Rickie Fowler cemented his official comeback with a PGA Tour win at the Rocket Mortgage Classic, defeating Adam Hadwin and Colin Morikawa in a playoff and finishing at 24 under.
Resplendent in bright orange, the relief was palpable as Rickie Fowler made birdie on the playoff hole, touched his putter on the green and looked skyward. Then he smiled. The 34-year-old golfer was a PGA winner once again.
It had been four years since his last win on The Tour, and this time he wanted to savor the moment.
After several victories had slipped through his fingers, including the heartbreaking loss at last monthās U.S. Open where he ended up T5 after holding the lead. That same month, Fowler was also in contention at the Memorial Tournament and Travelers in Cromwell, CT, where he ended up T9 and T13 in the final rounds. After edging close in all three tournaments, it was starting to look like the popular golfer might have a closing problem.
And there was doubt that his highly anticipated comeback would yield the ultimate result: a win on the tour.
But all that disbelief was chucked out the window with the six-time PGA winnerās result at the Detroit Golf Club. Rickie Fowler has entered the winnerās circle again, and the pressure of translating massive talent into an official victory was painfully clear.
āItās just nice to have this one out of the way,ā Fowler said, collecting his first trophy since 2019ās Waste Management Phoenix Open, via ESPN. āIām obviously going to soak this one in and celebrate a bit.
āYeah, itās just been a long road.ā
Even more special? The Rocket Mortgage win was Fowlerās first as a father, making the victory even more meaningful as he held his two-year-old daughter, Maya, during his post-match interview.
Rickie Fowler ends title drought with Rocket Mortgage win
āItās hard to really put it all into words,ā Fowler said to CBS interviewer Amanda Balionis, via Sports Illustrated. āObviously a lot of good stuff this year, been playing some really good golf. I knew it was just a matter of time with how Iāve been playing. Iāve had a couple tough weekends where Iāve had a chance. U.S. Open didnāt get it done.
āBut at the end of the day, getting to hold her, getting to hang with Maya and my wife. Winning is great but thereās a lot more to life than that.ā
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But thereās no question that Fowlerās been on an upward trajectory since last year. Having fallen out of the T100 in the OWGRās, the fan favorite has been inching up the list again and placing within the T50 for the first time in three years, after his stellar showing at the Charles Schwab in May of this year.
During that time, Fowlerās been through swing changes and both a new coach and caddie. Throughout it all, the charismatic player held onto belief, even as he struggled.
āYou never really know with this game,ā Fowler said, according to the Detroit News. āYou definitely learn to appreciate the good times when youāre playing well. You hope the struggles donāt last, but sometimes they last longer than you would hope for.
āI knew what I was capable of, but itās tough when youāre struggling for that long for a period of time. But I knew it wasnāt far off.
āJust kind of had to keep putting the time in, keep grinding, keep pushing.ā
That grind, on Sunday, finally paid off.
The Open is the next major, taking place July 16-23, in Merseyside, England, where Rickie Fowler is sure to be one of the major contenders at The Open.