For a moment on Sunday, there it was: The winning moment Daniel Berger had spent the better part of the 2020s dreaming about.
It arrived on the 72nd hole of the Arnold Palmer Invitational, with Berger suddenly confronting an uncomfortable reality: the tournament he’d led since an opening-round 63 on Thursday was now on the line — and his playing partner, Akshay Bhatia, was a real threat to win it.
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As he stared down the 13-foot, nine-inch par putt on the hole he’d played worse than any other all week at Bay Hill, the toll of the day and of the decade came into clear focus. What happened next was also revealing: Berger poured in the 14-footer to make a soul-stealing par, thrusting the pressure back onto Bhatia, who suddenly had a short par putt to make just to force a playoff.
When the ball fell into the hole, Berger erupted in a way we had not seen all week at Bay Hill. He threw a furious fist-pump, and then another, as he yelled into the crowd. It was a decidedly un-Bergerian response, particularly from a pro so softspoken that he opted not to speak at all to the media on Saturday or Sunday, but it also reflected the gravity of the moment far beyond the golf tournament.
Berger had given everything for the chance to win again on the PGA Tour — losing 27 months to injury between the end of 2021 and the beginning of 2026, and untold more time to regaining form in the months his body allowed for competitive golf. Now, after recovery from back and finger injuries that had frustrated and foiled him, he was at the peak of his powers — refusing to go away despite a furious late push from Bhatia, and clinging to the lead he’d worked all week to build at Bay Hill.
That putt must have been cathartic, the way it hit the bottom of the hole against all odds. In many ways, it was a metaphor for the journey he’d taken to that point. But what came after it was a reminder that redemption stories are rarely so simple.
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Bhatia made his putt to force a playoff, and then smoked a drive down the center of the fairway on the first playoff hole (also held on that pesky 18th). Berger followed up his triumphant putt by pumping a low hooking drive into the rough that broadcaster Bones Mackay estimated “might not have traveled 250 yards.” He needed the longest approach shot all day to find the green on the 18th at Bay Hill (216 yards) just to get a look at birdie (from 106 feet away). Bhatia, on the other hand, smoked a brilliant iron shot right into the fat part of the green.
Berger’s lag putt was plenty good, leaving a little bit less than 8 feet for par. But even then, the Tour make-rate from that distance amounted to a coin flip. Bhatia, on the other hand, gave himself 4 feet for par — much closer to gimme range.
The wylie vet went first, and this time the magic wore off. He watched helplessly as the ball didn’t even scare the hole, missing on the low side and giving Bhatia a chance at a straight make for the win.
When Bhatia’s putt hit the center of the cup, Berger was deflated. He quickly zipped off the green and held a short interview with NBC broadcaster Smylie Kaufman.
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“Yeah, I mean, I’m proud of myself,” he said. “Obviously it didn’t go the way I wanted it to, but at the start of the week if you told me I would have a chance on the 18th hole to win Bay Hill, I would be ecstatic with that. So a lot of positives, a lot of things to learn from.”
In the end, the arrow is pointing up for Berger, and he’s been around long enough to know that. But that doesn’t take away the sting of Sunday at Bay Hill. A loss after leading for 72 holes is hard in itself, but it’s harder after half a decade of struggle to get there.
“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.”
It’s also tough to lose. And for Daniel Berger on Sunday at Bay Hill, it was a little bit tougher.
The winning moment arrived … but not the win. Not yet.
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