North Carolina State University Athletics

Pettersson Wins Third Career PGA Tour Event
8/17/2008 12:00:00 AM | Men's Golf
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) -- Carl Pettersson was one imperfect hole from leading the full final two rounds of the Wyndham Championship. It was that brief slip-up that propelled the Swede to victory in his adopted hometown.
Pettersson won his local tournament for his first PGA Tour victory in two years, shooting a 2-under 68 on Sunday for a two-stroke victory at Sedgefield Country Club. Irked by a bogey on the 11th hole that temporarily dropped him into second place, Pettersson responded with three birdies during the four-hole stretch that followed to finish at 21-under 259 and earn $918,000.
| Wyndham Championship Sedgefield Country Club Greensboro, N.C. | ||
| 1. | Carl Pettersson | -21 |
| 2. | Scott McCarron | -19 |
| 3. | Rich Beem | -17 |
| T4. | J.J. Henry | -16 |
| T4. | Martin Laird | -16 |
| T6 | Tim Clark | -15 |
| T6 | John Senden | -15 |
| T6 | Kevin Streelman | -15 |
Scott McCarron briefly led midway through the final round before fading into second with a 68. Rich Beem's second straight 63 left him four strokes off the lead, with J.J. Henry (62) and rookie Martin Laird (63) another shot behind him.
Former Wolfpack All-American Tim Clark, Pettersson's one-time roommate while living in Raleigh, finished tied for sixth in the tournament at 15-under par. PGA Tour rookie Mark Turnesa, who also roomed with Pettersson and Clark as a player at NC State, finished in a tie for 36th at 1-under par. Pettersson and Clark are slated to participate Monday in the State Cup at Prestonwood Country Club in Cary, the annual fundraiser for the Wolfpack men's and women's golf teams.
One of the spectators at sold-out Sedgefield was long-time NC State men's golf coach Richard Sykes, who celebrated with his former players after the final round.
"It was really kind of special," Sykes said. "The other times Carl has won on the PGA Tour and the times Tim has won overseas, I have never gotten to attend," Sykes said on his way home from Greensboro Sunday evening. "So it was really a thrill for me to be a part of it."
But first Pettersson, who attended high school in Greensboro not far from the Sedgefield course, had to survive a little drama. He began the back nine with consecutive bogeys and fell one stroke back to 19 under when he missed an 8-foot par putt on the 10th.Pettersson made his move immediately after slipping out of the lead for the first time since Friday, when his tournament-record 61 in Round 2 shot him up the leaderboard. He began the back nine with consecutive bogeys, falling one stroke back to 19 under when he missed an 8-foot par putt on the 11th.
"I kind of felt like I let the tournament slip away on 10 and 11," Pettersson said.
McCarron gave the stroke back on the 12th, missing a 13-foot birdie putt and lipping out a 4-foot par attempt during just his second bogey, then saying afterward that "I thought I kind of let it go" on that hole.
"I told myself on the next tee box, 'I got my momentum. I've got to put the pressure on Scott and hit a great tee shot. I've got a chance to really put the hammer down,'" Pettersson said. "And I managed to do it."
Pettersson birdied the 13th for a one-stroke lead, then went back up by two shots with a birdie on the par-5 15th - the easiest hole on the course for everyone but him, after two bogeys and a par on it. This time it was McCarron's turn for trouble; he sent his second shot into the sand, recovered and lipped out an 8-foot birdie putt.
"That hole has not been very good to me," Pettersson said. "Finally feel like you got one back on that hole."
McCarron's bogey on the 17th all but locked up Pettersson's first victory since the 2006 Memorial.
"It will be a great satisfaction just to think about, you know, pulled it off and did it and it's a wonderful feeling," Pettersson said. "Doesn't happen that often in golf unless you're Tiger Woods."
McCarron - who had used two early birdies to erase the two-stroke lead that Pettersson brought into the round - was denied his fourth career victory and first since 2001. It was the second top-10 finish of the year for the PGA Tour veteran who sat out the 2007 season after having surgery to repair a tendon in his right elbow.
"Second place is obviously tough to swallow right now, but I'll probably be pretty happy here when I realize I've got a job for the rest of the year," McCarron said.
Beem and Henry both finished strong and propelled themselves off the FedEx Cup bubble and into the playoffs, which begin later this week at The Barclays.
"I knew I had to play my butt off just to make it up there," Beem said. "I didn't want to have four weeks off, you know, and I'm glad at least I got into the first one."
Beem had birdies on four of his last six holes, jumping 52 spots to 114th, while Henry, who birdied four of his final five holes, moved up 42 spots to 135th. Laird, who shared the first-day lead with Bob Heintz before falling off the pace, wound up jumping 36 spots to 128th.
Click here for Pettersson's complete scorecard.



