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Justin Rose wins 2025 FedEx St. Jude Championship in playoff duel with J.J. Spaun as Tommy Fleetwood collapses

From out of nowhere into the winner's circle, Justin Rose raced through the finish line and a congested chasing pack atop the leaderboard Sunday to edge U.S. Open champion J.J. Spaun across three sudden-death playoff holes and claim the first leg of the FedEx Cup Playoffs at the 2025 St. Jude Championship. In doing so, he won his first PGA Tour event since 2023 and atoned for a playoff loss to Rory McIlroy earlier this year at the Masters.

"Played unbelievable golf coming down the stretch," Rose said. "I had so much fun with it. [The 18th hole] was playing perfectly for me today. If I pulled it, I carried it, if I held it up -- I hit a couple good putts in regulation and in the first playoff hole as well. Obviously J.J. dropped a bomb on me; I topped him. It was a lot of fun today. 

"That's why I practice. That's why I play. I've been saying for some time now, obviously Augusta [National], when I bring my best, I know I'm good enough to play and to compete, and to now win against the best players in the world. Very gratifying day for me and a lot of hard work coming to fruition."

Rose scored six birdies across his final eight holes, including a barrage of four straight from Nos. 14-17 that took him from well back of the leaders to tied atop the field at TPC Southwind late on the back nine. He posted a final-round 67 finished the week at 16 under as Spaun, who shot a 65, birdied two of his final three regulation holes to create the sudden death opportunity.

The Englishman found himself three strokes back of of 54-hole leader Tommy Fleetwood in the middle portion of their back nine before Rose scored those four birdies to match Spaun's clubhouse lead. During that stretch, Rose rolled in birdie putts from 15 feet, 9 feet, 6 feet and 23 feet before missing from 13 feet on the 72nd hole.

Rose made amends on the third extra hole as he drained a birdie from inside 12 feet to secure the St. Jude Championship. This after Rose and Spaun made impressive dueling birdies on the second playoff hole, extending the tournament over an hour past its expected conclusion.

With his triumph, Rose at age 45 becomes the oldest winner on the PGA Tour since Phil Mickelson at the 2021 PGA Championship, the oldest winner in the postseason since Vijay Singh and the first player in his 40s to win on the PGA Tour this season. The win pushes Rose inside the top five of the FedEx Cup standings, assuring him of a spot in the Tour Championship for the first time since 2019.

Beginning the day one stroke behind Tommy Fleetwood in the final pairing, Rose started his final round with a head-scratching three-putt bogey. His game was slightly off across the front nine as he found the water on the par-4 9th for the second straight day and himself three strokes off the pace after a birdie on No. 10 was offset by a bogey on No. 12.

In jeopardy of being taken out of the conversation, Rose marched louder. A birdie on the difficult par-3 14th gave him a sliver of hope before solid conversions on the next two holes. It was only when a long-distance connection on the par-4 17th coincided with a bogey from the blade of Fleetwood that Rose's chances felt real, and real they were indeed.

After missing a chance to win in regulation, Rose rode back to the tee box on the par-4 18th. His missed from a similar position and from a similar distance on the green on the first playoff hole, but he kept at it -- emblematic of this performance and his career resurgence in 2025.

Birdies were matched on the second before a birdie was solely his on the third and final playoff hole as Rose raised his hands to the sky, clinched his fist and secured what not only the trophy but the knowledge this his best is still capable of beating the best in the world.

"I've always known I've had that," Rose said. "I get nervous with the best of them. I feel nervous at times. But I know, when it matters, I've still got it. I kind of feel better and better and better as it gets more important. That's good to know." Grade: A+

Here are the rest of the notable names on the leaderboard at the 2025 St. Jude Championship.

2. J.J. Spaun (-16): A tough end to a tremendous tournament for Spaun, who continues to prove he is no flash in the pan. The dream season continues with the 34-year-old, who had one PGA Tour win to his name before capturing the U.S. Open, now No. 3 in the FedEx Cup standings only behind Scheffler and Rory McIlroy, who did not play this week. Spaun and Rose each saw tournament-winning putts lip out on the first playoff hole with Spaun continuing his tremendous putting from 30 feet and beyond this week in Memphis. A position on the United States Ryder Cup team has now been clinched, and with two more playoff events to play, Spaun has every opportunity to continue cashing checks amid this tremendous campaign. Grade: A

T3. Tommy Fleetwood (-15): Another painful defeat for Fleetwood, who seems to find new, excruciating ways to fall short each time he is in contention at a PGA Tour event. After a slow start, he found his footing on the greens and made three birdies in a four-hole stretch in the middle of his back nine to assert himself on the leaderboard. He was met with runs by Rose and Spaun but walked to the par-5 16th with the tournament in his hands. Instead of taking advantage of the opportunity, Fleetwood carded a poor par on the par-5 16th before a bad bogey on the 17th pushed him back from his peers. This marks the sixth third-place finish in Fleetwood's PGA Tour career. 

