Back to all posts

Former PNGA Player of the Year Nick Taylor Wins AT&T at Pebble Beach

Click here to read Jay Taylor’s (Nick Taylor’s father) comments on his son’s win.

(Courtesy of Golf Canada)

Nick Taylor had more trouble with the wind than he did with Phil Mickelson. The Canadian managed both just fine Sunday and won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am for his second career victory.

With the gallery eager to see Mickelson add a record sixth victory at Pebble Beach, Taylor, from Abbotsford, B.C., showed plenty of moxie in building a five-shot lead at the turn and then holding on when 40 mph gusts blasted the Monterey Peninsula.

Nick Taylor
Nick Taylor

He closed with a 2-under 70 for a four-shot victory over Kevin Streelman (68). Mickelson, who closed within two shots with four holes to play, shot 74 and finished alone in third. He has won, been runner-up twice and finished third in his last four starts at the Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Before turning professional in 2010, Taylor was named the PNGA Player of the Year in 2008 and 2009, won the 2007 Canadian Amateur and 2009 Sahalee Players Championship, was low amateur in the 2009 U.S. Open, and received the 2009 McCormack Medal for being the No. 1-ranked amateur in the world. Taylor was a star on the University of Washington men’s golf team before graduating in 2010.

Taylor won in his fourth start as a PGA Tour rookie at the 2015 Sanderson Farms Championship in Mississippi, at the time an opposite-field event that didn’t feature any of the top players. He went 146 starts on the PGA Tour until his next victory, and it was a big one.

The victory gets him into the Masters for the first time, along with the PGA Championship up the coast at Harding Park in May. In his sixth year on tour, Taylor has played only two majors as a pro. “That was amazing,” Taylor said. “I believed I could do it because I’ve done it before.

Taylor with wife AT&T 2020
Nick celebrates his AT&T win with his wife Andie and their newborn son Charlie.

But to do it in that fashion, playing with Phil, gives me a lot of confidence going forward.” Taylor started the final round with a one-shot lead over Mickelson, and they were tied after Lefty got up-and-down from a bunker on the par-5 second. Seven holes later, Taylor had a five-shot lead.

He holed a 15-foot birdie putt on the fourth, a 10-foot birdie putt on the par-3 fifth, and then he holed a bunker shot for eagle on the par-5 sixth hole, the kind of short-game shot everyone expected out of Mickelson. Thanks to the wind, it wasn’t quite over.

Five holes later, Mickelson had cut the lead to two despite having only one birdie putt, a tap-in on No. 10. Taylor ran into tree trouble off the tee at No. 11, flew the green into a back bunker on No. 12 and then took double bogey on the par-5 14th hole when he found a bunker off the tee, could only advance it about 100 yards and took five to reach the green.

The wind was blowing so hard at that point that Taylor’s cap blew off his head and he had to chase it down the fairway before hitting his third shot from 227 yards away. Mickelson, however, missed his chances to capitalize on Taylor’s mistakes. He came up short of the 11th green from just under 100 yards with Taylor in trouble.

He didn’t hit a green in regulation after his tap-in birdie on the 10th until his tee shot on the par-3 17th that settled 40 feet away. Taylor seized control by chipping in for birdie on the 15th for a three-shot lead, and the knockout punch was his tee shot to 6 feet below the hole for birdie on the 17th. He finished at 19-under 268, earning a two-year exemption on the PGA Tour.

Mickelson wasn’t the only player who struggled. Dustin Johnson shot a 78. Matt Every, in the third-to-last group, shot 80. Jason Day closed with a 75.

Nick Taylor with trophy.
Nick Taylor with trophy.

The best round and best finish belonged to Jordan Spieth, who chipped in to save par on his final hole for a 67. It was the low round of the day and enabled Spieth to finish in a tie for ninth. That narrowly moves him back into the top 50 and makes him eligible for a World Golf Championship in Mexico City in two weeks.

Streelman also leaves with a trophy. He teamed with Arizona Cardinals receiver Larry Fitzgerald to easily win the pro-am for the second time in three years.

Click HERE for complete final scoring.