PINEHURST, N.C. — Patrick Cantlay has spent the majority of the past five years ranked in the top 10 in the world but has had few realistic chances to win a major championship.
He had one this week at Pinehurst No. 2, but walked away disappointed again. This time, he has his putting to blame.
Cantlay, who stormed to the lead at the U.S. Open with an opening-round 65, had a several opportunities to grab a share of the lead during a wild final round on Sunday that saw dramatic momentum swings. But he ultimately couldn’t take advantage and shot 70 on Sunday, finishing at 4-under 276 and tying for third, two shots behind winner Bryson DeChambeau and one back of playing partner Rory McIlroy.
“All in all I thought I played pretty solid. Could have holed a few more putts,” Cantlay said. “If I would have putted like I did (on Saturday), I would have been right there.”
Cantlay finished tied for first in greens in regulation (13 of 18) in the final round, but was 61st out of 74 players in putting under the “strokes gained” metric.
The 16th hole proved to be the undoing for Cantlay, currently ranked No. 9.
With the chance to move within a shot of the lead behind DeChambeau and McIlroy, Cantlay’s second shot caught the left side of the green and fell off.
He chipped to 7 feet, but his putt broke wide and right for a bogey that dropped him back to 4-under.