"Did a lot of good things today, really. Right at the end again. I'm getting close. That's the good side of it. I feel like I'm getting really close," He said after the round. "On that back nine, managed to get myself ahead, played some really good golf, putted really well. … I just didn't quite do enough. … I'm obviously disappointed." Grade: A-

T3. Scottie Scheffler (-15): Scheffler traversed the final round without caddie Ted Scott by his side as Scott was forced to return home due to an unexpected family emergency. Without his right-hand man, Scheffler sauntered through TPC Scottsdale in his typical manner driving the ball as well as he had all week and giving himself ample birdie opportunities from inside 15 feet. 

Getting more comfortable on the greens as the week progressed, Scheffler saw a number of those birdie chances burn the edge on Sunday, which was the ultimate difference maker. Still, he heads into the BMW Championship in the top spot in the FedEx Cup standings, and he has not finished outside the top 10 since the Players Championship. Grade: B+

T6. Rickie Fowler (-10): Two months ago, Fowler found himself well outside the top 70 that qualifies for the postseason and in major flux given his lack of status for next season. A strong summer launched at the Memorial and bookended by a nice run at the St. Jude Championship will see the former Players Championship winner qualify for the BMW Championship and all eight signature events in 2026. 

Fowler's ball striking carried the load this week at TPC Southwind as he led in terms of proximity through three rounds and kept the wheels on the track in the final. While the success is something that should be celebrated, Fowler's work is far from done as he will try to climb inside the Tour Championship bubble where major championship exemptions wait for next season. Grade: B+

T22. Xander Schauffele (-6): In his first start since back-to-back top 10s across the pond, Schauffele was stuck in neutral. Putting inconsistencies which have been the tale of his season riddled his first two rounds, and not even a third-round 65 could kick him on in the right direction. Because of this, he finds himself in a precarious position heading into the BMW Championship -- well outside the top 30 that qualify for the Tour Championship. Schauffele has become synonymous with East Lake given his success at the venue, but he is at major risk of not playing in this year's postseason finale unless a strong start shows up in Baltimore. Grade: C

T38. Jordan Spieth (-3): He gave it a valiant effort, but Spieth's season came to a close at the St. Jude Championship as he moved from No. 48 in the FedEx Cup standings to outside the top 50 by the time his 72nd hole concluded. This likely means his chances of being chosen for the U.S. Ryder Cup team have been extinguished as he will not be able to make a case to captain Keegan Bradley over the next two weeks. It was a solid campaign following offseason wrist surgery but one without any highlights. Spieth was above average in every strokes-gained category but outside the top 20 in each of them as well, which kind of sums it all up. His early exit from the postseason marks the second straight year he has fallen short of the BMW Championship. Grade: D

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Matching birdies on second playoff hole

J.J. Spaun makes a birdie putt from roughly 30 feet while Justin Rose responds from just about 7 feet to extend this playoff to the third hole. The PGA Tour rules staff is cutting a new hole as players head back to the 18th tee once again. This hole location will be cut in the back right portion of the green.

 
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We go to No. 18 again!

J.J. Spaun lips out his birdie putt from long distance and Justin Rose does the same from a very similar position that he missed in regulation — again from 13 feet. They head back to the 18th tee to do this dance again!

 
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August 10, 2025, 10:02 PM
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Rose vs. Spaun in a playoff

Justin Rose just misses a 13-foot birdie putt on the last to win the tournament in regulation and will now face a playoff with J.J. Spaun. Tommy Fleetwood falls short due to large part to his 5-5 stretch on Nos. 16-17. The playoff will begin on No. 18.

