Chris wins season-opening Sony Open by two shots
Published: 04:01 AM,Jan 19,2026 | EDITED : 08:01 AM,Jan 19,2026
Chris Gotterup likes how he handles situations when he's in position to win on the PGA Tour.
He did it again, shooting 6-under-par 64 to capture the season-opening Sony Open on Sunday at Honolulu.
His 16-under 264 score was good for a two-stroke victory at Waialae Country Club.
'When I've been in control of my game, when I've had a chance to win, I've done it,' Gotterup said. 'This is another example. When you get in contention, you're able to hit shots under the gun. You just believe in yourself that you can do it again.
'Sometimes there's blind luck involved, and I'll take as much as I can get. But I played pretty good this week.'
Ryan Gerard shot 65 to finish as runner-up, while Patrick Rodgers' bogey-free 65 helped him to third place at 13 under.
Seven birdies were spread across Gotterup's scorecard en route to his third career victory on the PGA Tour. By the time he grabbed a three-stroke lead as he toured the backside he was in good shape because he played the final four holes without a bogey for all four rounds.
'You couldn't dream up a better starter,' Gotterup said of two birdies early in the round.
Gotterup had two of his birdies on par-3 holes -- the latter by sinking a 12-foot putt on No. 17. He now has one victory in three consecutive years.
'There's a lot of nice things that come with it,' Gotterup said.
Gotterup became emotional when discussing the support system around him.
'Everyone believes in me,' he said.
Even with a solid final round, he began the tournament one stroke better with 63 on Thursday. He began Sunday's play in a tie for second place.
Gerard, who tied for 37th place in last year's tournament, made a push with birdies on three of the last four holes.
Rodgers said he might have benefited from less windy conditions early in the day. Yet he couldn't finish enough birdie chances, while Gotterup was too good.
'I was focused on my process today and put as many good holes together as I could and was trying to make enough birdies to get up there and catch him,' Rodgers said.
Scotland's Robert MacIntyre had the round's best score at 63, pushing him to 12 under and sharing fourth place with Jacob Bridgeman (64).
After Sunday's round, MacIntyre revealed that he snapped his putter on the 17th hole Friday and then missed a 3-footer on the next hole.
'Doing that cost me a shot,' he said. 'Big, big reminder for me that attitude has got to be right for 72 holes, not just 36. Because at the end of the day my attitude cost me this golf tournament, and can't be allowing that.'
Third-round leader Davis Riley struggled at times with a three-hole stretch at 4 over on the frontside, but posted 71 and finished at 11 under and tied for sixth place. He had six straight pars before a birdie on the last hole.
Defending champion Nick Taylor of Canada posted 70 for the second day in a row and ended at 9 under in a tie for 13th.