MICHAEL THORBJORNSEN SETS TRAVELERS CHAMPIONSHIP AMATEUR RECORD

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No amateur had ever finished in the top five in the 70-year history of Connecticut’s biggest sporting event.

But that was before Michael Thorbjornsen put together a stirring final round of the Travelers Championship on Sunday at TPC River Highlands. The junior-to-be at Stanford University came within inches of a double-eagle 2 on the sixth hole and made four consecutive birdies starting at No. 8 on the way to a 4-under-par 66 for a 72-hole total of 15-under 265 and fourth place.

The 20-year-old from Wellesley, Mass., failed to become the first amateur to win a PGA Tour event since two-time Canon Greater Hartford Open champion Phil Mickelson in the 1991 Northern Telecom Open. But he bettered the best previous finish by an amateur in the tournament, a tie for sixth by Connecticut Golf Hall of Famer Jim Grant in 1966 at his home course, Wethersfield Country Club, where the event began in 1952 as the Insurance City Open.

“It was incredible. It was surreal,” Thornbjornsen said of the applause that greeted him walking up the 18th hole. “It was very welcoming, better than how I dreamt about it, and I think it was louder than it was at the U.S. Open. I felt really calm, really cool, until a few hiccups near the end, but that happens.”

Thornbjornsen’s stellar showing came a week after he missed the cut in the U.S. Open at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., about 10 minutes from his hometown. His historic finish was built around being an astonishing 6-under for six holes, starting with a 261-yard shot that stopped two inches from an albatross 2 at the par-5 sixth. The four straight birdies got him within a stroke of eventual winner Xander Scheffele, but errant drives led to bogeys on the 12th and 13th holes, the later where his tee shot right stopped at the edge of a lake and he made a 25-foot putt.

Thornbjornsen, whose childhood friend and high school classmate Drew Cohen was his caddie for the second straight week, didn’t know he was only one back after his fourth consecutive birdie at the 11th hole.

“I figured I was around the lead, but I was thinking, ‘Okay, well, let’s go. Let’s keep it going. Let’s try to hit some good shots,’ ” he said. “It got a little difficult, two holes straight into the wind, and I mishit two drives. But overall, it was a lot of fun. I can’t wait to come back next year and the following years. The hospitality here is amazing. I love the course, love the way it fits my game. I guess the only thing is it might be a little too hot, but I will definitely come back if I can.”

Thorbjornsen, whose father/swing coach and some other family and friends followed him, said he will be returning to Stanford and then take it one year at a time. But did this week help him know he belonged on the PGA Tour.

“Yeah, I definitely would say so,” he said. “It gives me a lot of confidence. I think the thing is I played well, but I didn’t feel like I played incredible. Definitely left a couple shots out there, had some miscues, mental errors throughout the week. But it feels good. I played solid and finished fourth.”

Thorbjornsen traced his turnaround to some lessons that he took at the U.S. Open while playing a practice round with another young phenom, Collin Morikawa, and brought to the Travelers Championship, which he used to play himself into contention on a sponsors’ exemption.

“I was trying to pick his brain a little bit on like how to be so good and he said to really try and do whatever it takes to be comfortable out there and understand that it’s just another round of golf — that everyone’s human, basically,” said Thorbjornsen, playing in his third PGA Tour event, including two U.S. Open starts. “Those guys are just really good. Try and forget about that and just play your game.”

After the Travelers Championship, Thorbjornsen headed for the Golf Club de Geneve in Switzerland to represent the United States in the Arnold Palmer Cup on July 1-3. Then he’ll return home to defend in the Massachusetts Amateur at Concord Country Club on July 11-15.

Thorbjornsen was born on Sept. 16, 2011, in Cleveland, Ohio. His mother, Sandra, was born and raised in Harara, Zimbabwe’s capital, and played golf and earned a bachelor’s degree in information from Ursuline College in Ohio. She continued her education at Babson College in Wellesley, where she earned her Masters degree.

Thorbjornsen was a member of the winning Junior Ryder Cup in 2018 and the Junior Presidents Cup in 2019 with Ben James of Milford, who also received a sponsors’ exemption to the Travelers Championship but missed the cut after shooting 2-over 142.

Thorbjornsen’s other major achievements include:

2022 Ping All-American second team, Golfweek All-American honorable mention, Ping All-Region, All-Pac-12 First team

2021 All-Pac First Team, All-Pac-12 Newcomer Team; Won Massachusetts Amateur and Western Amateur

2020 graduate of Wellesley High School who was quarterfinalist at U.S. Amateur and caddie and fellow classmate Karl Vilips

2019: One of four amateurs to make the cut in the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach Golf Links in California (79th) and one of the two youngest to ever accomplish that feat; Member of victorious U.S. Team in the Junior Presidents Cup in Melbourne, Australia; Wellesley High School golf team MVP

2018: Won U.S. Junior Championship; Member of victorious U.S. team in the Junior Ryder Team.

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Bruce worked as sports writer for The Hartford Courant for 38 years before retiring in 2008. His major beats at the paper were golf, the Hartford Whalers, University of Connecticut men’s and women’s basketball, Yale football, United States and World Figure Skating Championships and ski columnist. He has covered every PGA Tour stop in Connecticut since 1971, along with 30 Masters, 25 U.S. Opens, four PGA Championships, 12 Deutsche Bank Championships, 15 Westchester (N.Y.) Classics and four Ryder Cups. He has won several Golf Writers Association of America writing awards, including a first place for a feature on John Daly, and was elected to the Connecticut Golf Hall of Fame in 2009. He also worked for the Connecticut Whale hockey team for two years when they were renamed by former Hartford Whalers managing general partner Howard Baldwin, who had become the marketing director of the Hartford Wolf Pack, the top affiliate of the New York Rangers.