Playing the treacherous 546-yard, par-4 18th hole, Oosthuizen hit his tee shot into the water and was essentially eliminated. Kozuma and Casey both made par. Then, Reed, standing over a sliding, downhill birdie putt from just inside 20 feet smoothly rolled in the putt for victory.
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He shot three-over 75 on the day but the birdie, only the third of the round on the home hole, was the only thing that mattered. Reed finally captured his first LIV Golf win and it came, of all places, in his home state of Texas.
.@PReedGolf wins for the first time on LIV Golf and in his home state of Texas 🏆#LIVGolfDallas @4AcesGC_ pic.twitter.com/SMYlCdeJ2i
— LIV Golf (@livgolf_league) June 29, 2025
“I tried to mess it up,” said Reed, who was playing in his 41st LIV event. “After making birdie on the first I seemed to leave every birdie short. I told myself, ‘hey, the putts have to start falling.’ For the most part I felt like I was hitting the ball fine, I just had a lot of missed putts.”
Here’s a smattering of events that show what a topsy-turvy day it was for the 2018 Masters champ. When Tyrrell Hatton birdied the eighth hole he was tied with Reed. Reed went back up one on the next hole over Hatton and Varner. When Reed bogeyed the eighth hole he was tied with Hatton and Varner. Reed bogeyed Nos. 3, 4, 6, 8 and 9 on the opening stretch. Kozuma birdied three of four holes to come from nowhere and tied Reed at six under at one point. Hatton made birdie at 13 and was tied with Kozuma and Reed. When Casey birdied the 13th he was tied at the top. At one point Hatton, Kozuma and Casey were tied with Reed for the lead. A bogey on the last pushed Hatton out of the eventual playoff. Kozuma birdied the 17th to take a one-shot lead but bogeyed the 18th.
Somehow Reed overcame all of that and found a way to win.
Main Image: Sam Hodde
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