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By Alex Myers
With no fans in attendance, the 2020 PGA Championship was always going to be one for the record books. But Collin Morikawa made even more history with how he finished off his maiden major title.

With weekend rounds of 65 and 64, Morikawa posted the lowest closing 36 holes by any golfer in a major. Ever.

Morikawa’s 129 total topped by one a mark held by Tiger Woods (2018 PGA), Tom Watson (1977 Open), Nick Faldo (1994 Open), Ian Baker-Finch (1991 Open), and Marc Leishman (2015 Open). Unlike Woods, Faldo, and Leishman, Morikawa’s weekend scores led to victory.

Morikawa has been linked to Tiger a couple times already this year for a couple other impressive accomplishments. He nearly matched Woods’ record for most consecutive cuts to start his pro career and he drew more comparisons to the 15-time major champ for having more PGA Tour wins than missed cuts following his victory at the Workday Charity Open.

More importantly to the 23-year-old, he can now call himself a major champ like one of his idols. And he actually beat Woods to hoisting a Wanamaker Trophy with only Jack Nicklaus and Rory McIlroy being younger PGA champs in the stroke-play era.

“It’s great company,” Morikawa told reporters after. “You know, it’s been crazy, because this entire start of my professional career, I see all the things comparing to Tiger and doing all this and then Tiger is on a completely different level. I think we all know that. But any time you’re in the conversation of the greats, Jack, Rory, Tiger, no matter who it is, if you’re in that conversation, you’re doing something well.”