PITTSFORD, N.Y. — Even as golf embarks on the final major of the year at the PGA Championship, still fresh in the mind is the closing round Phil Mickelson put together at Muirfield to win the British Open. He birdied four of the last six holes for a 6-under 66, the best round of the day in demanding conditions.
It matched the low round of the week and was 7.5 shots better than the average score that Sunday. It also was the lowest final round ever at Muirfield by the champion, and the best by any British Open champion in 16 years.
Can the PGA Championship top that?
Maybe.
The PGA has had its share of great closing rounds, such as the time Bob May shot 66 at Valhalla to get into a playoff with Tiger Woods, who had a 67. Woods ended up beating May in a three-hole playoff.
Dating to the start of stroke play in 1958, here are five examples of the greatest closing rounds in the PGA Championship:
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5. SLUMAN BEATS THE HEAT: Paul Azinger was poised to atone for his runner-up finish at the British Open the previous year when he opened with rounds of 67-66 at Oak Tree outside Oklahoma City, and then had a 71 to take a one-shot lead over Dave Rummells going into the final round of the 1988 PGA Championship.