Rafael Campos Earns His First PGA Tour Title with Bermuda Championship Victory

It’s a memorable PGA Tour first for Rafael Campos.

The 36-year-old Puerto Rican professional golfer notched a three-shot victory in the Bermuda Championship on Sunday, joining the late Chi Chi Rodriguez as the only Puerto Rican players to win on the PGA Tour.

Rafael Campos,Campos had always dreamed of being a PGA Tour winner. He never could have imagined when it would happen and just how much it would mean.

Campos had missed five straight cuts and was in danger of not having a card on any tour. Campos arrived in Bermuda about 90 minutes before his tee time to start the tournament, having been unsure he could even play until his pregnant wife had labor induced and gave birth their to first child on Monday.

No wonder he felt like he was living a fairy tale Sunday.

He hit all the right shots, none better than a 2-iron to 2 feet on the par-5 seventh during a surge that sent him to a 3-under 68 victory.

“I just can’t believe this is actually happening to me,” Campos said through sobs when he was interviewed on the 18th green.

Campos, in only his second full year on the PGA Tour, was No. 147 in the FedEx Cup with time running out — the season ends next week — to get into the top 125 and keep his card. That’s what was causing so much stress inside the ropes.

And then Paola Isabel was born on Monday, giving Campos peace and perspective.

“It has been a surreal week,” he said. “I’m just extremely happy to be a champion and not have to worry about where I’m going to be playing the next couple of years.”

He’s going places he has never been. Campos has never played in a major. Now he’s going to the Masters and the PGA Championship. The victory gives him full status on the PGA Tour through 2026.

Campos won by three shots over Andrew Novak, who shot 71 for his best PGA Tour finish. Novak pulled within two shots when Campos missed an 18-inch par putt on the 14th hole. Campos was not rattled until he lost control of his emotions after the final putt.

“It’s been an unbelievable week — best week of my life,” he said. “Such a bad year, and to have things go my way — everything together at once — I’m just so happy. I’m grateful to call myself a PGA Tour champion. It’s something I’ve dreamt about my entire life.”

Campos, who finished at 19-under 265, earned $1.242 million and a two-year exemption, which might be more valuable considering how hard it has been to just get on tour over the past decade. Campos gets into The Sentry to start the year at Kapalua, along with the Masters, the PGA Championship and the Players Championship.

He was tied with Novak to start the final round, and both were passed quickly by Justin Lower, a runner-up last week in Mexico.

That changed when Campos worked the wind flawlessly, setting up a 6-foot birdie putt on No. 6 and the eagle on the next hole. And it changed for Lower, who four-putted for double bogey on the par-3 eighth and never quite recovered.

Campos used his imagination in hitting shots through the wind, and it paid off on No. 10 when his shot rolled out to 18 inches for birdie, and on the next hole when he rammed in another birdie putt from 15 feet.

Then it was a matter of finishing in conditions so windy and tough that even short putts were being blown off line. Campos didn’t take a wrong step aside of the 18-inch putt he missed.

A few friends rushed onto the 18th green to spray him with bubbly, and he took a swig to celebrate a week he never imagined.

“It’s been such a bad year ballstriking wise,” Campos said. “This game is so hard when things aren’t going well, so hard to actually get yourself to be confident. Things have just been so different this week. I just don’t know. I’m just so grateful.”

Sergio Garcia Claims First Individual LIV Golf Title with Playoff Win at LIV Golf Andalucia

Sergio Garcia is LIVing large…

The 44-year-old Spanish professional golfer claimed his first individual LIV Golf win on Sunday after beating overnight leader Anirban Lahiri in a playoff for the Andalucia title.

Sergio Garcia García thrilled the home fans with a 5-under 66 to pull level with Lahiri and force the playoff with both players at 5-under overall.

This was the first title for García since he joined the new Saudi-backed LIV circuit in 2022.

Jon Rahm, another home favorite, finished in a tie for 10th in his first event back home since joining LIV Golf.

García’s Fireballs team also won the team title at the tournament in southern Spain after winning a playoff over the Crushers — the first time in a LIV Golf tournament that both the individual and team titles had been decided in a playoff.

García has won nearly 40 international tournaments as a professional, most notably the 2008 Players Championship and the 2017 Masters Tournament.