LAKE FOREST, Ill. — Zach Johnson is having a September to remember, and there’s still one very big week to go. In  one tournament, he made a 25-foot birdie putt on his final hole to earn  the last spot on the Presidents Cup team. In the next one, Johnson made  a bunch of big putts in the final round of the rain-delayed BMW  Championship for a 6-under 65 for a two-shot victory over Nick Watney. Next up? His  win Monday at Conway Farms gave Johnson the No. 4 seed going into Tour  Championship, giving him a clear shot at the FedEx Cup and its $10  million prize. “It’s hard to grasp the last two weeks of golf,”  Johnson said. “It’s not like you have to win every week to win that  FedEx Cup. You’ve just got to win at the right times, or play well at  the right times. And I like the momentum I have for next week.” Johnson’s  10th career win came at the expense of Jim Furyk, who endured another  dose of final-round disappointment. Furyk, who had a one-shot lead, has  failed to win the last six times he had at least a share of the lead  going into the last round. He holed a 12-foot birdie putt at No. 10 to  build a two-shot lead, but played the last eight holes in 2-over and  wound up with a 71 to finish alone in third. Furyk had to settle  for slice of history Friday as the sixth player in PGA Tour history with  a 59. Only three players in that exclusive club went on to win — Al  Geiberger is the only player to win when the 59 was not in the final  round. “I don’t know if I used them all up on Friday and knocked  them all in or what, but I just wasn’t able to get the putts to go,”  Furyk said. Johnson wasn’t the only player who felt like a winner Monday. Luke  Donald, a member at Conway Farms, was No. 54 in the FedEx Cup and was  on the verge of being left out of the top 30 players who advanced to the  Tour Championship. He ran off four straight birdies on the back nine,  atoned for a bogey on No. 16 with a birdie on the 17th, and then saved  par from a bunker on the 18th hole for a 66 to tie for fourth. That  moved him up to No. 29 to get him into East Lake. Watney was at  No. 34, and he went from playing his way into the top 30 to nearly  winning the tournament. Watney closed with a 64 and was tied for the  lead until Johnson made an 18-foot birdie putt out of the first cut on  the 16th hole, and a 12-footer for birdie on the next hole. “The  guys ahead of me were ahead of me for a reason — they’ve been playing  well all year,” Watney said. “Luckily for me, I kind of pulled  everything together.” The FedEx Cup points will be reset, meaning the top five only have to win the Tour Championship to capture the cup. Tiger  Woods will be the No. 1 seed, though he doesn’t go there with much  momentum. Woods started the final round in cool, breezy conditions just  four shots behind and was never a factor after missing a short par putt  on the opening hole. He closed with a 71 and tied for 11th, seven shots  behind. “It was not a very good putting week,” Woods said, who was  coming off a tie for 65th on the TPC Boston. “It’s just one of those  weeks where I just didn’t have it.” Henrik Stenson, a winner in  Boston and angry enough in Chicago that he snapped off the head of his  driver during the final round, will be the No. 2 seed at East Lake,  followed by Masters champion Adam Scott, Johnson and Matt Kuchar. Steve  Stricker, who played in the final group with Johnson, was one shot off  the lead when he started the back nine bogey-double bogey. He closed  with a 72, a round that cost him one of the top five seeds. Furyk had company in his misery. Matt  Jones of Australia had a chance to get to the Tour Championship —  which, in effect, would have put him in the four majors next year — but  his 8-foot birdie putt on the last hole hit the lip. That cost him a  spot in the top 30. Harris English was at No. 28 and might have  caught the worst break of them all. In a driving rain Sunday, he lost  the grip on his tee shot and pulled it into grass so thick the ball was  never found. The horn to stop play sounded a minute later, and English  went back out Monday morning to No. 8 to play his third shot on the par  5. He wound up with a double bogey, never found momentum and fell out of  the top 30 by two shots. Lee Westwood also fell out of the Tour Championship with a poor week. Johnson  put his postseason in jeopardy by skipping the opening FedEx Cup  playoff event to attend his brother’s wedding. He was at No. 27 before  he arrived for the BMW Championship and started the week just wanting to  make sure he was in Atlanta. He did that and more, giving him 10 wins in his 10 years on the PGA Tour. “I’m  going to have to forget about this week, take Atlanta for Atlanta and  just play,” Johnson said. “East Lake is not Conway Farms. It’s a beast.  I’m just going to keep doing what I’m doing and just be thankful.” Johnson finished at 16-under 268 and earned $1.44 million, pushing his career earnings just past $30 million.
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