Kaymer seals PGA Championship victory in playoff

KOHLER, Wisconsin, (Reuters) – Germany’s Martin  Kaymer maintained ice-cool composure to win his maiden major  title in a gripping two-way playoff with American Bubba Watson  for the 92nd U.S. PGA Championship yesterday. 
 
With American Dustin Johnson having earlier been eliminated  from the playoff after being given a two-stroke penalty, Kaymer  went on to clinch the prized Wanamaker Trophy over three extra  holes at Whistling Straits. 

Watson holed a three-foot birdie putt at the first extra  hole, the par-four 10th, but Kaymer immediately responded by  sinking a 15-footer to birdie the treacherous 223-yard 17th.  

The German then sealed victory in the year’s final major  with a bogey at the par-four 18th after both players found the  right rough off the tee. The long-hitting Watson struck his second shot into a creek  guarding the front of the green on the way to a double-bogey  six. Kaymer laid up with his second shot and struck his third  to 15 feet before two-putting for the title.  

The 25-year-old from Dusseldorf removed his cap to  acknowledge the roars from the crowd packed around the green  before walking across to shake hands with Watson.  

SECOND GERMAN  
Kaymer became only the second German to win a major title,  compatriot Bernhard Langer having won the U.S. Masters in 1985  and 1993. Johnson had finished level with the duo after the 72  regulation holes on 11-under-par 277 but was adjudged by  officials to have grounded his club in a bunker before playing  his second shot at the 18th. “Walking up there and seeing the shot, it never once  crossed my mind I was in a sand trap,” Johnson said in a  television interview. 
 
“The only worse thing that could have happened was if I had  made that putt on the last hole. I never once thought that was  a sand trap. I just thought I was on a piece of dirt.”  

Johnson had led the tournament by one shot playing the last  but he missed an eight-foot par putt to bogey the hole for a  closing one-under 71 which was then adjusted to a 73. 
 
Watson, who returned a 68, and Kaymer, after a 70, went  into the playoff with each of them competing for a maiden major  title.  
It was the first playoff in the year’s final major since  Fiji’s Vijay Singh edged out Americans Justin Leonard and Chris  DiMarco at Whistling Straits in 2004.  

Six players held at least a share of the lead during  yesterday’s final round and six were still in the title hunt with  just three holes remaining before the championship went into a  playoff. 
 
Kaymer’s victory made him the sixth first-time winner in  the last seven majors with Phil Mickelson’s emotional victory  at the U.S. Masters in April the sole exception.