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Jacobson wins Travellers Championship

Fredrik Jacobson promised five-year-old daughter Emmie that he would get her a trophy this year like the ones she saw other players holding up on TV.Promise kept.

CROMWELL, Conn. — Fredrik Jacobson promised five-year-old daughter Emmie that he would get her a trophy this year like the ones she saw other players holding up on TV.

Promise kept.

Jacobson closed out his first PGA Tour title Sunday, shooting a 4-under 66 in the Travelers Championship for a one-stroke victory over John Rollins and Ryan Moore.

“It’s been haunting me,” Jacobson said. “I’ve been on the board, I’ve been asked so many times from the kids, ’Did you get a trophy this week daddy? Did you get a trophy this week?’ Nope, no trophy. So, I’m excited about that. I’m glad I’m not breaking that promise for her.”

Jacobson, a 36-year-old Swede who joined the tour eight years ago and has three European Tour victories, had just one bogey in the tournament and finished at 20 under, two shots off the course record.

“I was hitting so many fairways,” said Jacobson, who tied for 14th last week in the U.S. Open at Congressional.

“It started clicking the end of last week. The last two days I struck the ball the best I ever have at the U.S. Open.”

Jacobson hit all 28 fairways over the weekend.

Rollins and Moore closed with 63s. Moore missed a four-foot par putt on 18.

“I’m not beating myself up over that putt,” he said. “That happens in golf.”

“It was a pretty simple left-centre putt, and I pushed it right into the middle of the hole and it just slipped by the side,” he said.

Nineteen-year-old Patrick Cantlay, the UCLA star who had a 60 on Friday to break the tour record for an amateur, — finished at 11 under after weekend rounds of 72 and 70.

He arrived to a loud ovation on the 18th green, but bogeyed the hole.

“I just learned what it’s like to have a week on the PGA Tour, to make the cut and to compete with all the guys,” said Cantlay, the low amateur at Congressional last week. “This was just my second go-around and it was a lot of fun. The ovations are special every time.”

Rollins had four consecutive birdies to start the back nine and gave himself a chance to win at 18, by making birdie after hitting his second shot four-feet from the pin.

“It seemed like every hole there was a roar going on, so you knew that guys were making birdies and all kinds of low numbers on the board,” he said. “So I just kept plugging along and staying with what I was doing and managed to get a good round.”

David Hearn (68) from Brantford, Ont., was 9 under for the tournament.

Michael Thompson, a 31-year-old who came out of qualifying school this season, shot the best round of the day, a 62, including a 29 on the back nine. He finished fourth at 18 under.

“It was very exciting, especially this being my dream to play on the PGA Tour,” he said.

Jacobson was trying to become the first player since Lee Trevino in the 1974 Greater New Orleans Open to play 72 holes without a bogey.

And he almost did it.

He had 63 consecutive bogey-free holes before running into problems on the par-4 10th. His second shot went right, ending up resting against the cart path, but after taking relief and pitching onto the green, he couldn’t make a 12-foot putt for par.

“I caught a mud ball there on the right side,” he said. “You’ve just got to accept those. With a long iron, it can take off sideways so I got challenged there. But I think I dealt with it nicely and kept playing well.”