BETHESDA, Md. — Bill Haas keeps winning the right tournaments to position himself on the periphery of the elite in golf.
His three-shot victory Sunday in the AT&T National was his fourth straight season with at least one PGA Tour title, joining a short list with Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson and Justin Rose. Some of that is good timing, though to suggest it's merely a coincidence would be to ignore an abundance of natural talent.
The trick is getting to the next level, and Haas knows the way.
"Work a little harder," he said. "This year I think I put in a little bit more work than I have in the previous years — easy to say now that it's paying off. But all the best players, they're working hard. And the best players ... there is a level, and I'd love to be a part of that. But the way you guys and the golf world ranks us, it's by the majors. And I have not had that much success in the majors."
Indeed, Haas has never had a top 10 in a major.
For now, he keeps winning on major golf courses. Faced with a rugged test at Congressional, which has hosted four major championships, Haas pulled away from a crowd of contenders with three straight birdies, two good pars and one good hop out of the rough by the 14th green that turned potential bogey into birdie.
He wound up with a 5-under 66 and a three-shot win over Robert Castro, who made Haas work hard in the sweltering heat Sunday.
Haas thought about a player such as Jason Day, who has only one win in his sixth year on the PGA Tour, but is looked upon now as a contender at the majors because that's what the Australian has done. Day has finished two shots behind in the Masters twice, and he was runner-up by two shots at the U.S. Open at Merion this year.