Aaron Rai pulls away from loaded field to win PGA Championship

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Aaron Rai sinks 68-foot putt to take commanding lead at PGA Championship (0:46)

Aaron Rai delivers a 68-foot birdie putt to take a big lead after the 17th hole. (0:46)

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. -- Until Sunday, Aaron Rai was best known for being the PGA Tour golfer who played with two gloves.

Now, Rai will be remembered as the first English-born golfer to win the PGA Championship in more than a century after his stunning victory at Aronimink Golf Club.

In a final round in which none of the game's biggest stars seemed capable of taking control, Rai finally did and won the Wanamaker Trophy after a 5-under 65. His 72-hole total of 9-under 271 was three strokes better than Jon Rahm and Alex Smalley.

Rai said he wasn't aware of England's 107-year drought without a PGA Championship until Saturday.

"Yeah, extremely, extremely proud," Rai said. "There's a lot of incredible and historic English players over those hundred years who have gone on to achieve incredible things and had phenomenal careers, but to win this event and then to be the person that's the first one to have won it in a long time from England is an amazing thing and something to be extremely proud of."

After making a couple of big mistakes on the front nine, Rai made an eagle on the par-5 ninth and four birdies on the back without a bogey to pull away from golf's deepest field.

"I'm super happy for him," two-time major champion Xander Schauffele said. "He's such a good dude. Rarely do you feel like people work way harder than you. I feel like I've played a pretty good amount of time, and Aaron is always there. He's always in the gym. He's always on the range. I think that's what it's about to be a major champion. You put the work in when nobody's looking."

Added Rory McIlroy: "You won't find one person on the property who's not happy for him."

Rai's knockout blows came on back-to-back birdies on Nos. 16 and 17. He sank a 68½-foot putt on the par-3 17th -- the second-longest putt made by any player in the field this week -- to briefly go four strokes in front.

Now, he gets a five-year exemption on the PGA Tour and invitations to the Masters, U.S. Open and Open Championship for the next five years. As for the PGA Championship, he is welcome back for life and earned a $3.7 million payday.

"Golf is an amazing game," said Rai, who joined two-time PGA champion Vijay Singh as major champions of Indian heritage. "It teaches you so many things, and it teaches you so much humility and discipline and absolute hard work because nothing is ever given in this game."

He became the first English-born golfer to win the PGA Championship since Jim Barnes captured the first two tournaments in 1916 and 1919, which were both match-play competitions.

Rai's victory ended a 10-year streak of American golfers winning the Wanamaker. Australia's Jason Day had been the most recent non-American to win the PGA when he triumphed at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin in 2015.

It's the first time European golfers have won the first two majors of the season, according to Elias Sports Bureau. McIlroy, of Northern Ireland, won the Masters for a second straight year in April.

Rai started wearing two gloves when he was golfing as a child in England, doing so to combat the cold temperatures there. He leaves covers on his irons "to remember where I came from and to respect what I have" -- a nod to the sacrifices his father made to buy him the nicest golf clubs growing up.

"I haven't spent a lot of time with him, but I have heard consistently there's very few people that are nicer and kinder human beings than Aaron Rai," Rahm said. "Anybody that wears or uses head covers on his irons because he coveted his irons when he was a kid so much that he wanted to respect the equipment so much, and to still do it?

"It shows a lot about a person."

Rai, who entered the PGA ranked 44th in the world and will rise to 15, started the final round two strokes behind Smalley, the 54-hole leader. Rai quickly cut his deficit to one when he made a 4-foot birdie on his opening hole.

After a bogey on No. 3 and another birdie on No. 4, Rai seemed to be in trouble when he carded two more bogeys on Nos. 6 and 8. He was three strokes behind Germany's Matti Schmid, who had grabbed the lead with three birdies in five holes.

But Rai bounced back quickly on the ninth. After blasting his drive 330 yards down the left side of the fairway, he hit his approach 273 yards to the right side of the green. He sank a 40-foot putt for eagle to get back to 5 under.

Then, he added birdies on Nos. 11, 13, 16 and 17 to pull away, becoming the first golfer to go 6 under or better over the final 10 holes while winning a major since Cameron Smith at the 2022 British Open and Jack Nicklaus at the 1986 Masters, according to ESPN Research.

"Obviously, I knew there were a lot of people that were relatively close, but I think regardless of how bunched that it was, it still required a really good, strong round of golf," Rai said. "Again, the course really demanded it this week, and it was very punishing. As soon as you lost a split-second of focus at any part, whether it was a tee shot, whether it was an approach shot, whether it was a putt."

DraftKings Sportsbook reported it had Rai at 290-1 to win the Wanamaker Trophy, making him the biggest long shot to win a major in at least the past 20 years.

Justin Thomas, a two-time PGA Championship winner, carded a 5-under 65 to become the early clubhouse leader. He had to wait around for hours to find out if it would hold up.

Rahm was undone by two bogeys on the front and couldn't get enough putts to fall on the back nine.

Australia's Smith made a Sunday charge with a 3-under 32 on the front nine, but the LIV Golf League captain didn't have a birdie on the back and made a bogey on the 17th to finish the tournament 4 under.

McIlroy started the final round three strokes behind Smalley and had to do something special. It never came for the six-time major champion, who finished in a tie for seventh at 4 under.

Smalley, who hasn't won on the PGA Tour, showed nerves early as a final-round leader in a major. He made an eagle on the 16th and a birdie on 18 to finish at 6 under.

Ludvig Åberg, who has been in contention in a handful of majors but hasn't closed, had another inconsistent Sunday. He was only two strokes behind Smalley at one point after making a birdie on No. 2, but then back-to-back bogeys on Nos. 7 and 8 caused him to fall three strokes behind.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler endured another frustrating day on the course's treacherous greens. He carded a 1-under 69, which wasn't nearly enough to climb up the leaderboard, and finished in a tie for 14th at 2 under.

Scheffler, who was attempting to lift a Wanamaker Trophy for the second straight year, needed 125 putts, which was second most in a major championship in his career. He missed six putts inside 5 feet, tied for the second most in any PGA Tour event in his career, according to ESPN Research.