 
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August 10, 2025, 9:57 PM
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Rose has chance to win; Fleetwood falters

This finish is officially insane! Tommy Fleetwood makes bogey on No. 17 where Justin Rose rolls in a a birdie to tie J.J. Spaun at 16 under who is in the clubhouse at that number. That means Rose can win with a birdie on the last and Fleetwood needs a birdie on the last to possibly force a playoff.

 
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August 10, 2025, 9:41 PM
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Fleetwood fails to birdie par-5 16th, J.J. Spaun ties the lead

J.J. Spaun has tied Tommy Fleetwood with a 17-foot birdie on No. 17. One hole behind, Fleetwood made a mess from around the green and had to make a 5-foot par putt just to remain at 16 under. Justin Rose is still in this story as he has made three birdies to trail the two at the top by one while Scottie Scheffler is two behind heading to the last alongside Spaun.

 
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Scheffler stumbles; Fleetwood holds steady

That is one of the exchanges that has been missing from Tommy Fleetwood's near misses. The Englishman makes an 8-foot par save on No. 14 and Scottie Scheffler misses his from a similar distance on No. 15. Fleetwood's lead remains one but over only J.J. Spaun as Scheffler and Rose now stand at 13 under.

 
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August 10, 2025, 8:47 PM
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August 10, 2025, 8:45 PM
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Tommy Fleetwood flying high

Why stop at one when you can make two?! Tommy Fleetwood is finding his footing on the greens and rolls in a 15-foot birdie on No. 13 after a nice draw to access the tucked pin. He is now the solo leader heading to the par-3 14th at 15 under. Justin Rose, meanwhile, is three behind and likely means this is a three-horse race.

 
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August 10, 2025, 8:38 PM
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August 10, 2025, 8:33 PM
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Tommy ties the lead

Finally, he makes something of substance. Tommy Fleetwood started his round with a bogey and 10 straight pars and finally takes the lid off the cup with a 33-foot birdie on No. 12. He now joins the party at 14 under with six holes left to play. 

 
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August 10, 2025, 8:26 PM
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Big save from Scheffler

His putting from 4 to 8 feet is so improved and it showed there for Scottie Scheffler on No. 12. After missing the fairway left, plugging his second into the greenside bunker and blasting his third just a shade inside 8 feet, the world No. 1 rolls in his par putt to remain tied with J.J. Spaun at 14 under. The penultimate pair are one clear of the final pair.

 
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August 10, 2025, 7:56 PM
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Scheffler, Spaun tied for lead

It has been a dart show from the penultimate group, and Scottie Scheffler just pulled into a tie of the lead at 14 under thanks to a 15-foot conversion on No. 10. 

 
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Spaun surges into solo lead

It is not an Englishman nor the world No. 1, but J.J. Spaun who is surging at the moment. The U.S. Open champion has rattled in three birdies in his final four holes of the front nine to reach 14 under, take the solo lead and head into the back nine one stroke clear of the three players behind him. Spaun mentioned he found a swing thought Friday evening, and it is showing with his iron play as he is throwing DARTS!

 
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August 10, 2025, 7:13 PM
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Three tied at the top

Game on! After missing an 8-foot look on No. 6, Scottie Scheffler sneaks in a 14-foot birdie on the next hole to return to 13 under for the tournament. He is met there with Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose who knocked his approach stiff on the short par-4 6th. We've got three tied at the top!

 
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A closer look into Spieth's season

 
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Scheffler ties the lead early

Tommy Fleetwood makes bogey on No. 1 and Scottie Scheffler makes birdie ahead of him on No. 3 meaning there are now two players tied for the lead at 13 under. Fleetwood will have a chance of his own to take advantage of the lone par 5 on the front nine where yesterday he found the water and made double bogey.

 
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August 10, 2025, 5:48 PM
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Final pair steps onto the golf course as Spieth searches for a late run

Tommy Fleetwood misses the fairway on his first hole and will do well to make par on his opener, while Jordan Spieth saunters through the final two holes of potentially his season. Spieth is 2 under on his back nine and will need at least one more across his final two holes to move closer to the top 50. He is currently projected to miss the top 50 by 22 FedEx Cup points as it stands.

 
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August 10, 2025, 5:41 PM
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Fowler begins his march to BMW Championship

Rickie Fowler is in the middle of the fairway on No. 1 and will look to keep his position inside the projected top 50 in order to qualify for next week's BMW Championship. The addition into next week's field is especially important for someone like Fowler who is outside the top 100 in the Official World Golf Rankings and without major championship exemptions in 2026.

 
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