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Bold Bhatia channels legend Palmer as he rallies to win the red sweater

China Daily | Updated: 2026-03-10 00:00
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Akshay Bhatia celebrates by donning the iconic red alpaca sweater after winning at the Arnold Palmer Invitational. REUTERS

ORLANDO, Florida — Akshay Bhatia missed a 30-inch par putt to fall five shots behind Sunday in the Arnold Palmer Invitational, making him angry enough to want to do something about it. What followed was a charge on the back nine at Bay Hill that would have made the King himself proud.

"You must play boldly to win," was one of Palmer's famous quotes.

Bhatia was every bit of that. Four straight birdies got him into the mix. Two shots behind with three to play, he hit a 6-iron to a dangerous pin on the par-5 16th that nearly went into the cup on the second bounce and set up a short eagle to stay in the game.

And then he outlasted Daniel Berger in the first playoff at Bay Hill since 1999 — three years before Bhatia was born — to win the Arnold Palmer Invitational with a stunning comeback.

"If he was up there watching, he's probably pretty proud of how that finished," said Bhatia, wearing the red sweater that goes to the winner of Palmer's tournament.

"Play bold — I think that was a big thing everyone knows of Mr Palmer," he said. "I could feel that energy and buzz. It was awesome. I'm very fortunate to win this tournament."

Bhatia, who also took on the flag over the rock-framed water on the 18th in regulation and nearly pulled it off, closed with a 3-under 69 and won his third PGA Tour title, all of which have come in playoffs.

This was the biggest, though. A$20 million signature event that moves the 24-year-old into the top 20 in the world at the start of a big stretch in golf that concludes with the Masters next month.

Berger looked like he had it won, walking confidently after building a four-shot lead at the turn. He lost the lead by missing a seven-foot par putt on the 17th hole and showed plenty of moxie just to get into the playoff with an up-and-down from 70 yards for par on the final hole for a 70.

Berger, who hit his tee shot into the right rough on the 18th in regulation, pulled his drive in the playoff and did well to hammer a 6-iron to the front edge of the green, 106 feet away. He rolled that to seven feet below the hole, and his par putt to extend the playoff was weak and missed below the cup.

Bhatia played to the center of the green. He took two putts from just inside 30 feet for the win and the $4 million prize.

"Everyone knows when you show up to Bay Hill, it's going to be a test,"Bhatia said.

He also felt like he had some of "Arnie's Army" on his side down the stretch, and there were moments the crowd was clearly in his favor, and opposed to Berger.

"No pressure," one spectator yelled as Berger walked in for a putt just inside 15 feet for par in regulation that he holed to force the playoff. "Get in the water," another spectator said on his putt.

Bhatia started the back nine with four straight birdies, one of them from just inside 60 feet on the 11th hole. There was a two-shot swing at the 13th when Bhatia holed a 10-foot birdie putt and Berger had a plugged lie in a bunker, facing a shot to the crispy green with water on the other side. He smartly played back toward the fairway and salvaged a bogey, his lead down to one shot.

The final hour turned electric on the par-5 16th with Bhatia's biggest shot. He said caddie Joe Greiner told him, "Just try to hit the best 6-iron of your life."

"It was one of those professional pushes," he said. "I wasn't trying to aim at the flag."

Berger, who missed 18 months with a back injury after the 2022 US Open and suffered a broken finger last August, was trying to become the first wire-to-wire winner at Bay Hill in 10 years.

"It's tough to win. It's tough to battle," he said. "But I feel like I did a good job, and a shot here or there was the difference."

That goes for Bhatia, too. He and Berger returned Sunday morning to finish the third round. Berger had a three-shot lead until the 18th hole, when he made bogey from the right rough and Bhatia made birdie when his 10-foot putt hung on the lip for just under 10 seconds and then dropped.

Berger's consolation prize, aside from the $2.2 million for finishing second, was earning a spot at the British Open and moving well into the world's top 40, which should make him safe to return to the Masters next month.

Cameron Young, who used to spend his winters in Orlando as a kid, played bogey-free for a 69 and tied for third with Ludvig Aberg (67).

Agencies via Xinhua

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