“I know we didn’t win, but it was the fact that we competed,” he said. “No one really made a mistake out there. We had to earn it, and that’s what you want to have. Hats off to Langers. They played amazing.”
Team Langer and Team Woods each closed with a 15-under 57 in the scramble format, each team making only four pars, and they set the tournament record at 28-under 116.
In the playoff, Langer had the advantage on the par 5 because of his age. He played the third set of tees, 82 yards ahead of where Woods had to play and 52 yards ahead of where the two sons were hitting.
Charlie just reached the front of the green. His 25-foot eagle putt hit the edge of the hole but had too much pace. Woods missed low. Jason Langer hit his approach to 18 feet, and he left it to his ageless father to make the winner.
For Woods, it was his first time in a playoff since Zach Johnson beat him at Sherwood in the 2013 World Challenge.
On a chilly afternoon, every seat was filled in the grandstand behind the 18th green, with fans in jackets packed down the side of the fairway. It was entertaining, along with a rare chance to see Woods on the golf course. He was playing for the first time since September surgery on his lower back. His last competition was the British Open in July.
Charlie was gearing up for a big fist pump when his eagle putt in the playoff neared the hole. Langer threw both arms in the air when his winning putt dropped.
It capped another amazing year for Langer, a two-time Masters champion. He tore his Achilles tendon playing pickleball at the start of the year, recovered in four months and extended his streak on the 50-and-older PGA Tour Champions by winning for the 18th consecutive season.
And now he has five titles in the PNC Championship — three with Jason, two with Stefan, who was caddying for his little brother.
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No one else was closer than five shots. Padraig Harrington and son Paddy were among those who tied for third, and they had a moment of their own when Paddy made a hole-in-one on the par-3 eighth hole.
“I was too excited. You couldn’t have talked to me,” Harrington said of watching his son make an ace. “I was gone. This is a great event, and all of it is great. And we try and play well, but that was sheer joy.”
The tournament is for winners of a major on any tour or The Players Championship and a family member. The purse is barely over $1 million. Everyone seems to leave happy.