

This FedEx St. Jude Championship began with a glimmer for Rickie Fowler, and, if we’re being honest, that’s more than he’s had in some time. By now, you’re no doubt well versed in Fowler’s years-long descent and the various bids to recapture the form that made him a star, but this week, this week felt different. He had snuck in to the start of this week’s playoffs on the number — Mr. 125 in the season-long standings — though he was helped by the absence of those who have left for LIV. But who’s counting; Fowler was in. 

What’s the No. 1 thing holding Rickie Fowler back? He thinks he knows. 
By: Nick Piastowski

Then it got really good. He shot a 65, his lowest number since … since … last October? In this space on Thursday, after his first round at TPC Southwind, we even wrote this headline: “What’s the No. 1 thing holding Rickie Fowler back? He thinks he knows.” The answer is putting, and knowledge is power, they say. 

There was more. Fowler had switched caddies, breaking up with longtime looper Joe Skovron. He switched putters. He had momentum. And who knew what the next three days could hold. 

“I felt like I got some good stuff in, and in a way kind of coming in, nothing to lose,” Fowler said after his first round. “Being 125, obviously need to play well to just make it to next week, but it would be a big bonus if we can do that and move on. Kind of leave it all out there, see what happens, but definitely happy with the start.”

If you’ve gotten this far, the tone tells you where this is going. But please hang on.  

On Friday, Fowler shot a one-over 71, though he made the weekend cut. To move into next week’s second leg of the playoffs — only the top 70 in the standings earn a spot into the BMW Championship — he would need to go low. 

On Saturday, Fowler was a stroke worse than Friday. Though, through 17 holes, things were looking good. But his 18th hole looked like this:

How Rickie Fowler became the last man in the FedEx Cup Playoffs
By: Jack Hirsh

Stroke one: tee shot into the water 

Stroke two: penalty and drop 

Stroke three: iron short, left and into the water 

Stroke four: penalty and drop 

Stroke five: iron short but safe 

Stroke six: chip short 

Stroke seven: chip on 

Stroke eight: missed 6-footer 

Stroke nine: in 

Quintuple-bogey, the nine tying his highest-ever score on Tour. Fowler will play 18 more holes on Sunday. But his season, barring the bizarre, is done. 

“He’s a really positive guy all the way around, but at some point, it’s hard to not beat yourself up for making stupid mistakes like finishing off this third round,” analyst Curt Byrum said on Golf Channel. “Just seems like everything is snowballing in the wrong direction.”

But that introspection would have to wait. 

Fowler had to sign autographs. According to a tweet from the PGA Tour’s Cameron Morfit, Fowler signed for everyone actually. No one was left without a Fowler signature. Then there is the picture Morfit also shared. In one of the better images you’ll see this golf year, Fowler is signing the white hat of a boy, and the kid looks mesmerized by the scene. 

Remarkable, right?

Like we said at the start, the leaderboard shows Fowler tied for 58th, and the record shows another tournament that continues only the search, and the scorecard shows a nine. 

But the kid won’t remember that.

Golf Magazine

Subscribe To The Magazine

Subscribe
Exit mobile version